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Romuald Giedroyć

Romuald Giedroyć (French: Romuald Gedroitze; Lithuanian: Romualdas Giedraitis; 7 February 1750 – 15 October 1824) was a Polish-Lithuanian prince from the Lithuanian princely Giedraičiai family,[2] who fought in the Bar Confederation, War of 1792 and the Uprising of 1794 as part of the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army. From mid-1812 to early 1813, Giedroyć was also the commander of the Lithuanian regiments raised during the French invasion of Russia.[3][4] In early 1813, he was captured by the Russians and exiled to Arkhangelsk. In 1815, Alexander I of Russia amnestied Giedroyć and made him a Lieutenant general of the Army of Congress Poland.

Romuald Giedroyć
Portrait of Giedroyć in the uniform of a Grand Ducal Lithuanian General of the artillery[1]

Coat of arms:
Hipocentaur
Born(1750-02-07)7 February 1750
Babtinas [lt], Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Died15 October 1824(1824-10-15) (aged 74)
Warsaw, Congress Poland
Allegiance
Service/branch
Years of service1765–1794, 1812–1813
Rank
Unit
Battles/wars
AwardsOrder of Saint Stanislaus (1790)[2]

Biography

He came from a Lithuanian princely family. His father was Józef Giedroyć, starosta of Bernatowszczyzna [be], his mother was Józefa Kiełpsz. He was born on 7 February 1750 in Babtinas [lt].

Bar Confederation

From 1765, he was in the Corps of Cadets in Warsaw.[2] Giedroyć began his military career in 1765 as a cadet in the 2nd Foot Regiment of the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army, part of the Polish-Lithuanian military forces.[5] The regiment in which he served followed Casimir Pulaski.[4] In it, Giedroyć reached the rank of major.[4] In 1771, he served in the unit led by Michał Kazimierz Ogiński.[4] At the battle of Stołowicze in 1771, Giedraitis was distinguished by his valour and was wounded eight times.[4][5]

After a long recovery he became vice-commander of the 1st Lithuanian National Cavalry Brigade in 1778.[5][6] In 1784 he was delegate to the Grodno Sejm.[3][4]

War of 1792

Giedroyć fought in the War of 1792,[2][5] during it he was elevated to the rank of major general.[3][4][5] When Stanisław August Poniatowski signed the Targowica Confederation, Giedroyć wrote a letter to the king demanding to be released from military service.[5]

Uprising of 1794

In 1794, he was one of the organizers of the Kościuszko Uprising in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[2] On April 16 in Šiauliai, together with Antoni Prozor, Piotr Zawisza [pl] and Franciszek Niesiołowski, announced the first act of uprising in Lithuania.[2][3] On April 18, Giedryoć with 200 cavalrymen advanced to Šatės [lt], where he fought against Kossakowski's regiment which supported the Russians.[3] From April 24, he was a member of the Lithuanian National Supreme Council [lt].[2] On April 30 he arrived to Vilnius.[3]

From June to August, he commanded the Samogitian Division's right wing.[2] Together with Tomasz Wawrzecki, they took over Liepāja.[3] In July, Giedroyć took over Salistrovski's command of a corps, and on July 3, fought with the Imperial Russian Army near Pušalotas.[3] A week later, on July 10, the Russians attacked him once more.[3] After a fortnight and a few more days, on July 28, Giedraitis won a battle near Vaiškai.[3][5] On July 29, he won the battle of Sałaty.[2][4] In the battle, he dealt a heavy defeat to the stronger Russian unit of Lieutenant General Sergei Fedorovich Golitsyn [ru].[7] Thanks to this victory, southern Courland came under the control of the insurrectionary forces.[7] Tadeusz Kościuszko promoted him to the rank of Lieutenant general.[4] Moreover, Kościuszko gave Giedroyć the permission to raise a regiment named Sałaty.[4] Following the victorious fight on July 29, he went towards Johaniszkiele.[3]

On 8 September 1794, he took over the command of the Lithuanian army in the Kościuszko Uprising from Antoni Chlewiński.[3] At the time, he marched to Orany.[3] From there, he retreated towards the Kingdom of Poland.[3] On November 3, near Stara Wieś, he joined Jan Henryk Dąbrowski.[3] At the time, Romuald Giedroyć had 2,000 infantrymen, 700 cavalrymen and 17 cannons under his command.[3] On November 4, already after the battle of Praga, he was recalled to Warsaw.[3] However, on November 5, he stopped near Tarczyn, and received Wawrzecki on November 10, who was retreating from Warsaw.[3] After his soldiers began dispersing, Giedroyć and others surrendered to the Russians at Radoszyce, being the last of the rebels to surrender.[3]

From 1795 to 1812

After the uprising's defeat, he emigrated to Paris.[3][4] He went there together with Tadeusz Mostowski, both being part of the Polish Deputation [pl], committee that sought the support of the French government.[4][8] In Paris, Giedroyć acquainted with Josephine Beauharnais.[3] Quickly thereafter, he came back to Lithuania.[3] In February 1796, he was sent by the aforementioned committee to Lithuania in order to encourage the insurrectionary spirit.[4] He first stopped in Dresden, but, seeing no way of being useful to the cause of independence, he retired to his lands, where he lived until 1812.[4] Nevertheless, In 1797, he was involved in the Ciecierski conspiracy.[3] In fact, he was a founder of a secret patriotic organization in Lithuania in 1797.[9]

Napoleon's Invasion of Russia

During French invasion of Russia in 1812, the day after Napoleon entered Vilnius, on 29 June 1812, an act of renewal of the Polish-Lithuanian Union was proclaimed at Vilnius Cathedral on the initiative of university students. In the following days, this act was signed by several thousand people, and the signatures were collected at the home of Romuald Giedroyć.[10] Later he was made Chairman of the Military Committee of the Lithuanian Provisional Governing Commission.[2] He was also the Inspector General of the Lithuanian regiments and Pospolite ruszenie formed for Napoleon's army.[2][3][9][11]

On 31 August 1812, General Van Hogendorp appointed him commander of the emerging Lithuanian military units.

War of the Sixth Coalition

During Napoleon's retreat, Giedroyć crossed the Nemunas and the Vistula.[3] On 12–13 February 1813, the Lithuanian cavalry division, which included the 17th Lithuanian Uhlan Regiment, led by him was surprised and defeated by Russian vanguard of Cossacks under general Chernyshev near Sieraków.[2][12] He was wounded during his capture.[12] He was captured by the Russians and imprisoned in Arkhangelsk until 1815.[2][3][4] He was amnestied by Alexander I of Russia.[3]

He was part of the Army of Congress Poland with the rank of the Imperial Russian Divisional General.[2][3] He was a member of the military committee charged with the army's organisation.[3][4]

 
Tomb of Romuald Giedroyć

Family

Romuald Giedroyć married Karolina Anna Borzymowska (1766-1858), their children were:[13]

  • Ludwik Jerzy (born 1785)
  • Stefan Józef Franciszek Ksawery Giedroyć (1787-1855), Colonel of the French Army (1808-1815), fought in the Battle of Waterloo. He received French citizenship in 1835, as Joseph Étienne François Xavier, prince Giedroyc.[14] He married Franciszka Szymańska in 1821.
  • Kunegunda Franciszka Róża Giedroyć (1793-1883), Lady-in-waiting of Empress Joséphine and the Russian Empress Elizabeth Alexeievna. She married Jerzy Białopiotrowicz (1785-1871) in 1825.
  • Barbara Łucja Giedroyć (1798-1886), wife of general Józef Rautenstrauch (1773-1842) from 1828
  • Aleksander Konstanty Julian Giedroyć (1805-1844), Kammerherr of the Imperial Russian palaces. He married Alina Aleksandra Podoska in 1841

Commemoration

On 30 April 2004, the General Romualdas Giedraitis Artillery Battalion of the Lithuanian Armed Forces was given the name of General Romuald Giedroyć.

References

  1. ^ Gureckienė, Virginija. LIETUVOS DIDŽIOSIOS KUNIGAIKŠTYSTĖS laikotarpio GRAFIKOS DARBAI Vytauto Didžiojo karo muziejaus rinkiniuose (PDF) (in Lithuanian). Kaunas: Vytautas the Great War Museum. p. 40. ISBN 978-609-412-056-5.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jasas 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Ivinskis & Biržiška 1956, p. 218.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Michaud 1838, p. 322.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Daugirdas 2021.
  6. ^ Mościcki 1958, p. 432.
  7. ^ a b "Powstanie kościuszkowskie (12.03.1794 - 16.11.1794)". www.muzeumwp.pl (in Polish). Polish Army Museum.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ Mościcki 1958, p. 433.
  9. ^ a b Judycki & Judycki 2021, p. 23.
  10. ^ Nawrot 2008, p. 265.
  11. ^ Jasas 2004, p. 639.
  12. ^ a b "Epoka napoleońska lata 1796-1815". www.muzeumwp.pl (in Polish). Polish Army Museum.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  13. ^ Romuald Tadeusz ks. Giedrojć h. wł. in M.J. Minakowski: Wielka Genealogia Minakowskiego
  14. ^ Stefan Józef Franciszek h. wł. in M.J. Minakowski: Wielka Genealogia Minakowskiego

Sources

  • Ivinskis, Zenonas; Biržiška, Vaclovas (1956). "Romualdas Giedraitis". Lietuvių Enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vol. 7. United States of America.
  • Daugirdas, A. (2021). "Divizijos Generolas Kunigaikštis Romualdas Gedraitis" (in Lithuanian). from the original on 9 October 2021.
  • Jasas, Rimantas (2004). "Romualdas Giedraitis (1750)". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vol. VI (Fau-Goris). Vilnius: Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos institutas.
  • Jasas, Rimantas (2021). . Vle.lt (in Lithuanian). Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos centras. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021.
  • Michaud, Louis Gabriel (1838). "Giedroyc". Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne (in French). Vol. 65. Paris: Imprimerie de Paul Dupont et Cie. p. 322.
  • Mościcki, Henryk (1958). "Romuald Tadeusz Giedroyć". Polski Słownik Biograficzny (in Polish). Vol. 7. Wrocław. pp. 432–433.
  • Judycki, Zbigniew; Judycki, Maksymilian (2021). Polacy w Armii Napoleona - Słownik Biograficzny Dowódców (PDF). Warsaw. ISBN 978-83-66640-51-1.
  • Nawrot, Dariusz (2008). Litwa i Napoleon w 1812 roku. Katowice. ISBN 9788322617489.

romuald, giedroyć, french, romuald, gedroitze, lithuanian, romualdas, giedraitis, february, 1750, october, 1824, polish, lithuanian, prince, from, lithuanian, princely, giedraičiai, family, fought, confederation, 1792, uprising, 1794, part, grand, ducal, lithu. Romuald Giedroyc French Romuald Gedroitze Lithuanian Romualdas Giedraitis 7 February 1750 15 October 1824 was a Polish Lithuanian prince from the Lithuanian princely Giedraiciai family 2 who fought in the Bar Confederation War of 1792 and the Uprising of 1794 as part of the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army From mid 1812 to early 1813 Giedroyc was also the commander of the Lithuanian regiments raised during the French invasion of Russia 3 4 In early 1813 he was captured by the Russians and exiled to Arkhangelsk In 1815 Alexander I of Russia amnestied Giedroyc and made him a Lieutenant general of the Army of Congress Poland Romuald GiedroycPortrait of Giedroyc in the uniform of a Grand Ducal Lithuanian General of the artillery 1 Coat of arms HipocentaurBorn 1750 02 07 7 February 1750Babtinas lt Grand Duchy of LithuaniaDied15 October 1824 1824 10 15 aged 74 Warsaw Congress PolandAllegianceGrand Duchy of Lithuania 1765 1794 Lithuania 1812 1813 Service wbr branchGrand Ducal Lithuanian ArmyYears of service1765 1794 1812 1813RankLithuanian major general 1792UnitLieutenant general Lithuanian Cavalry Division 1813 Battles warsBar Confederation War of 1792 Kosciuszko Uprising Battle of Salociai Battle of PragaAwardsOrder of Saint Stanislaus 1790 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Bar Confederation 1 2 War of 1792 1 3 Uprising of 1794 1 4 From 1795 to 1812 1 5 Napoleon s Invasion of Russia 1 6 War of the Sixth Coalition 2 Family 3 Commemoration 4 References 5 SourcesBiography EditHe came from a Lithuanian princely family His father was Jozef Giedroyc starosta of Bernatowszczyzna be his mother was Jozefa Kielpsz He was born on 7 February 1750 in Babtinas lt Bar Confederation Edit From 1765 he was in the Corps of Cadets in Warsaw 2 Giedroyc began his military career in 1765 as a cadet in the 2nd Foot Regiment of the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army part of the Polish Lithuanian military forces 5 The regiment in which he served followed Casimir Pulaski 4 In it Giedroyc reached the rank of major 4 In 1771 he served in the unit led by Michal Kazimierz Oginski 4 At the battle of Stolowicze in 1771 Giedraitis was distinguished by his valour and was wounded eight times 4 5 After a long recovery he became vice commander of the 1st Lithuanian National Cavalry Brigade in 1778 5 6 In 1784 he was delegate to the Grodno Sejm 3 4 War of 1792 Edit Giedroyc fought in the War of 1792 2 5 during it he was elevated to the rank of major general 3 4 5 When Stanislaw August Poniatowski signed the Targowica Confederation Giedroyc wrote a letter to the king demanding to be released from military service 5 Uprising of 1794 Edit In 1794 he was one of the organizers of the Kosciuszko Uprising in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 2 On April 16 in Siauliai together with Antoni Prozor Piotr Zawisza pl and Franciszek Niesiolowski announced the first act of uprising in Lithuania 2 3 On April 18 Giedryoc with 200 cavalrymen advanced to Sates lt where he fought against Kossakowski s regiment which supported the Russians 3 From April 24 he was a member of the Lithuanian National Supreme Council lt 2 On April 30 he arrived to Vilnius 3 From June to August he commanded the Samogitian Division s right wing 2 Together with Tomasz Wawrzecki they took over Liepaja 3 In July Giedroyc took over Salistrovski s command of a corps and on July 3 fought with the Imperial Russian Army near Pusalotas 3 A week later on July 10 the Russians attacked him once more 3 After a fortnight and a few more days on July 28 Giedraitis won a battle near Vaiskai 3 5 On July 29 he won the battle of Salaty 2 4 In the battle he dealt a heavy defeat to the stronger Russian unit of Lieutenant General Sergei Fedorovich Golitsyn ru 7 Thanks to this victory southern Courland came under the control of the insurrectionary forces 7 Tadeusz Kosciuszko promoted him to the rank of Lieutenant general 4 Moreover Kosciuszko gave Giedroyc the permission to raise a regiment named Salaty 4 Following the victorious fight on July 29 he went towards Johaniszkiele 3 On 8 September 1794 he took over the command of the Lithuanian army in the Kosciuszko Uprising from Antoni Chlewinski 3 At the time he marched to Orany 3 From there he retreated towards the Kingdom of Poland 3 On November 3 near Stara Wies he joined Jan Henryk Dabrowski 3 At the time Romuald Giedroyc had 2 000 infantrymen 700 cavalrymen and 17 cannons under his command 3 On November 4 already after the battle of Praga he was recalled to Warsaw 3 However on November 5 he stopped near Tarczyn and received Wawrzecki on November 10 who was retreating from Warsaw 3 After his soldiers began dispersing Giedroyc and others surrendered to the Russians at Radoszyce being the last of the rebels to surrender 3 From 1795 to 1812 Edit After the uprising s defeat he emigrated to Paris 3 4 He went there together with Tadeusz Mostowski both being part of the Polish Deputation pl committee that sought the support of the French government 4 8 In Paris Giedroyc acquainted with Josephine Beauharnais 3 Quickly thereafter he came back to Lithuania 3 In February 1796 he was sent by the aforementioned committee to Lithuania in order to encourage the insurrectionary spirit 4 He first stopped in Dresden but seeing no way of being useful to the cause of independence he retired to his lands where he lived until 1812 4 Nevertheless In 1797 he was involved in the Ciecierski conspiracy 3 In fact he was a founder of a secret patriotic organization in Lithuania in 1797 9 Napoleon s Invasion of Russia Edit During French invasion of Russia in 1812 the day after Napoleon entered Vilnius on 29 June 1812 an act of renewal of the Polish Lithuanian Union was proclaimed at Vilnius Cathedral on the initiative of university students In the following days this act was signed by several thousand people and the signatures were collected at the home of Romuald Giedroyc 10 Later he was made Chairman of the Military Committee of the Lithuanian Provisional Governing Commission 2 He was also the Inspector General of the Lithuanian regiments and Pospolite ruszenie formed for Napoleon s army 2 3 9 11 On 31 August 1812 General Van Hogendorp appointed him commander of the emerging Lithuanian military units War of the Sixth Coalition Edit During Napoleon s retreat Giedroyc crossed the Nemunas and the Vistula 3 On 12 13 February 1813 the Lithuanian cavalry division which included the 17th Lithuanian Uhlan Regiment led by him was surprised and defeated by Russian vanguard of Cossacks under general Chernyshev near Sierakow 2 12 He was wounded during his capture 12 He was captured by the Russians and imprisoned in Arkhangelsk until 1815 2 3 4 He was amnestied by Alexander I of Russia 3 He was part of the Army of Congress Poland with the rank of the Imperial Russian Divisional General 2 3 He was a member of the military committee charged with the army s organisation 3 4 Tomb of Romuald GiedroycFamily EditRomuald Giedroyc married Karolina Anna Borzymowska 1766 1858 their children were 13 Ludwik Jerzy born 1785 Stefan Jozef Franciszek Ksawery Giedroyc 1787 1855 Colonel of the French Army 1808 1815 fought in the Battle of Waterloo He received French citizenship in 1835 as Joseph Etienne Francois Xavier prince Giedroyc 14 He married Franciszka Szymanska in 1821 Kunegunda Franciszka Roza Giedroyc 1793 1883 Lady in waiting of Empress Josephine and the Russian Empress Elizabeth Alexeievna She married Jerzy Bialopiotrowicz 1785 1871 in 1825 Barbara Lucja Giedroyc 1798 1886 wife of general Jozef Rautenstrauch 1773 1842 from 1828 Aleksander Konstanty Julian Giedroyc 1805 1844 Kammerherr of the Imperial Russian palaces He married Alina Aleksandra Podoska in 1841Commemoration EditOn 30 April 2004 the General Romualdas Giedraitis Artillery Battalion of the Lithuanian Armed Forces was given the name of General Romuald Giedroyc References Edit Gureckiene Virginija LIETUVOS DIDZIOSIOS KUNIGAIKSTYSTĖS laikotarpio GRAFIKOS DARBAI Vytauto Didziojo karo muziejaus rinkiniuose PDF in Lithuanian Kaunas Vytautas the Great War Museum p 40 ISBN 978 609 412 056 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jasas 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Ivinskis amp Birziska 1956 p 218 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Michaud 1838 p 322 a b c d e f g Daugirdas 2021 Moscicki 1958 p 432 a b Powstanie kosciuszkowskie 12 03 1794 16 11 1794 www muzeumwp pl in Polish Polish Army Museum a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Moscicki 1958 p 433 a b Judycki amp Judycki 2021 p 23 Nawrot 2008 p 265 Jasas 2004 p 639 a b Epoka napoleonska lata 1796 1815 www muzeumwp pl in Polish Polish Army Museum a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Romuald Tadeusz ks Giedrojc h wl in M J Minakowski Wielka Genealogia Minakowskiego Stefan Jozef Franciszek h wl in M J Minakowski Wielka Genealogia MinakowskiegoSources EditIvinskis Zenonas Birziska Vaclovas 1956 Romualdas Giedraitis Lietuviu Enciklopedija in Lithuanian Vol 7 United States of America Daugirdas A 2021 Divizijos Generolas Kunigaikstis Romualdas Gedraitis in Lithuanian Archived from the original on 9 October 2021 Jasas Rimantas 2004 Romualdas Giedraitis 1750 Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija in Lithuanian Vol VI Fau Goris Vilnius Mokslo ir enciklopediju leidybos institutas Jasas Rimantas 2021 Romualdas Giedraitis Vle lt in Lithuanian Mokslo ir enciklopediju leidybos centras Archived from the original on 8 October 2021 Michaud Louis Gabriel 1838 Giedroyc Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne in French Vol 65 Paris Imprimerie de Paul Dupont et Cie p 322 Moscicki Henryk 1958 Romuald Tadeusz Giedroyc Polski Slownik Biograficzny in Polish Vol 7 Wroclaw pp 432 433 Judycki Zbigniew Judycki Maksymilian 2021 Polacy w Armii Napoleona Slownik Biograficzny Dowodcow PDF Warsaw ISBN 978 83 66640 51 1 Nawrot Dariusz 2008 Litwa i Napoleon w 1812 roku Katowice ISBN 9788322617489 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Romuald Giedroyc amp oldid 1129329490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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