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Wikipedia

Lubomirski

The House of Lubomirski is a Polish princely family. The Lubomirski family's coat of arms is the Drużyna coat of arms, which is similar to the Szreniawa coat of arms but without a cross.

Lubomirski
Princely coat of arms of the Lubomirski family
Current regionPoland
Place of originLesser Poland
Estate(s)Lubomirski Palace, Warsaw
Lubomirski Palace, Lviv
Łańcut Castle
Presidential Palace, Warsaw
Prince Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski
Prince Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski
Prince Jan Kazimierz Lubomirski
Prince Jerzy Aleksander Lubomirski
Prince Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski
Prince Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski
Prince Teodor Lubomirski
Prince Hieronim Augustyn Lubomirski

Origin and the coat of arms edit

The Lubomirski family have been actors in the history of Poland since the 10th century. There are two theories regarding the family's origin. One, by Adam Boniecki, a Polish heraldist, assumes that there were two branches of the family. One settled at the Szreniawa River in Proszowice County while the other established itself in Szczyrzyc County. The time of this division of the family is not known, but most likely it was before the adoption of Christianity by Poland. The Szreniawici family used a similar coat of arms, which means that the two families had the same ancestry. At the time of Mieszko I, the members of the Lubomirski family demonstrated bravery in battle against pagans. For this they were awarded the rank of knight and a coat of arms, which depicts bends of the Szreniawa River in the form of a letter S of white colour on a red background, instead of the Szreniawici cross, with the motto Patriam Versus (Turned to the Homeland). This coat of arms has been used by the representatives of the family to the present time.[1]

The author of the second theory of the family's origins is the medievalist Władysław Semkowicz. In his article "The fellowship and Śreniawa. Heraldic study" („Drużyna i Śreniawa. Studyum heraldyczne”) he writes that the family used to live on the banks of the Szreniawa River in Szczyrzycki poviat (county), in the area surrounded by the Raba and Stradomka rivers, the Trzciański brook, and the Łososina and Krzyworzeka streams. Semkowicz says that the original territory of the Drużynnici family (ancestors of the Lubomirski, Wieruski, Rupniewski, and Lasocki families) was located there. Semkowicz says that the coat of arms does not show bends of a river, but a curved rod – a sign of episcopal or secular power, signifying that for many centuries before the adoption of the name, the family had exercised significant power. This theory assumes, in its later part, that, in the 15th century, the Polish chronicler Jan Długosz incorrectly ascribed the origin of the coat of arms of the fellowship (Szreniawa without a cross), and other heraldists accepted this view.[2]

The history of the Szreniawici, or Drużynnici, family is closely linked with the rulers of the Piast dynasty. One of the Szreniawici was a canon at the Wawel court, and people using this coat of arms belonged to the inner circle of Bolesław II the Generous, according to Jan Długosz, in Annals or Chronicles of the Famous Kingdom of Poland (Roczniki czyli Kronikisławnego Królestwa Polskiego). The oldest document mentioning the Lubomirski family comes from the 11th century. It is in the property section of the Crown Register of 1682 in Kraków. The original no longer exists. There is only a mention in the register under a given year.[3] Successive members of the family took up positions of bishops, for example, Piotr, Archbishop of Gniezno mediated between the princes of the Piast dynasty during the congress in Łęczyca in 1180.[4] The family performed important functions at the court of the Piast dynasty and extended their estates through investing in land, mainly within the territory of the Małopolska province. Jakub Lubomirski served as a borough writer in the 14th century.

Foundations of economic power edit

Piotr (d. 1480), the heir of Lubomierz, the territorial designation that is the basis of the family name, is regarded as the progenitor of the Lubomirski family. The economic foundation of the family rested on the exploitation of salt mines in Kraków province, the mineshafts being leased from rulers of Poland. The Lubomirski family also established private mines in Małopolska province. Sebastian (c. 1546 – 1613), who in 1581 became a mine administrator of Kraków, was the creator of this economic power. This was the first administrative position in the capital city occupied by a member of the family. While taking up his duties, Sebastian had the support of Stefan Batory. In 1595, Sebastian received the title of Count of Wiśnicz from the Emperor Rudolf II; in 1591, he entered the Senate as governor of Małogoszcz. He opened a private salt mine shaft "Kunegunda" in Siercza, which was exploited for about 100 years.[5]

Money gained from the salt trade allowed the Lubomirski family to lend money to even the wealthiest people in the country. This enabled them to purchase properties or take them over from insolvent debtors. The family built up its economic position over many generations, accumulating assets that they held for centuries.[6]

Residences edit

The first mentions of the home in Lubomierz were recorded in 1398.[7] The number of family estates, starting with Gdów and Szczyrzyca which the family also possessed in the 13th century, increased significantly. In the 17th and 18th centuries they were located in Lubomierz, Nowy Wiśnicz, Bochnia, Wieliczka, Łańcut, Baranów Sandomierski, Puławy, Rzeszów, Równe, Tarnów, Jarosław, Przeworsk, and Janowiec upon the Vistula, among others. To this day, the castle in Nowy Wiśnicz has been the property of the Family Association of the Princes Lubomirski.[8] Many estates were located in the territories of the largest Polish cities: Warsaw (e.g. Mokotów, Ujazdów, Czerniaków), Kraków (Wola Justowska, Kamienica Pod Baranami), Rzeszów (castle), Sandomierz, and Lviv (then Lwów). Maintaining foreign residences in Dresden, Vienna, and Paris enhanced family prestige. The members of the family were referred to as "the owners of the bank of the Dnieper River" because many of their estates were located in what is now Ukraine and Slovakia. The Lubomirski family enjoyed political, military, and economic influence, which was concentrated in the provinces of Kraków, Sandomierz, Stanisławów, and Ruthenia, to eventually cover the whole area of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. They kept this state of ownership until the collapse of the Polish state, when they were deprived of many estates as a result of penalties for pro-independence activities.

The Lubomirski family looked to invest by buying large estate complexes. They consciously strived to gather them into one contiguous whole. Territorial expansion began in the ancestral territory located south of Kraków and was directed toward the east. The combined estates reached their largest size at the time of Stanisław (d. 1649). It was the third largest holding in the Republic of Poland, only smaller than the entail of Ostróg and the estates of the Radziwiłł family. In addition to purchasing properties, the Lubomirski family leased rich royal estates, such as the Starosties of Spisz, Sandomierz, and Sącz. Income from the land leased from the king was comparable to that from private estates.

The family introduced several innovative facilities and processes to their estates. Their arable farms adopted methods of industrial production; sugar factories, distilleries, and factories were built. They also introduced enlightened social practices, such as granting equal rights for subjects, allowing Jews to buy properties in private towns and to build houses, and vesting them with judicial powers. Jerzy Sebastian was particularly involved in the activities of democratization. He believed that the increase in economic rights of all his subjects would make him get richer, too. Schools and hospitals for the peasant population were founded, which were maintained with private family income. The family estates often hired people from the lowest class, caring about their education, offering a place of residence, clothing, and a salary paid twice a year. For faithful service, workers were given ownership of land in perpetual or inheritable possession.[9]

Division edit

The family, originally small in number, grew considerably, which led to divisions of material wealth but enhanced political influence, due to having the support of more people in the Sejms, in the Senate, or at the royal court. Members of the family were able to count on the support of their relatives in political or court activities.

The family split into five major lineages: of Wiśnicz (from Aleksander Michał, 1614 – 1677), Łańcut (from Stanisław Herakliusz, 1642 – 1702), Przeworsk (from Aleksander Michał, – d. 1675), Rzeszów (from Hieronim Augustyn, c. 1647 – 1706), and Janowiec (from Jerzy Dominik, 1665 – 1727). The most numerous was that of Przeworsk, which was further divided into three branches: dubrowieńsko-kruszyńska, równieńsko-przeworska, and dubieńska. Many members of this line are alive now.

First citizens of Poland edit

The members of the family served the state as marshals, starosts, governors, and hetmans. Four of the princes Lubomirski held the office of Grand Marshal of the Crown: Jerzy Sebastian, Józef Karol, Stanisław Herakliusz and Stanisław. They were active in the politics, chairing the Sejms, forming a private army, representing the king at the courts Europe. Many times they had a decisive influence on the choice of monarchs. They were defenders of the nobility, who often entrusted the family with their proxy vote at the Sejms and in the election of kings. Although Jerzy Sebastian was Grand Marshal and Field Hetman of the Crown, he supported the nobility in rebellion.[10]

Marriages were also important. Members of the Lubomirski family became linked with equally powerful and wealthy families. It enabled them to extend their private estates, and even take over a part of the estate of Ostróg under the Kolbuszowa transaction of 1753. Stanisław Lubomirski (1583 – 1649) married Zofia Ostrogska; Aleksander Michał Lubomirski married Helena Tekla Ossolińska; Krystyna Lubomirska married Albrycht Stanisław Radziwiłł. Józef Karol (1638 – 1702) was Teofilia Ludwika Zasławska’s husband; Teresa Lubomirska (d. 1712) married Karol Filip, the Prince of Neuburg, and Marianna Lubomirska (1693 – 1729) married Paweł Karol Sanguszko, the Grand Marshal of Lithuania.[11]

Royal blood edit

In 1647, Stanisław Lubomirski received the hereditary title of Prince of the Holy Roman Empire from Emperor Ferdinand III. The Lubomirski family itself was a candidate for Poland's crown. Grand Hetman of the Crown Prince Hieronim Augustyn was the most serious candidate for the Polish crown after the death of John III Sobieski. Prince Teodor Konstanty (1683-1745), governor of Kraków, submitted his candidacy for the Crown after the death of Augustus II the Strong. Prince Stanisław Lubomirski, governor of Kiev and Speaker of the Radom treasury tribunal, campaigned for the throne in 1764. Lubomirski princes were also candidates for the Czech and Hungarian crowns; Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski (1687-1753) sought the throne of Hungary. The culmination of these efforts was Zdzislaw Lubomirski's serving as prince regent from 1917 to 1918.[12]

The Lubomirski family was related to almost all the dynasties ruling in Europe, the Capetien, Bourbon, Liudolfing, Wittelsbach, Hohenzollern, and Rurykowicz dynasties. The family is maternally related to the Piast of Masovia family. Zofia Lubomirska was the great-granddaughter of Anna Lubomirska, the daughter of Konrad III Rudy, the prince of Mazovia. Katarzyna Lubomirska (c. 1585 – 1620) was the wife of Konstanty Bazyli II, Prince of Ostróg, who was closely related to Bolesław IV, a descendant of Konrad Mazowiecki.[13]

A descendant of the House of Lubomirski, reportedly Ladislas Jean Lubomirski (father of the photographer Alexi Lubomirski), tested at FamilyTreeDNA. He belongs to Y-haplogroup J2b-L283 > PH1602.[14]

Military exploits edit

Prince Stanisław Lubomirski was famous for commanding at the Battle of Chocim in 1621, fought against Turkish-Tatar forces. Stanisław initially took part in the battle at the head of a private regiment, but when hetman Karol Chodkiewicz died, and hetman Koniecpolski was taken captive, Stanisław took command and ended the multi-day battle quickly, with the Turks being repelled on October 10, 1621.

Prince Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski (1616 – 1667) was the only Polish aristocrat during the Deluge to not take the oath to Charles X Gustav.[citation needed] Jerzy gave shelter to king John II Casimir on his estate in Lubowla (today’s Slovakia) and launched a counteroffensive of Polish troops. He lent his private army, which fought the Battle of Warka, and recaptured Warsaw and Toruń, which had been occupied by the Swedes. Stefan Czarniecki supported the campaign. In 1660, at the head of private and royal armies, Prince Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski conducted a lightning campaign that ended with the defeat of Russian forces at Cudnów and Połonka. In 1661, a worsening of relations with the king resulted in rebellion. The prince withdrew to Silesia; and, degraded by the Sejm court, fought for his political rehabilitation. His sons succeeded in this matter.

Prince Hieronim Augustyn, a member of the Order of Hospitallers, devoted his life to fighting the Ottoman Turks, who were considered a cultural threat to European civilization. He also defeated Ukrainian commander Petro Doroshenko in a Cossack Uprising against Poland. In 1670, he fought against the Crimean Horde at Bracław and Kalnik [uk]. In 1683, during the Battle of Vienna, his troops were the first to reach the city gates. Under the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, eight members of the family served as generals. Two of them took part in the war with the Russian Empire, which gave rise to the Kościuszko Insurrection.[15]

Lubomirski family in the history of Warsaw edit

To build his numerous residences, Prince Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski (1642 – 1702) hired Tylman of Gameren, later court architect to King Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki. Stanisław Lubomirski owned residences in Puławy, Czerniaków, (where he founded a monastery and church of the Bernardines), and in Ujazdów (now part of Warsaw), where, at the end of the 17th century, he built a bathhouse that became the Palace on the Water of Stanisław August Poniatowski, and the Ermitage, which was planned as a place of meditation and relaxation. Stanisław Herakliusz was a friend of many European artists and patrons of the arts, as evidenced by correspondence. He had relations with the French and Spanish courts, as well as members of the Medici family. These facilitated his carrying out a number of missions and negotiations on behalf of the Polish king.

Stanisław Herakliusz was a talented author, a precursor of the Polish Baroque in literature. He spoke several languages and made use almost all known literary forms in his works. However, he was interested mostly in the new trends coming from Italy. His philosophical work "Dialogues of Artakses and Ewander" entered the canon of the Old Polish Literature and became required reading.[16]

An example of building in the very centre of Warsaw is a reconstruction of the Copper-Roof Palace (Pałac Pod Blachą), commissioned in the early 18th century by Jerzy Dominik Lubomirski. The palace, classical in form and situated on the south side of the Royal Castle, was bought by the king himself, in 1777, who later added the library.[17]

The previous owner of this building was Prince Jerzy Marcin Lubomirski (1738 – 1811), distinguished in service to the Polish theatre. He financed exhibitions of family and European art and organized numerous concerts, balls, and meetings. Celebrations organized by him were a meeting place for artists and aristocrats from across Europe, while in local memory he was remembered as an organizer of public events with fireworks displays.[18]

Prince Jerzy Marcin was also an adventurer and a member of the Bar Confederation. From 1758, he served in the Prussian and Russian armies. He was barred from political life in Poland by his family, but he went down in history as a lover of music and theatre. In 1777, he financed a production of Tartuffe by Molière; in 1783 leased the privilege of the theatre and made Wojciech Bogusławski its director. He also opened a ballet drama school for 1000 people.[19]

Prince Stanisław Lubomirski went down in history as an administrator of Warsaw. He introduced permanent street lighting and supported a police unit with his private money. Above all, he wished to care for the health of the Varsovians, wherefore he decided to surround the city, on both sides of the Vistula, with an earthen embankment, initially to protect against the spreading plague epidemic. There were only three crossings in the embankment, by which traffic in and out of the city was controlled. Later, the embankment, reinforced with guns, was used to defend the capital during the Kościuszko Uprising and the November Uprising. Throughout the 19th century, the embankment marked the boundary of the city. By the Act of 1770, Stanisław introduced permanent street names, which greatly facilitated the administration of the city and its functioning, especially facilitating registration and correspondence.[20]

Princess Izabela Lubomirska (1736 – 1816), the wife of Stanisław, rebuilt the Łańcut Castle and collected art and books from around the world. She was politically active; during the revolution, she sheltered part of the French court at her estate in Łańcut. She extended her residences, often employing the latest architectural solutions. She built a palace on her estate in Mokotów, the district of Warsaw that gets its name from her estate, Mon Coteau (My Hill). She was a lover of theatre and laid the foundation stone of the National Theatre in Warsaw, as well as maintaining a number of theatres in her palaces. The notion of theatre then had a much broader meaning than now. It included not only the theatre performances, but also opera, cabaret, and acrobatic performances. For her, Franciszek Karpiński wrote the "Song about the Lord’s birth", better known under the title "God is born". In honour of her daughter, Cyprian Kamil Norwid wrote a panegyric. Tadeusz Kościuszko set out from the residence in Łańcut, to Kraków, when he incited the Kościuszko Uprising.[21]

They also bore the title of Count of Wisnicz und Jaroslaw.

Philanthropists and patrons edit

The Lubomirski family, like other affluent aristocratic families, engaged in artistic, cultural, and scientific patronage. At Wiśnicz, Wilanów, the Royal Baths, Łańcut, or Mokotów, they supported private theatre groups, financed artists, funded religious buildings, and maintained their residences. The reconstruction of Wiśnicz castle was planned by architect Maciej Trapola, the castle chapel being decorated with stucco by Giovanni Battista Falconi and wherein Stanisław Lubomirski, who financed the renovation of the castle, installed twenty sacred objects.[22]

Marceli Lubomirski for many years supported the work of poet Cyprian Kamil Norwid. He was immortalized by the poet in the book White Flowers.[23] Józef Lubomirski (1751 – 1817) was a promoter of industrialization and reforms, a capable military commander, and a knight of the Order of White Eagle and the Order of Saint Stanislaus. He supported the Constitution of May 3, 1791.[24]

The Lubomirski family built private schools for pupils on their estates. They often put schooling in the hands of professionals – the Order of Piarists and the Order of Jesuits. The members of the family founded monasteries, churches, and other religious buildings. Stanisław Lubomirski founded the Carmelite Monastery in Wiśnicz, which is still the pearl of Renaissance architecture in Poland. For many decades, residents of the castle in Wiśnicz contributed various legacies to the monastery. Jerzy Dominik Lubomirski (c. 1665 – 1727) gave to the Pauline Monastery at Jasna Góra many valuable objects, including the sacred vessels. It was on his initiative to build the main gate leading to the Monastery. The gate is called the Gate of the Lubomirski Family.[25]

Under partition edit

After 1795, the princes Lubomirski engaged in clandestine and insurgent activities against the occupying Russians; and, in consequence, they lost estates. Prince Jerzy Roman Lubomirski (1799 – 1865), the owner of Rozwadów, participated in the battles of the November and January uprisings and organized hospitals for the wounded on his estates. After the collapse of the uprising, his palace became a place where secret meetings of Polish patriots were held. Jerzy was active in social and scientific fields, maintaining a grammar school and poorhouse for the poor and establishing two scientific foundations, one funding the scientific testing of equipment, the other rewarding Polish authors of outstanding scientific works. His brother Adam Hieronim Karol Lubomirski (1811 – 1873) was awarded the Virtuti Militari cross, for participating in the November Uprising.[26]

In 1883, Prince Henryk Lubomirski (1777–1850) gave his rich collection of books, archive material, works of art, and other antiques to the Ossoliński National Institute in Lvov, which since has become an important scientific and cultural institution, with its 19th-century publications, on the humanities research conducted there, being still considered of value. Without the material and financial support of Henryk, the facility would have closed at an early stage of activity. Henryk for many years served as a curator of the facility. He also contributed to the formation of the Museum of the Princes Lubomirski, the first private museum in the Polish land generally available to the public. He was on familiar terms with poet Zygmunt Krasiński, who memorialized the prince in his Non-Divine Comedy, in the person of Orcio.[27] In 1823, Henryk created the entail of Przeworsk; but, as a result of his subversive activities, the entail was legalized by the partitioning authorities only after his death. In 1869, his son Prince Andrzej Lubomirski became the first recognized entailer.

Prince Aleksander Lubomirski (1802 - 1893) founded centres for poor boys (at today's seat of the University of Economics) and girls (in Łagiewniki) in the centre of Kraków. At these centres, young poor were prepared for adult life, being instructed for free in practical professions that could be the basis for future employment.[28]

Prince Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski (1826 – 1908) founded the Warsaw Charity Society. He was the long-standing president of the Ophthalmology Institute in Warsaw, which conducted ophthalmology research according to European standards. On his initiative, special teams were set up which helped poor people to get free eye care. During the January Uprising the prince was a member of the National Government of Romuald Traugutt, where he served as a head of the Department of Internal Affairs. For anti-Tsarist activities, he was exiled deep into Russia, to Nizhny Novgorod. He supported Polish education. He protected Polish vocational organizations from competition from Russian and Prussian ones and established credit unions. He tried to regain possession of Polish art stolen by the Russians; and among others, he helped to reconstruct the Poniatowski monument standing in front of the Presidential Palace. He also restored and renovated the Zygmunt's Column, and bought Polish castles in Czersk and Iłża, in order to save them from being demolished. In 1875, he established the Museum of Industry and Agriculture in Warsaw. He established evening schools for craftsmen and journeymen as well as penny-saving banks for the poor. He financed the publishing of sources important in the history of Poland, as well as professional magazines. He organized free libraries.[29]

Władysław Emanuel Lubomirski supported the Zoological Cabinet of the University of Warsaw, helping to purchase teaching aids and financing travel by employees of the university. He donated his collection of shells. He was interested in floristics and studied the behavior of plants in the changed climate conditions. The Zoological Museum of the Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAN) has been making use of his collections to this day.[30]

Prince Władysław Lubomirski (1866 – 1934) was a patron and founder of Music Young Poland. To facilitate the operation of the organization, he founded a company that promoted talented young Polish artists. He supported music education. He helped to promote Karol Szymanowski, Artur Rubinstein, and Grzegorz Fitelberg. He helped to protect the Warsaw Philharmonic from closure by Tsarist officials.[31] Władysław and Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski were important in creating the Family Association of the Princes Lubomirski.[32]

Prince Stanisław Sebastian Lubomirski (1875 – 1932) founded the Warsaw aviation association Aviata in 1910. His aim was to establish the first civilian pilot school and aircraft factory on Polish soil. The first airport of Aviata was located at Mokotów Field, with the permission of Tsarist officials.[33]

Independent Poland edit

On 7 of October 1918, after 123 years under the third partition, on the initiative of Prince Regent Zdzisław Lubomirski (1865 – 1943), Polish independence was proclaimed and published in the Monitor Polski.[34] Zdzisław was a politician, president of the Civic Committee, and the president of Warsaw. He extended self-government, organized intervention works, credit unions, and cared for the education and living conditions of the Varsovians. His activities mapped out the direction that future politicians of the independent state would follow. In 1926, he undertook the role of mediator between the parties to the May coup. In the 1930s, he was a senator on the foreign affairs and military committees. During World War II he was imprisoned and tortured by the Gestapo. He died of wounds sustained in prison.[35][36]

Interwar period edit

In the years 1919 – 1939, princes Lubomirski served as Members of Parliament, senators, and in the ministries. They were also engaged in the industrialization of the country. They belonged to the key organizations involved in the modernization of roads, railways, and aviation. They took part in the reconstruction of the Polish army. They formed banking centres and credit unions, which provided cheap loans to the poorest, and were active in educational organizations, financing schools, as well as being engaged in Polish culture.

Prince Stefan Lubomirski (1862 – 1941) was a founder of the Polish Olympic Games Committee (later the Polish Olympic committee, PKOL), becoming its first president (its next president being his cousin, Prince Kazimierz Lubomirski), and a member of the International Olympic Committee. Prince Stefan was passionate about racehorse breeding, forming with his brothers the most modern horse-breeding farm in Poland at Widzów manor near Częstochowa.[37] Stefan was the owner of the Warsaw Commuter Railways (Warszawska Kolej Dojazdowa) company, which created the narrow gauge passenger and freight railways of Grójec, Jabłonków, and Wilanów. Railways allowed capital city dwellers to reach factories located outside the city and residents of suburban areas to get to the capital city. During World War II, the railways built by Lubomirski delivered supplies to the occupied city and brought employees to Warsaw offices and factories.[38]

Prince Stanisław Sebastian Lubomirski established the central union of Polish industry Leviatan, where he was the president from 1932. The union promoted the ideas of development of industry – lowering taxes, social security benefits for workers, and increasing state aid to industry. Members of the organization were elected to the Sejm, the Senate, were members of governments of the Second Republic of Poland, and served other state institutions. They published three magazines: Economic Review (Przegląd Gospodarczy), The Polish Courier (Kurier Polski), and The Telegram (Depesza). Stanisław Sebastian established the Industrial Bank of Warsaw SA (Bank Przemysłowy Warszawski S.A.) and was the president of the Commercial Bank (Bank Handlowy) in Warsaw, the Central Union of Polish Industry (Centralny Związek Przemysłu Polskiego), the Polish Bank Association (Związek Banków Polskich), and the Association of Polish Industrialists (Stowarzyszenie Przemysłowców Polskich). He devoted his life to the struggle for the independence of the Polish economy from the influence of the partitioners, and, after regaining independence, from that of neighbouring countries.[39]

World War II. Armed struggle edit

Prince Stefan Lubomirski (1898 – 1948) during the occupation was a member of the Western Union. For keeping a secret storehouse of medicines for the Home Army, he was arrested and detained in prison in Montelupich. He was on the list to be shot but escaped to Kraków, where he was hidden. The Germans set the date for the transportation of his family to the concentration camp near Oświęcim.[40]

Prince Eugeniusz Lubomirski (1895 – 1982) was arrested by the NKVD and put in the Lubyanka Prison, where he met General Anders, later becoming the general's adjutant, fighting at the general's side throughout Europe. He eventually reached the United Kingdom and was a candidate for President of Poland in Exile.[41]

Prince Hieronim Lubomirski was killed at the age of 17, during the rescue of prisoners in Pawiak code-named Action "Pawiak" ("Akcja Pawiak"). On July 19–20, 1944, a Ukrainian Wachmeister (guard) Petrenko, and some prisoners attempted a mass jailbreak, supported by an attack from the outside, but failed. Petrenko and several others committed suicide. The Resistance attack detachment was ambushed and suffered very heavy casualties, practically ceasing to exist. In reprisal, over 380 prisoners were executed the next day.[42]

Prince Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski (1882 – 1945) was active in the local community. He travelled to Vienna to discuss the construction of the bridge over the San River. He helped people particularly affected during the war. He was arrested in 1944 and detained and tortured in Tarnobrzeg prison. He was murdered by the Secret Police (Urząd Bezpieczeństwa) as a member of the Home Army.[43]

Recent times edit

In 2010, family members established the Princes Lubomirski Foundation (Fundacja Książąt Lubomirskich), to facilitate charitable activities. The foundation supports the development of various social and heritage projects in Poland. Jan Lubomirski-Lanckoroński is the current president of the foundation.[44]

Family members edit

Family tree edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A. Boniecki, A. Reiski, herbarz polski, part 1, Wiadomości historyczno-genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich, v. 15, Gebethner i Wolf, Warsaw 1912, p. 56 – 57.
  2. ^ W. Semkowicz, Drużyna i Śreniawa. Studyum heraldyczne, „Kwartalnik Historyczny”, R. 14 (1900), pp. 200 – 222
  3. ^ A. Boniecki, A. Reiski, Herbarz polski, part 1, Wiadomości historyczno-genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich, v. 15, Gebethner i Wolf, Warsaw 1912, 56 – 58. However, the authors of Herbarz argue that this document was a forgery.
  4. ^ K. Niecsiecki S. J. Herbarz polski powiększony dodatkami z późniejszych autorów, rękopisów, dowodów urzędowych, v. 8, Breitkopf w Haertel, Lipsk 1841, p. 469 – 472.
  5. ^ T. Zielińska, Poczet polskich rodów arystokratycznych, WSiP, Warsaw 1997, p. 134.
  6. ^ Rody magnackie Rzeczypospolitej, PWN, Warsaw 2009, p. 98.
  7. ^ A. Boniecki, A. Reiski, Herbarz polski, part 1, Wiadomości historyczno-genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich, v. 15, Gebethner i Wolf, Warsaw 1912, 56 – 58.
  8. ^ District Court in Bochnia, Division of the Land Registry Office, LWH 390.
  9. ^ K. Niesiecki, Herbarz polski powiększony dodatkami z późniejszych autorów, rękopisów, dowodów urzędowych i wydany przez J. N. Borowicza, v. 6, Lipsk 1841, p. 147.
  10. ^ J. Długosz, latyfundia Lubomirskich w XVII wieku (powstanie – rozwój – podziały), Opole University, Opole 1997, p. 13
  11. ^ Rody magnackie Rzeczypospolitej, PWN, Warsaw 2009, p. 103, T. Zielińska, Poczet polskich rodów arystokratycznych, WSiP, Warsaw 1997, p. 137.
  12. ^ Elekcje królów Polski w Warszawie na Woli 1575-1764. Upamiętnienie pola elekcyjnego w 400-lecie stołeczności Warszawy, pod red. Marka Tarczyńskiego, Rytm, Warsaw 1997, pass.
  13. ^ wielcy.pl, Wielka genealogia Minakowskiego.
  14. ^ "Eupedia".
  15. ^ T. M. Nowak, Historia oręża polskiego 963 – 1795, Wiedza Powszechna, Warsaw 1988, pass.
  16. ^ S. Mossakowski, Mecenat artystyczny Stanisława Herakliusza Lubomirskiego, [w:] Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirskie. Pisarz – polityk – mecenas, edited by W. Roszkowska, Ossolineum, Wrocław 1982, p. 51 – 75.
  17. ^ M. M. Drozdowski, A. Zahorski, Historia Warszawy, Jeden Świat, Warsaw 2004, p. 120 – 121.
  18. ^ Encyklopedia Warszawy, red. B. Petrozolin – Skowrońska, PWN, Warsaw 1994, p. 231.
  19. ^ T. Zielińska, Poczet polskich rodów arystokratycznych, WSiP, Warsaw 1997, p. 143 – 144.
  20. ^ M. M. Drozdowski, A. Zahorski, Historia Warszawy, Jeden Świat, Warsaw 2004, p. pass.
  21. ^ B. Majewska – Maszkowska, Mecenat artystyczny Izabeli z Czartoryskich Lubomirskiej (1746 – 1816), Ossolineum, Wrocław 1976, p. 17 – 96.
  22. ^ P. S. Szlezynger, Fundacje architektoniczne Stanisława Lubomirskiego wojewody i starosty generalnego krakowskiego, Cracow University of Technology, Kraków 1994, p. 10 – 27.
  23. ^ C. K. Norwid, Białe kwiaty, ed. 3, reviewed and supplemented. PIW, Warsaw 1977, pass.
  24. ^ A. Przyboś, Lubomirski Józef, [w:] Polski Słownik Biograficzny, ed. E. Rostworowski, v. 18, PWN, Warsaw 1973, p. 26 – 27.
  25. ^ http://czestochowa.miasto.biz, downloaded on 18.10.2011. 2021-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ [Tourist trail of ancestral Lubomiski sites]. Tourist Compass (in Polish). 6 April 2011. Archived from the original on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  27. ^ Gawroński, Łukasz (3 February 2011). [History of the National Ossoliński Institute]. Ossolineum (in Polish). Archived from the original on 6 December 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2018. Downloaded on 18.10.2011. The name Orcio derives from French Henry (read Auri).
  28. ^ J. Bieniarzówna, Lubomirski Aleksander Ignacy [w:] Polski Słownik Biograficzny, ed. E. Roztworowski, v. 18 PWN, Warsaw 1973, p. 2.
  29. ^ W. H. Melanowski, Dzieje Instytutu Oftalmicznego im. Edwarda ks. Lubomirskiego w Warszawie 1823 – 1944, Towarzystwo Naukowe Warszawskie, Warsaw 1948, pass; H. Markiewiczowa, Działalność opiekuńczo-wychowawcza Warszawskiego Towarzystwa Dobroczynności 1814-1914, Akademia Pedagogiki Specjalnej im. Marii Grzegorzewskiej, Warsaw 2002, pass; J. Skodlarski, Zarys historii gospodarczej Polski do 1945 roku, ed. 2, extended and amended, PWN, Warsaw 1997.
  30. ^ K. Kowalska, Lubomirski Władysław Emanuel, [w:] Polski Słownik Biograficzny, ed. E. Rostworowski, v. 18, p. 63
  31. ^ H. Sachs, Artur Rubinstein, translated by D. Chylińska, Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie, Wrocław 1999, pass.
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  33. ^ H. Mordawski, Siły powietrzne w I wojnie światowej, Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie, Wrocław, 2008, p. 45-46.
  34. ^ Monitor Polski Special supplement of. 7.10.1918, no. 168, p. 1.
  35. ^ L. Królikowski, K. Oktabiński, Warszawa 1914 – 1920. Warszawa i okolice w latach walk o niepodległość i granice Rzeczypospolitej, Wydawnictwa Akademickie i Profesjonalne, Warsaw 2007, pass.
  36. ^ Z. J. Winnicki, Rada Regencyjna Królestwa Polskiego i jej organy 917 – 1918, Wektory, Wrocław 1991.
  37. ^ [History of the Polish Olympic Committee]. Polish Olympic Committee (in Polish). Archived from the original on 19 December 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  38. ^ B. Prokopiński, Kolej jabłonowska, WKŁ, Warsaw 2004; B. Prokopiński, Kolej grójecka, WKŁ, Warsaw 2002, B. Prokopiński, Kolej wilanowska, WKŁ, Warsaw 2001.
  39. ^ Z. Landau, Lubomirski Stanisław Sebastian, [w:] Polski Słownik Biograficzny, ed. E. Roztworowski, v. 18, PWN, Warsaw 1973, p. 56 – 58; B. Winiarski Polityka gospodarcza, ed. 3, PWN, Warsaw 2006, p. 143 - 198.
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  41. ^ E. Lubomirski, Kartki z życia mego, Polska Fundacja Kulturalna, London, 1982, pass.
  42. ^ "Aleksy Witkowski". Warsaw Uprising Museum (in Polish). 2016. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
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  44. ^ "Home Page". Foundation of the Lubomir Dukes. Retrieved 20 July 2018. Downloaded on 18.10.2011.

External links edit

  • The Princes Lubomirski Foundation

lubomirski, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2015, lea. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lubomirski news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The House of Lubomirski is a Polish princely family The Lubomirski family s coat of arms is the Druzyna coat of arms which is similar to the Szreniawa coat of arms but without a cross LubomirskiPrincely coat of arms of the Lubomirski familyCurrent regionPolandPlace of originLesser PolandEstate s Lubomirski Palace WarsawLubomirski Palace LvivLancut CastlePresidential Palace WarsawPrince Jerzy Sebastian LubomirskiPrince Stanislaw Herakliusz LubomirskiPrince Jan Kazimierz LubomirskiPrince Jerzy Aleksander LubomirskiPrince Jerzy Ignacy LubomirskiPrince Stanislaw Herakliusz LubomirskiPrince Teodor LubomirskiPrince Hieronim Augustyn Lubomirski Contents 1 Origin and the coat of arms 2 Foundations of economic power 3 Residences 4 Division 5 First citizens of Poland 6 Royal blood 7 Military exploits 8 Lubomirski family in the history of Warsaw 9 Philanthropists and patrons 10 Under partition 11 Independent Poland 12 Interwar period 13 World War II Armed struggle 14 Recent times 15 Family members 16 Family tree 17 See also 18 References 19 External linksOrigin and the coat of arms editThe Lubomirski family have been actors in the history of Poland since the 10th century There are two theories regarding the family s origin One by Adam Boniecki a Polish heraldist assumes that there were two branches of the family One settled at the Szreniawa River in Proszowice County while the other established itself in Szczyrzyc County The time of this division of the family is not known but most likely it was before the adoption of Christianity by Poland The Szreniawici family used a similar coat of arms which means that the two families had the same ancestry At the time of Mieszko I the members of the Lubomirski family demonstrated bravery in battle against pagans For this they were awarded the rank of knight and a coat of arms which depicts bends of the Szreniawa River in the form of a letter S of white colour on a red background instead of the Szreniawici cross with the motto Patriam Versus Turned to the Homeland This coat of arms has been used by the representatives of the family to the present time 1 The author of the second theory of the family s origins is the medievalist Wladyslaw Semkowicz In his article The fellowship and Sreniawa Heraldic study Druzyna i Sreniawa Studyum heraldyczne he writes that the family used to live on the banks of the Szreniawa River in Szczyrzycki poviat county in the area surrounded by the Raba and Stradomka rivers the Trzcianski brook and the Lososina and Krzyworzeka streams Semkowicz says that the original territory of the Druzynnici family ancestors of the Lubomirski Wieruski Rupniewski and Lasocki families was located there Semkowicz says that the coat of arms does not show bends of a river but a curved rod a sign of episcopal or secular power signifying that for many centuries before the adoption of the name the family had exercised significant power This theory assumes in its later part that in the 15th century the Polish chronicler Jan Dlugosz incorrectly ascribed the origin of the coat of arms of the fellowship Szreniawa without a cross and other heraldists accepted this view 2 The history of the Szreniawici or Druzynnici family is closely linked with the rulers of the Piast dynasty One of the Szreniawici was a canon at the Wawel court and people using this coat of arms belonged to the inner circle of Boleslaw II the Generous according to Jan Dlugosz in Annals or Chronicles of the Famous Kingdom of Poland Roczniki czyli Kronikislawnego Krolestwa Polskiego The oldest document mentioning the Lubomirski family comes from the 11th century It is in the property section of the Crown Register of 1682 in Krakow The original no longer exists There is only a mention in the register under a given year 3 Successive members of the family took up positions of bishops for example Piotr Archbishop of Gniezno mediated between the princes of the Piast dynasty during the congress in Leczyca in 1180 4 The family performed important functions at the court of the Piast dynasty and extended their estates through investing in land mainly within the territory of the Malopolska province Jakub Lubomirski served as a borough writer in the 14th century Foundations of economic power editPiotr d 1480 the heir of Lubomierz the territorial designation that is the basis of the family name is regarded as the progenitor of the Lubomirski family The economic foundation of the family rested on the exploitation of salt mines in Krakow province the mineshafts being leased from rulers of Poland The Lubomirski family also established private mines in Malopolska province Sebastian c 1546 1613 who in 1581 became a mine administrator of Krakow was the creator of this economic power This was the first administrative position in the capital city occupied by a member of the family While taking up his duties Sebastian had the support of Stefan Batory In 1595 Sebastian received the title of Count of Wisnicz from the Emperor Rudolf II in 1591 he entered the Senate as governor of Malogoszcz He opened a private salt mine shaft Kunegunda in Siercza which was exploited for about 100 years 5 Money gained from the salt trade allowed the Lubomirski family to lend money to even the wealthiest people in the country This enabled them to purchase properties or take them over from insolvent debtors The family built up its economic position over many generations accumulating assets that they held for centuries 6 Residences editThe first mentions of the home in Lubomierz were recorded in 1398 7 The number of family estates starting with Gdow and Szczyrzyca which the family also possessed in the 13th century increased significantly In the 17th and 18th centuries they were located in Lubomierz Nowy Wisnicz Bochnia Wieliczka Lancut Baranow Sandomierski Pulawy Rzeszow Rowne Tarnow Jaroslaw Przeworsk and Janowiec upon the Vistula among others To this day the castle in Nowy Wisnicz has been the property of the Family Association of the Princes Lubomirski 8 Many estates were located in the territories of the largest Polish cities Warsaw e g Mokotow Ujazdow Czerniakow Krakow Wola Justowska Kamienica Pod Baranami Rzeszow castle Sandomierz and Lviv then Lwow Maintaining foreign residences in Dresden Vienna and Paris enhanced family prestige The members of the family were referred to as the owners of the bank of the Dnieper River because many of their estates were located in what is now Ukraine and Slovakia The Lubomirski family enjoyed political military and economic influence which was concentrated in the provinces of Krakow Sandomierz Stanislawow and Ruthenia to eventually cover the whole area of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth They kept this state of ownership until the collapse of the Polish state when they were deprived of many estates as a result of penalties for pro independence activities The Lubomirski family looked to invest by buying large estate complexes They consciously strived to gather them into one contiguous whole Territorial expansion began in the ancestral territory located south of Krakow and was directed toward the east The combined estates reached their largest size at the time of Stanislaw d 1649 It was the third largest holding in the Republic of Poland only smaller than the entail of Ostrog and the estates of the Radziwill family In addition to purchasing properties the Lubomirski family leased rich royal estates such as the Starosties of Spisz Sandomierz and Sacz Income from the land leased from the king was comparable to that from private estates The family introduced several innovative facilities and processes to their estates Their arable farms adopted methods of industrial production sugar factories distilleries and factories were built They also introduced enlightened social practices such as granting equal rights for subjects allowing Jews to buy properties in private towns and to build houses and vesting them with judicial powers Jerzy Sebastian was particularly involved in the activities of democratization He believed that the increase in economic rights of all his subjects would make him get richer too Schools and hospitals for the peasant population were founded which were maintained with private family income The family estates often hired people from the lowest class caring about their education offering a place of residence clothing and a salary paid twice a year For faithful service workers were given ownership of land in perpetual or inheritable possession 9 Division editThe family originally small in number grew considerably which led to divisions of material wealth but enhanced political influence due to having the support of more people in the Sejms in the Senate or at the royal court Members of the family were able to count on the support of their relatives in political or court activities The family split into five major lineages of Wisnicz from Aleksander Michal 1614 1677 Lancut from Stanislaw Herakliusz 1642 1702 Przeworsk from Aleksander Michal d 1675 Rzeszow from Hieronim Augustyn c 1647 1706 and Janowiec from Jerzy Dominik 1665 1727 The most numerous was that of Przeworsk which was further divided into three branches dubrowiensko kruszynska rowniensko przeworska and dubienska Many members of this line are alive now First citizens of Poland editThe members of the family served the state as marshals starosts governors and hetmans Four of the princes Lubomirski held the office of Grand Marshal of the Crown Jerzy Sebastian Jozef Karol Stanislaw Herakliusz and Stanislaw They were active in the politics chairing the Sejms forming a private army representing the king at the courts Europe Many times they had a decisive influence on the choice of monarchs They were defenders of the nobility who often entrusted the family with their proxy vote at the Sejms and in the election of kings Although Jerzy Sebastian was Grand Marshal and Field Hetman of the Crown he supported the nobility in rebellion 10 Marriages were also important Members of the Lubomirski family became linked with equally powerful and wealthy families It enabled them to extend their private estates and even take over a part of the estate of Ostrog under the Kolbuszowa transaction of 1753 Stanislaw Lubomirski 1583 1649 married Zofia Ostrogska Aleksander Michal Lubomirski married Helena Tekla Ossolinska Krystyna Lubomirska married Albrycht Stanislaw Radziwill Jozef Karol 1638 1702 was Teofilia Ludwika Zaslawska s husband Teresa Lubomirska d 1712 married Karol Filip the Prince of Neuburg and Marianna Lubomirska 1693 1729 married Pawel Karol Sanguszko the Grand Marshal of Lithuania 11 Royal blood editIn 1647 Stanislaw Lubomirski received the hereditary title of Prince of the Holy Roman Empire from Emperor Ferdinand III The Lubomirski family itself was a candidate for Poland s crown Grand Hetman of the Crown Prince Hieronim Augustyn was the most serious candidate for the Polish crown after the death of John III Sobieski Prince Teodor Konstanty 1683 1745 governor of Krakow submitted his candidacy for the Crown after the death of Augustus II the Strong Prince Stanislaw Lubomirski governor of Kiev and Speaker of the Radom treasury tribunal campaigned for the throne in 1764 Lubomirski princes were also candidates for the Czech and Hungarian crowns Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski 1687 1753 sought the throne of Hungary The culmination of these efforts was Zdzislaw Lubomirski s serving as prince regent from 1917 to 1918 12 The Lubomirski family was related to almost all the dynasties ruling in Europe the Capetien Bourbon Liudolfing Wittelsbach Hohenzollern and Rurykowicz dynasties The family is maternally related to the Piast of Masovia family Zofia Lubomirska was the great granddaughter of Anna Lubomirska the daughter of Konrad III Rudy the prince of Mazovia Katarzyna Lubomirska c 1585 1620 was the wife of Konstanty Bazyli II Prince of Ostrog who was closely related to Boleslaw IV a descendant of Konrad Mazowiecki 13 A descendant of the House of Lubomirski reportedly Ladislas Jean Lubomirski father of the photographer Alexi Lubomirski tested at FamilyTreeDNA He belongs to Y haplogroup J2b L283 gt PH1602 14 Military exploits editPrince Stanislaw Lubomirski was famous for commanding at the Battle of Chocim in 1621 fought against Turkish Tatar forces Stanislaw initially took part in the battle at the head of a private regiment but when hetman Karol Chodkiewicz died and hetman Koniecpolski was taken captive Stanislaw took command and ended the multi day battle quickly with the Turks being repelled on October 10 1621 Prince Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski 1616 1667 was the only Polish aristocrat during the Deluge to not take the oath to Charles X Gustav citation needed Jerzy gave shelter to king John II Casimir on his estate in Lubowla today s Slovakia and launched a counteroffensive of Polish troops He lent his private army which fought the Battle of Warka and recaptured Warsaw and Torun which had been occupied by the Swedes Stefan Czarniecki supported the campaign In 1660 at the head of private and royal armies Prince Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski conducted a lightning campaign that ended with the defeat of Russian forces at Cudnow and Polonka In 1661 a worsening of relations with the king resulted in rebellion The prince withdrew to Silesia and degraded by the Sejm court fought for his political rehabilitation His sons succeeded in this matter Prince Hieronim Augustyn a member of the Order of Hospitallers devoted his life to fighting the Ottoman Turks who were considered a cultural threat to European civilization He also defeated Ukrainian commander Petro Doroshenko in a Cossack Uprising against Poland In 1670 he fought against the Crimean Horde at Braclaw and Kalnik uk In 1683 during the Battle of Vienna his troops were the first to reach the city gates Under the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth eight members of the family served as generals Two of them took part in the war with the Russian Empire which gave rise to the Kosciuszko Insurrection 15 Lubomirski family in the history of Warsaw editSee also History of Warsaw To build his numerous residences Prince Stanislaw Herakliusz Lubomirski 1642 1702 hired Tylman of Gameren later court architect to King Michal Korybut Wisniowiecki Stanislaw Lubomirski owned residences in Pulawy Czerniakow where he founded a monastery and church of the Bernardines and in Ujazdow now part of Warsaw where at the end of the 17th century he built a bathhouse that became the Palace on the Water of Stanislaw August Poniatowski and the Ermitage which was planned as a place of meditation and relaxation Stanislaw Herakliusz was a friend of many European artists and patrons of the arts as evidenced by correspondence He had relations with the French and Spanish courts as well as members of the Medici family These facilitated his carrying out a number of missions and negotiations on behalf of the Polish king Stanislaw Herakliusz was a talented author a precursor of the Polish Baroque in literature He spoke several languages and made use almost all known literary forms in his works However he was interested mostly in the new trends coming from Italy His philosophical work Dialogues of Artakses and Ewander entered the canon of the Old Polish Literature and became required reading 16 An example of building in the very centre of Warsaw is a reconstruction of the Copper Roof Palace Palac Pod Blacha commissioned in the early 18th century by Jerzy Dominik Lubomirski The palace classical in form and situated on the south side of the Royal Castle was bought by the king himself in 1777 who later added the library 17 The previous owner of this building was Prince Jerzy Marcin Lubomirski 1738 1811 distinguished in service to the Polish theatre He financed exhibitions of family and European art and organized numerous concerts balls and meetings Celebrations organized by him were a meeting place for artists and aristocrats from across Europe while in local memory he was remembered as an organizer of public events with fireworks displays 18 Prince Jerzy Marcin was also an adventurer and a member of the Bar Confederation From 1758 he served in the Prussian and Russian armies He was barred from political life in Poland by his family but he went down in history as a lover of music and theatre In 1777 he financed a production of Tartuffe by Moliere in 1783 leased the privilege of the theatre and made Wojciech Boguslawski its director He also opened a ballet drama school for 1000 people 19 Prince Stanislaw Lubomirski went down in history as an administrator of Warsaw He introduced permanent street lighting and supported a police unit with his private money Above all he wished to care for the health of the Varsovians wherefore he decided to surround the city on both sides of the Vistula with an earthen embankment initially to protect against the spreading plague epidemic There were only three crossings in the embankment by which traffic in and out of the city was controlled Later the embankment reinforced with guns was used to defend the capital during the Kosciuszko Uprising and the November Uprising Throughout the 19th century the embankment marked the boundary of the city By the Act of 1770 Stanislaw introduced permanent street names which greatly facilitated the administration of the city and its functioning especially facilitating registration and correspondence 20 Princess Izabela Lubomirska 1736 1816 the wife of Stanislaw rebuilt the Lancut Castle and collected art and books from around the world She was politically active during the revolution she sheltered part of the French court at her estate in Lancut She extended her residences often employing the latest architectural solutions She built a palace on her estate in Mokotow the district of Warsaw that gets its name from her estate Mon Coteau My Hill She was a lover of theatre and laid the foundation stone of the National Theatre in Warsaw as well as maintaining a number of theatres in her palaces The notion of theatre then had a much broader meaning than now It included not only the theatre performances but also opera cabaret and acrobatic performances For her Franciszek Karpinski wrote the Song about the Lord s birth better known under the title God is born In honour of her daughter Cyprian Kamil Norwid wrote a panegyric Tadeusz Kosciuszko set out from the residence in Lancut to Krakow when he incited the Kosciuszko Uprising 21 They also bore the title of Count of Wisnicz und Jaroslaw Philanthropists and patrons editThe Lubomirski family like other affluent aristocratic families engaged in artistic cultural and scientific patronage At Wisnicz Wilanow the Royal Baths Lancut or Mokotow they supported private theatre groups financed artists funded religious buildings and maintained their residences The reconstruction of Wisnicz castle was planned by architect Maciej Trapola the castle chapel being decorated with stucco by Giovanni Battista Falconi and wherein Stanislaw Lubomirski who financed the renovation of the castle installed twenty sacred objects 22 Marceli Lubomirski for many years supported the work of poet Cyprian Kamil Norwid He was immortalized by the poet in the book White Flowers 23 Jozef Lubomirski 1751 1817 was a promoter of industrialization and reforms a capable military commander and a knight of the Order of White Eagle and the Order of Saint Stanislaus He supported the Constitution of May 3 1791 24 The Lubomirski family built private schools for pupils on their estates They often put schooling in the hands of professionals the Order of Piarists and the Order of Jesuits The members of the family founded monasteries churches and other religious buildings Stanislaw Lubomirski founded the Carmelite Monastery in Wisnicz which is still the pearl of Renaissance architecture in Poland For many decades residents of the castle in Wisnicz contributed various legacies to the monastery Jerzy Dominik Lubomirski c 1665 1727 gave to the Pauline Monastery at Jasna Gora many valuable objects including the sacred vessels It was on his initiative to build the main gate leading to the Monastery The gate is called the Gate of the Lubomirski Family 25 Under partition editAfter 1795 the princes Lubomirski engaged in clandestine and insurgent activities against the occupying Russians and in consequence they lost estates Prince Jerzy Roman Lubomirski 1799 1865 the owner of Rozwadow participated in the battles of the November and January uprisings and organized hospitals for the wounded on his estates After the collapse of the uprising his palace became a place where secret meetings of Polish patriots were held Jerzy was active in social and scientific fields maintaining a grammar school and poorhouse for the poor and establishing two scientific foundations one funding the scientific testing of equipment the other rewarding Polish authors of outstanding scientific works His brother Adam Hieronim Karol Lubomirski 1811 1873 was awarded the Virtuti Militari cross for participating in the November Uprising 26 In 1883 Prince Henryk Lubomirski 1777 1850 gave his rich collection of books archive material works of art and other antiques to the Ossolinski National Institute in Lvov which since has become an important scientific and cultural institution with its 19th century publications on the humanities research conducted there being still considered of value Without the material and financial support of Henryk the facility would have closed at an early stage of activity Henryk for many years served as a curator of the facility He also contributed to the formation of the Museum of the Princes Lubomirski the first private museum in the Polish land generally available to the public He was on familiar terms with poet Zygmunt Krasinski who memorialized the prince in his Non Divine Comedy in the person of Orcio 27 In 1823 Henryk created the entail of Przeworsk but as a result of his subversive activities the entail was legalized by the partitioning authorities only after his death In 1869 his son Prince Andrzej Lubomirski became the first recognized entailer Prince Aleksander Lubomirski 1802 1893 founded centres for poor boys at today s seat of the University of Economics and girls in Lagiewniki in the centre of Krakow At these centres young poor were prepared for adult life being instructed for free in practical professions that could be the basis for future employment 28 Prince Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski 1826 1908 founded the Warsaw Charity Society He was the long standing president of the Ophthalmology Institute in Warsaw which conducted ophthalmology research according to European standards On his initiative special teams were set up which helped poor people to get free eye care During the January Uprising the prince was a member of the National Government of Romuald Traugutt where he served as a head of the Department of Internal Affairs For anti Tsarist activities he was exiled deep into Russia to Nizhny Novgorod He supported Polish education He protected Polish vocational organizations from competition from Russian and Prussian ones and established credit unions He tried to regain possession of Polish art stolen by the Russians and among others he helped to reconstruct the Poniatowski monument standing in front of the Presidential Palace He also restored and renovated the Zygmunt s Column and bought Polish castles in Czersk and Ilza in order to save them from being demolished In 1875 he established the Museum of Industry and Agriculture in Warsaw He established evening schools for craftsmen and journeymen as well as penny saving banks for the poor He financed the publishing of sources important in the history of Poland as well as professional magazines He organized free libraries 29 Wladyslaw Emanuel Lubomirski supported the Zoological Cabinet of the University of Warsaw helping to purchase teaching aids and financing travel by employees of the university He donated his collection of shells He was interested in floristics and studied the behavior of plants in the changed climate conditions The Zoological Museum of the Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences PAN has been making use of his collections to this day 30 Prince Wladyslaw Lubomirski 1866 1934 was a patron and founder of Music Young Poland To facilitate the operation of the organization he founded a company that promoted talented young Polish artists He supported music education He helped to promote Karol Szymanowski Artur Rubinstein and Grzegorz Fitelberg He helped to protect the Warsaw Philharmonic from closure by Tsarist officials 31 Wladyslaw and Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski were important in creating the Family Association of the Princes Lubomirski 32 Prince Stanislaw Sebastian Lubomirski 1875 1932 founded the Warsaw aviation association Aviata in 1910 His aim was to establish the first civilian pilot school and aircraft factory on Polish soil The first airport of Aviata was located at Mokotow Field with the permission of Tsarist officials 33 Independent Poland editFurther information Independence of Poland regained On 7 of October 1918 after 123 years under the third partition on the initiative of Prince Regent Zdzislaw Lubomirski 1865 1943 Polish independence was proclaimed and published in the Monitor Polski 34 Zdzislaw was a politician president of the Civic Committee and the president of Warsaw He extended self government organized intervention works credit unions and cared for the education and living conditions of the Varsovians His activities mapped out the direction that future politicians of the independent state would follow In 1926 he undertook the role of mediator between the parties to the May coup In the 1930s he was a senator on the foreign affairs and military committees During World War II he was imprisoned and tortured by the Gestapo He died of wounds sustained in prison 35 36 Interwar period editFurther information Second Polish Republic In the years 1919 1939 princes Lubomirski served as Members of Parliament senators and in the ministries They were also engaged in the industrialization of the country They belonged to the key organizations involved in the modernization of roads railways and aviation They took part in the reconstruction of the Polish army They formed banking centres and credit unions which provided cheap loans to the poorest and were active in educational organizations financing schools as well as being engaged in Polish culture Prince Stefan Lubomirski 1862 1941 was a founder of the Polish Olympic Games Committee later the Polish Olympic committee PKOL becoming its first president its next president being his cousin Prince Kazimierz Lubomirski and a member of the International Olympic Committee Prince Stefan was passionate about racehorse breeding forming with his brothers the most modern horse breeding farm in Poland at Widzow manor near Czestochowa 37 Stefan was the owner of the Warsaw Commuter Railways Warszawska Kolej Dojazdowa company which created the narrow gauge passenger and freight railways of Grojec Jablonkow and Wilanow Railways allowed capital city dwellers to reach factories located outside the city and residents of suburban areas to get to the capital city During World War II the railways built by Lubomirski delivered supplies to the occupied city and brought employees to Warsaw offices and factories 38 Prince Stanislaw Sebastian Lubomirski established the central union of Polish industry Leviatan where he was the president from 1932 The union promoted the ideas of development of industry lowering taxes social security benefits for workers and increasing state aid to industry Members of the organization were elected to the Sejm the Senate were members of governments of the Second Republic of Poland and served other state institutions They published three magazines Economic Review Przeglad Gospodarczy The Polish Courier Kurier Polski and The Telegram Depesza Stanislaw Sebastian established the Industrial Bank of Warsaw SA Bank Przemyslowy Warszawski S A and was the president of the Commercial Bank Bank Handlowy in Warsaw the Central Union of Polish Industry Centralny Zwiazek Przemyslu Polskiego the Polish Bank Association Zwiazek Bankow Polskich and the Association of Polish Industrialists Stowarzyszenie Przemyslowcow Polskich He devoted his life to the struggle for the independence of the Polish economy from the influence of the partitioners and after regaining independence from that of neighbouring countries 39 World War II Armed struggle editFurther information History of Poland 1939 1945 Prince Stefan Lubomirski 1898 1948 during the occupation was a member of the Western Union For keeping a secret storehouse of medicines for the Home Army he was arrested and detained in prison in Montelupich He was on the list to be shot but escaped to Krakow where he was hidden The Germans set the date for the transportation of his family to the concentration camp near Oswiecim 40 Prince Eugeniusz Lubomirski 1895 1982 was arrested by the NKVD and put in the Lubyanka Prison where he met General Anders later becoming the general s adjutant fighting at the general s side throughout Europe He eventually reached the United Kingdom and was a candidate for President of Poland in Exile 41 Prince Hieronim Lubomirski was killed at the age of 17 during the rescue of prisoners in Pawiak code named Action Pawiak Akcja Pawiak On July 19 20 1944 a Ukrainian Wachmeister guard Petrenko and some prisoners attempted a mass jailbreak supported by an attack from the outside but failed Petrenko and several others committed suicide The Resistance attack detachment was ambushed and suffered very heavy casualties practically ceasing to exist In reprisal over 380 prisoners were executed the next day 42 Prince Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski 1882 1945 was active in the local community He travelled to Vienna to discuss the construction of the bridge over the San River He helped people particularly affected during the war He was arrested in 1944 and detained and tortured in Tarnobrzeg prison He was murdered by the Secret Police Urzad Bezpieczenstwa as a member of the Home Army 43 Recent times editIn 2010 family members established the Princes Lubomirski Foundation Fundacja Ksiazat Lubomirskich to facilitate charitable activities The foundation supports the development of various social and heritage projects in Poland Jan Lubomirski Lanckoronski is the current president of the foundation 44 Family members editAleksander Michal Lubomirski 1614 1677 Aleksander Michal Lubomirski 1673 Aleksandra Lubomirska 1760 1836 Alexi Lubomirski 1975 Anna Krystyna Lubomirska 1618 1667 Anna Krystyna Lubomirska 1701 Anna Lubomirska 1736 Anna Lubomirska 1763 Antoni Benedykt Lubomirski 1718 1761 Antoni Lubomirski 1718 1782 Elzbieta Lubomirska 1755 1783 Elzbieta Lubomirska 1669 1729 Franciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski 1710 1747 Franciszek Lubomirski 1721 Franciszek Sebastian Lubomirski 1699 Hieronim Augustyn Lubomirski 1647 1706 Jan Kazimierz Lubomirski 1692 1737 Jerzy Aleksander Lubomirski 1735 Jerzy Dominik Lubomirski 1654 1727 Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski 1616 1667 Jozef Karol Lubomirski 1638 1702 Jozef Lubomirski 1676 1732 Julia Lubomirska 1764 1794 Katarzyna Lubomirska 1611 Konstancja Malgorzata Lubomirska 1761 1840 Krystyna Lubomirska 1645 Krystyna Lubomirska 1699 Maria Karolina Lubomirska 1730 1795 Marianna Lubomirska 1693 1729 Sebastian Lubomirski 1539 1613 Stanislaw Herakliusz Lubomirski 1642 1702 Stanislaw Lubomirski 1583 1649 Stanislaw Lubomirski 1704 1793 Stanislaw Lubomirski 1722 1782 Teodor Lubomirski 1683 1745 Teresa Lubomirska 1658 1712 Wladyslaw Jan Emanuel Lubomirski 1824 1882 Zofia Lubomirska 1718 1790 Kazimierz Lubomirski 1869 1930 Family tree editvteLubomirski family treeThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Aleksander Dominik Lubomirski1693 1720Sebastian Lubomirski1546 1613Anna PieniazekAnna BranickaStanislaw Lubomirski1583 1649Zofia OstrogskaAleksander Michal Lubomirski1614 1677Helena Tekla OssolinskaJozef Karol Lubomirski1638 1702Teofila Ludwika ZaslawskaTeresa Lubomirska1685 1712Charles III PhilipStanislaw Lubomirski 1585Laura de EffremisBarbara HruszowskaKatarzyna LubomirskaJan PrzypkowskiJoachim Lubomirski1588 1610Marianna Lubomirska1693 1729Pawel Karol SanguszkoJozefa Lubomirska1764 1851Adam WalewskiJoseph de WittAnna LubomirskaWincenty WieruskiKatarzyna Lubomirska 1611Janusz OstrogskiJerzy Sebastian Lubomirski1616 1667Konstancja LigezaBarbara TarloStanislaw Herakliusz Lubomirski1642 1702Zofia OpalinskaElzbieta DoenhoffElzbieta Lubomirska1669 1729Adam Mikolaj SieniawskiKacper Lubomirski1724 1780Barbara LubomirskaMarianna Lubomirska1766 1810Protazy Antoni PotockiWalerian ZubowTeodor UwarowZofia Lubomirska1585 1612Mikolaj OlesnickiKonstanty Jacek Lubomirski1620 1663Barbara Domicella SzczawinskaTeodor Lubomirski1683 1745Elzbieta Culler CumingAnna LubomirskaMikolaj EsterhazyBarbara LubomirskaJan ZebrzydowskiKonstancja Lubomirska1618 1646Kazimierz Franciszek CzarnkowskiFranciszek Lubomirski 1721Anna Lubomirska1717 1763Waclaw RzewuskiKrystyna Lubomirska 1645Stanislaw KoniecpolskiAnna Krystyna Lubomirska1618 1667Albrycht Stanislaw RadziwillJozef Lubomirski1676 1732Katarzyna BelzeckaTeresa MniszechAntoni Lubomirski1718 1782Apolonia UstrzyckaZofia KrasinskaElzbieta Lubomirska1755 1783Roman Ignacy PotockiAleksander Michal Lubomirski 1675Katarzyna Anna SapiehaAnna Konstancja Lubomirska 1726Jan Kazimierz WielopolskiStanislaw MalachowskiStanislaw Lubomirski1722 1782Elzbieta CzartoryskaJulia Lubomirska1764 1794Jan PotockiJerzy Aleksander Lubomirski1666 1735Joanna von StarzhausenAniela Teresa MichowskaAnna LubomirskaAntoni Jozef DambskiAleksandra Lubomirska1760 1836Stanislaw Kostka PotockiMichal Lubomirski 1714Jozef Lubomirski 1755Felicja JablonowskaMarianna JablonowskaMagdalena Agnieszka LubomirskaKonstancja Malgorzata Lubomirska1761 1840Seweryn RzewuskiJozef Lubomirski 1710Stanislaw Lubomirski1704 1793Ludwika Honorata PociejLudwika Lubomirska 1829Jozef Makary PotockiEugeniusz Lubomirski1789 1834Maria CzackaKlementyna ks Swiatopelk CzetwertynskaJan Tadeusz Lubomirski1826 1908Maria ZamoyskaZdzislaw Lubomirski1865 1943Maria BranickaHieronim Augustyn Lubomirski1648 1706Konstancja BokumAnna Lubomirska 1736Franciszek WielopolskiKsawery Lubomirski1747 1819Antonia Adela PotockaTeofila RzewuskiMaria Lvovna NaryshkinaAleksander Ignacy Lubomirski1802 1893Julia RadziwillMarianna LubomirskaKrzysztof TowianskiJozef Aleksander Lubomirski1751 1817Ludwika SosnowskaHenryk Ludwik Lubomirski1777 1850Teresa CzartoryskaDorota Lubomirska1807 1844Elzbieta LubomirskaJakub Zygmunt RybinskiMaria Karolina Lubomirska1730 1795Karol Stanislaw RadziwillIzabela Maria Lubomirska1808 1868Wladyslaw Hieronim SanguszkoTeresa Lubomirska1856 1883Karol RadziwilKrystyna Lubomirska 1669Feliks Kazimierz PotockiJerzy Ignacy Lubomirski1687 1753Magda Magdalena BielinskaJoanna von SteinFryderyka LubomirskaRoland Desalleursmrgr de LireeJadwiga Julia Wanda Lubomirska1815 1895Eugeniusz de LigneElzbieta Lubomirska1858 1859Franciszek Sebastian Lubomirski 1699Jan Lubomirski 1736Urszula BranickaKarolina LubomirskaKarol FlemmingJerzy Henryk Lubomirski1817 1872Cecylia ZamoyskaLaura GodefroidMaria Lubomirska1860 1942Benedykt Tyszkiewicz LohojskiHenryk Lubomirski1905 1986Aleksander Lubomirski1695 1772Karolina Fryderyka von VitzthumLudwika LubomirskaFryderyk August RutowskiAndrzej Lubomirski1862 1953Eleonora HusarzewskaCecylia Lubomirska1907 2001Gabriel of Bourbon Two SiciliesJerzy Dominik Lubomirski1654 1727Ursula Katharina of AltenbockumMagdalena TarloAntoni Benedykt Lubomirski1710 1761Anna Zofia OzarowskaMarcin Lubomirski1738 1811Marianna Hadik de FutakHonorata StempkowskaTekla LabeckaAntoni Lubomirski1770 1801Kazimierz Lubomirski1869 1930Teresa WodzickaSebastian Lubomirski1908 Anna Krystyna Lubomirska 1701Dominik Mikolaj RadziwillFranciszek Stefan SapiehaFranciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski1710 1774Magdalena Lubomirska1739 1780Jozef LubomirskiAleksander Michal SapiehaLucja Lubomirska1770 1811Jerzy TyszkiewiczLaura Lubomirska1840 Zygmunt Festetics de TolnaAndrzej Lubomirski1911 2003Notes See also editLubomirski Rokosz Lubomirski Palace Lancut Castle List of szlachtaReferences edit A Boniecki A Reiski herbarz polski part 1 Wiadomosci historyczno genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich v 15 Gebethner i Wolf Warsaw 1912 p 56 57 W Semkowicz Druzyna i Sreniawa Studyum heraldyczne Kwartalnik Historyczny R 14 1900 pp 200 222 A Boniecki A Reiski Herbarz polski part 1 Wiadomosci historyczno genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich v 15 Gebethner i Wolf Warsaw 1912 56 58 However the authors of Herbarz argue that this document was a forgery K Niecsiecki S J Herbarz polski powiekszony dodatkami z pozniejszych autorow rekopisow dowodow urzedowych v 8 Breitkopf w Haertel Lipsk 1841 p 469 472 T Zielinska Poczet polskich rodow arystokratycznych WSiP Warsaw 1997 p 134 Rody magnackie Rzeczypospolitej PWN Warsaw 2009 p 98 A Boniecki A Reiski Herbarz polski part 1 Wiadomosci historyczno genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich v 15 Gebethner i Wolf Warsaw 1912 56 58 District Court in Bochnia Division of the Land Registry Office LWH 390 K Niesiecki Herbarz polski powiekszony dodatkami z pozniejszych autorow rekopisow dowodow urzedowych i wydany przez J N Borowicza v 6 Lipsk 1841 p 147 J Dlugosz latyfundia Lubomirskich w XVII wieku powstanie rozwoj podzialy Opole University Opole 1997 p 13 Rody magnackie Rzeczypospolitej PWN Warsaw 2009 p 103 T Zielinska Poczet polskich rodow arystokratycznych WSiP Warsaw 1997 p 137 Elekcje krolow Polski w Warszawie na Woli 1575 1764 Upamietnienie pola elekcyjnego w 400 lecie stolecznosci Warszawy pod red Marka Tarczynskiego Rytm Warsaw 1997 pass wielcy pl Wielka genealogia Minakowskiego Eupedia T M Nowak Historia oreza polskiego 963 1795 Wiedza Powszechna Warsaw 1988 pass S Mossakowski Mecenat artystyczny Stanislawa Herakliusza Lubomirskiego w Stanislaw Herakliusz Lubomirskie Pisarz polityk mecenas edited by W Roszkowska Ossolineum Wroclaw 1982 p 51 75 M M Drozdowski A Zahorski Historia Warszawy Jeden Swiat Warsaw 2004 p 120 121 Encyklopedia Warszawy red B Petrozolin Skowronska PWN Warsaw 1994 p 231 T Zielinska Poczet polskich rodow arystokratycznych WSiP Warsaw 1997 p 143 144 M M Drozdowski A Zahorski Historia Warszawy Jeden Swiat Warsaw 2004 p pass B Majewska Maszkowska Mecenat artystyczny Izabeli z Czartoryskich Lubomirskiej 1746 1816 Ossolineum Wroclaw 1976 p 17 96 P S Szlezynger Fundacje architektoniczne Stanislawa Lubomirskiego wojewody i starosty generalnego krakowskiego Cracow University of Technology Krakow 1994 p 10 27 C K Norwid Biale kwiaty ed 3 reviewed and supplemented PIW Warsaw 1977 pass A Przybos Lubomirski Jozef w Polski Slownik Biograficzny ed E Rostworowski v 18 PWN Warsaw 1973 p 26 27 http czestochowa miasto biz downloaded on 18 10 2011 Archived 2021 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Turystyczny szlak gniazd rodowych Lubomirskich Tourist trail of ancestral Lubomiski sites Tourist Compass in Polish 6 April 2011 Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 20 July 2018 Gawronski Lukasz 3 February 2011 Historia Zakladu Narodowego im Ossolinskich History of the National Ossolinski Institute Ossolineum in Polish Archived from the original on 6 December 2011 Retrieved 20 July 2018 Downloaded on 18 10 2011 The name Orcio derives from French Henry read Auri J Bieniarzowna Lubomirski Aleksander Ignacy w Polski Slownik Biograficzny ed E Roztworowski v 18 PWN Warsaw 1973 p 2 W H Melanowski Dzieje Instytutu Oftalmicznego im Edwarda ks Lubomirskiego w Warszawie 1823 1944 Towarzystwo Naukowe Warszawskie Warsaw 1948 pass H Markiewiczowa Dzialalnosc opiekunczo wychowawcza Warszawskiego Towarzystwa Dobroczynnosci 1814 1914 Akademia Pedagogiki Specjalnej im Marii Grzegorzewskiej Warsaw 2002 pass J Skodlarski Zarys historii gospodarczej Polski do 1945 roku ed 2 extended and amended PWN Warsaw 1997 K Kowalska Lubomirski Wladyslaw Emanuel w Polski Slownik Biograficzny ed E Rostworowski v 18 p 63 H Sachs Artur Rubinstein translated by D Chylinska Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie Wroclaw 1999 pass KRS 0000074334 H Mordawski Sily powietrzne w I wojnie swiatowej Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie Wroclaw 2008 p 45 46 Monitor Polski Special supplement of 7 10 1918 no 168 p 1 L Krolikowski K Oktabinski Warszawa 1914 1920 Warszawa i okolice w latach walk o niepodleglosc i granice Rzeczypospolitej Wydawnictwa Akademickie i Profesjonalne Warsaw 2007 pass Z J Winnicki Rada Regencyjna Krolestwa Polskiego i jej organy 917 1918 Wektory Wroclaw 1991 Historia Polskiego Komitetu Olimpijskiego History of the Polish Olympic Committee Polish Olympic Committee in Polish Archived from the original on 19 December 2011 Retrieved 20 July 2018 B Prokopinski Kolej jablonowska WKL Warsaw 2004 B Prokopinski Kolej grojecka WKL Warsaw 2002 B Prokopinski Kolej wilanowska WKL Warsaw 2001 Z Landau Lubomirski Stanislaw Sebastian w Polski Slownik Biograficzny ed E Roztworowski v 18 PWN Warsaw 1973 p 56 58 B Winiarski Polityka gospodarcza ed 3 PWN Warsaw 2006 p 143 198 Stanislaw Lubomirski Biografia Stanislaw Lubomirski Biography Nowy Wisnicz in Polish 28 January 2009 Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 20 July 2018 Downloaded on 18 10 2011 dead link E Lubomirski Kartki z zycia mego Polska Fundacja Kulturalna London 1982 pass Aleksy Witkowski Warsaw Uprising Museum in Polish 2016 Retrieved 20 July 2018 Lubomirski Jerzy Ignacy ksiaze Prince Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski Stalowka net in Polish Retrieved 20 July 2018 Downloaded on 18 10 2011 Home Page Foundation of the Lubomir Dukes Retrieved 20 July 2018 Downloaded on 18 10 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lubomirski family The Princes Lubomirski Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lubomirski amp oldid 1199317147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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