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Jesuit College in Khyriv

Jesuit College in Khyriv, formerly Jesuit College in Chyrów (full name: The Educational Academy of the Jesuit Fathers in Chyrów, Polish: Zakład Naukowo-Wychowawczy Ojców Jezuitów w Chyrowie, Ukrainian: Комплекс споруд Хирівської єзуїтської колегії), was a purpose-built Polish secondary boys college, owned by the Society of Jesus, in the occupied Austro-Hungarian partition of Poland in the late 19th century. The vast estate, comprising the college, has the rare distinction of having existed in at least five separate national Jurisdictions in the last century and a half. From 1918 the college was in independent Poland until 1939 when it ceased to exist as an institution, although not as an asset, due to foreign invasions, first by the Red Army till 1941, then by the German Wehrmacht until 1943, before being re-taken by the Soviet Union. Since 1944 the site and its entire estate was in the USSR and since 1991 has been in present-day Ukraine.

Jesuit College in Khyriv
Zakład Naukowo-Wychowawczy Ojców Jezuitów w Chyrowie
Aerial view of the college buildings, 1930s
Other name
Комплекс споруд Хирівської єзуїтської колегії
TypeRoman Catholic boarding school for boys
Active1580; 444 years ago (1580), re-founded 1886–1939
FoundersMarian Ignacy Dzierżykraj-Morawski SJ, Henryk Jackowski SJ
Religious affiliation
Roman Catholic (Jesuit)
Address
Khyriv, Ukraine nr. Przemyśl, Poland
, ,
Patron saintSaint Joseph
Part of the former school buildings, before the disastrous fire in 2018, now in Western Ukraine

The college in Khyriv and its extensive grounds have so far not been returned to the Jesuit order, as part of war reparations. For a time it served as army barracks for the Soviet Armed Forces. In August 2013, the historic college and outbuildings were sold in a Ukrainian government auction for ₴2,231,000 (then about $275,000) to a private investor "Chyrów-rent-inwest”.[1]

As a (gimnazjum), the college had a Jesuit educational tradition reaching back to 1580 in the Commonwealth of Two Nations. It opened in Chyrów (now Khyriv, Ukraine), near Przemyśl then in the Austrian Partition of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, just as the Jesuit college in Tarnopol was closed down by the authorities in 1886. It survived and flourished despite obstacles from the Austrian authorities, and was to continue the tradition of the former Jesuit Colleges in Polotsk (1580-1820) and Tarnopol until the Soviet invasion of Poland (1939).[2] It was considered one of the most prestigious boys' schools in Poland and many of its alumni went on to notable careers.[3]

History edit

The foundation of the school was initiated by two Jesuit priests: academic theologian, Father Marian Ignacy Dzierżykraj-Morawski (1845–1901), alumnus of the dissolved Jesuit Collège Saint Clément in Metz, France and Henryk Jackowski (1834–1905), Polish provincial of the Jesuits.[4][5][6] In 1883 the Polish Jesuits purchased the country estate of Franciszek Topolnicki at Bąkowice near Chyrów, about 33 kilometres (21 mi) from Przemyśl. The school, opened in 1886.[7] It drew on the traditions of the erstwhile Jesuit College in Polotsk which closed in 1820, and the Jesuit College in Tarnopol, closed in 1886.[8][3]

In the autumn of 1918 the college served as the quarters for the company of general Stanisław Maczek which he wrote about in his memoire.[9]

After Poland regained its independence and the Second Polish Republic came into being, a statute of the Ministry for Religious Faiths and Public Education, which came into force on 5 December 1925, confirmed that the college operated with the full rights of all state secondary educational establishments.[10] During the 1920s the college was known as the "Convent of St Joseph in Chyrów".[7] Since that time, the college was generally referred to as "Chyrów" and its pupils as "Chyrowiacy" (Chyrowiaks). Ownership of the college remained with the Polish province of the Jesuit order.[7] The teaching at the college followed a classical curriculum. In 1926 there were eight forms and fourteen departments, with 471 male pupils.[7]

College facilities edit

The college was rated as one of the best in Poland if not in the whole of Europe. The vast buildings comprised airy classes, with the latest teaching aids, ateliers devoted to particular subjects, a library with in excess of 30,000 volumes, comprising collections on geography, history (including archaeology and numismatics). There was a natural science department with its own botanical garden. As in Stonyhurst College, Chyrów's equivalent Jesuit school in Lancashire, there was an astronomical observatory.[11] The sports facilities included gyms with a range of equipment, four tennis courts and eight pitches.

The college boasted its own theatre. There was generous space for socialising and boarders had good sleeping accommodation with an enormous dining hall and an assembly chamber. The estate possessed a modern plumbing and waste water system, with an independent electricity generator, an infirmary, a mill with a bakery attached. There was a steam laundry, and engineering workshops for repairs. The estate had its own farm, all in a rural setting with a landscaped park. The original building design was by Antoni Łuszczkiewicz, and later by Jan Zakrzewski. Further extensions were added at the start of the 20th century supervised by Edgar Kovats. The ensemble consisted of a total of 327 rooms and lecture halls to accommodate 400 pupils.[7]

The library edit

As committed scholars, the Jesuits, devoted great effort and attention to the development of the academy's library. The nucleus of the collection was formed out of the collection moved from their college in Tarnopol. It was further expanded with the volumes the Jesuits managed to recover from many locations after the re-establishment of the Order in Europe, and by new purchases and donations. The collection included medieval manuscripts, incunabula, old music prints, collections of the 18th-century maps, rare scholarly and scientific works, academic and school manuals from Jesuit colleges (the oldest from the Jesuit College in Polotsk), from missions (e.g. Minsk) and from Jesuit houses before the suppression of the Society of Jesus.

The Chyrów library collection surpassed, by the number of volumes, their value and educational quality, all secondary school libraries in the Austrian Partition of Poland and then those of all educational establishments in the Second Polish Republic, after Poland had regained national independence in 1920.[7] At the time of the Soviet invasion of Poland (1939) the Chyrów Library counted over 50,000 volumes and items of cultural heritage. In 1939 the academy was liquidated by the Soviet authorities and its library with its collections entirely destroyed.

Curriculum edit

Although the college curriculum was largely based on that followed in all Polish state high schools, there were at various stages, attempts to extend its scope. For instance in 1890 there was an experiment to teach history in the German language, however the expected results were not attained and the initiative was abandoned. Between 1909 and 1917 aside from core subjects taught in Polish, other language teaching was introduced consisting of Ukrainian, Russian, French and English. To those were added courses in Graphic design and Calligraphy. A music department was developed to teach various instruments and to put on performances. The availability of extra-curricular subjects made it possible for pupils from less privileged backgrounds to attend the college. However, they formed a minority of students.[7]

Regimented System edit

The pupils timetable was regimented as was the behaviour expected of them. A former turn of the century pupil recorded his college routines thus:

In that two-floor structure there were two kilometres of corridors. Each form had its own sleeping quarters, its own classroom and games room. Crossing all common parts and passages had to be done in silence in two columns. Entering the dining hall, set for 550 people, had to be in silence, and only after the prefect general, who dined with us, had sounded his bell, was talking permitted. At the end of the meal another bell signalled talking had to stop, which did not always work out harmoniously. A wake-up call was sounded at 6am and lights out was at 9.30pm. Lessons began at 9am till 1pm, with three quarters of an hour for recreation. Lessons resumed at 4pm till 5.30pm. Prep lasted four hours and was arranged over three phases. The first was between 8 and 9 in the morning. Recreation was allotted two and a half hours split over two parts. On Tuesdays and Thursdays instead of after-lunch recreation or lessons, we had outings and rambling. In winter there was ice-skating, skiing and sledding. In summer we could swim in the river.[12]

Alumni edit

During its years of operation, 6,000 alumni had passed through its doors.[13] Some notable students included:

Faculty edit

The school's faculty included:

  • The future blessed Father Jan Beyzym, SJ (1850–1912) who taught in Tarnopol and Chyrów for 17 years before leaving, at 48 in 1898, for Madagascar to begin his apostolate to people suffering with Leprosy.[24][25]
  • Adam Kozłowiecki, SJ was in charge of discipline 1933–34. After surviving Dachau concentration camp, he went on to spend decades as a missionary in Zambia. He became Archbishop of Lusaka and was elevated in 1998 to Cardinal priest by Pope John Paul II.
  • Władyslaw Dzikiewicz, last Head Master until 1939. During the war was parish priest of the John the Baptist Cathedral in the Old Town in Warsaw

World War II and after edit

During the first phase of Soviet occupation in September 1939 which lasted until June 1941, the site became a military base for the Red Army. Upon the subsequent ingress on the territory of the German Wehrmacht in June 1941, the college was used as a prisoner of war camp. From the second half of 1943 till the end of the German occupation in August 1944, it was used as a military hospital.

 
The fire damaged Jesuit College in Khyriv, Ukraine (detail, 2018)
 
Plaque commemorating the foundation of the Jesuit Monastery and College in Chyrów - St. Barbara's Church, Krakow Poland

Following the Fourth Partition of Poland after the war, the college, known familiarly as "Chyrów", found itself beyond the Polish frontier. It was now in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, when it served as a Soviet military barracks until 1992, and housed Ukrainian troops until 2004. On 4 February 1996, the college chapel was re-consecrated as a Greek Catholic church dedicated to Saint Nicholas. The original buildings and later military extensions were allowed to become run down.

There were discussions to use the site for a Polish-Ukrainian research institute, and while the local authority had in principle agreed to such an initiative, it changed its mind and leased the site to a private developer. The idea was to create a country club or a theme park.

On 24 March 2018 the attics of the former college caught alight with considerable damage to the fabric of the buildings.[26]

Commemoration edit

On the 100th anniversary of the college's foundation, a commemorative plaque was installed in the church of St. Barbara in Kraków, Poland on 14 September 1986. It was sponsored by "Chyrowiak" Old Boys, both in Poland and abroad to recall the long traditions and legacy of the earlier Jesuit colleges of Polotsk and of Tarnopol of which Chyrow became an honourable successor. The plaque also pays tribute to the founders of the college, its teachers, prefects and pupils and all those among them who paid the ultimate sacrifice during its existence, dying or being murdered in the ensuing historical conflicts, including the two world wars. The motto on the plaque reads: Deo - Patriae - Amicitiae.

See also edit

Notes and References edit

  1. ^ "Kurier Galicyjski", nr 19 z dnia 15-28.10.2013 r.
  2. ^ "Konwikt w Chyrowie - Zakład Naukowo-Wychowawczy".
  3. ^ a b Topij-Stempińska, Beata (2019). Uczniowie Jezuickich Instytutcji Edukacyjnych w Galicji w XIX Wieku: Portret Zbiorowy (PDF) (in Polish and English). Kraków: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Akademii Ignatium w Krakowie. ISBN 978-83-7614-414-6.
  4. ^ Viansson-Ponté, L. (1897). Les Jésuites à Metz : Collège Saint-Louis, 1622–1762, Collège Saint Clément, 1852–1872. p. 426.
  5. ^ Tuszewski TJ, Józef (1932). . p. 64. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  6. ^ Piech, Stanisław. (2000) "Księdza Mariana Ignacego Morawskiego Posługa Myślenia". Folia Historica Cracoviensia, Vol.7. http://czasopisma.upjp2.edu.pl/foliahistoricacracoviensia/article/viewFile/1406/1302 in Polish, p.1 accessed 12-18-2017
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Zagórowski, Zygmunt (1926). Spis nauczycieli szkół wyższych, średnich, zawodowych, seminarjów nauczycielskich oraz wykaz zakładów naukowych i władz szkolnych. Rocznik II. Warszawa-Lwów: Książnica-Atlas. p. 131.
  8. ^ Połock Academy (1812-1820): An Example of the Society of Jesus's Endurance, by Irena Kadulska in: Robert A. MARYKS and Jonathan WRIGHT (eds.), Jesuit Survival and Restoration: A Global History, 1773-1900, Leiden and Boston, MA: Brill, 2015, ISBN 9789004282384, pp. 83-98
  9. ^ Maczek, Stanisław (1990). Od podwody do czołga. Wspomnienia wojenne 1918-1945. Wrocław: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich. ISBN 83-04-03659-2. (in Polish)
  10. ^ . Dziennik Urzędowy Ministerstwa Wyznań Religijnych i Oświecenia Publicznego Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. 1 February 1926. p. 46. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  11. ^ "Urania no. 2/1938 - article "W Chyrowie powstaje obserwatorium szkolne"". p. 31. Archived from the original on 8 October 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  12. ^ Andrzej Rostworowski
  13. ^ "Grzebień, Ludwik: Teofil Bzowski SJ (1873-1959), wychowawca i autor literatury młodzieżowej". Społeczeństwo, kultura, wychowanie w poglądach polskich jezuitów okresu II Rzeczypospolitej (PDF) (in Polish). p. 313. (summaries in English)
  14. ^ "Obituary of Józef Garliński". The Telegraph. 1 December 2005. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  15. ^ "Biography of Father Kazimierz Konopka, SJ // Book of Remembrance: Biographies of Catholic Clergy and Laity Repressed in the Soviet Union (USSR) from 1918 to 1953".
  16. ^ "JESUITICA: Auschwitz - "the best noviciate"". 8 March 2011.
  17. ^ "AFRICA/ZAMBIA - A tribute to Cardinal Adam Kozłowiecki: First Bishop of Lusaka, then for 20 years national director of the Pontifical Mission Societies in Zambia - Agenzia Fides".
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  19. ^ one of the creators and first professors (since 1920) of the Maritime School (Państwowa Szkoła Morska) in Tczew, which is considered the 'cradle of the Polish merchant navy'
  20. ^ "Maritime School in Tczew 1920-1930 - Current exhibitions - Visit us - Archive - National Maritime Museum in Gdańsk".
  21. ^ "Biografia - JULIUSZ MIEROSZEWSKI".
  22. ^ http://www.naskale.oficerskie.info/pliki/2013-04-14.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  23. ^ Sprawozdanie Zakładu Naukowo-Wychowawczego OO. Jezuitów w Bąkowicach pod Chyrowem za rok szkolny 1913/14 [Report of the Scientific and Educational Institute OO. of the Jesuits in Bąkowice near Chyrów for the school year 1913/14] (in Polish). Przemyśl: Druk. J. Styfiego. 1914. p. 98.
  24. ^ "Jan Beyzym (1850-1912)".
  25. ^ http://www.sjweb.info/saintsBio.cfm?SaintID=287
  26. ^ "Pożar słynnego kolegium w Chyrowie na Ukrainie". rmf24.pl. 24 March 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2018.

External links edit

jesuit, college, khyriv, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, avai. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jesuit College in Khyriv formerly Jesuit College in Chyrow full name The Educational Academy of the Jesuit Fathers in Chyrow Polish Zaklad Naukowo Wychowawczy Ojcow Jezuitow w Chyrowie Ukrainian Kompleks sporud Hirivskoyi yezuyitskoyi kolegiyi was a purpose built Polish secondary boys college owned by the Society of Jesus in the occupied Austro Hungarian partition of Poland in the late 19th century The vast estate comprising the college has the rare distinction of having existed in at least five separate national Jurisdictions in the last century and a half From 1918 the college was in independent Poland until 1939 when it ceased to exist as an institution although not as an asset due to foreign invasions first by the Red Army till 1941 then by the German Wehrmacht until 1943 before being re taken by the Soviet Union Since 1944 the site and its entire estate was in the USSR and since 1991 has been in present day Ukraine Jesuit College in KhyrivZaklad Naukowo Wychowawczy Ojcow Jezuitow w ChyrowieAerial view of the college buildings 1930sOther nameKompleks sporud Hirivskoyi yezuyitskoyi kolegiyiTypeRoman Catholic boarding school for boysActive1580 444 years ago 1580 re founded 1886 1939FoundersMarian Ignacy Dzierzykraj Morawski SJ Henryk Jackowski SJReligious affiliationRoman Catholic Jesuit AddressKhyriv Ukraine nr Przemysl Poland Chyrow Galicia Eastern Europe in Austria Hungary Poland now UkrainePatron saintSaint JosephPart of the former school buildings before the disastrous fire in 2018 now in Western UkraineThe college in Khyriv and its extensive grounds have so far not been returned to the Jesuit order as part of war reparations For a time it served as army barracks for the Soviet Armed Forces In August 2013 the historic college and outbuildings were sold in a Ukrainian government auction for 2 231 000 then about 275 000 to a private investor Chyrow rent inwest 1 As a gimnazjum the college had a Jesuit educational tradition reaching back to 1580 in the Commonwealth of Two Nations It opened in Chyrow now Khyriv Ukraine near Przemysl then in the Austrian Partition of the former Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth just as the Jesuit college in Tarnopol was closed down by the authorities in 1886 It survived and flourished despite obstacles from the Austrian authorities and was to continue the tradition of the former Jesuit Colleges in Polotsk 1580 1820 and Tarnopol until the Soviet invasion of Poland 1939 2 It was considered one of the most prestigious boys schools in Poland and many of its alumni went on to notable careers 3 Contents 1 History 2 College facilities 2 1 The library 2 2 Curriculum 2 3 Regimented System 3 Alumni 4 Faculty 5 World War II and after 6 Commemoration 7 See also 8 Notes and References 9 External linksHistory editThe foundation of the school was initiated by two Jesuit priests academic theologian Father Marian Ignacy Dzierzykraj Morawski 1845 1901 alumnus of the dissolved Jesuit College Saint Clement in Metz France and Henryk Jackowski 1834 1905 Polish provincial of the Jesuits 4 5 6 In 1883 the Polish Jesuits purchased the country estate of Franciszek Topolnicki at Bakowice near Chyrow about 33 kilometres 21 mi from Przemysl The school opened in 1886 7 It drew on the traditions of the erstwhile Jesuit College in Polotsk which closed in 1820 and the Jesuit College in Tarnopol closed in 1886 8 3 In the autumn of 1918 the college served as the quarters for the company of general Stanislaw Maczek which he wrote about in his memoire 9 After Poland regained its independence and the Second Polish Republic came into being a statute of the Ministry for Religious Faiths and Public Education which came into force on 5 December 1925 confirmed that the college operated with the full rights of all state secondary educational establishments 10 During the 1920s the college was known as the Convent of St Joseph in Chyrow 7 Since that time the college was generally referred to as Chyrow and its pupils as Chyrowiacy Chyrowiaks Ownership of the college remained with the Polish province of the Jesuit order 7 The teaching at the college followed a classical curriculum In 1926 there were eight forms and fourteen departments with 471 male pupils 7 College facilities editThe college was rated as one of the best in Poland if not in the whole of Europe The vast buildings comprised airy classes with the latest teaching aids ateliers devoted to particular subjects a library with in excess of 30 000 volumes comprising collections on geography history including archaeology and numismatics There was a natural science department with its own botanical garden As in Stonyhurst College Chyrow s equivalent Jesuit school in Lancashire there was an astronomical observatory 11 The sports facilities included gyms with a range of equipment four tennis courts and eight pitches The college boasted its own theatre There was generous space for socialising and boarders had good sleeping accommodation with an enormous dining hall and an assembly chamber The estate possessed a modern plumbing and waste water system with an independent electricity generator an infirmary a mill with a bakery attached There was a steam laundry and engineering workshops for repairs The estate had its own farm all in a rural setting with a landscaped park The original building design was by Antoni Luszczkiewicz and later by Jan Zakrzewski Further extensions were added at the start of the 20th century supervised by Edgar Kovats The ensemble consisted of a total of 327 rooms and lecture halls to accommodate 400 pupils 7 The library edit As committed scholars the Jesuits devoted great effort and attention to the development of the academy s library The nucleus of the collection was formed out of the collection moved from their college in Tarnopol It was further expanded with the volumes the Jesuits managed to recover from many locations after the re establishment of the Order in Europe and by new purchases and donations The collection included medieval manuscripts incunabula old music prints collections of the 18th century maps rare scholarly and scientific works academic and school manuals from Jesuit colleges the oldest from the Jesuit College in Polotsk from missions e g Minsk and from Jesuit houses before the suppression of the Society of Jesus The Chyrow library collection surpassed by the number of volumes their value and educational quality all secondary school libraries in the Austrian Partition of Poland and then those of all educational establishments in the Second Polish Republic after Poland had regained national independence in 1920 7 At the time of the Soviet invasion of Poland 1939 the Chyrow Library counted over 50 000 volumes and items of cultural heritage In 1939 the academy was liquidated by the Soviet authorities and its library with its collections entirely destroyed Curriculum edit Although the college curriculum was largely based on that followed in all Polish state high schools there were at various stages attempts to extend its scope For instance in 1890 there was an experiment to teach history in the German language however the expected results were not attained and the initiative was abandoned Between 1909 and 1917 aside from core subjects taught in Polish other language teaching was introduced consisting of Ukrainian Russian French and English To those were added courses in Graphic design and Calligraphy A music department was developed to teach various instruments and to put on performances The availability of extra curricular subjects made it possible for pupils from less privileged backgrounds to attend the college However they formed a minority of students 7 Regimented System edit The pupils timetable was regimented as was the behaviour expected of them A former turn of the century pupil recorded his college routines thus In that two floor structure there were two kilometres of corridors Each form had its own sleeping quarters its own classroom and games room Crossing all common parts and passages had to be done in silence in two columns Entering the dining hall set for 550 people had to be in silence and only after the prefect general who dined with us had sounded his bell was talking permitted At the end of the meal another bell signalled talking had to stop which did not always work out harmoniously A wake up call was sounded at 6am and lights out was at 9 30pm Lessons began at 9am till 1pm with three quarters of an hour for recreation Lessons resumed at 4pm till 5 30pm Prep lasted four hours and was arranged over three phases The first was between 8 and 9 in the morning Recreation was allotted two and a half hours split over two parts On Tuesdays and Thursdays instead of after lunch recreation or lessons we had outings and rambling In winter there was ice skating skiing and sledding In summer we could swim in the river 12 Alumni editDuring its years of operation 6 000 alumni had passed through its doors 13 Some notable students included Roman Abraham Witold Belza Aleksander Birkenmajer Jan Brzechwa Adam Epler Jozef Garlinski army officer survivor of Auschwitz concentration camp writer 14 Kamil Gizycki Adolf Hyla Kazimierz Junosza Stepowski Jerzy Kirchmayer Kazimierz Konopka 15 Adam Kozlowiecki 16 17 Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski Deputy Prime Minister of the Second Polish Republic Wlodzimierz Jung Mochnacki bank director before WWII prisoner of Woldenberg POW camp until 1945 Antoni Halka Ledochowski 18 19 20 Juliusz Mieroszewski 21 Edward O Rourke Zdzislaw Peszkowski 22 Ksawery Pruszynski Stanislaw Kostka Starowieyski 23 Kazimierz Tomczak Kazimierz Wierzynski Antoni WiwulskiFaculty editThe school s faculty included The future blessed Father Jan Beyzym SJ 1850 1912 who taught in Tarnopol and Chyrow for 17 years before leaving at 48 in 1898 for Madagascar to begin his apostolate to people suffering with Leprosy 24 25 Adam Kozlowiecki SJ was in charge of discipline 1933 34 After surviving Dachau concentration camp he went on to spend decades as a missionary in Zambia He became Archbishop of Lusaka and was elevated in 1998 to Cardinal priest by Pope John Paul II Wladyslaw Dzikiewicz last Head Master until 1939 During the war was parish priest of the John the Baptist Cathedral in the Old Town in WarsawWorld War II and after editDuring the first phase of Soviet occupation in September 1939 which lasted until June 1941 the site became a military base for the Red Army Upon the subsequent ingress on the territory of the German Wehrmacht in June 1941 the college was used as a prisoner of war camp From the second half of 1943 till the end of the German occupation in August 1944 it was used as a military hospital nbsp The fire damaged Jesuit College in Khyriv Ukraine detail 2018 nbsp Plaque commemorating the foundation of the Jesuit Monastery and College in Chyrow St Barbara s Church Krakow PolandFollowing the Fourth Partition of Poland after the war the college known familiarly as Chyrow found itself beyond the Polish frontier It was now in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic when it served as a Soviet military barracks until 1992 and housed Ukrainian troops until 2004 On 4 February 1996 the college chapel was re consecrated as a Greek Catholic church dedicated to Saint Nicholas The original buildings and later military extensions were allowed to become run down There were discussions to use the site for a Polish Ukrainian research institute and while the local authority had in principle agreed to such an initiative it changed its mind and leased the site to a private developer The idea was to create a country club or a theme park On 24 March 2018 the attics of the former college caught alight with considerable damage to the fabric of the buildings 26 Commemoration editOn the 100th anniversary of the college s foundation a commemorative plaque was installed in the church of St Barbara in Krakow Poland on 14 September 1986 It was sponsored by Chyrowiak Old Boys both in Poland and abroad to recall the long traditions and legacy of the earlier Jesuit colleges of Polotsk and of Tarnopol of which Chyrow became an honourable successor The plaque also pays tribute to the founders of the college its teachers prefects and pupils and all those among them who paid the ultimate sacrifice during its existence dying or being murdered in the ensuing historical conflicts including the two world wars The motto on the plaque reads Deo Patriae Amicitiae See also editList of Jesuit sites Jazlowiec College Territorial evolution of PolandNotes and References edit Kurier Galicyjski nr 19 z dnia 15 28 10 2013 r Konwikt w Chyrowie Zaklad Naukowo Wychowawczy a b Topij Stempinska Beata 2019 Uczniowie Jezuickich Instytutcji Edukacyjnych w Galicji w XIX Wieku Portret Zbiorowy PDF in Polish and English Krakow Wydawnictwo Naukowe Akademii Ignatium w Krakowie ISBN 978 83 7614 414 6 Viansson Ponte L 1897 Les Jesuites a Metz College Saint Louis 1622 1762 College Saint Clement 1852 1872 p 426 Tuszewski TJ Jozef 1932 O Marjan Morawski 1845 1901 p 64 Archived from the original on 22 December 2017 Retrieved 19 December 2017 Piech Stanislaw 2000 Ksiedza Mariana Ignacego Morawskiego Posluga Myslenia Folia Historica Cracoviensia Vol 7 http czasopisma upjp2 edu pl foliahistoricacracoviensia article viewFile 1406 1302 in Polish p 1 accessed 12 18 2017 a b c d e f g Zagorowski Zygmunt 1926 Spis nauczycieli szkol wyzszych srednich zawodowych seminarjow nauczycielskich oraz wykaz zakladow naukowych i wladz szkolnych Rocznik II Warszawa Lwow Ksiaznica Atlas p 131 Polock Academy 1812 1820 An Example of the Society of Jesus s Endurance by Irena Kadulska in Robert A MARYKS and Jonathan WRIGHT eds Jesuit Survival and Restoration A Global History 1773 1900 Leiden and Boston MA Brill 2015 ISBN 9789004282384 pp 83 98 Maczek Stanislaw 1990 Od podwody do czolga Wspomnienia wojenne 1918 1945 Wroclaw Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich ISBN 83 04 03659 2 in Polish Organizacja szkol Szkolnictwo srednie Dziennik Urzedowy Ministerstwa Wyznan Religijnych i Oswiecenia Publicznego Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 1 February 1926 p 46 Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 25 November 2021 Urania no 2 1938 article W Chyrowie powstaje obserwatorium szkolne p 31 Archived from the original on 8 October 2013 Retrieved 8 October 2013 Andrzej Rostworowski Grzebien Ludwik Teofil Bzowski SJ 1873 1959 wychowawca i autor literatury mlodziezowej Spoleczenstwo kultura wychowanie w pogladach polskich jezuitow okresu II Rzeczypospolitej PDF in Polish p 313 summaries in English Obituary of Jozef Garlinski The Telegraph 1 December 2005 Retrieved 1 April 2021 Biography of Father Kazimierz Konopka SJ Book of Remembrance Biographies of Catholic Clergy and Laity Repressed in the Soviet Union USSR from 1918 to 1953 JESUITICA Auschwitz the best noviciate 8 March 2011 AFRICA ZAMBIA A tribute to Cardinal Adam Kozlowiecki First Bishop of Lusaka then for 20 years national director of the Pontifical Mission Societies in Zambia Agenzia Fides MiastoiLudzie pl regionalny serwis informacyjny Wydarzenia kultura sport z powiatow Tarnowskiego brzeskiego dabrowskiego debickiego Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 18 September 2015 one of the creators and first professors since 1920 of the Maritime School Panstwowa Szkola Morska in Tczew which is considered the cradle of the Polish merchant navy Maritime School in Tczew 1920 1930 Current exhibitions Visit us Archive National Maritime Museum in Gdansk Biografia JULIUSZ MIEROSZEWSKI http www naskale oficerskie info pliki 2013 04 14 pdf bare URL PDF Sprawozdanie Zakladu Naukowo Wychowawczego OO Jezuitow w Bakowicach pod Chyrowem za rok szkolny 1913 14 Report of the Scientific and Educational Institute OO of the Jesuits in Bakowice near Chyrow for the school year 1913 14 in Polish Przemysl Druk J Styfiego 1914 p 98 Jan Beyzym 1850 1912 http www sjweb info saintsBio cfm SaintID 287 Pozar slynnego kolegium w Chyrowie na Ukrainie rmf24 pl 24 March 2018 Retrieved 25 October 2018 External links editDobosz Andrzej Jedno slowo za duzo Tygodnik Powszechny http www tygodnik com pl numer 275012 dobosz felieton html Society culture and formation as Jesuit concepts in the inter war years in Polish nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jesuit College in Khyriv Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jesuit College in Khyriv amp oldid 1177243466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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