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John III Sobieski

John III Sobieski (Polish: Jan III Sobieski; Lithuanian: Jonas III Sobieskis; Latin: Ioannes III Sobiscius; 17 August 1629 – 17 June 1696) was King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania from 1674 until his death in 1696.

John III
Defender of the Faith
Portrait by Daniel Schultz.
King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania
Reign19 May 1674 – 17 June 1696
Coronation2 February 1676
PredecessorMichael I
SuccessorAugustus II
Born(1629-08-17)17 August 1629
Olesko Castle, Olesko, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Died17 June 1696(1696-06-17) (aged 66)
Wilanów Palace, Warsaw, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Burial
SpouseMarie Casimire Louise de La Grange d'Arquien
Issue
among others...
HouseSobieski
FatherJakub Sobieski
MotherZofia Teofillia Daniłowicz
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

Born into Polish nobility, Sobieski was educated at the Jagiellonian University and toured Europe in his youth. As a soldier and later commander, he fought in the Khmelnytsky Uprising, the Russo-Polish War and during the Swedish invasion known as the Deluge. Sobieski demonstrated his military prowess during the war against the Ottoman Empire and established himself as a leading figure in Poland and Lithuania. In 1674, he was elected monarch of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth following the sudden and unexpected death of King Michael.

Sobieski's 22-year reign marked a period of the Commonwealth's stabilization, much needed after the turmoil of previous conflicts.[1] Popular among his subjects, he was an able military leader, most famously for his victory over the Ottoman at the Battle of Vienna in 1683.[2] The defeated Ottomans named Sobieski the "Lion of Lechistan", and the Pope hailed him as the saviour of Western Christendom.[3] Suffering from poor health and obesity in later life, Sobieski died in 1696 and was buried at Wawel Cathedral in Kraków. He was succeeded by Augustus II of Poland and Saxony.

Biography

Youth

 
Olesko Castle, the birthplace of John Sobieski

John Sobieski was born on 17 August 1629, in Olesko, now in Ukraine, then part of the Ruthenian Voivodeship in the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth to a renowned noble family de Sobieszyn Sobieski of Janina coat of arms.[4][5] His father, Jakub Sobieski, was the Voivode of Ruthenia and Castellan of Kraków; his mother, Zofia Teofillia Daniłowicz was a granddaughter of Hetman Stanisław Żółkiewski.[5] John Sobieski spent his childhood in Żółkiew.[5] After graduating from Bartłomiej Nowodworski College in Kraków in 1643, young John Sobieski then graduated from the philosophical faculty of the University of Kraków in 1646.[5][6] After finishing his studies, John and his brother Marek Sobieski left for western Europe, where he spent more than two years travelling.[5][7] They visited Leipzig, Antwerp, Paris, London, Leiden, and The Hague.[5] During that time, he met influential contemporary figures such as Louis II de Bourbon, Charles II of England and William II, Prince of Orange, and learned French, German, and Italian, in addition to Latin.[8]

Both brothers returned to the Commonwealth in 1648. Upon receiving the news of the death of king Władysław IV Vasa and the hostilities of the Khmelnytsky Uprising, they volunteered for the army.[5][9] They both fought in the siege of Zamość.[5] They founded and commanded their own banners (chorągiew) of cavalry (one light, "cossack", and one heavy, of Polish hussars).[5] Soon, the fortunes of war separated the brothers. In 1649, Jakub fought in the Battle of Zboriv.[5] In 1652, Marek died in Tatar captivity after his capture at the Battle of Batih.[5][10] John was promoted to the rank of pułkownik and fought with distinction in the Battle of Berestechko.[11] In 1653, he voluntarily spent time as a hostage in the Crimean Tatar capital of Bakhchysarai.[12] A promising commander, John was sent by King John II Casimir as one of the envoys in the diplomatic mission of Mikołaj Bieganowski to the Ottoman Empire.[5][13] There, Sobieski learned the Tatar language and the Turkish language and studied Ottoman military traditions and tactics.[5][13] It is likely he participated as part of the briefly allied Polish-Tatar forces in the 1655 Battle of Okhmativ.[5]

After the start of the Swedish invasion of Poland known as "The Deluge", John Sobieski was among the Greater Polish regiments led by Krzysztof Opaliński, Palatine of Poznań which capitulated at Ujście, and swore allegiance to King Charles X Gustav of Sweden.[5][13] However, around late March 1656, he abandoned their side, returning to the side of Polish king John II Casimir Vasa, enlisting under the command of hetmans Stefan Czarniecki and Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski.[5]

Commander

 
Portrait of John III by Jan Tricius

By 26 May 1656, he received the position of the chorąży koronny (Standard-bearer of the Crown).[14] During the three-day-long battle of Warsaw of 1656, Sobieski commanded a 2,000-man strong regiment of Tatar cavalry.[14][15] He took part in a number of engagements over the next two years, including the Siege of Toruń in 1658.[14] In 1659, he was elected a deputy to the Sejm (Polish parliament), and was one of the Polish negotiators of the Treaty of Hadiach with the Cossacks.[14] In 1660, he took part in the last offensive against the Swedes in Prussia, and was rewarded with the office of starost of Stryj.[14] Soon afterward he took part in the war against the Russians, participating in the Battle of Slobodyshche and Battle of Lyubar, and later that year he again was one of the negotiators of a new treaty with the Cossacks (the Treaty of Cudnów).[14]

Through personal connections, he became a strong supporter of the French faction in the Polish royal court, represented by Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga. His pro-French allegiance was reinforced in 1665, when he married Marie Casimire Louise de la Grange d'Arquien and was promoted to the rank of Grand Marshal of the Crown.[4]

 
The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1657

In 1662, he was again elected a deputy to the Sejm, and took part in the work on reforming the military. He was also a member of the Sejm in 1664 and 1665.[14] In between he participated in the Russian campaign of 1663.[14] Sobieski remained loyal to the King during the Lubomirski Rebellion of 1665–66, though it was a difficult decision for him.[14][16] He participated in the Sejm of 1665, and after some delays, accepted the prestigious office of the Marshal of the Crown on 18 May that year.[16] Around late April or early May 1666 he received another high office of the Commonwealth, that of the Field Crown Hetman.[16] Soon afterward, he was defeated at the Battle of Mątwy, and signed the Agreement of Łęgonice on 21 July, which ended the Lubomirski Rebellion.[16]

In October 1667, he achieved another victory over the Cossacks of Petro Doroshenko and their Crimean Tatar allies in the Battle of Podhajce during the Polish–Cossack–Tatar War (1666–71).[13] This allowed him to regain his image as a skilled military leader.[16] Later that year, in November, his first child, James Louis Sobieski was born in Paris.[16] On 5 February 1668, he achieved the rank of Grand Hetman of the Crown, the highest military rank in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and thereby the de facto commander-in-chief of the entire Polish Army.[13] Later that year he supported the French candidacy of Louis, Grand Condé for the Polish throne, and after this candidacy fell apart, Philip William, Elector Palatine.[16] Following the election of Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki he joined the opposition faction; he and his allies helped veto several sejms (including the coronation ones), and his attitude once again resulted in him losing popularity among the regular szlachta.[16] While his pro-French stance in politics alienated some, his military victories against invading Tatars in 1671 helped him gain other allies.[16]

 
John III Sobieski, the victor of the Battle of Khotyn

The year 1672 saw internal politics destabilizing the Commonwealth, as the pro-French faction of Sobieski and pro-court faction of King Michał formed two confederations, which despite major Ottoman incursions in the south seemed more concerned with one another than with uniting to defend the country.[17] The court faction called openly for confiscation of his estates and dismissal from office, and declared him an "enemy of the state".[17] This division culminated in the humiliating Treaty of Buchach, where the Commonwealth was forced to cede territories to the Ottomans, but promise an annual tribute.[18] Sobieski eventually succeeded in balancing politics and national defense, and a combination of his military victories over the invaders, and successful negotiations at the Sejm in April 1673, led to a compromise in which the court faction dropped its demands and challenges against him.[17]

In the year 1672, the Polish-Lithuanian Tatars rose up in open rebellion against the Commonwealth. This was the widely remembered Lipka rebellion. Thanks to the efforts of Sobieski, who was held in great esteem by the Tatar soldiers, many of the Lipkas seeking asylum and service in the Ottoman Army returned to his command.

On 11 November 1673, Sobieski added a major victory to his list, this time defeating the Ottomans in the Battle of Khotyn and capturing the fortress located there.[13] The news of the battle coincided with the death of King Michal the day before the battle.[13] This made Sobieski one of the leading figures of the state, so on 19 May the following year, he was elected monarch of the Commonwealth.[4] His candidacy was almost universally supported, with only a dozen or so members of the diet opposing him (mainly centered around magnates of the Lithuanian Pac family).[17] In light of the war, requiring Sobieski to be on the front lines, the coronation ceremony was significantly delayed – he was crowned John III almost two years later, on 2 February 1676.[4][17]

King of Poland

 
Sobieski's coronation (1676), relief, Wilanów Palace

Though Poland-Lithuania was at that time the largest and one of the most populous states of Europe,[19] Sobieski became a king of a country devastated by almost half a century of constant war.[20] The treasury was almost empty and the court had little to offer the powerful magnates, who often allied themselves with foreign courts rather than the state.[21][22]

Sobieski had a number of long-term plans, including establishing his own dynasty in the Commonwealth, regaining lost territories, and strengthening the country through various reforms.[22][23] One of his ambitions was to unify Christian Europe in a crusade to drive the Turks out of Europe.[23] At the beginning of his reign, however, the Polish state was in dire fiscal straits and faced military threats to the north. King Louis XIV of France promised to mediate a truce between the Ottomans and Poland so that Sobieski could focus his attentions on Prussia. The negotiations ended in failure and Sobieski's Baltic goals had to be tempered by the immediate reality of the Ottoman threat to the south.[18][22][24]

 
Sobieski with the Order of the Holy Spirit, circa 1676

In the autumn of 1674, he recommenced the war against the Ottomans and managed to recapture a number of cities and fortresses including Bratslav, Mogilev, and Bar, which re-established a strongly fortified line defending Poland's southern border in Ukraine.[17] In 1675, Sobieski defeated a Turkish and Tatar offensive aiming at Lviv.[17][25] In 1676, the Tatars began a counter-offensive and crossed the Dneper, but could not retake the strategic town of Żórawno, and a peace treaty (the Treaty of Żurawno) was signed soon afterwards.[17] Although Kamieniec Podolski and much of Podolia remained a part of the Ottoman Empire, Poland gained the return of the towns of Bila Tserkva and Pavoloch.[17]

The treaty with the Ottomans began a period of peace that was much needed for the repair of the country and strengthening of the royal authority. Sobieski managed to reform the Polish army completely.[24] The army was reorganised into regiments, the infantry finally dropped pikes, replacing them with battle-axes, and the Polish cavalry adopted hussar and dragoon formations.[26] Sobieski also greatly increased the number of cannon and introduced new artillery tactics.[26]

Sobieski wanted to conquer Prussia with Swedish troops and French support.[24] Regaining control of this autonomous province was in the Commonwealth's best interest, and Sobieski also hoped for it to become part of his family domain.[22] To this end he made the secret Treaty of Jaworów (1675), but he achieved nothing. The wars with the Ottoman Empire were not decisively won by the Commonwealth, the ruler of Brandenburg-Prussia made treaties with France, Prussia defeated the Swedish invasion, and Sobieski's plans for the Commonwealth's own military campaign against Prussia was opposed by Commonwealth magnates, many of them taking the Prussian side.[17][22][25][27][28] Backed by Brandenburg and Austria, internal enemies of Sobieski even planned to dethrone him and elect Charles of Lorraine.[27]

 
Sobieski defeats the Ottomans at the Battle of Vienna in 1683, by Martino Altomonte

The French-Prussian treaty of 1679 meant that Sobieski lost the major foreign ally for his planned campaign against Prussia; consequently, he started to distance himself from the pro-French faction, which, in turn, resulted in the cooling down of the Polish-French relations. During the Sejm of 1683, the French ambassador was expelled for involvement with a plan to dethrone Sobieski, which definitely marked the end of the Polish-French alliance.[27] At the same time Sobieski made peace with the pro-Habsburg faction and started to gravitate towards an alliance with Austria.[27][28] This did not end the existence of strong internal opposition to Sobieski; however, it changed a number of allegiances, and further opposition was temporarily weakened through the king's successful political maneuvering, including granting the Grand Hetman office to one of the opposition's chief leaders, Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski.[27][29]

 
Polish coin minted during John III Sobieski reign, c. 1682

Conscious that Poland lacked allies and risked war against most of its neighbours (a situation similar to the Deluge), Sobieski allied himself by 1683 with Leopold I, of the Holy Roman Empire.[27] Both sides promised to come to one's another aid if their capitals were threatened.[22] The alliance was signed by royal representatives on 31 March 1683 and ratified by the Emperor and Polish parliament within weeks.[30] Although aimed directly against the Ottomans and indirectly against France, it had the advantage of gaining internal support for the defense of Poland's southern borders.[27] This was a beginning of what would become the Holy League, championed by Pope Innocent XI to preserve Christendom.[31]

Meantime, in the spring of 1683, royal spies uncovered Ottoman preparations for a military campaign. Sobieski feared that the target might be the Polish cities of Lwów and Kraków.[13] To counteract the threat, Sobieski began the fortification of the cities and ordered universal military conscription.[13] In July, the Austrian envoy asked for Polish assistance.[32] Soon afterward, the Polish army started massing for an expedition against the Ottomans, and in August was joined by Bavarians and Saxon allies under Charles of Lorraine.[30][32]

Battle of Vienna

 
Victorious John III Sobieski at the Battle of Vienna in 1683, equestrian portrait by Jerzy Siemiginowski-Eleuter

Sobieski's greatest success came in 1683, with his victory at the Battle of Vienna, in joint command of Polish and German troops, against the invading Ottomans under Kara Mustafa.[27][32] Upon reaching Vienna on 12 September, with the Ottoman Army close to breaching the walls, Sobieski ordered a full attack. In the early morning, the united army of about 65,000[33]–76,000[32] men (including 22,000,[33]-27,000 Poles[27]) attacked a Turkish force of about 143,000[33][32] men. At about 17:00, after observing the infantry battle from the Kahlenberg hilltop, Sobieski led the Polish husaria cavalry along with Austrians and Germans in a massive charge down the hillside. Soon, the Ottoman battle line was broken and the Ottoman forces scattered in disarray.[34] At 17:30, Sobieski entered the deserted tent of Kara Mustafa and the Battle of Vienna ended.[30][32]

The Pope and other foreign dignitaries hailed Sobieski as the "Savior of Vienna and Western European civilization."[35] In a letter to his wife, he wrote, "All the common people kissed my hands, my feet, my clothes; others only touched me, saying: 'Ah, let us kiss so valiant a hand!'"[36]

 
Sobieski sending message of victory to the Pope after the Battle of Vienna, by Jan Matejko, 1880, Vatican Museums

The war against the Ottomans was not yet over, and Sobieski continued the campaign with the Battle of Párkány on 7–9 October.[37] After early victories, the Polish found themselves a junior partner in the Holy League, gaining no lasting territorial or political rewards.[37] The prolonged and indecisive war also weakened Sobieski's position at home.[37] For the next four years Poland would blockade the key fortress at Kamenets, and Ottoman Tatars would raid the borderlands. In 1691, Sobieski undertook another expedition to Moldavia, with slightly better results, but still with no decisive victories.[37]

Later years and death

Although the King spent much time on the battlefields, which could suggest a good state of health, towards the end of his life he became seriously and increasingly ill.[38]

King John III Sobieski died in Wilanów, Poland on 17 June 1696 from a sudden heart attack.[38] His wife, Marie Casimire Louise, died in 1716 in Blois, France, and her body was returned to Poland. They are interred together in Wawel Cathedral, Kraków,[39] although his heart is interned separately in the Church of the Transfiguration in Warsaw, Poland.[40][41] He was succeeded by Augustus II.[42]

Legacy and significance

 
Portrayal of Sobieski's royal crown, Gdańsk

Sobieski is remembered in Poland as a "hero king", victor at Vienna who defeated the Ottoman threat, an image that became particularly well recognized after his story was told in many works of 19th-century literature.[43] In the Polish Biographical Dictionary he is described as "an individual above his contemporaries, but still one of them"; an oligarch and a magnate, interested in personal wealth and power.[43] His ambitions for the most part were instilled in him by his beloved wife, whom he undoubtedly loved more than any throne (when being forced to divorce her and marry the former Queen as a condition to gain the throne, he immediately refused the throne) and tended to obey, at times blindly.[44][45]

He failed to reform the ailing Commonwealth, and to secure the throne for his heir.[43] At the same time, he displayed high military prowess, he was well educated and literate, and a patron of science and arts. He supported the astronomer Johannes Hevelius, mathematician Adam Adamandy Kochański and the historian and poet Wespazjan Kochowski. His Wilanów Palace became the first of many palaces that would dot the lands of the Commonwealth over the next two centuries.[43]

Gallery

Family

 
Sobieski and his sons

On 5 July 1665, he married the widow of Jan "Sobiepan" Zamoyski, Marie Casimire Louise de la Grange d'Arquien (1641–1716), of Nevers, Burgundy, France. Their children were:

  • James Louis Sobieski (2 November 1667 – 19 December 1737), Crown Prince of Poland, married Countess Palatine Hedwig Elisabeth of Neuburg and had issue.
  • Twin Daughters (9 May 1669), stillborn or died shortly after birth.
  • Teresa Teofila (October 1670), was a frail child and failed to survive for more than a month.
  • Adelajda Ludwika (15 October 1672 – 10 February 1677), called "Barbelune", died at the age of four.
  • Maria Teresa (18 October 1673 – 7 December 1675), called "La Mannone", died at the age of two.
  • Daughter (October 1674), stillborn or died shortly after birth.
  • Teresa Kunegunda (4 March 1676 – 10 March 1730), married Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria and had issue.
  • Aleksander Benedykt (6 September 1677 – 19 November 1714), died unmarried.
  • Daughter (13 November 1678), stillborn or died shortly after birth.
  • Konstanty Władysław (1 May 1680 – 28 February 1726), married Maria Józefa Wessel but had no issue.
  • Jan (4 June 1683 – 1 January/12 April 1685), died at the age of one.
  • Daughter (20 December 1684), stillborn or died shortly after birth.

Sobieski family

Royal titles

Literary references

  • Vincenzo da Filicaia[47] (1642-1707) wrote a collection of odes or canzoni about the raising of the siege of Vienna by King John III Sobieski titled "Canzoni in occasione dell'assedio, e liberazione di Vienna," published by Piero Matini in Florence in 1684.[48]
  • the first known book review journal Nouvelles de la république des lettres (News from the Republic of Letters), edited and largely written by the Protestant philosopher Pierre Bayle, included a number of works about King Sobieski's victory in its 1st volume:[49] an address to the King (pp. 179–180), Motet Dramatique ou Oratoire (pp. 181–182), Paralelle de Jules Cesar et du Roi de Pologne ("Venit, vidit, vicit..." (pp. 183–185)[50]
  • William Wordsworth wrote on February 4, 1816, and published the same year among the "Sonnets dedicated to Liberty"[51] (or "Poems dedicated to Independence and Liberty"[52]) his "Siege of Vienna Raised by John Sobieski", which was his take on da Falicaia's ode to Sobieski's victory, about which Wordworth wrote, "This, and his other poems on the same occasion [of Sobieski's raising the siege of Vienna], are superior perhaps to any lyrical pieces that contemporary events have ever given birth to, those of the Hebrew Scriptures only excepted.—W. W. (1816 and 1820.)"

Popular culture

When he turned to go back to the camp, he discovered that there was another man up on this hill, a stone’s throw away: some kind of monk or holy man, perhaps, as he was dressed in a rough sackcloth robe, with no finery. But then the bloke whipped out a sword. It was not one of your needle-thin rapiers, such as fops pushed at each other in the streets of London and Paris, but some kind of relic of the Crusades, a two-handed production with a single crossbar instead of a proper guard—the sort of thing Richard the Lionhearted might’ve used to slay camels in the streets of Jerusalem. This man went down on one knee in the dirt, and he did it with verve and enthusiasm. You see your rich man kneeling in church and it takes him two or three minutes, you can hear his knees popping and sinews creaking, he totters this way and that, creating small alarums amongst the servants who are gripping his elbows. But this brute knelt easily, even lustily if such a thing were possible, and facing toward the city of Vienna, he planted his sword in the ground so that it became a steel cross. The morning light was shining directly into his grizzled face and glinting from the steel of the blade and glowing in some indifferent colored jewels set into the weapon’s hilt and crossbar. The man bowed his head and took to mumbling in Latin. The hand that wasn’t holding the sword was thumbing through a rosary—Jack’s cue to exit stage right. But as he was leaving he recognized the man with the broadsword as King John Sobieski.

— Neal Stephenson, King of the Vagabonds, chapter "The Continent"

See also

References

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  2. ^ J.A. Hammerton (2007). Peoples of All Nations: Their Life Today And Story of Their Past. Concept Publishing Company. p. 4142. ISBN 978-81-7268-144-9.
  3. ^ Mario Reading (2009). The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. p. 382. ISBN 978-1-906787-39-4.
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  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.413
  6. ^ J.B. Morton. Sobieski, King of Poland. pp. 30–31.
  7. ^ Tindal Palmer 1815, p. 5
  8. ^ Daniel Stone (2001). The Polish–Lithuanian state, 1386–1795. University of Washington Press. p. 236. ISBN 0-295-98093-1.
  9. ^ Tindal Palmer 1815, p. 7
  10. ^ Tindal Palmer 1815, pp. 12–13
  11. ^ Tindal Palmer 1815, p. 20
  12. ^ Brian Glyn Williams (2013). (PDF). The Jamestown Foundation. p. 24. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 October 2013.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Simon Millar; Peter Dennis (2008). Vienna 1683: Christian Europe Repels the Ottomans. Osprey Publishing. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-84603-231-8.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.414
  15. ^ Tindal Palmer 1815, pp. 23–24
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.415
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.416
  18. ^ a b Frank N. Magill (13 September 2013). The 17th and 18th Centuries: Dictionary of World Biography. Routledge. p. 726. ISBN 978-1-135-92414-0.
  19. ^ Howard N. Lupovitch (16 December 2009). Jews and Judaism in World History. Routledge. p. 120. ISBN 978-1-135-18965-5.
  20. ^ Joseph Cummins (2008). The War Chronicles: From Chariots to Flintlocks. Fair Winds. p. 323. ISBN 978-1-61673-403-9.
  21. ^ F. L. Carsten (1 January 1961). The New Cambridge Modern History: Volume 5, The Ascendancy of France, 1648–88. CUP Archive. p. 564. ISBN 978-0-521-04544-5.
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  24. ^ a b c Wiktor Waintraub (1976). Memoirs of the Polish Baroque: the writings of Jan Chryzostom Pasek, a squire of the Commonwealth of Poland and Lithuania. University of California Press. p. 308. ISBN 0-520-02752-3.
  25. ^ a b Oskar Halecki; W: F. Reddaway; J. H. Penson. The Cambridge History of Poland. CUP Archive. p. 542. ISBN 978-1-00-128802-4.
  26. ^ a b Mirosław Nagielski (1995). Hetmani Rzeczypospolitej Obojga Narodów (in Polish). Bellona. p. 227. ISBN 83-11-08275-8.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.417
  28. ^ a b Oskar Halecki; W: F. Reddaway; J. H. Penson. The Cambridge History of Poland. CUP Archive. pp. 543–544. ISBN 978-1-00-128802-4.
  29. ^ Oskar Halecki; W: F. Reddaway; J. H. Penson. The Cambridge History of Poland. CUP Archive. p. 541. ISBN 978-1-00-128802-4.
  30. ^ a b c Kenneth Meyer Setton (1991). Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century. American Philosophical Society. pp. 266–269. ISBN 978-0-87169-192-7.
  31. ^ Oskar Halecki; W: F. Reddaway; J. H. Penson. The Cambridge History of Poland. CUP Archive. pp. 544–545. ISBN 978-1-00-128802-4.
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  33. ^ a b c Miltiades Varvounis (2012). JAN SOBIESKI. Xlibris Corporation. p. 189. ISBN 978-1-4628-8082-9.
  34. ^ Miltiades Varvounis (2012). JAN SOBIESKI. Xlibris Corporation. p. 195. ISBN 978-1-4628-8082-9.
  35. ^ World Book, Inc (2007). "Volume 1". The World Book Encyclopedia. Bellona. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-7166-0107-4.
  36. ^ Mizwa, Stephen Paul (1942). Great Men and Women of Poland. New York: Macmillan. p. 103.
  37. ^ a b c d Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.418
  38. ^ a b Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.419
  39. ^ FM., RMF. "Kto przewiózł trumnę Marysieńki Sobieskiej do Polski?".
  40. ^ "Poland.Church of the Transfiguration (Kościół Przemienienia Pańskiego)".
  41. ^ "English: Sarcophagus with the heart of Jan III Sobieski in the Capuchin church in Warsaw". 15 May 2018.
  42. ^ Oskar Halecki; W: F. Reddaway; J. H. Penson. The Cambridge History of Poland. CUP Archive. p. 547. ISBN 978-1-00-128802-4.
  43. ^ a b c d Red. (Eds.), Jan III Sobieski, p.420
  44. ^ de Battaglia, O.Forst. The Cambridge History of Poland. Cambridge University Press. p. 539. ISBN 9781001288024.
  45. ^ Drohojowska, Countess Antoinette Joséphine Françoise Anne; Salvandy, Achille (Count.) (1856). Love of Country, or Sobieski and Hedwig. Compiled and translated from the French (of N. A. de Salvandy, the Countess Drohojowska, etc.) by Trauermantel. Crosby, Nichols, and company. pp. 87–88.
  46. ^ Ignacy Zagórski, Edward Rastawiecki (baron) (1845). Monety dawnej polski jakoteż prowincyj i miast do niéj niegdy należacych: z trzech ostatnich wieków zebrane (in Polish). S.H. Merzbach. p. 75.
  47. ^ "Treccani - la cultura italiana | Treccani, il portale del sapere".
  48. ^ Canzoni in occasione dell'assedio, e liberatione di Vienna ([Reprod.]) / Di Vincenzio da Filicaia. 1684.
  49. ^ "Nouvelles de la republique des lettres". 1684.
  50. ^ Jerzy Starnawski, Łacińska scenka dramatyczna ku czci Jana III Sobieskiego na łamach 'Nouvelles de la Republique des Lettres' /1684/, Zeszyty Naukowe Wyższej Szkoły Pedagogicznej w Bydgoszczy. Studia filologiczne 1983 z. 18.
  51. ^ The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Vol. VI (of 8). William Knight (ed.). Macmillan and Co. 1896. p. 110.
  52. ^ John Frederick Wyatt, "Wordsworth and the Geologists: A Correlation of Influences". 1991. pp. 292-293

Bibliography

  • Tindal Palmer, Alicia (1815), Authentic memoirs of John Sobieski, King of Poland, Printed for the author; and sold by Longman and Co
  • Red. (Eds.) (1962–1964). "Jan III Sobieski". Polski Słownik Biograficzny (in Polish). Vol. X.

Further reading

  • Chełmecki, König J. Sobieski und die Befreiung Wiens (Vienna, 1883)
  • Coyer, Histoire de Jean Sobieski (Amsterdam, 1761 and 1783)
  • Du Hamel de Breuil, Sobieski et sa politique de 1674 à 1683 (Paris, 1894)
  • Dupont, Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de Sobieski (Warsaw, 1885)
  • Rieder, Johann III., König von Polen (Vienna, 1883)
  • Salvandy, Histoire de Pologne avant et sous le roi Jean Sobieski (two volumes, new edition, Paris, 1855)
  • AA.VV., L'Europa di Giovanni Sobieski. Cultura, politica, mercatura e società, a cura di Gaetano Platania, Viterbo, Sette Città editore, 2005 (CESPoM n. 10, Centro Studi sull'Età dei Sobieski e della Polonia Moderna)
  • G. Platania, Polonia e Curia romana. Corrispondenza del lucchese Tommaso Talenti segretario intimo del Re di Polonia con Carlo Barberini protettore del regno (1681–1693). vol. 1, pp. 7–613, Viterbo, Sette Città Editore, 2004, ISBN 8886091613
  • Radoslaw Sikora, Bartosz Musialowicz, Winged Hussars, BUM Magazine, 2016.
  • Tatham, John Sobieski (Oxford, 1881)
  • Miltiades Varvounis, Jan Sobieski: The King Who Saved Europe (2012)
  • G. Platania, L’inedita corrispondenza di Jan III Sobieski e Carlo Barberini, cardinale Protettore del Regno, in Studia Wilanowskie, vol. XXII, pp. 99–119, Wilanów-Muzeum Palacu Króla Jana III w Wilanowie. ISSN 0137-7329.
  • G. Platania, Polonia e Curia romana. Corrispondenza di Giovanni III Sobieski, re di Polonia, con Carlo Barberini, protettore del regno (1681–1696). Collana Barberiniana vol. 2, pp. 11–385, Viterbo, Sette Città editore, ISBN 978-88-7853-252-6
  • Waliszewski, Acta (three volumes, Cracow, 1684)
  • Prochazka Jiří: "1683. Vienna obsessa. Via Silesiaca". (Brno, Wien 2012), ISBN 978-80-903476-3-2

External links

  • Polish website about John III Sobieski
  • Jan III Sobieski of the Janina coat of arms at the Wilanow Palace Museum
  • Jan III Sobieski – a book lover at the Wilanow Palace Museum
  • Jan III Sobieski's entry into Krakow for coronation at the Wilanow Palace Museum
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "John Sobieski" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "John III. Sobieski" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). pp. 442–443.
John III Sobieski
Born: 17 August 1629 Died: 17 June 1696
Regnal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Michael I
King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania

1674–1696
Vacant
Title next held by
Augustus II
Political offices
Vacant
Title last held by
Stefan Czarniecki
Field Crown Hetman of Poland
1666–1667
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Stanisław "Rewera" Potocki
Great Crown Hetman of Poland
1667–1674
Preceded by Great Marshal of the Crown of Poland
1667–1674
Succeeded by

john, sobieski, other, monarchs, with, similar, names, john, poland, disambiguation, descendant, john, sobieski, colonel, polish, sobieski, lithuanian, jonas, sobieskis, latin, ioannes, sobiscius, august, 1629, june, 1696, king, poland, grand, duke, lithuania,. For other monarchs with similar names see John of Poland disambiguation For his descendant see John Sobieski U S Colonel John III Sobieski Polish Jan III Sobieski Lithuanian Jonas III Sobieskis Latin Ioannes III Sobiscius 17 August 1629 17 June 1696 was King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania from 1674 until his death in 1696 John IIIDefender of the FaithPortrait by Daniel Schultz King of PolandGrand Duke of LithuaniaReign19 May 1674 17 June 1696Coronation2 February 1676PredecessorMichael ISuccessorAugustus IIBorn 1629 08 17 17 August 1629Olesko Castle Olesko Polish Lithuanian CommonwealthDied17 June 1696 1696 06 17 aged 66 Wilanow Palace Warsaw Polish Lithuanian CommonwealthBurialWawel Cathedral KrakowSpouseMarie Casimire Louise de La Grange d ArquienIssueamong others James Prince of Olawa Teresa Electress of Bavaria Prince Aleksander Prince KonstantyHouseSobieskiFatherJakub SobieskiMotherZofia Teofillia DanilowiczReligionRoman CatholicismSignatureBorn into Polish nobility Sobieski was educated at the Jagiellonian University and toured Europe in his youth As a soldier and later commander he fought in the Khmelnytsky Uprising the Russo Polish War and during the Swedish invasion known as the Deluge Sobieski demonstrated his military prowess during the war against the Ottoman Empire and established himself as a leading figure in Poland and Lithuania In 1674 he was elected monarch of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth following the sudden and unexpected death of King Michael Sobieski s 22 year reign marked a period of the Commonwealth s stabilization much needed after the turmoil of previous conflicts 1 Popular among his subjects he was an able military leader most famously for his victory over the Ottoman at the Battle of Vienna in 1683 2 The defeated Ottomans named Sobieski the Lion of Lechistan and the Pope hailed him as the saviour of Western Christendom 3 Suffering from poor health and obesity in later life Sobieski died in 1696 and was buried at Wawel Cathedral in Krakow He was succeeded by Augustus II of Poland and Saxony Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Youth 1 2 Commander 1 3 King of Poland 1 4 Battle of Vienna 1 5 Later years and death 2 Legacy and significance 2 1 Gallery 3 Family 3 1 Sobieski family 4 Royal titles 5 Literary references 6 Popular culture 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography EditYouth Edit Olesko Castle the birthplace of John SobieskiJohn Sobieski was born on 17 August 1629 in Olesko now in Ukraine then part of the Ruthenian Voivodeship in the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth to a renowned noble family de Sobieszyn Sobieski of Janina coat of arms 4 5 His father Jakub Sobieski was the Voivode of Ruthenia and Castellan of Krakow his mother Zofia Teofillia Danilowicz was a granddaughter of Hetman Stanislaw Zolkiewski 5 John Sobieski spent his childhood in Zolkiew 5 After graduating from Bartlomiej Nowodworski College in Krakow in 1643 young John Sobieski then graduated from the philosophical faculty of the University of Krakow in 1646 5 6 After finishing his studies John and his brother Marek Sobieski left for western Europe where he spent more than two years travelling 5 7 They visited Leipzig Antwerp Paris London Leiden and The Hague 5 During that time he met influential contemporary figures such as Louis II de Bourbon Charles II of England and William II Prince of Orange and learned French German and Italian in addition to Latin 8 Both brothers returned to the Commonwealth in 1648 Upon receiving the news of the death of king Wladyslaw IV Vasa and the hostilities of the Khmelnytsky Uprising they volunteered for the army 5 9 They both fought in the siege of Zamosc 5 They founded and commanded their own banners choragiew of cavalry one light cossack and one heavy of Polish hussars 5 Soon the fortunes of war separated the brothers In 1649 Jakub fought in the Battle of Zboriv 5 In 1652 Marek died in Tatar captivity after his capture at the Battle of Batih 5 10 John was promoted to the rank of pulkownik and fought with distinction in the Battle of Berestechko 11 In 1653 he voluntarily spent time as a hostage in the Crimean Tatar capital of Bakhchysarai 12 A promising commander John was sent by King John II Casimir as one of the envoys in the diplomatic mission of Mikolaj Bieganowski to the Ottoman Empire 5 13 There Sobieski learned the Tatar language and the Turkish language and studied Ottoman military traditions and tactics 5 13 It is likely he participated as part of the briefly allied Polish Tatar forces in the 1655 Battle of Okhmativ 5 After the start of the Swedish invasion of Poland known as The Deluge John Sobieski was among the Greater Polish regiments led by Krzysztof Opalinski Palatine of Poznan which capitulated at Ujscie and swore allegiance to King Charles X Gustav of Sweden 5 13 However around late March 1656 he abandoned their side returning to the side of Polish king John II Casimir Vasa enlisting under the command of hetmans Stefan Czarniecki and Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski 5 Commander Edit Portrait of John III by Jan TriciusBy 26 May 1656 he received the position of the chorazy koronny Standard bearer of the Crown 14 During the three day long battle of Warsaw of 1656 Sobieski commanded a 2 000 man strong regiment of Tatar cavalry 14 15 He took part in a number of engagements over the next two years including the Siege of Torun in 1658 14 In 1659 he was elected a deputy to the Sejm Polish parliament and was one of the Polish negotiators of the Treaty of Hadiach with the Cossacks 14 In 1660 he took part in the last offensive against the Swedes in Prussia and was rewarded with the office of starost of Stryj 14 Soon afterward he took part in the war against the Russians participating in the Battle of Slobodyshche and Battle of Lyubar and later that year he again was one of the negotiators of a new treaty with the Cossacks the Treaty of Cudnow 14 Through personal connections he became a strong supporter of the French faction in the Polish royal court represented by Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga His pro French allegiance was reinforced in 1665 when he married Marie Casimire Louise de la Grange d Arquien and was promoted to the rank of Grand Marshal of the Crown 4 The Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1657In 1662 he was again elected a deputy to the Sejm and took part in the work on reforming the military He was also a member of the Sejm in 1664 and 1665 14 In between he participated in the Russian campaign of 1663 14 Sobieski remained loyal to the King during the Lubomirski Rebellion of 1665 66 though it was a difficult decision for him 14 16 He participated in the Sejm of 1665 and after some delays accepted the prestigious office of the Marshal of the Crown on 18 May that year 16 Around late April or early May 1666 he received another high office of the Commonwealth that of the Field Crown Hetman 16 Soon afterward he was defeated at the Battle of Matwy and signed the Agreement of Legonice on 21 July which ended the Lubomirski Rebellion 16 In October 1667 he achieved another victory over the Cossacks of Petro Doroshenko and their Crimean Tatar allies in the Battle of Podhajce during the Polish Cossack Tatar War 1666 71 13 This allowed him to regain his image as a skilled military leader 16 Later that year in November his first child James Louis Sobieski was born in Paris 16 On 5 February 1668 he achieved the rank of Grand Hetman of the Crown the highest military rank in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and thereby the de facto commander in chief of the entire Polish Army 13 Later that year he supported the French candidacy of Louis Grand Conde for the Polish throne and after this candidacy fell apart Philip William Elector Palatine 16 Following the election of Michal Korybut Wisniowiecki he joined the opposition faction he and his allies helped veto several sejms including the coronation ones and his attitude once again resulted in him losing popularity among the regular szlachta 16 While his pro French stance in politics alienated some his military victories against invading Tatars in 1671 helped him gain other allies 16 John III Sobieski the victor of the Battle of KhotynThe year 1672 saw internal politics destabilizing the Commonwealth as the pro French faction of Sobieski and pro court faction of King Michal formed two confederations which despite major Ottoman incursions in the south seemed more concerned with one another than with uniting to defend the country 17 The court faction called openly for confiscation of his estates and dismissal from office and declared him an enemy of the state 17 This division culminated in the humiliating Treaty of Buchach where the Commonwealth was forced to cede territories to the Ottomans but promise an annual tribute 18 Sobieski eventually succeeded in balancing politics and national defense and a combination of his military victories over the invaders and successful negotiations at the Sejm in April 1673 led to a compromise in which the court faction dropped its demands and challenges against him 17 In the year 1672 the Polish Lithuanian Tatars rose up in open rebellion against the Commonwealth This was the widely remembered Lipka rebellion Thanks to the efforts of Sobieski who was held in great esteem by the Tatar soldiers many of the Lipkas seeking asylum and service in the Ottoman Army returned to his command On 11 November 1673 Sobieski added a major victory to his list this time defeating the Ottomans in the Battle of Khotyn and capturing the fortress located there 13 The news of the battle coincided with the death of King Michal the day before the battle 13 This made Sobieski one of the leading figures of the state so on 19 May the following year he was elected monarch of the Commonwealth 4 His candidacy was almost universally supported with only a dozen or so members of the diet opposing him mainly centered around magnates of the Lithuanian Pac family 17 In light of the war requiring Sobieski to be on the front lines the coronation ceremony was significantly delayed he was crowned John III almost two years later on 2 February 1676 4 17 King of Poland Edit Sobieski s coronation 1676 relief Wilanow PalaceThough Poland Lithuania was at that time the largest and one of the most populous states of Europe 19 Sobieski became a king of a country devastated by almost half a century of constant war 20 The treasury was almost empty and the court had little to offer the powerful magnates who often allied themselves with foreign courts rather than the state 21 22 Sobieski had a number of long term plans including establishing his own dynasty in the Commonwealth regaining lost territories and strengthening the country through various reforms 22 23 One of his ambitions was to unify Christian Europe in a crusade to drive the Turks out of Europe 23 At the beginning of his reign however the Polish state was in dire fiscal straits and faced military threats to the north King Louis XIV of France promised to mediate a truce between the Ottomans and Poland so that Sobieski could focus his attentions on Prussia The negotiations ended in failure and Sobieski s Baltic goals had to be tempered by the immediate reality of the Ottoman threat to the south 18 22 24 Sobieski with the Order of the Holy Spirit circa 1676In the autumn of 1674 he recommenced the war against the Ottomans and managed to recapture a number of cities and fortresses including Bratslav Mogilev and Bar which re established a strongly fortified line defending Poland s southern border in Ukraine 17 In 1675 Sobieski defeated a Turkish and Tatar offensive aiming at Lviv 17 25 In 1676 the Tatars began a counter offensive and crossed the Dneper but could not retake the strategic town of Zorawno and a peace treaty the Treaty of Zurawno was signed soon afterwards 17 Although Kamieniec Podolski and much of Podolia remained a part of the Ottoman Empire Poland gained the return of the towns of Bila Tserkva and Pavoloch 17 The treaty with the Ottomans began a period of peace that was much needed for the repair of the country and strengthening of the royal authority Sobieski managed to reform the Polish army completely 24 The army was reorganised into regiments the infantry finally dropped pikes replacing them with battle axes and the Polish cavalry adopted hussar and dragoon formations 26 Sobieski also greatly increased the number of cannon and introduced new artillery tactics 26 Sobieski wanted to conquer Prussia with Swedish troops and French support 24 Regaining control of this autonomous province was in the Commonwealth s best interest and Sobieski also hoped for it to become part of his family domain 22 To this end he made the secret Treaty of Jaworow 1675 but he achieved nothing The wars with the Ottoman Empire were not decisively won by the Commonwealth the ruler of Brandenburg Prussia made treaties with France Prussia defeated the Swedish invasion and Sobieski s plans for the Commonwealth s own military campaign against Prussia was opposed by Commonwealth magnates many of them taking the Prussian side 17 22 25 27 28 Backed by Brandenburg and Austria internal enemies of Sobieski even planned to dethrone him and elect Charles of Lorraine 27 Sobieski defeats the Ottomans at the Battle of Vienna in 1683 by Martino AltomonteThe French Prussian treaty of 1679 meant that Sobieski lost the major foreign ally for his planned campaign against Prussia consequently he started to distance himself from the pro French faction which in turn resulted in the cooling down of the Polish French relations During the Sejm of 1683 the French ambassador was expelled for involvement with a plan to dethrone Sobieski which definitely marked the end of the Polish French alliance 27 At the same time Sobieski made peace with the pro Habsburg faction and started to gravitate towards an alliance with Austria 27 28 This did not end the existence of strong internal opposition to Sobieski however it changed a number of allegiances and further opposition was temporarily weakened through the king s successful political maneuvering including granting the Grand Hetman office to one of the opposition s chief leaders Stanislaw Jan Jablonowski 27 29 Polish coin minted during John III Sobieski reign c 1682Conscious that Poland lacked allies and risked war against most of its neighbours a situation similar to the Deluge Sobieski allied himself by 1683 with Leopold I of the Holy Roman Empire 27 Both sides promised to come to one s another aid if their capitals were threatened 22 The alliance was signed by royal representatives on 31 March 1683 and ratified by the Emperor and Polish parliament within weeks 30 Although aimed directly against the Ottomans and indirectly against France it had the advantage of gaining internal support for the defense of Poland s southern borders 27 This was a beginning of what would become the Holy League championed by Pope Innocent XI to preserve Christendom 31 Meantime in the spring of 1683 royal spies uncovered Ottoman preparations for a military campaign Sobieski feared that the target might be the Polish cities of Lwow and Krakow 13 To counteract the threat Sobieski began the fortification of the cities and ordered universal military conscription 13 In July the Austrian envoy asked for Polish assistance 32 Soon afterward the Polish army started massing for an expedition against the Ottomans and in August was joined by Bavarians and Saxon allies under Charles of Lorraine 30 32 Battle of Vienna Edit Main article Battle of Vienna Victorious John III Sobieski at the Battle of Vienna in 1683 equestrian portrait by Jerzy Siemiginowski EleuterSobieski s greatest success came in 1683 with his victory at the Battle of Vienna in joint command of Polish and German troops against the invading Ottomans under Kara Mustafa 27 32 Upon reaching Vienna on 12 September with the Ottoman Army close to breaching the walls Sobieski ordered a full attack In the early morning the united army of about 65 000 33 76 000 32 men including 22 000 33 27 000 Poles 27 attacked a Turkish force of about 143 000 33 32 men At about 17 00 after observing the infantry battle from the Kahlenberg hilltop Sobieski led the Polish husaria cavalry along with Austrians and Germans in a massive charge down the hillside Soon the Ottoman battle line was broken and the Ottoman forces scattered in disarray 34 At 17 30 Sobieski entered the deserted tent of Kara Mustafa and the Battle of Vienna ended 30 32 The Pope and other foreign dignitaries hailed Sobieski as the Savior of Vienna and Western European civilization 35 In a letter to his wife he wrote All the common people kissed my hands my feet my clothes others only touched me saying Ah let us kiss so valiant a hand 36 Sobieski sending message of victory to the Pope after the Battle of Vienna by Jan Matejko 1880 Vatican MuseumsThe war against the Ottomans was not yet over and Sobieski continued the campaign with the Battle of Parkany on 7 9 October 37 After early victories the Polish found themselves a junior partner in the Holy League gaining no lasting territorial or political rewards 37 The prolonged and indecisive war also weakened Sobieski s position at home 37 For the next four years Poland would blockade the key fortress at Kamenets and Ottoman Tatars would raid the borderlands In 1691 Sobieski undertook another expedition to Moldavia with slightly better results but still with no decisive victories 37 Later years and death Edit Although the King spent much time on the battlefields which could suggest a good state of health towards the end of his life he became seriously and increasingly ill 38 King John III Sobieski died in Wilanow Poland on 17 June 1696 from a sudden heart attack 38 His wife Marie Casimire Louise died in 1716 in Blois France and her body was returned to Poland They are interred together in Wawel Cathedral Krakow 39 although his heart is interned separately in the Church of the Transfiguration in Warsaw Poland 40 41 He was succeeded by Augustus II 42 Legacy and significance Edit Portrayal of Sobieski s royal crown GdanskSobieski is remembered in Poland as a hero king victor at Vienna who defeated the Ottoman threat an image that became particularly well recognized after his story was told in many works of 19th century literature 43 In the Polish Biographical Dictionary he is described as an individual above his contemporaries but still one of them an oligarch and a magnate interested in personal wealth and power 43 His ambitions for the most part were instilled in him by his beloved wife whom he undoubtedly loved more than any throne when being forced to divorce her and marry the former Queen as a condition to gain the throne he immediately refused the throne and tended to obey at times blindly 44 45 He failed to reform the ailing Commonwealth and to secure the throne for his heir 43 At the same time he displayed high military prowess he was well educated and literate and a patron of science and arts He supported the astronomer Johannes Hevelius mathematician Adam Adamandy Kochanski and the historian and poet Wespazjan Kochowski His Wilanow Palace became the first of many palaces that would dot the lands of the Commonwealth over the next two centuries 43 Gallery Edit Commemorative plaque featuring Sobieski Vienna Scutum Sobiescianum Shield of Sobieski on the sky by Johannes Hevelius 1690 Monument of Sobieski in Lazienki Park Warsaw John III Sobieski Monument in Gdansk moved from Lwow after World War II Equestrian monument of King John III inside Wilanow PalaceFamily EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sobieski and his sonsOn 5 July 1665 he married the widow of Jan Sobiepan Zamoyski Marie Casimire Louise de la Grange d Arquien 1641 1716 of Nevers Burgundy France Their children were James Louis Sobieski 2 November 1667 19 December 1737 Crown Prince of Poland married Countess Palatine Hedwig Elisabeth of Neuburg and had issue Twin Daughters 9 May 1669 stillborn or died shortly after birth Teresa Teofila October 1670 was a frail child and failed to survive for more than a month Adelajda Ludwika 15 October 1672 10 February 1677 called Barbelune died at the age of four Maria Teresa 18 October 1673 7 December 1675 called La Mannone died at the age of two Daughter October 1674 stillborn or died shortly after birth Teresa Kunegunda 4 March 1676 10 March 1730 married Maximilian II Emanuel Elector of Bavaria and had issue Aleksander Benedykt 6 September 1677 19 November 1714 died unmarried Daughter 13 November 1678 stillborn or died shortly after birth Konstanty Wladyslaw 1 May 1680 28 February 1726 married Maria Jozefa Wessel but had no issue Jan 4 June 1683 1 January 12 April 1685 died at the age of one Daughter 20 December 1684 stillborn or died shortly after birth Sobieski family Edit Anonymous portrait of James Louis painted about 1685 Anonymous portrait of Teresa Kunegunda painted at the end of the 17th century Portrait of Aleksander Benedykt by the circle of Hyacinthe Rigaud about 1696 Portrait of Konstanty Wladyslaw by the circle of Hyacinthe Rigaud about 1696 Anonymous portrait of Prince Jan 1682 1685 painted about 1683 Portrait of Maria Klementyna John III s granddaughter painted by Pier Leone Ghezzi around 1735 Anonymous portrait of Maria Karolina John III s granddaughter painted around 1730 Portrait of the Sobieski family by Siemiginowski Eleuter Left side Jakub Konstanty Aleksander Teresa Right side Marie Casimire holding Jan 1682 1685 Portrait of the Sobieski family by Henri Gascar Left side Konstanty and Jakub grasping a portrait of John III Right side Aleksander Teresa and Marie Casimire Portrait of the Sobieski family by Henri Gascar John III and Marie Casimire are in the middle Konstanty Aleksander and Jakub are on the left Teresa Kunegunda and Hedwig of Neuburg holding her daughter Maria Leopoldyna 1693 1695 are on the right Royal titles EditOfficial title in Latin Ioannes III Dei Gratia rex Poloniae magnus dux Lithuaniae Russiae Prussiae Masoviae Samogitiae Livoniae Smolensciae Kijoviae Volhyniae Podlachiae Severiae Czernichoviaeque etc 46 Official title in Polish Jan III z laski Bozej krol Polski wielki ksiaze litewski ruski pruski mazowiecki zmudzki kijowski wolynski podlaski i czernichowski etc English translation John III by the grace of God King of Poland Grand Duke of Lithuania Ruthenia Prussia Masovia Samogitia Livonia Smolensk Kyiv Volhynia Podlasie Severia and Chernihiv etc Literary references EditVincenzo da Filicaia 47 1642 1707 wrote a collection of odes or canzoni about the raising of the siege of Vienna by King John III Sobieski titled Canzoni in occasione dell assedio e liberazione di Vienna published by Piero Matini in Florence in 1684 48 the first known book review journal Nouvelles de la republique des lettres News from the Republic of Letters edited and largely written by the Protestant philosopher Pierre Bayle included a number of works about King Sobieski s victory in its 1st volume 49 an address to the King pp 179 180 Motet Dramatique ou Oratoire pp 181 182 Paralelle de Jules Cesar et du Roi de Pologne Venit vidit vicit pp 183 185 50 William Wordsworth wrote on February 4 1816 and published the same year among the Sonnets dedicated to Liberty 51 or Poems dedicated to Independence and Liberty 52 his Siege of Vienna Raised by John Sobieski which was his take on da Falicaia s ode to Sobieski s victory about which Wordworth wrote This and his other poems on the same occasion of Sobieski s raising the siege of Vienna are superior perhaps to any lyrical pieces that contemporary events have ever given birth to those of the Hebrew Scriptures only excepted W W 1816 and 1820 Popular culture EditJohn III Sobieski s character is played by Jerzy Skolimowski in the 2012 English language Polish and Italian historical drama film The Day of the Siege September Eleven 1683 John III Sobieski sometimes appears in the loading screen in the computer strategy game Europa Universalis IV His involvement in the Battle of Vienna is also referenced in the Baroque Cycle novels When he turned to go back to the camp he discovered that there was another man up on this hill a stone s throw away some kind of monk or holy man perhaps as he was dressed in a rough sackcloth robe with no finery But then the bloke whipped out a sword It was not one of your needle thin rapiers such as fops pushed at each other in the streets of London and Paris but some kind of relic of the Crusades a two handed production with a single crossbar instead of a proper guard the sort of thing Richard the Lionhearted might ve used to slay camels in the streets of Jerusalem This man went down on one knee in the dirt and he did it with verve and enthusiasm You see your rich man kneeling in church and it takes him two or three minutes you can hear his knees popping and sinews creaking he totters this way and that creating small alarums amongst the servants who are gripping his elbows But this brute knelt easily even lustily if such a thing were possible and facing toward the city of Vienna he planted his sword in the ground so that it became a steel cross The morning light was shining directly into his grizzled face and glinting from the steel of the blade and glowing in some indifferent colored jewels set into the weapon s hilt and crossbar The man bowed his head and took to mumbling in Latin The hand that wasn t holding the sword was thumbing through a rosary Jack s cue to exit stage right But as he was leaving he recognized the man with the broadsword as King John Sobieski Neal Stephenson King of the Vagabonds chapter The Continent He appears in his pre royalty status as a character in Mount amp Blade With Fire amp Sword Sobieski appears as a character in the historical novel Poland by James A Michener in a chapter recounting the Battle of Vienna See also EditHistory of Poland 1569 1795 Wilanow Palace List of Poles List of Polish monarchs Scutum SobieskiPortals Christianity Poland MonarchyReferences Edit Aleksander Gieysztor 1979 History of Poland PWN Polish Scientific Publishers p 223 ISBN 83 01 00392 8 J A Hammerton 2007 Peoples of All Nations Their Life Today And Story of Their Past Concept Publishing Company p 4142 ISBN 978 81 7268 144 9 Mario Reading 2009 The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus Sterling Publishing Company Inc p 382 ISBN 978 1 906787 39 4 a b c d Wojciech Skalmowski Tatjana Soldatjenkova Emmanuel Waegemans 2003 Liber amicorum Peeters Publishers p 165 ISBN 90 429 1298 7 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 413 J B Morton Sobieski King of Poland pp 30 31 Tindal Palmer 1815 p 5 Daniel Stone 2001 The Polish Lithuanian state 1386 1795 University of Washington Press p 236 ISBN 0 295 98093 1 Tindal Palmer 1815 p 7 Tindal Palmer 1815 pp 12 13 Tindal Palmer 1815 p 20 Brian Glyn Williams 2013 The Sultan s Raiders The Military Role of the Crimean Tatars in the Ottoman Empire PDF The Jamestown Foundation p 24 Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2013 a b c d e f g h i Simon Millar Peter Dennis 2008 Vienna 1683 Christian Europe Repels the Ottomans Osprey Publishing p 17 ISBN 978 1 84603 231 8 a b c d e f g h i Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 414 Tindal Palmer 1815 pp 23 24 a b c d e f g h i Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 415 a b c d e f g h i j Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 416 a b Frank N Magill 13 September 2013 The 17th and 18th Centuries Dictionary of World Biography Routledge p 726 ISBN 978 1 135 92414 0 Howard N Lupovitch 16 December 2009 Jews and Judaism in World History Routledge p 120 ISBN 978 1 135 18965 5 Joseph Cummins 2008 The War Chronicles From Chariots to Flintlocks Fair Winds p 323 ISBN 978 1 61673 403 9 F L Carsten 1 January 1961 The New Cambridge Modern History Volume 5 The Ascendancy of France 1648 88 CUP Archive p 564 ISBN 978 0 521 04544 5 a b c d e f Frank N Magill 13 September 2013 The 17th and 18th Centuries Dictionary of World Biography Routledge p 727 ISBN 978 1 135 92414 0 a b Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive p 538 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 a b c Wiktor Waintraub 1976 Memoirs of the Polish Baroque the writings of Jan Chryzostom Pasek a squire of the Commonwealth of Poland and Lithuania University of California Press p 308 ISBN 0 520 02752 3 a b Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive p 542 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 a b Miroslaw Nagielski 1995 Hetmani Rzeczypospolitej Obojga Narodow in Polish Bellona p 227 ISBN 83 11 08275 8 a b c d e f g h i Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 417 a b Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive pp 543 544 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive p 541 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 a b c Kenneth Meyer Setton 1991 Venice Austria and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century American Philosophical Society pp 266 269 ISBN 978 0 87169 192 7 Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive pp 544 545 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 a b c d e f Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive pp 547 548 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 a b c Miltiades Varvounis 2012 JAN SOBIESKI Xlibris Corporation p 189 ISBN 978 1 4628 8082 9 Miltiades Varvounis 2012 JAN SOBIESKI Xlibris Corporation p 195 ISBN 978 1 4628 8082 9 World Book Inc 2007 Volume 1 The World Book Encyclopedia Bellona p 132 ISBN 978 0 7166 0107 4 Mizwa Stephen Paul 1942 Great Men and Women of Poland New York Macmillan p 103 a b c d Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 418 a b Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 419 FM RMF Kto przewiozl trumne Marysienki Sobieskiej do Polski Poland Church of the Transfiguration Kosciol Przemienienia Panskiego English Sarcophagus with the heart of Jan III Sobieski in the Capuchin church in Warsaw 15 May 2018 Oskar Halecki W F Reddaway J H Penson The Cambridge History of Poland CUP Archive p 547 ISBN 978 1 00 128802 4 a b c d Red Eds Jan III Sobieski p 420 de Battaglia O Forst The Cambridge History of Poland Cambridge University Press p 539 ISBN 9781001288024 Drohojowska Countess Antoinette Josephine Francoise Anne Salvandy Achille Count 1856 Love of Country or Sobieski and Hedwig Compiled and translated from the French of N A de Salvandy the Countess Drohojowska etc by Trauermantel Crosby Nichols and company pp 87 88 Ignacy Zagorski Edward Rastawiecki baron 1845 Monety dawnej polski jakotez prowincyj i miast do niej niegdy nalezacych z trzech ostatnich wiekow zebrane in Polish S H Merzbach p 75 Treccani la cultura italiana Treccani il portale del sapere Canzoni in occasione dell assedio e liberatione di Vienna Reprod Di Vincenzio da Filicaia 1684 Nouvelles de la republique des lettres 1684 Jerzy Starnawski Lacinska scenka dramatyczna ku czci Jana III Sobieskiego na lamach Nouvelles de la Republique des Lettres 1684 Zeszyty Naukowe Wyzszej Szkoly Pedagogicznej w Bydgoszczy Studia filologiczne 1983 z 18 The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth Vol VI of 8 William Knight ed Macmillan and Co 1896 p 110 John Frederick Wyatt Wordsworth and the Geologists A Correlation of Influences 1991 pp 292 293 Bibliography Edit Tindal Palmer Alicia 1815 Authentic memoirs of John Sobieski King of Poland Printed for the author and sold by Longman and Co Red Eds 1962 1964 Jan III Sobieski Polski Slownik Biograficzny in Polish Vol X Further reading EditChelmecki Konig J Sobieski und die Befreiung Wiens Vienna 1883 Coyer Histoire de Jean Sobieski Amsterdam 1761 and 1783 Du Hamel de Breuil Sobieski et sa politique de 1674 a 1683 Paris 1894 Dupont Memoires pour servir a l histoire de Sobieski Warsaw 1885 Rieder Johann III Konig von Polen Vienna 1883 Salvandy Histoire de Pologne avant et sous le roi Jean Sobieski two volumes new edition Paris 1855 AA VV L Europa di Giovanni Sobieski Cultura politica mercatura e societa a cura di Gaetano Platania Viterbo Sette Citta editore 2005 CESPoM n 10 Centro Studi sull Eta dei Sobieski e della Polonia Moderna G Platania Polonia e Curia romana Corrispondenza del lucchese Tommaso Talenti segretario intimo del Re di Polonia con Carlo Barberini protettore del regno 1681 1693 vol 1 pp 7 613 Viterbo Sette Citta Editore 2004 ISBN 8886091613 Radoslaw Sikora Bartosz Musialowicz Winged Hussars BUM Magazine 2016 Tatham John Sobieski Oxford 1881 Miltiades Varvounis Jan Sobieski The King Who Saved Europe 2012 G Platania L inedita corrispondenza di Jan III Sobieski e Carlo Barberini cardinale Protettore del Regno in Studia Wilanowskie vol XXII pp 99 119 Wilanow Muzeum Palacu Krola Jana III w Wilanowie ISSN 0137 7329 G Platania Polonia e Curia romana Corrispondenza di Giovanni III Sobieski re di Polonia con Carlo Barberini protettore del regno 1681 1696 Collana Barberiniana vol 2 pp 11 385 Viterbo Sette Citta editore ISBN 978 88 7853 252 6 Waliszewski Acta three volumes Cracow 1684 Prochazka Jiri 1683 Vienna obsessa Via Silesiaca Brno Wien 2012 ISBN 978 80 903476 3 2External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John III of Poland Wikisource has original works by or about John III Sobieski Polish website about John III Sobieski Jan III Sobieski of the Janina coat of arms at the Wilanow Palace Museum Jan III Sobieski a book lover at the Wilanow Palace Museum Jan III Sobieski s entry into Krakow for coronation at the Wilanow Palace Museum Herbermann Charles ed 1913 John Sobieski Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Bain Robert Nisbet 1911 John III Sobieski Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed pp 442 443 John III SobieskiSobieskiBorn 17 August 1629 Died 17 June 1696Regnal titlesVacantTitle last held byMichael I King of PolandGrand Duke of Lithuania1674 1696 VacantTitle next held byAugustus IIPolitical officesVacantTitle last held byStefan Czarniecki Field Crown Hetman of Poland1666 1667 Succeeded byDymitr WisniowieckiVacantTitle last held byStanislaw Rewera Potocki Great Crown Hetman of Poland1667 1674Preceded byJerzy Sebastian Lubomirski Great Marshal of the Crown of Poland1667 1674 Succeeded byStanislaw Herakliusz Lubomirski Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John III Sobieski amp oldid 1167852563, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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