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Stanisław August Poniatowski

Stanisław II August[a] (born Stanisław Antoni Poniatowski;[b] 17 January 1732 – 12 February 1798), known also by his regnal Latin name Stanislaus II Augustus, was King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania from 1764 to 1795, and the last monarch of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Stanisław II August
Portrait by Marcello Bacciarelli, 1786
King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania
Reign7 September 1764 – 25 November 1795
Coronation25 November 1764
St. John's Archcathedral, Warsaw
PredecessorAugustus III
Successormonarchy suppressed (Partitions of Poland)[1]
Born(1732-01-17)17 January 1732
Wołczyn, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Died12 February 1798(1798-02-12) (aged 66)
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Burial
Issue
Details...
illegitimate
Names
Stanisław Antoni Poniatowski
HousePoniatowski
FatherStanisław Poniatowski
MotherKonstancja Czartoryska
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

Born into wealthy Polish aristocracy, Poniatowski arrived as a diplomat at the Russian imperial court in Saint Petersburg in 1755 at the age of 22[2] and became intimately involved with the future empress Catherine the Great. With her connivance, he was elected King of Poland by the Polish Diet in September 1764[3][4][5] following the death of Augustus III. Contrary to expectations, Poniatowski attempted to reform and strengthen the large but ailing Commonwealth. His efforts were met with external opposition from neighbouring Prussia, Russia and Austria, all committed to keeping the Commonwealth weak. From within he was opposed by conservative interests, which saw the reforms as a threat to their traditional liberties and privileges granted centuries earlier.

The defining crisis of his early reign was the War of the Bar Confederation (1768–1772) that led to the First Partition of Poland (1772). The later part of his reign saw reforms wrought by the Diet (1788–1792) and the Constitution of 3 May 1791. These reforms were overthrown by the 1792 Targowica Confederation and by the Polish–Russian War of 1792, leading directly to the Second Partition of Poland (1793), the Kościuszko Uprising (1794) and the final and Third Partition of Poland (1795), marking the end of the Commonwealth. Stripped of all meaningful power, Poniatowski abdicated in November 1795 and spent the last years of his life as a captive in Saint Petersburg's Marble Palace.

A controversial figure in Poland's history, he is criticized primarily for his failure to resolutely stand against and prevent the partitions, which led to the destruction of the Polish state. On the other hand, he is remembered as a great patron of the arts and sciences who laid the foundation for the Commission of National Education, the first institution of its kind in the world, and sponsored many architectural landmarks.

Youth

 
Personal coat of arms
 
Aged 14

Stanisław Antoni Poniatowski was born on 17 January 1732 in Wołczyn (then in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and now Voŭčyn, Belarus). He was one of eight surviving children, and the fourth son, of Princess Konstancja Czartoryska and of Count Stanisław Poniatowski, Ciołek coat of arms, Castellan of Kraków, who started as a Lithuanian domestic servant.[2] His older brothers were Kazimierz Poniatowski (1721–1800), a Podkomorzy at Court, Franciszek Poniatowski (1723–1749), Canon of Wawel Cathedral who suffered from Epilepsy and Aleksander Poniatowski (1725–1744), an officer killed in the Rhineland-Palatinate during the War of the Austrian Succession. His younger brothers were, Andrzej Poniatowski (1734–1773), an Austrian Feldmarschall, Michał Jerzy Poniatowski (1736–94) who became Primate of Poland. His two older and married sisters were Ludwika Zamoyska (1728–1804) and Izabella Branicka (1730–1808). Among his nephews was Prince Józef Poniatowski (1763–1813), son of Andrzej.[6][7] He was a great-grandson of poet and courtier Jan Andrzej Morsztyn and through his great-grandmother, Catherine Gordon, lady-in-waiting to Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga, he was related to the House of Stuart and thereby connected to the leading families of Scotland, Spain and France.[8][9] The Poniatowski family had achieved high status among the Polish nobility (szlachta) of the time.[7][10]

He spent the first few years of his childhood in Gdańsk. He was temporarily kidnapped as a toddler, on the orders of Józef Potocki, Governor of Kiev, as a reprisal for his father's support for King Augustus III and held for some months in Kamieniec-Podolski. He was returned to his parents in Gdańsk. Later he moved with his family to Warsaw. He was initially educated by his mother, then by private tutors, including Russian ambassador Herman Karl von Keyserling. He had few friends in his teenage years and instead developed a fondness for books which continued throughout his life.[7] He went on his first foreign trip in 1748, with elements of the Imperial Russian army as it advanced into the Rhineland to aid Maria Theresia's troops during the War of the Austrian Succession which ended with the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748). This enabled Poniatowski both to visit the city, also known as Aachen, and to venture into the Netherlands. On his return journey he stopped in Dresden.[7]

Political career

 
Sir Charles Hanbury Williams, Poniatowski's mentor, by John Giles Eccardt

The following year Poniatowski was apprenticed to the office of Michał Fryderyk Czartoryski, the then Deputy Chancellor of Lithuania.[7] In 1750, he travelled to Berlin where he met a British diplomat, Charles Hanbury Williams, who became his mentor and friend.[11] In 1751, Poniatowski was elected to the Treasury Tribunal in Radom, where he served as a commissioner.[7][11] He spent most of January 1752 at the Austrian court in Vienna.[11] Later that year, after serving at the Radom Tribunal and meeting King Augustus III of Poland, he was elected deputy of the Sejm (Polish parliament). While there his father secured for him the title of Starosta of Przemyśl. In March 1753, he travelled to Hungary and Vienna, where he again met with Williams.[11] He returned to the Netherlands, where he met many key members of that country's political and economic sphere. By late August he had arrived in Paris, where he moved among the elites. In February 1754, he travelled on to Britain, where he spent some months. There, he was befriended by Charles Yorke, the future Lord Chancellor of Great Britain.[11] He returned to the Commonwealth later that year, however he eschewed the Sejm, as his parents wanted to keep him out of the political furore surrounding the Ostrogski family's land inheritance (see: fee tailOrdynacja Ostrogska).[11] The following year he received the title of Stolnik of Lithuania.[12][13]

Poniatowski owed his rise and influence to his family connections with the powerful Czartoryski family and their political faction, known as the Familia, with whom he had grown close.[12][14] It was the Familia who sent him in 1755 to Saint Petersburg in the service of Williams, who had been nominated British ambassador to Russia.[12][15]

 
Grand Duchess Catherine Alexeyevna, 1745, by Louis Caravaque

In Saint Petersburg, Williams introduced Poniatowski to the 26-year-old Catherine Alexeievna, the future empress Catherine the Great. The two became lovers.[12][16] Whatever his feelings for Catherine, it is likely Poniatowski also saw an opportunity to use the relationship for his own benefit, using her influence to bolster his career.[12]

Poniatowski had to leave St. Petersburg in July 1756 due to court intrigue.[12][14] Through the combined influence of Catherine, of Russian empress Elizabeth and of chancellor Bestuzhev-Ryumin, Poniatowski was able to rejoin the Russian court now as ambassador of Saxony the following January.[12][14] Still in St Petersburg, he appears to have been a source of intrigue between various European governments, some supporting his appointment, others demanding his withdrawal. He eventually left the Russian capital on 14 August 1758.[12]

Poniatowski attended the Sejms of 1758, 1760 and 1762.[17] He continued his involvement with the Familia, and supported a pro-Russian and anti-Prussian stance in Polish politics. His father died in 1762, leaving him a modest inheritance.[17] In 1762, when Catherine ascended the Russian throne, she sent him several letters professing her support for his own ascension to the Polish throne, but asking him to stay away from St. Petersburg.[17] Nevertheless, Poniatowski hoped that Catherine would consider his offer of marriage, an idea seen as plausible by some international observers. He participated in the failed plot by the Familia to stage a coup d'état against King Augustus III.[17] In August 1763, however, Catherine advised him and the Familia that she would not support a coup as long as King Augustus was alive.[17]

Kingship

Years of hope

 
Banner of Poland during the reign of Stanisław II
 
Stanisław August's 1764 election as king, depicted by Bernardo Bellotto.

Upon the death of Poland's King Augustus III in October 1763, lobbying began for the election of the new king. Catherine threw her support behind Poniatowski.[18] The Russians spent about 2.5m rubles in aid of his election. Poniatowski's supporters and opponents engaged in some military posturing and even minor clashes. In the end, the Russian army was deployed only a few kilometres from the election sejm, which met at Wola near Warsaw.[19] In the event, there were no other serious contenders, and during the convocation sejm on 7 September 1764, 32-year-old Poniatowski was elected king, with 5,584 votes.[19][20][21] He swore the pacta conventa on 13 November, and a formal coronation took place in Warsaw on 25 November.[18] The new king's "uncles" in the Familia would have preferred another nephew on the throne, Prince Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski, characterized by one of his contemporaries as "débauché, si non dévoyé" (French: "debauched if not depraved"), but Czartoryski had declined to seek office.[22]

 
Stanisław August in coronation robes

"Stanisław August", as he now styled himself combining the names of his two immediate royal predecessors, began his rule with only mixed support within the nation. It was mainly the small nobility who favoured his election.[18] In his first years on the throne he attempted to introduce a number of reforms. He founded the Knights School, and began to form a diplomatic service, with semi-permanent diplomatic representatives throughout Europe, Russia and the Ottoman Empire.[23] On 7 May 1765, Poniatowski established the Order of the Knights of Saint Stanislaus, in honour of Saint Stanislaus of Krakow, Bishop and Martyr, Poland's and his own patron saint, as the country's second order of chivalry, to reward Poles and others for noteworthy service to the King.[24][25] Together with the Familia he tried to reform the ineffective system of government, by reducing the powers of the hetmans (Commonwealth's top military commanders) and treasurers, moving them to commissions elected by the Sejm and accountable to the King.[23] In his memoirs, Poniatowski called this period the "years of hope."[18] The Familia, which was interested in strengthening its own power base, was dissatisfied with his conciliatory attitude as he reached out to many former opponents of their policies.[18][21] This uneasy alliance between Poniatowski and the Familia continued for most of the first decade of his rule.[18] One of the points of contention between Poniatowski and the Familia concerned the rights of religious minorities in Poland. Whereas Poniatowski reluctantly supported a policy of religious tolerance, the Familia was opposed to it. The growing rift between Poniatowski and the Familia was exploited by the Russians, who used the issue as a pretext to intervene in the Commonwealth's internal politics and to destabilize the country.[23] Catherine had no wish to see Poniatowski's reform succeed. She had supported his ascent to the throne to ensure the Commonwealth remained a virtual puppet state under Russian control, so his attempts to reform the Commonwealth's ailing government structures were a threat to the status quo.[21][23]

The Bar Confederation and First Partition of Poland

Matters came to a head in 1766. During the Sejm in October of that year, Poniatowski attempted to push through a radical reform, restricting the disastrous liberum veto provision.[26] He was opposed by conservatives such as Michał Wielhorski, who were supported by the Prussian and Russian ambassadors and who threatened war if the reform was passed. The dissidents, supported by the Russians, formed the Radom Confederation.[26] Abandoned by the Familia, Poniatowski's reforms failed to pass at the Repnin Sejm, named after Russian ambassador Nicholas Repnin, who promised to guarantee with all the might of the Russian Empire the Golden Liberties of the Polish nobility, enshrined in the Cardinal Laws.[26][27][28]

Although it had abandoned the cause of Poniatowski's reforms, the Familia did not receive the support it expected from the Russians who continued to press for the conservatives' rights. Meanwhile, other factions now rallied under the banner of the Bar Confederation, aimed against the conservatives, Poniatowski and the Russians.[26] After an unsuccessful attempt to raise allies in Western Europe, France, Britain and Austria, Poniatowski and the Familia had no choice but to rely more heavily on the Russian Empire, which treated Poland as a protectorate.[29] In the War of the Bar Confederation (1768–1772), Poniatowski supported the Russian army's repression of the Bar Confederation.[26][30] In 1770, the Council of the Bar Confederation proclaimed him dethroned.[31] The following year, he was kidnapped by Bar Confederates and was briefly held prisoner outside of Warsaw, but he managed to escape.[31][32] In view of the continuing weakness of the Polish-Lithuanian state, Austria, Russia, and Prussia collaborated to threaten military intervention in exchange for substantial territorial concessions from the Commonwealth – a decision they made without consulting Poniatowski or any other Polish parties.[31]

 
Tadeusz Rejtan's famous gesture of protest at the Partition Sejm, as depicted by Matejko

Although Poniatowski protested against the First Partition of the Commonwealth (1772), he was powerless to do anything about it.[33] He considered abdication, but decided against it.[31]

During the Partition Sejm of 1773–1775, in which Russia was represented by ambassador Otto von Stackelberg, with no allied assistance forthcoming from abroad and with the armies of the partitioning powers occupying Warsaw to compel the Sejm by force of arms, no alternative was available save submission to their will.[34][35][36] Eventually Poniatowski and the Sejm acceded to the "partition treaty". At the same time, several other reforms were passed.[36] The Cardinal Laws were confirmed and guaranteed by the partitioning powers.[35] Royal prerogative was restricted, so that the King lost the power to confer titular roles, and military promotions, to appoint ministers and senators. Starostwo territories, and Crown lands would be awarded by auction.[35][37][38] The Sejm also created two notable institutions: the Permanent Council, a government body in continuous operation, and the Commission of National Education.[39] The partitioning powers intended the council to be easier to control than the unruly Sejms, and indeed it remained under the influence of the Russian Empire. Nevertheless, it was a significant improvement on the earlier Commonwealth governance.[35][39] The new legislation was guaranteed by the Russian Empire, giving it licence to interfere in Commonwealth politics when legislation it favoured was threatened.[35]

The aftermath of the Partition Sejm saw the rise of a conservative faction opposed to the Permanent Council, seeing it as a threat to their Golden Freedoms. This faction was supported by the Czartoryski family, but not by Poniatowski, who proved to be quite adept at making the Council follow his wishes. This marked the formation of new anti-royal and pro-royal factions in Polish politics.[24][36] The royal faction was made up primarily of people indebted to the King, who planned to build their careers on service to him. Few were privy to his plans for reforms, which were kept hidden from the conservative opposition and Russia.[24] Poniatowski scored a political victory during the Sejm of 1776, which further strengthened the council.[36] Chancellor Andrzej Zamoyski was tasked with the codification of the Polish law, a project that became known as the Zamoyski Code. Russia supported some, but not all, of the 1776 reforms, and to prevent Poniatowski from growing too powerful, it supported the opposition during the Sejm of 1778. This marked the end of Poniatowski's reforms, as he found himself without sufficient support to carry them through.[40]

The Great Sejm and the Constitution of 3 May 1791

In the 1780s, Catherine appeared to favour Poniatowski marginally over the opposition, but she did not support any of his plans for significant reform.[40] Despite repeated attempts, Poniatowski failed to confederate the sejms, which would have made them immune to the liberum veto.[24] Thus, although he had a majority in the Sejms, Poniatowski was unable to pass even the smallest reform. The Zamoyski Code was rejected by the Sejm of 1780, and opposition attacks on the King dominated the Sejms of 1782 and 1786.[24]

Reforms became possible again in the late 1780s. In the context of the wars being waged against the Ottoman Empire by both the Austrian Empire and the Russian Empire, Poniatowski tried to draw Poland into the Austro-Russian alliance, seeing a war with the Ottomans as an opportunity to strengthen the Commonwealth.[41][42] Catherine gave permission for the next Sejm to be called, as she considered some form of limited military alliance with Poland against the Ottomans might be useful.[42][43]

The Polish-Russian alliance was not implemented, as in the end the only acceptable compromise proved unattractive to both sides.[42][43] However, in the ensuing Four-Year Sejm of 1788–92 (known as the Great Sejm), Poniatowski threw his lot in with the reformers associated with the Patriotic Party of Stanisław Małachowski, Ignacy Potocki and Hugo Kołłątaj, and co-authored the Constitution of 3 May 1791.[44][45][46][47] The Constitution introduced sweeping reforms. According to Jacek Jędruch, the Constitution, despite its liberal provisions, "fell somewhere below the French, above the Canadian, and left the General State Laws for the Prussian States (in German: Allgemeines Landrecht für die Preußischen Staaten) far behind", but was "no match for the American Constitution".[48]

George Sanford notes that the Constitution gave Poland "a constitutional monarchy close to the British model of the time."[49] According to a contemporary account, Poniatowski himself described it, as "founded principally on those of England and the United States of America, but avoiding the faults and errors of both, and adapted as much as possible to the local and particular circumstances of the country."[50] The Constitution of 3 May remained to the end a work in progress. A new civil and criminal code (provisionally called the "Stanisław Augustus Code") was among the proposals. Poniatowski also planned a reform to improve the situation of Polish Jews.[51]

In foreign policy, spurned by Russia, Poland turned to another potential ally, the Triple Alliance, represented on the Polish diplomatic scene primarily by the Kingdom of Prussia, which led to the formation of the ultimately futile Polish–Prussian alliance.[52] The pro-Prussian shift was not supported by Poniatowski, who nevertheless acceded to the decision of the majority of Sejm deputies.[46] The passing of the Constitution of 3 May, although officially applauded by Frederick William II of Prussia, who sent a congratulatory note to Warsaw, caused further worry in Prussia.[53] The contacts of Polish reformers with the revolutionary French National Assembly were seen by Poland's neighbours as evidence of a conspiracy and a threat to their absolute monarchies.[54][55] Prussian statesman Ewald von Hertzberg expressed the fears of European conservatives: "The Poles have given the coup de grâce to the Prussian monarchy by voting in a constitution", elaborating that a strong Commonwealth would likely demand the return of the lands Prussia acquired in the First Partition;[56] a similar sentiment was later expressed by Prussian Foreign Minister, Count Friedrich Wilhelm von der Schulenburg-Kehnert.[53] Russia's wars with the Ottomans and Sweden having ended, Catherine was furious over the adoption of the Constitution, which threatened Russian influence in Poland.[57][58][59] One of Russia's chief foreign policy authors, Alexander Bezborodko, upon learning of the Constitution, commented that "the worst possible news have arrived from Warsaw: the Polish king has become almost sovereign."[56]

War in Defence of the Constitution and fall of the Commonwealth

 
The three Partitions of Poland-Lithuania: Russian (purple and red), Austrian (green), Prussian (blue)

Shortly thereafter, conservative Polish nobility formed the Targowica Confederation to overthrow the Constitution, which they saw as a threat to the traditional freedoms and privileges they enjoyed.[60][61] The confederates aligned themselves with Russia's Catherine the Great, and the Russian army entered Poland, marking the start of the Polish–Russian War of 1792, also known as the War in Defence of the Constitution. The Sejm voted to increase the Polish Army to 100,000 men, but due to insufficient time and funds this number was never achieved.[62] Poniatowski and the reformers could field only a 37,000-man army, many of them untested recruits.[63] This army, under the command of the King's nephew Józef Poniatowski and Tadeusz Kościuszko, managed to defeat the Russians or fight them to a draw on several occasions.[62] Following the victorious Battle of Zieleńce, in which Polish forces were commanded by his nephew, the King founded a new order, the Order of Virtuti Militari, to reward Poles for exceptional military leadership and courage in combat.[64]

Despite Polish requests, Prussia refused to honour its alliance obligations.[53] In the end, the numerical superiority of the Russians was too great, and defeat looked inevitable.[62] Poniatowski's attempts at negotiations with Russia proved futile.[65] In July 1792, when Warsaw was threatened with siege by the Russians, the king came to believe that surrender was the only alternative to total defeat. Having received assurances from Russian ambassador Yakov Bulgakov that no territorial changes would occur, a cabinet of ministers called the Guard of Laws (or Guardians of Law, Polish: Straż Praw) voted eight to four in favor of surrender.[65] On 24 July 1792, Poniatowski joined the Targowica Confederation.[62] The Polish Army disintegrated. Many reform leaders, believing their cause lost, went into self-exile, although they hoped that Poniatowski would be able to negotiate an acceptable compromise with the Russians, as he had done in the past.[65] Poniatowski had not saved the Commonwealth, however. He and the reformers had lost much of their influence, both within the country and with Catherine.[66] Neither were the Targowica Confederates victorious. To their surprise, there ensued the Second Partition of Poland.[62] With the new deputies bribed or intimidated by the Russian troops, the Grodno Sejm took place.[62][67] On 23 November 1793, it annulled all acts of the Great Sejm, including the Constitution.[68] Faced with his powerlessness, Poniatowski once again considered abdication; in the meantime he tried to salvage whatever reforms he could.[69][70]

Final years

Poniatowski's plans had been ruined by the Kościuszko Uprising.[70] The King had not encouraged it, but once it began he supported it, seeing no other honourable option.[70] Its defeat marked the end of the Commonwealth. Poniatowski tried to govern the country in the brief period after the fall of the Uprising, but on 2 December 1794, Catherine demanded he leave Warsaw, a request to which he acceded on 7 January 1795, leaving the capital under Russian military escort and settling briefly in Grodno.[71] On 24 October 1795, the Act of the final, Third Partition of Poland was signed. One month and one day later, on 25 November, Poniatowski signed his abdication.[71][72][73] Reportedly, his sister, Ludwika Maria Zamoyska and her daughter also his favourite niece, Urszula Zamoyska, who had been threatened with confiscation of their property, had contributed to persuading him to sign the abdication: they feared that his refusal would lead to a Russian confiscation of their properties and their ruin.[74]

Catherine died on 17 November 1796, succeeded by her son, Paul I of Russia. On 15 February 1797, Poniatowski left for Saint Petersburg.[72] He had hoped to be allowed to travel abroad, but was unable to secure permission to do so.[72] A virtual prisoner in St. Petersburg's Marble Palace,[75] he subsisted on a pension granted to him by Catherine.[72] Despite financial troubles, he still supported some of his former allies, and continued to try to represent the Polish cause at the Russian court.[72] He also worked on his memoirs.[72]

 
Poniatowski on his deathbed, 1798, by Bacciarelli

Poniatowski died of a stroke on 12 February 1798.[76] Paul I sponsored a royal state funeral, and on 3 March he was buried at the Catholic Church of St. Catherine in St. Petersburg.[76] In 1938, when the Soviet Union planned to demolish the Church, his remains were transferred to the Second Polish Republic and interred in a church at Wołczyn, his birthplace.[76] This was done in secret and caused controversy in Poland when the matter became known.[76] In 1990, due to the poor state of the Wołczyn church (then in the Byelorussian SSR), his body was once more exhumed and was brought to Poland, to St. John's Cathedral in Warsaw, where on 3 May 1791 he had celebrated the adoption of the Constitution that he had coauthored.[76][77] A third funeral ceremony was held on 14 February 1995.[76]

Legacy

Patron of culture

Stanisław August Poniatowski has been called the Polish Enlightenment's most important patron of the arts.[78] His cultural projects were attuned to his socio-political aims of overthrowing the myth of the Golden Freedoms and the traditional ideology of Sarmatism.[79][80] His weekly "Thursday Dinners" were considered the most scintillating social functions in the Polish capital.[81][82] He founded Warsaw's National Theatre, Poland's first public theatre, and sponsored an associated Ballet schoolsballet school.[81][82][83][84] He remodeled Ujazdów Palace and the Royal Castle in Warsaw, and erected the elegant Łazienki (Royal Baths) Palace in Warsaw's Łazienki, Park.[85] He involved himself deeply in the detail of his architectural projects, and his eclectic style has been dubbed the "Stanisław August style" by Polish art historian Władysław Tatarkiewicz.[85] His chief architects included Domenico Merlini and Jan Kammsetzer.[85]

He was also patron to numerous painters.[85] They included Poles such as his protégée, Anna Rajecka and Franciszek Smuglewicz, Jan Bogumił Plersch, son of Jan Jerzy Plersch, Józef Wall, and Zygmunt Vogel, as well as foreign painters including, Marcello Bacciarelli, Bernardo Bellotto, Jean Pillement, Ludwik Marteau, and Per Krafft the Elder.[85][86] His retinue of sculptors, headed by André-Jean Lebrun, included Giacomo Monaldi, Franz Pinck, and Tommaso Righi.[85] Jan Filip Holzhaeusser was his court engraver and the designer of many commemorative medals.[85][86] According to a 1795 inventory, Stanisław August's art collection, spread among numerous buildings, contained 2,889 pieces, including works by Rembrandt, Rubens, and van Dyck.[86] His plan to create a large gallery of paintings in Warsaw was disrupted by the dismemberment of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Most of the paintings that he had ordered for it can now be seen in London's Dulwich Picture Gallery.[87][88] Poniatowski also planned to found an Academy of Fine Arts, but this finally came about only after his abdication and departure from Warsaw.[86]

Poniatowski accomplished much in the realm of education and literature.[81][89] He established the School of Chivalry, also called the "Cadet Corps", which functioned from 1765 to 1794 and whose alumni included Tadeusz Kościuszko. He supported the creation of the Commission of National Education, considered to be the world's first Ministry of Education.[81][90] In 1765 he helped found the Monitor, one of the first Polish newspapers and the leading periodical of the Polish Enlightenment.[81][82][83][84] He sponsored many articles that appeared in the Monitor.[82] Writers and poets who received his patronage included, Stanisław Trembecki, Franciszek Salezy Jezierski, Franciszek Bohomolec and Franciszek Zabłocki.[82] He also supported publishers including, Piotr Świtkowski, and library owners such as Józef Lex.[82]

 
Łazienki Park: monument to John III Sobieski, meant to recall anti-Ottoman sentiment during the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878)

He supported the development of the sciences, particularly cartography; he hired a personal cartographer, Karol de Perthees, even before he was elected king.[79] A plan he initiated to map the entire territory of the Commonwealth, however, was never finished.[79] At the Royal Castle in Warsaw, he organized an astronomical observatory and supported astronomers Jan Śniadecki and Marcin Odlanicki Poczobutt.[79][82] He also sponsored historical studies, including the collection, cataloging and copying of historical manuscripts.[82] He encouraged publications of biographies of famous Polish historical figures, and sponsored paintings and sculptures of them.[82]

For his contributions to the arts and sciences, Poniatowski was awarded in 1766 a royal Fellowship of the Royal Society, where he became the first royal Fellow outside British royalty.[79][91] In 1778 he was awarded fellowship of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences, and in 1791 of the Berlin Academy of Sciences.[79][91]

He also supported the development of industry and manufacturing, areas in which the Commonwealth lagged behind most of Western Europe.[79][89] Among the endeavours in which he invested were the manufacture of cannons and firearms and the mining industry.[79]

Poniatowski himself left several literary works: his memoirs, some political brochures and recorded speeches from the Sejm.[76] He was considered a great orator and a skilled conversationalist.[76]

Conflicting assessments

 
Polish coin bearing the coat of arms of King Stanisław II August, c. 1766

King Stanisław Augustus remains a controversial figure.[69][92] In Polish historiography and in popular works, he has been criticized or marginalized by authors such as, Szymon Askenazy, Joachim Lelewel, Jerzy Łojek whom Andrzej Zahorski describes as Poniatowski's most vocal critic among modern historians, Tadeusz Korzon, Karol Zyszewski and Krystyna Zienkowska; whereas more neutral or positive views have been expressed by Paweł Jasienica, Walerian Kalinka, Władysław Konopczyński, Stanisław Mackiewicz, Emanuel Rostworowski and Stanisław Wasylewski.[93][69]

 
Manuscript of the Constitution of 3 May 1791

When elected to the throne, he was seen by many as simply an "instrument for displacing the somnolent Saxons from the throne of Poland", yet as the British historian, Norman Davies notes, "he turned out to be an ardent patriot, and a convinced reformer."[94] Still, according to many, his reforms did not go far enough, leading to accusations that he was being overly cautious, even indecisive, a fault to which he himself admitted.[76][95] His decision to rely on Russia has been often criticized.[95] Poniatowski saw Russia as a "lesser evil" – willing to support the notional "independence" of a weak Poland within the Russian sphere of influence. However, in the event Russia imposed the Partitions of Poland rather than choose to support internal reform.[95][96] He was accused by others of weakness and subservience, even of treason, especially in the years following the Second Partition.[69][70] During the Kościuszko Uprising, there were rumours that Polish Jacobins had been planning a coup d'état and Poniatowski's assassination.[71] Another line of criticism alleged poor financial management on his part.[86] Poniatowski actually had little personal wealth. Most of his income came from Crown Estates and monopolies.[86] His lavish patronage of the arts and sciences was a major drain on the royal treasury. He also supported numerous public initiatives, and attempted to use the royal treasury to cover the state's expenses when tax revenues were insufficient.[86] The Sejm promised several times to compensate his treasury to little practical effect.[86] Nonetheless contemporary critics frequently accused him of being a spendthrift.[76]

Andrzej Zahorski dedicated a book to a discussion of Poniatowski, The Dispute over Stanisław August (Spór o Stanisława Augusta, Warsaw, 1988).[69] He notes that the discourse concerning Poniatowski is significantly coloured by the fact that he was the last King of Poland – the King who failed to save the country.[92] This failure, and his prominent position, rendered him a convenient scapegoat for many.[97] Zahorski argues that Poniatowski made the error of joining the Targowica Confederation. Although he wanted to preserve the integrity of the Polish state, it was far too late for that – he succeeded instead in cementing the damage to his own reputation for succeeding centuries.[96]

Remembrance

 
Poniatowski: pencil drawing by Jan Matejko

Poniatowski has been the subject of numerous biographies and many works of art.[69] Voltaire, who saw Poniatowski as a model reformist, based his character, King Teucer in the play Les Lois de Minos (1772) on Poniatowski.[79] At least 58 contemporary poems were dedicated to him or praised him.[78] Since then, he has been a major character in many works of Józef Ignacy Kraszewski, in the Rok 1794 trilogy by Władysław Stanisław Reymont, in the novels of Tadeusz Łopalewski, and in the dramas of Ignacy Grabowski, Tadeusz Miciński, Roman Brandstaetter and Bogdan Śmigielski.[69] He is discussed in Luise Mühlbach's novel Joseph II and His Court,[98] and appears in Jane Porter's 1803 novel, Thaddeus of Warsaw.[99][100]

On screen he has been played by Wieńczysław Gliński in the 1976 3 Maja directed by Grzegorz Królikiewicz.[101] He appears in a Russian TV series.[102]

Poniatowski is depicted in numerous portraits, medals and coins.[69] He is prominent in Jan Matejko's work, especially in the 1891 painting, Constitution of 3 May 1791 and in another large canvas, Rejtan, and in his series of portraits of Polish monarchs.[103][69] A bust of Poniatowski was unveiled in Łazienki Palace in 1992.[69] A number of cities in Poland have streets named after him, including Kraków and Warsaw.[69]

Family

Poniatowski never married. In his youth, he had loved his cousin Elżbieta Czartoryska, but her father August Aleksander Czartoryski disapproved because he did not think him influential or rich enough. When this was no longer an issue, she was already married. His pacta conventa specified that he should marry a Polish noblewoman, although he himself always hoped to marry into some royal family.[69]

Upon his accession to the throne, he had hopes of marrying Catherine II, writing to her on 2 November 1763 in a moment of doubt, "If I desired the throne, it was because I saw you on it." When she made it clear through his envoy Rzewuski that she would not marry him, there were hopes of an Austrian archduchess,[104] Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria (1743–1808). A marriage to Princess Sophia Albertina of Sweden was suggested despite the religious differences, but this match was opposed by his sisters, Ludwika Maria Poniatowska and Izabella Poniatowska, and nothing came of it.[105] The ceremonial role of queen and hostess of his court was played by his favourite niece, Urszula Zamoyska.[106]

A few historians believe that he later contracted a secret marriage with Elżbieta Szydłowska. However, according to Wirydianna Fiszerowa, a contemporary who knew them both, this rumour only spread after the death of Poniatowski, was generally disbelieved, and moreover, was circulated by Elżbieta herself, so the marriage is considered by most to be unlikely.[107] He had several notable lovers, including Elżbieta Branicka, who acted as his political adviser and financier,[108] and had children with two of them. With Magdalena Agnieszka Sapieżyna (1739–1780), he became the father of Konstancja Żwanowa (1768–1810) and Michał Cichocki (1770–1828).[69] With Elżbieta Szydłowska (1748–1810), he became the father of Stanisław Konopnicy-Grabowski (1780–1845), Michał Grabowski (1773–1812), Kazimierz Grabowski (1770-?),[a] Konstancja Grabowska[a] and Izabela Grabowska (1776–1858).[69]

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
By Catherine the Great
Anna Petrovna 9 December 1757 8 March 1758 Her legal father was Catherine's husband, Peter III of Russia; but most historians assume that Anna Petrovna's biological father was Poniatowski[109]
By Magdalena Agnieszka Sapieżyna
Konstancja Żwanowa [pl] 1768 1810 married Karol Żwan; no issue (divorced)
Michał Cichocki [fr] September 1770 5 May 1828
By Elżbieta Szydłowska
Konstancja Grabowska ? ? married Wincenty Dernałowicz. Not all sources agree she was Poniatowski's child.[a]
Michał Grabowski 1773 17 August 1812 Brigadier general of the Army of the Duchy of Warsaw; died in Battle of Smolensk (1812); no issue
Izabela Grabowska 26 March 1776 21 May 1858 married Walenty Sobolewski; had three daughters
Stanisław Grabowski 29 October 1780 3 October 1845 married twice
Kazimierz Grabowski ? ? Not all sources agree he was Poniatowski's child.[a]

Titles, honours and arms

 
Coat of Arms of Stanisław August Poniatowski with colland of Order of White Eagle

The English translation of the Polish text of the 1791 Constitution gives his title as Stanisław August, by the grace of God and the will of the people, King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania and Duke of Ruthenia, Prussia, Masovia, Samogitia, Kiev, Volhynia, Podolia, Podlasie, Livonia, Smolensk, Severia and Chernihiv.[110]

National

Foreign

See also

Notes

a ^ Sources vary as to whether Konstancja Grabowska and Kazimierz Grabowski were Poniatowski's children. They are listed as such by several sources, including Jerzy Michalski's article on Stanisław August Poniatowski in the Polish Biographical Dictionary.[69] However, Marek Jerzy Minakowski's website on descendants of Great Sejm participants lists neither Kazimierz Grabowski nor Konstancja Grabowska as Poniatowski's children; and for Elżbieta Szydłowska, it lists only Kazimierz Grabowski as Jan Jerzy Grabowski's child.[114][115]

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Further reading

  • Butterwick, Richard (14 May 1998). Poland's Last King and English Culture: Stanisław August Poniatowski, 1732–1798. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-820701-6. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  • Butterwick, Richard (2001). "The Enlightened Monarchy of Stanisław August Poniatowski, 1764–1795". In Richard, Butterwick (ed.). The Polish-Lithuanian Monarchy in European Context, c.1500–1795. Basingstoke and London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 192–217. ISBN 978-0-333-99380-4.
  • Dembiński, Bronisław, ed. (1904). Stanisław August i książe Józef Poniatowski w świetle własnej korespondencyi [Stanislaw and Prince Joseph Poniatowski in the Light of Their Private Correspondence] (in Polish). Nakład Towarzystwa dla Popierania Nauki Polskiej Lviv.
  • Kiliński, Jan (1899) [1818]. Drugi pamiętnik, nieznany, o czasach Stanisława Augusta [Recollections of the Times of Stanislaw August] (in Polish). Aleksander Kraushar.
  • Kwiatkowski, Marek (1983). Stanisław August, Król-Architekt (Stanisław August, King-Architect) (in Polish). Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich. ISBN 978-83-04-00850-2. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  • Lindemann, Mary (2006). Liaisons dangereuses: sex, law, and diplomacy in the age of Frederick the Great. JHU Press. ISBN 08-01883-17-2.
  • Łojek, Jerzy (1998). Stanisław August Poniatowski i jego czasy (Stanisław August Poniatowski and His Times) (in Polish). Wydawn. Alfa. ISBN 978-83-7179-023-2. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  • Schulz-Forberg, Hagen (2005). Unravelling Civilisation: European Travel and Travel Writing. Peter Lang. ISBN 90-52012-35-0.
  • Zamoyski, Adam (1992). The last king of Poland. J. Cape. ISBN 0-224-03548-7.

Bibliography

  • Marek Żukow-Karczewski, Stanisław August w Petersburgu (Stanisław August in Saint Petersburg), "Życie Literackie", No. 43, 1987, p. 1, 6. (in Polish)

External links

  •   Media related to Stanislaus II August of Poland at Wikimedia Commons
  • Biography at www.lazienki-krolewskie.pl (Official page of the Royal Łazienki Museum in Warsaw)
  • Poniatowski, in: The Historical Geography of the Ciołek clan AD 950–1950.
  • Poniatowski's memoirs
  • Works by Stanisław August Poniatowski in digital library Polona
Stanisław August Poniatowski
Born: 17 January 1732 Died: 12 February 1798
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Poland
1764–1795
Succeeded byas King of Galicia and Lodomeria
Succeeded byas Duke of Warsaw
Succeeded byas Grand Duke of Posen
Succeeded byas King of Poland
Grand Duke of Lithuania
1764–1795

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Poniatowski". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 61.

stanisław, august, poniatowski, stanisław, august, born, stanisław, antoni, poniatowski, january, 1732, february, 1798, known, also, regnal, latin, name, stanislaus, augustus, king, poland, grand, duke, lithuania, from, 1764, 1795, last, monarch, polish, lithu. Stanislaw II August a born Stanislaw Antoni Poniatowski b 17 January 1732 12 February 1798 known also by his regnal Latin name Stanislaus II Augustus was King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania from 1764 to 1795 and the last monarch of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Stanislaw II AugustPortrait by Marcello Bacciarelli 1786King of PolandGrand Duke of LithuaniaReign7 September 1764 25 November 1795Coronation25 November 1764St John s Archcathedral WarsawPredecessorAugustus IIISuccessormonarchy suppressed Partitions of Poland 1 Born 1732 01 17 17 January 1732Wolczyn Polish Lithuanian CommonwealthDied12 February 1798 1798 02 12 aged 66 Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireBurialSt John s Archcathedral WarsawIssueDetails illegitimateNamesStanislaw Antoni PoniatowskiHousePoniatowskiFatherStanislaw PoniatowskiMotherKonstancja CzartoryskaReligionRoman CatholicismSignatureBorn into wealthy Polish aristocracy Poniatowski arrived as a diplomat at the Russian imperial court in Saint Petersburg in 1755 at the age of 22 2 and became intimately involved with the future empress Catherine the Great With her connivance he was elected King of Poland by the Polish Diet in September 1764 3 4 5 following the death of Augustus III Contrary to expectations Poniatowski attempted to reform and strengthen the large but ailing Commonwealth His efforts were met with external opposition from neighbouring Prussia Russia and Austria all committed to keeping the Commonwealth weak From within he was opposed by conservative interests which saw the reforms as a threat to their traditional liberties and privileges granted centuries earlier The defining crisis of his early reign was the War of the Bar Confederation 1768 1772 that led to the First Partition of Poland 1772 The later part of his reign saw reforms wrought by the Diet 1788 1792 and the Constitution of 3 May 1791 These reforms were overthrown by the 1792 Targowica Confederation and by the Polish Russian War of 1792 leading directly to the Second Partition of Poland 1793 the Kosciuszko Uprising 1794 and the final and Third Partition of Poland 1795 marking the end of the Commonwealth Stripped of all meaningful power Poniatowski abdicated in November 1795 and spent the last years of his life as a captive in Saint Petersburg s Marble Palace A controversial figure in Poland s history he is criticized primarily for his failure to resolutely stand against and prevent the partitions which led to the destruction of the Polish state On the other hand he is remembered as a great patron of the arts and sciences who laid the foundation for the Commission of National Education the first institution of its kind in the world and sponsored many architectural landmarks Contents 1 Youth 2 Political career 3 Kingship 3 1 Years of hope 3 2 The Bar Confederation and First Partition of Poland 3 3 The Great Sejm and the Constitution of 3 May 1791 3 4 War in Defence of the Constitution and fall of the Commonwealth 4 Final years 5 Legacy 5 1 Patron of culture 5 2 Conflicting assessments 5 3 Remembrance 6 Family 6 1 Issue 7 Titles honours and arms 7 1 National 7 2 Foreign 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 Bibliography 13 External linksYouth Edit Personal coat of arms Aged 14 Stanislaw Antoni Poniatowski was born on 17 January 1732 in Wolczyn then in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and now Voŭcyn Belarus He was one of eight surviving children and the fourth son of Princess Konstancja Czartoryska and of Count Stanislaw Poniatowski Ciolek coat of arms Castellan of Krakow who started as a Lithuanian domestic servant 2 His older brothers were Kazimierz Poniatowski 1721 1800 a Podkomorzy at Court Franciszek Poniatowski 1723 1749 Canon of Wawel Cathedral who suffered from Epilepsy and Aleksander Poniatowski 1725 1744 an officer killed in the Rhineland Palatinate during the War of the Austrian Succession His younger brothers were Andrzej Poniatowski 1734 1773 an Austrian Feldmarschall Michal Jerzy Poniatowski 1736 94 who became Primate of Poland His two older and married sisters were Ludwika Zamoyska 1728 1804 and Izabella Branicka 1730 1808 Among his nephews was Prince Jozef Poniatowski 1763 1813 son of Andrzej 6 7 He was a great grandson of poet and courtier Jan Andrzej Morsztyn and through his great grandmother Catherine Gordon lady in waiting to Queen Marie Louise Gonzaga he was related to the House of Stuart and thereby connected to the leading families of Scotland Spain and France 8 9 The Poniatowski family had achieved high status among the Polish nobility szlachta of the time 7 10 He spent the first few years of his childhood in Gdansk He was temporarily kidnapped as a toddler on the orders of Jozef Potocki Governor of Kiev as a reprisal for his father s support for King Augustus III and held for some months in Kamieniec Podolski He was returned to his parents in Gdansk Later he moved with his family to Warsaw He was initially educated by his mother then by private tutors including Russian ambassador Herman Karl von Keyserling He had few friends in his teenage years and instead developed a fondness for books which continued throughout his life 7 He went on his first foreign trip in 1748 with elements of the Imperial Russian army as it advanced into the Rhineland to aid Maria Theresia s troops during the War of the Austrian Succession which ended with the Treaty of Aix la Chapelle 1748 This enabled Poniatowski both to visit the city also known as Aachen and to venture into the Netherlands On his return journey he stopped in Dresden 7 Political career Edit Sir Charles Hanbury Williams Poniatowski s mentor by John Giles Eccardt The following year Poniatowski was apprenticed to the office of Michal Fryderyk Czartoryski the then Deputy Chancellor of Lithuania 7 In 1750 he travelled to Berlin where he met a British diplomat Charles Hanbury Williams who became his mentor and friend 11 In 1751 Poniatowski was elected to the Treasury Tribunal in Radom where he served as a commissioner 7 11 He spent most of January 1752 at the Austrian court in Vienna 11 Later that year after serving at the Radom Tribunal and meeting King Augustus III of Poland he was elected deputy of the Sejm Polish parliament While there his father secured for him the title of Starosta of Przemysl In March 1753 he travelled to Hungary and Vienna where he again met with Williams 11 He returned to the Netherlands where he met many key members of that country s political and economic sphere By late August he had arrived in Paris where he moved among the elites In February 1754 he travelled on to Britain where he spent some months There he was befriended by Charles Yorke the future Lord Chancellor of Great Britain 11 He returned to the Commonwealth later that year however he eschewed the Sejm as his parents wanted to keep him out of the political furore surrounding the Ostrogski family s land inheritance see fee tail Ordynacja Ostrogska 11 The following year he received the title of Stolnik of Lithuania 12 13 Poniatowski owed his rise and influence to his family connections with the powerful Czartoryski family and their political faction known as the Familia with whom he had grown close 12 14 It was the Familia who sent him in 1755 to Saint Petersburg in the service of Williams who had been nominated British ambassador to Russia 12 15 Grand Duchess Catherine Alexeyevna 1745 by Louis Caravaque In Saint Petersburg Williams introduced Poniatowski to the 26 year old Catherine Alexeievna the future empress Catherine the Great The two became lovers 12 16 Whatever his feelings for Catherine it is likely Poniatowski also saw an opportunity to use the relationship for his own benefit using her influence to bolster his career 12 Poniatowski had to leave St Petersburg in July 1756 due to court intrigue 12 14 Through the combined influence of Catherine of Russian empress Elizabeth and of chancellor Bestuzhev Ryumin Poniatowski was able to rejoin the Russian court now as ambassador of Saxony the following January 12 14 Still in St Petersburg he appears to have been a source of intrigue between various European governments some supporting his appointment others demanding his withdrawal He eventually left the Russian capital on 14 August 1758 12 Poniatowski attended the Sejms of 1758 1760 and 1762 17 He continued his involvement with the Familia and supported a pro Russian and anti Prussian stance in Polish politics His father died in 1762 leaving him a modest inheritance 17 In 1762 when Catherine ascended the Russian throne she sent him several letters professing her support for his own ascension to the Polish throne but asking him to stay away from St Petersburg 17 Nevertheless Poniatowski hoped that Catherine would consider his offer of marriage an idea seen as plausible by some international observers He participated in the failed plot by the Familia to stage a coup d etat against King Augustus III 17 In August 1763 however Catherine advised him and the Familia that she would not support a coup as long as King Augustus was alive 17 Kingship EditYears of hope Edit Banner of Poland during the reign of Stanislaw II Stanislaw August s 1764 election as king depicted by Bernardo Bellotto Upon the death of Poland s King Augustus III in October 1763 lobbying began for the election of the new king Catherine threw her support behind Poniatowski 18 The Russians spent about 2 5m rubles in aid of his election Poniatowski s supporters and opponents engaged in some military posturing and even minor clashes In the end the Russian army was deployed only a few kilometres from the election sejm which met at Wola near Warsaw 19 In the event there were no other serious contenders and during the convocation sejm on 7 September 1764 32 year old Poniatowski was elected king with 5 584 votes 19 20 21 He swore the pacta conventa on 13 November and a formal coronation took place in Warsaw on 25 November 18 The new king s uncles in the Familia would have preferred another nephew on the throne Prince Adam Kazimierz Czartoryski characterized by one of his contemporaries as debauche si non devoye French debauched if not depraved but Czartoryski had declined to seek office 22 Stanislaw August in coronation robes Stanislaw August as he now styled himself combining the names of his two immediate royal predecessors began his rule with only mixed support within the nation It was mainly the small nobility who favoured his election 18 In his first years on the throne he attempted to introduce a number of reforms He founded the Knights School and began to form a diplomatic service with semi permanent diplomatic representatives throughout Europe Russia and the Ottoman Empire 23 On 7 May 1765 Poniatowski established the Order of the Knights of Saint Stanislaus in honour of Saint Stanislaus of Krakow Bishop and Martyr Poland s and his own patron saint as the country s second order of chivalry to reward Poles and others for noteworthy service to the King 24 25 Together with the Familia he tried to reform the ineffective system of government by reducing the powers of the hetmans Commonwealth s top military commanders and treasurers moving them to commissions elected by the Sejm and accountable to the King 23 In his memoirs Poniatowski called this period the years of hope 18 The Familia which was interested in strengthening its own power base was dissatisfied with his conciliatory attitude as he reached out to many former opponents of their policies 18 21 This uneasy alliance between Poniatowski and the Familia continued for most of the first decade of his rule 18 One of the points of contention between Poniatowski and the Familia concerned the rights of religious minorities in Poland Whereas Poniatowski reluctantly supported a policy of religious tolerance the Familia was opposed to it The growing rift between Poniatowski and the Familia was exploited by the Russians who used the issue as a pretext to intervene in the Commonwealth s internal politics and to destabilize the country 23 Catherine had no wish to see Poniatowski s reform succeed She had supported his ascent to the throne to ensure the Commonwealth remained a virtual puppet state under Russian control so his attempts to reform the Commonwealth s ailing government structures were a threat to the status quo 21 23 The Bar Confederation and First Partition of Poland Edit Matters came to a head in 1766 During the Sejm in October of that year Poniatowski attempted to push through a radical reform restricting the disastrous liberum veto provision 26 He was opposed by conservatives such as Michal Wielhorski who were supported by the Prussian and Russian ambassadors and who threatened war if the reform was passed The dissidents supported by the Russians formed the Radom Confederation 26 Abandoned by the Familia Poniatowski s reforms failed to pass at the Repnin Sejm named after Russian ambassador Nicholas Repnin who promised to guarantee with all the might of the Russian Empire the Golden Liberties of the Polish nobility enshrined in the Cardinal Laws 26 27 28 Although it had abandoned the cause of Poniatowski s reforms the Familia did not receive the support it expected from the Russians who continued to press for the conservatives rights Meanwhile other factions now rallied under the banner of the Bar Confederation aimed against the conservatives Poniatowski and the Russians 26 After an unsuccessful attempt to raise allies in Western Europe France Britain and Austria Poniatowski and the Familia had no choice but to rely more heavily on the Russian Empire which treated Poland as a protectorate 29 In the War of the Bar Confederation 1768 1772 Poniatowski supported the Russian army s repression of the Bar Confederation 26 30 In 1770 the Council of the Bar Confederation proclaimed him dethroned 31 The following year he was kidnapped by Bar Confederates and was briefly held prisoner outside of Warsaw but he managed to escape 31 32 In view of the continuing weakness of the Polish Lithuanian state Austria Russia and Prussia collaborated to threaten military intervention in exchange for substantial territorial concessions from the Commonwealth a decision they made without consulting Poniatowski or any other Polish parties 31 Tadeusz Rejtan s famous gesture of protest at the Partition Sejm as depicted by Matejko Although Poniatowski protested against the First Partition of the Commonwealth 1772 he was powerless to do anything about it 33 He considered abdication but decided against it 31 During the Partition Sejm of 1773 1775 in which Russia was represented by ambassador Otto von Stackelberg with no allied assistance forthcoming from abroad and with the armies of the partitioning powers occupying Warsaw to compel the Sejm by force of arms no alternative was available save submission to their will 34 35 36 Eventually Poniatowski and the Sejm acceded to the partition treaty At the same time several other reforms were passed 36 The Cardinal Laws were confirmed and guaranteed by the partitioning powers 35 Royal prerogative was restricted so that the King lost the power to confer titular roles and military promotions to appoint ministers and senators Starostwo territories and Crown lands would be awarded by auction 35 37 38 The Sejm also created two notable institutions the Permanent Council a government body in continuous operation and the Commission of National Education 39 The partitioning powers intended the council to be easier to control than the unruly Sejms and indeed it remained under the influence of the Russian Empire Nevertheless it was a significant improvement on the earlier Commonwealth governance 35 39 The new legislation was guaranteed by the Russian Empire giving it licence to interfere in Commonwealth politics when legislation it favoured was threatened 35 The aftermath of the Partition Sejm saw the rise of a conservative faction opposed to the Permanent Council seeing it as a threat to their Golden Freedoms This faction was supported by the Czartoryski family but not by Poniatowski who proved to be quite adept at making the Council follow his wishes This marked the formation of new anti royal and pro royal factions in Polish politics 24 36 The royal faction was made up primarily of people indebted to the King who planned to build their careers on service to him Few were privy to his plans for reforms which were kept hidden from the conservative opposition and Russia 24 Poniatowski scored a political victory during the Sejm of 1776 which further strengthened the council 36 Chancellor Andrzej Zamoyski was tasked with the codification of the Polish law a project that became known as the Zamoyski Code Russia supported some but not all of the 1776 reforms and to prevent Poniatowski from growing too powerful it supported the opposition during the Sejm of 1778 This marked the end of Poniatowski s reforms as he found himself without sufficient support to carry them through 40 The Great Sejm and the Constitution of 3 May 1791 Edit In the 1780s Catherine appeared to favour Poniatowski marginally over the opposition but she did not support any of his plans for significant reform 40 Despite repeated attempts Poniatowski failed to confederate the sejms which would have made them immune to the liberum veto 24 Thus although he had a majority in the Sejms Poniatowski was unable to pass even the smallest reform The Zamoyski Code was rejected by the Sejm of 1780 and opposition attacks on the King dominated the Sejms of 1782 and 1786 24 Constitution of 3 May 1791 by Matejko 1891 Reforms became possible again in the late 1780s In the context of the wars being waged against the Ottoman Empire by both the Austrian Empire and the Russian Empire Poniatowski tried to draw Poland into the Austro Russian alliance seeing a war with the Ottomans as an opportunity to strengthen the Commonwealth 41 42 Catherine gave permission for the next Sejm to be called as she considered some form of limited military alliance with Poland against the Ottomans might be useful 42 43 The Polish Russian alliance was not implemented as in the end the only acceptable compromise proved unattractive to both sides 42 43 However in the ensuing Four Year Sejm of 1788 92 known as the Great Sejm Poniatowski threw his lot in with the reformers associated with the Patriotic Party of Stanislaw Malachowski Ignacy Potocki and Hugo Kollataj and co authored the Constitution of 3 May 1791 44 45 46 47 The Constitution introduced sweeping reforms According to Jacek Jedruch the Constitution despite its liberal provisions fell somewhere below the French above the Canadian and left the General State Laws for the Prussian States in German Allgemeines Landrecht fur die Preussischen Staaten far behind but was no match for the American Constitution 48 George Sanford notes that the Constitution gave Poland a constitutional monarchy close to the British model of the time 49 According to a contemporary account Poniatowski himself described it as founded principally on those of England and the United States of America but avoiding the faults and errors of both and adapted as much as possible to the local and particular circumstances of the country 50 The Constitution of 3 May remained to the end a work in progress A new civil and criminal code provisionally called the Stanislaw Augustus Code was among the proposals Poniatowski also planned a reform to improve the situation of Polish Jews 51 In foreign policy spurned by Russia Poland turned to another potential ally the Triple Alliance represented on the Polish diplomatic scene primarily by the Kingdom of Prussia which led to the formation of the ultimately futile Polish Prussian alliance 52 The pro Prussian shift was not supported by Poniatowski who nevertheless acceded to the decision of the majority of Sejm deputies 46 The passing of the Constitution of 3 May although officially applauded by Frederick William II of Prussia who sent a congratulatory note to Warsaw caused further worry in Prussia 53 The contacts of Polish reformers with the revolutionary French National Assembly were seen by Poland s neighbours as evidence of a conspiracy and a threat to their absolute monarchies 54 55 Prussian statesman Ewald von Hertzberg expressed the fears of European conservatives The Poles have given the coup de grace to the Prussian monarchy by voting in a constitution elaborating that a strong Commonwealth would likely demand the return of the lands Prussia acquired in the First Partition 56 a similar sentiment was later expressed by Prussian Foreign Minister Count Friedrich Wilhelm von der Schulenburg Kehnert 53 Russia s wars with the Ottomans and Sweden having ended Catherine was furious over the adoption of the Constitution which threatened Russian influence in Poland 57 58 59 One of Russia s chief foreign policy authors Alexander Bezborodko upon learning of the Constitution commented that the worst possible news have arrived from Warsaw the Polish king has become almost sovereign 56 War in Defence of the Constitution and fall of the Commonwealth Edit The three Partitions of Poland Lithuania Russian purple and red Austrian green Prussian blue Shortly thereafter conservative Polish nobility formed the Targowica Confederation to overthrow the Constitution which they saw as a threat to the traditional freedoms and privileges they enjoyed 60 61 The confederates aligned themselves with Russia s Catherine the Great and the Russian army entered Poland marking the start of the Polish Russian War of 1792 also known as the War in Defence of the Constitution The Sejm voted to increase the Polish Army to 100 000 men but due to insufficient time and funds this number was never achieved 62 Poniatowski and the reformers could field only a 37 000 man army many of them untested recruits 63 This army under the command of the King s nephew Jozef Poniatowski and Tadeusz Kosciuszko managed to defeat the Russians or fight them to a draw on several occasions 62 Following the victorious Battle of Zielence in which Polish forces were commanded by his nephew the King founded a new order the Order of Virtuti Militari to reward Poles for exceptional military leadership and courage in combat 64 Despite Polish requests Prussia refused to honour its alliance obligations 53 In the end the numerical superiority of the Russians was too great and defeat looked inevitable 62 Poniatowski s attempts at negotiations with Russia proved futile 65 In July 1792 when Warsaw was threatened with siege by the Russians the king came to believe that surrender was the only alternative to total defeat Having received assurances from Russian ambassador Yakov Bulgakov that no territorial changes would occur a cabinet of ministers called the Guard of Laws or Guardians of Law Polish Straz Praw voted eight to four in favor of surrender 65 On 24 July 1792 Poniatowski joined the Targowica Confederation 62 The Polish Army disintegrated Many reform leaders believing their cause lost went into self exile although they hoped that Poniatowski would be able to negotiate an acceptable compromise with the Russians as he had done in the past 65 Poniatowski had not saved the Commonwealth however He and the reformers had lost much of their influence both within the country and with Catherine 66 Neither were the Targowica Confederates victorious To their surprise there ensued the Second Partition of Poland 62 With the new deputies bribed or intimidated by the Russian troops the Grodno Sejm took place 62 67 On 23 November 1793 it annulled all acts of the Great Sejm including the Constitution 68 Faced with his powerlessness Poniatowski once again considered abdication in the meantime he tried to salvage whatever reforms he could 69 70 Final years Edit Portrait by Elisabeth Louise Vigee Le Brun 1797 Poniatowski s plans had been ruined by the Kosciuszko Uprising 70 The King had not encouraged it but once it began he supported it seeing no other honourable option 70 Its defeat marked the end of the Commonwealth Poniatowski tried to govern the country in the brief period after the fall of the Uprising but on 2 December 1794 Catherine demanded he leave Warsaw a request to which he acceded on 7 January 1795 leaving the capital under Russian military escort and settling briefly in Grodno 71 On 24 October 1795 the Act of the final Third Partition of Poland was signed One month and one day later on 25 November Poniatowski signed his abdication 71 72 73 Reportedly his sister Ludwika Maria Zamoyska and her daughter also his favourite niece Urszula Zamoyska who had been threatened with confiscation of their property had contributed to persuading him to sign the abdication they feared that his refusal would lead to a Russian confiscation of their properties and their ruin 74 Catherine died on 17 November 1796 succeeded by her son Paul I of Russia On 15 February 1797 Poniatowski left for Saint Petersburg 72 He had hoped to be allowed to travel abroad but was unable to secure permission to do so 72 A virtual prisoner in St Petersburg s Marble Palace 75 he subsisted on a pension granted to him by Catherine 72 Despite financial troubles he still supported some of his former allies and continued to try to represent the Polish cause at the Russian court 72 He also worked on his memoirs 72 Poniatowski on his deathbed 1798 by Bacciarelli Poniatowski died of a stroke on 12 February 1798 76 Paul I sponsored a royal state funeral and on 3 March he was buried at the Catholic Church of St Catherine in St Petersburg 76 In 1938 when the Soviet Union planned to demolish the Church his remains were transferred to the Second Polish Republic and interred in a church at Wolczyn his birthplace 76 This was done in secret and caused controversy in Poland when the matter became known 76 In 1990 due to the poor state of the Wolczyn church then in the Byelorussian SSR his body was once more exhumed and was brought to Poland to St John s Cathedral in Warsaw where on 3 May 1791 he had celebrated the adoption of the Constitution that he had coauthored 76 77 A third funeral ceremony was held on 14 February 1995 76 Legacy EditPatron of culture Edit Artwork with the Coat of arms of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1780 Stanislaw August Poniatowski has been called the Polish Enlightenment s most important patron of the arts 78 His cultural projects were attuned to his socio political aims of overthrowing the myth of the Golden Freedoms and the traditional ideology of Sarmatism 79 80 His weekly Thursday Dinners were considered the most scintillating social functions in the Polish capital 81 82 He founded Warsaw s National Theatre Poland s first public theatre and sponsored an associated Ballet schoolsballet school 81 82 83 84 He remodeled Ujazdow Palace and the Royal Castle in Warsaw and erected the elegant Lazienki Royal Baths Palace in Warsaw s Lazienki Park 85 He involved himself deeply in the detail of his architectural projects and his eclectic style has been dubbed the Stanislaw August style by Polish art historian Wladyslaw Tatarkiewicz 85 His chief architects included Domenico Merlini and Jan Kammsetzer 85 He was also patron to numerous painters 85 They included Poles such as his protegee Anna Rajecka and Franciszek Smuglewicz Jan Bogumil Plersch son of Jan Jerzy Plersch Jozef Wall and Zygmunt Vogel as well as foreign painters including Marcello Bacciarelli Bernardo Bellotto Jean Pillement Ludwik Marteau and Per Krafft the Elder 85 86 His retinue of sculptors headed by Andre Jean Lebrun included Giacomo Monaldi Franz Pinck and Tommaso Righi 85 Jan Filip Holzhaeusser was his court engraver and the designer of many commemorative medals 85 86 According to a 1795 inventory Stanislaw August s art collection spread among numerous buildings contained 2 889 pieces including works by Rembrandt Rubens and van Dyck 86 His plan to create a large gallery of paintings in Warsaw was disrupted by the dismemberment of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Most of the paintings that he had ordered for it can now be seen in London s Dulwich Picture Gallery 87 88 Poniatowski also planned to found an Academy of Fine Arts but this finally came about only after his abdication and departure from Warsaw 86 Poniatowski accomplished much in the realm of education and literature 81 89 He established the School of Chivalry also called the Cadet Corps which functioned from 1765 to 1794 and whose alumni included Tadeusz Kosciuszko He supported the creation of the Commission of National Education considered to be the world s first Ministry of Education 81 90 In 1765 he helped found the Monitor one of the first Polish newspapers and the leading periodical of the Polish Enlightenment 81 82 83 84 He sponsored many articles that appeared in the Monitor 82 Writers and poets who received his patronage included Stanislaw Trembecki Franciszek Salezy Jezierski Franciszek Bohomolec and Franciszek Zablocki 82 He also supported publishers including Piotr Switkowski and library owners such as Jozef Lex 82 Lazienki Park monument to John III Sobieski meant to recall anti Ottoman sentiment during the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 He supported the development of the sciences particularly cartography he hired a personal cartographer Karol de Perthees even before he was elected king 79 A plan he initiated to map the entire territory of the Commonwealth however was never finished 79 At the Royal Castle in Warsaw he organized an astronomical observatory and supported astronomers Jan Sniadecki and Marcin Odlanicki Poczobutt 79 82 He also sponsored historical studies including the collection cataloging and copying of historical manuscripts 82 He encouraged publications of biographies of famous Polish historical figures and sponsored paintings and sculptures of them 82 For his contributions to the arts and sciences Poniatowski was awarded in 1766 a royal Fellowship of the Royal Society where he became the first royal Fellow outside British royalty 79 91 In 1778 he was awarded fellowship of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences and in 1791 of the Berlin Academy of Sciences 79 91 He also supported the development of industry and manufacturing areas in which the Commonwealth lagged behind most of Western Europe 79 89 Among the endeavours in which he invested were the manufacture of cannons and firearms and the mining industry 79 Poniatowski himself left several literary works his memoirs some political brochures and recorded speeches from the Sejm 76 He was considered a great orator and a skilled conversationalist 76 Conflicting assessments Edit Polish coin bearing the coat of arms of King Stanislaw II August c 1766 King Stanislaw Augustus remains a controversial figure 69 92 In Polish historiography and in popular works he has been criticized or marginalized by authors such as Szymon Askenazy Joachim Lelewel Jerzy Lojek whom Andrzej Zahorski describes as Poniatowski s most vocal critic among modern historians Tadeusz Korzon Karol Zyszewski and Krystyna Zienkowska whereas more neutral or positive views have been expressed by Pawel Jasienica Walerian Kalinka Wladyslaw Konopczynski Stanislaw Mackiewicz Emanuel Rostworowski and Stanislaw Wasylewski 93 69 Manuscript of the Constitution of 3 May 1791 When elected to the throne he was seen by many as simply an instrument for displacing the somnolent Saxons from the throne of Poland yet as the British historian Norman Davies notes he turned out to be an ardent patriot and a convinced reformer 94 Still according to many his reforms did not go far enough leading to accusations that he was being overly cautious even indecisive a fault to which he himself admitted 76 95 His decision to rely on Russia has been often criticized 95 Poniatowski saw Russia as a lesser evil willing to support the notional independence of a weak Poland within the Russian sphere of influence However in the event Russia imposed the Partitions of Poland rather than choose to support internal reform 95 96 He was accused by others of weakness and subservience even of treason especially in the years following the Second Partition 69 70 During the Kosciuszko Uprising there were rumours that Polish Jacobins had been planning a coup d etat and Poniatowski s assassination 71 Another line of criticism alleged poor financial management on his part 86 Poniatowski actually had little personal wealth Most of his income came from Crown Estates and monopolies 86 His lavish patronage of the arts and sciences was a major drain on the royal treasury He also supported numerous public initiatives and attempted to use the royal treasury to cover the state s expenses when tax revenues were insufficient 86 The Sejm promised several times to compensate his treasury to little practical effect 86 Nonetheless contemporary critics frequently accused him of being a spendthrift 76 Andrzej Zahorski dedicated a book to a discussion of Poniatowski The Dispute over Stanislaw August Spor o Stanislawa Augusta Warsaw 1988 69 He notes that the discourse concerning Poniatowski is significantly coloured by the fact that he was the last King of Poland the King who failed to save the country 92 This failure and his prominent position rendered him a convenient scapegoat for many 97 Zahorski argues that Poniatowski made the error of joining the Targowica Confederation Although he wanted to preserve the integrity of the Polish state it was far too late for that he succeeded instead in cementing the damage to his own reputation for succeeding centuries 96 Remembrance Edit Poniatowski pencil drawing by Jan Matejko Poniatowski has been the subject of numerous biographies and many works of art 69 Voltaire who saw Poniatowski as a model reformist based his character King Teucer in the play Les Lois de Minos 1772 on Poniatowski 79 At least 58 contemporary poems were dedicated to him or praised him 78 Since then he has been a major character in many works of Jozef Ignacy Kraszewski in the Rok 1794 trilogy by Wladyslaw Stanislaw Reymont in the novels of Tadeusz Lopalewski and in the dramas of Ignacy Grabowski Tadeusz Micinski Roman Brandstaetter and Bogdan Smigielski 69 He is discussed in Luise Muhlbach s novel Joseph II and His Court 98 and appears in Jane Porter s 1803 novel Thaddeus of Warsaw 99 100 On screen he has been played by Wienczyslaw Glinski in the 1976 3 Maja directed by Grzegorz Krolikiewicz 101 He appears in a Russian TV series 102 Poniatowski is depicted in numerous portraits medals and coins 69 He is prominent in Jan Matejko s work especially in the 1891 painting Constitution of 3 May 1791 and in another large canvas Rejtan and in his series of portraits of Polish monarchs 103 69 A bust of Poniatowski was unveiled in Lazienki Palace in 1992 69 A number of cities in Poland have streets named after him including Krakow and Warsaw 69 Family EditPoniatowski never married In his youth he had loved his cousin Elzbieta Czartoryska but her father August Aleksander Czartoryski disapproved because he did not think him influential or rich enough When this was no longer an issue she was already married His pacta conventa specified that he should marry a Polish noblewoman although he himself always hoped to marry into some royal family 69 Upon his accession to the throne he had hopes of marrying Catherine II writing to her on 2 November 1763 in a moment of doubt If I desired the throne it was because I saw you on it When she made it clear through his envoy Rzewuski that she would not marry him there were hopes of an Austrian archduchess 104 Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria 1743 1808 A marriage to Princess Sophia Albertina of Sweden was suggested despite the religious differences but this match was opposed by his sisters Ludwika Maria Poniatowska and Izabella Poniatowska and nothing came of it 105 The ceremonial role of queen and hostess of his court was played by his favourite niece Urszula Zamoyska 106 Elzbieta Szydlowska Grabowska by Johann Baptist von Lampi the Elder A few historians believe that he later contracted a secret marriage with Elzbieta Szydlowska However according to Wirydianna Fiszerowa a contemporary who knew them both this rumour only spread after the death of Poniatowski was generally disbelieved and moreover was circulated by Elzbieta herself so the marriage is considered by most to be unlikely 107 He had several notable lovers including Elzbieta Branicka who acted as his political adviser and financier 108 and had children with two of them With Magdalena Agnieszka Sapiezyna 1739 1780 he became the father of Konstancja Zwanowa 1768 1810 and Michal Cichocki 1770 1828 69 With Elzbieta Szydlowska 1748 1810 he became the father of Stanislaw Konopnicy Grabowski 1780 1845 Michal Grabowski 1773 1812 Kazimierz Grabowski 1770 a Konstancja Grabowska a and Izabela Grabowska 1776 1858 69 Issue Edit Name Birth Death NotesBy Catherine the GreatAnna Petrovna 9 December 1757 8 March 1758 Her legal father was Catherine s husband Peter III of Russia but most historians assume that Anna Petrovna s biological father was Poniatowski 109 By Magdalena Agnieszka SapiezynaKonstancja Zwanowa pl 1768 1810 married Karol Zwan no issue divorced Michal Cichocki fr September 1770 5 May 1828By Elzbieta SzydlowskaKonstancja Grabowska married Wincenty Dernalowicz Not all sources agree she was Poniatowski s child a Michal Grabowski 1773 17 August 1812 Brigadier general of the Army of the Duchy of Warsaw died in Battle of Smolensk 1812 no issueIzabela Grabowska 26 March 1776 21 May 1858 married Walenty Sobolewski had three daughtersStanislaw Grabowski 29 October 1780 3 October 1845 married twiceKazimierz Grabowski Not all sources agree he was Poniatowski s child a Titles honours and arms Edit Coat of Arms of Stanislaw August Poniatowski with colland of Order of White Eagle The English translation of the Polish text of the 1791 Constitution gives his title as Stanislaw August by the grace of God and the will of the people King of Poland Grand Duke of Lithuania and Duke of Ruthenia Prussia Masovia Samogitia Kiev Volhynia Podolia Podlasie Livonia Smolensk Severia and Chernihiv 110 National Edit Poland Lithuania Order of the White Eagle 1756 Poland Lithuania Order of Saint Stanislaus 1765 111 Poland Lithuania Order of Virtuti Militari 1792 112 Foreign Edit Prussia Order of the Black Eagle 5 April 1764 113 Russia Order of Saint Andrew 1764 111 See also EditHistory of Poland 1569 1795 Poles in the United Kingdom Warsaw Society of Friends of LearningNotes Edit pronounced staˈɲiswaf drugiˈauɡust pronounced staˈɲiswaf anˈtɔɲi pɔɲaˈtɔfskʲi a Sources vary as to whether Konstancja Grabowska and Kazimierz Grabowski were Poniatowski s children They are listed as such by several sources including Jerzy Michalski s article on Stanislaw August Poniatowski in the Polish Biographical Dictionary 69 However Marek Jerzy Minakowski s website on descendants of Great Sejm participants lists neither Kazimierz Grabowski nor Konstancja Grabowska as Poniatowski s children and for Elzbieta Szydlowska it lists only Kazimierz Grabowski as Jan Jerzy Grabowski s child 114 115 References Edit pl Stanislaw August Poniatowski a b Gribble Francis 1912 The comedy of Catherine the Great London p 48 Eversley 1915 p 39 The Partitions of Poland by Lord Eversley London 1915 pp 35 39 Bartlomiej Szyndler 2009 Raclawice 1794 Bellona Publishing pp 64 65 ISBN 9788311116061 Retrieved 26 September 2014 Oleg Jardetzky 1992 The Ciolek of Poland Akademische Druck u Verlagsanstalt p 176 ISBN 3 201 01583 0 a b c d e f Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 612 F de Callieres Sztuka dyplomacji pp 12 16 M Dernalowicz Portret Familii pg 7 Professor Anita J Prazmowska 13 July 2011 A History of Poland Palgrave Macmillan p 199 ISBN 978 0 230 34537 9 Retrieved 29 April 2012 a b c d e f Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 613 a b c d e f g h Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 614 Teresa Zielinska 1997 Volume 1 Poczet polskich rodow arystokratycznych in Polish Wydawnictwa Szkolne i Pedagogiczne p 239 ISBN 83 02 06429 7 a b c Butterwick 1998 p 94 Butterwick 1998 p 92 Butterwick 1998 p 93 a b c d e Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 615 a b c d e f Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 616 a b Bartlomiej Szyndler January 2009 RacLawice 1794 Bellona p 64 ISBN 978 83 11 11606 1 Retrieved 18 June 2012 Butterwick 1998 p 156 a b c Professor Anita J Prazmowska 13 July 2011 A History of Poland Palgrave Macmillan p 200 ISBN 978 0 230 34537 9 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Lindemann 2006 p 236 a b c d Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 617 a b c d e 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to America a Hero s Fight for Liberty The Rosen Publishing Group p 20 ISBN 1 4042 2646 X Zamoyski 1992 p 198 Lewinski Corwin Edward Henry 1917 1917 The Political History of Poland Google Print pp 310 315 a b c d e Wladyslaw Smolenski 1919 Dzieje narodu polskiego Gebethner i Wolff pp 295 305 retrieved 5 September 2011 a b c d Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 620 Wlodzimierz Sochacki 2007 Historia dla maturzystow repetytorium Wlodzimierz Sochacki pp 274 275 ISBN 978 83 60186 58 9 retrieved 5 September 2011 Daniel Stone 1 September 2001 The Polish Lithuanian state 1386 1795 University of Washington Press pp 274 275 ISBN 978 0 295 98093 5 retrieved 5 September 2011 a b Jacek Jedruch 1998 Constitutions elections and legislatures of Poland 1493 1977 a guide to their history EJJ Books pp 162 163 ISBN 978 0 7818 0637 4 Retrieved 13 August 2011 a b Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 621 Jerzy Lojek 1986 Geneza i obalenie Konstytucji 3 maja Wydawn Lubelskie p 24 ISBN 978 83 222 0313 2 Retrieved 17 December 2011 a b c Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 623 a b Jerzy Lojek 1986 Geneza i obalenie Konstytucji 3 maja Wydawn Lubelskie pp 26 31 ISBN 978 83 222 0313 2 Retrieved 17 December 2011 Zamoyski 1992 p 343 Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 624 a b Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 625 Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 626 Jacek Jedruch 1998 Constitutions elections and legislatures of Poland 1493 1977 a guide to their history EJJ Books p 178 ISBN 978 0 7818 0637 4 Retrieved 13 August 2011 George Sanford 2002 Democratic government in Poland constitutional politics since 1989 Palgrave Macmillan pp 11 12 ISBN 978 0 333 77475 5 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Joseph Kasparek Obst 1 June 1980 The constitutions of Poland and of the United States kinships and genealogy American Institute of Polish Culture p 40 ISBN 978 1 881284 09 3 Retrieved 6 July 2011 Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 627 Jerzy Lojek 1986 Geneza i obalenie Konstytucji 3 maja Wydawn Lubelskie pp 31 32 ISBN 978 83 222 0313 2 Retrieved 17 December 2011 a b c Jerzy Lojek 1986 Geneza i obalenie Konstytucji 3 maja Wydawn Lubelskie pp 325 326 ISBN 978 83 222 0313 2 Retrieved 17 December 2011 Francis W Carter 1994 Trade and urban development in Poland an economic geography of Cracow from its origins to 1795 Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 978 0 521 41239 1 Retrieved 18 August 2011 Norman Davies 30 March 2005 God s Playground The origins to 1795 Columbia University Press p 403 ISBN 978 0 231 12817 9 Retrieved 18 August 2011 a b Krzysztof Bauer 1991 Uchwalenie i obrona Konstytucji 3 Maja Wydawnictwa Szkolne i Pedagogiczne p 167 ISBN 978 83 02 04615 5 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Robert Bideleux Ian Jeffries 28 January 1998 A history of eastern Europe crisis and change Psychology Press p 160 ISBN 978 0 415 16111 4 Retrieved 11 September 2011 Paul W Schroeder 1996 The transformation of European politics 1763 1848 Oxford University Press US p 84 ISBN 978 0 19 820654 5 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Jerzy Lukowski 3 August 2010 Disorderly liberty the political culture of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in the eighteenth century Continuum International Publishing Group p 226 ISBN 978 1 4411 4812 4 Retrieved 23 September 2011 Zamoyski 1992 p 363 Professor Anita J Prazmowska 13 July 2011 A History of Poland Palgrave Macmillan pp 206 207 ISBN 978 0 230 34537 9 Retrieved 29 April 2012 a b c d e f Jacek Jedruch 1998 Constitutions elections and legislatures of Poland 1493 1977 a guide to their history EJJ Books pp 184 185 ISBN 978 0 7818 0637 4 Retrieved 13 August 2011 Juliusz Bardach Boguslaw Lesnodorski and Michal Pietrzak Historia panstwa i prawa polskiego Warsaw Paristwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe 1987 p 317 22 czerwca 1792 roku ustanowienie Orderu Wojennego Virtuti Militari www wspolnota polska org pl in Polish Retrieved 28 February 2009 a b c Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 628 Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 629 Jacek Jedruch 1998 Constitutions elections and legislatures of Poland 1493 1977 a guide to their history EJJ Books pp 186 187 ISBN 978 0 7818 0637 4 Retrieved 13 August 2011 Volumina Legum t X Poznan 1952 p 326 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 639 a b c d Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 631 a b c Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 632 a b c d e f Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 633 Schulz Forberg 2005 p 162 Biogram zostal opublikowany w 1976 r w XXI tomie Polskiego Slownika Biograficznego Butterwick 1998 p 1 a b c d e f g h i j Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 638 Butterwick 1998 p 2 a b Jan IJ van der Meer 2002 Literary Activities and Attitudes in the Stanislavian Age in Poland 1764 1795 A Social System Rodopi p 235 ISBN 978 90 420 0933 2 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b c d e f g h i Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 634 Jan IJ van der Meer 2002 Literary Activities and Attitudes in the Stanislavian Age in Poland 1764 1795 A Social System Rodopi p 234 ISBN 978 90 420 0933 2 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b c d e Jan IJ van der Meer 2002 Literary Activities and Attitudes in the Stanislavian Age in Poland 1764 1795 A Social System Rodopi p 233 ISBN 978 90 420 0933 2 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b c d e f g h i Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 635 a b Czeslaw Milosz 24 October 1983 The History of Polish Literature University of California Press p 162 ISBN 978 0 520 04477 7 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b Jan IJ van der Meer 2002 Literary Activities and Attitudes in the Stanislavian Age in Poland 1764 1795 A Social System Rodopi p 51 ISBN 978 90 420 0933 2 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b c d e f g Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 636 a b c d e f g h Jerzy Michalski Stanislaw August Poniatowski Polski Slownik Biograficzny T 41 2011 p 637 Historic England Dulwich Picture Gallery and Mausoleum 1385543 National Heritage List for England retrieved 18 December 2017 Butterwick 1998 p 218 a b Jerzy Jan Lerski Piotr Wrobel Richard J Kozicki 1996 Volume 289 Polish Historical dictionary of Poland 966 1945 Greenwood Publishing Group p 565 ISBN 0 313 26007 9 Norman Davies God s Playground A History of Poland Columbia University Press 2005 ISBN 0 231 12819 3 Google Print p 167 a b Polska Akademia Nauk 1973 Nauka polska Polska Akademia Nauk p 151 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b Andrzej Zahorski 1988 Spor o Stanislawa Augusta Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy p 7 ISBN 978 83 06 01559 1 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Andrzej Zahorski 1988 Spor o Stanislawa Augusta Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy p 413 ISBN 978 83 06 01559 1 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Norman Davies 2005 God s Playground A History of Poland in Two Volumes Oxford University Press p 310 ISBN 978 0 19 925339 5 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b c Andrzej Zahorski 1988 Spor o Stanislawa Augusta Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy p 8 ISBN 978 83 06 01559 1 Retrieved 3 May 2012 a b Andrzej Zahorski 1988 Spor o Stanislawa Augusta Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy pp 446 449 ISBN 978 83 06 01559 1 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Andrzej Zahorski 1988 Spor o Stanislawa Augusta Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy pp 9 10 ISBN 978 83 06 01559 1 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Muhlbach L Luise 1 February 2003 Joseph II and His Court An Historical Novel Retrieved 30 July 2022 via Project Gutenberg Laskowski Maciej 2012 Jane Porter s Thaddeus of Warsaw as evidence of Polish British relationships PDF in Polish Poznan Instytucie Filologii Angielskiej Retrieved 3 December 2014 Porter Jane Thaddeus of Warsaw Retrieved 30 July 2022 via Project Gutenberg TRZECI MAJA Retrieved 3 December 2014 Trailer with English subtitles at https www youtube com watch v TbRQhvkups8 Marek Wrede Hanna Malachowicz Pawel Sadlej 2007 Konstytucja 3 Maja Historia Obraz Konsweracja Zamek Krolewski w Warszawie pp 26 31 ISBN 978 83 7022 172 0 Zamoyski Adam The last king of Poland Biogram zostal opublikowany w 1936 r w II tomie Polskiego Slownika Biograficznego Biography in PSB 1976 vol 21 tom XXI Polskiego Slownika Biograficznego Fiszerowa Wirydianna 1998 Dzieje moje wlasne Warsaw Biogram zostal opublikowany w 1994 r w XXXV tomie Polskiego Slownika Biograficznego Hatt Christine 24 November 2017 Catherine the Great World Almanac Library ISBN 9780836855357 Retrieved 24 November 2017 via Google Books Mieczyslaw B Biskupski James S Pula 1990 Volume 289 Polish democratic thought from the Renaissance to the great emigration essays and documents East European Monographs p 168 ISBN 0 88033 186 0 a b Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orla Bialego 1705 2008 Zamek Krolewski w Warszawie 2008 p 186 Krzysztof Filipow 2003 Falerystyka polska XVII XIX w Muzeum Wojska w Bialymstoku p 73 Liste der Ritter des Koniglich Preussischen Hohen Ordens vom Schwarzen Adler 1851 Von Seiner Majestat dem Konige Friedrich II ernannte Ritter p 9 Stanislaw August Antoni II Poniatowski h Ciolek M J Minakowski Genealogia potomkow Sejmu Wielkiego Sejm wielki pl Retrieved 16 June 2012 Elzbieta Szydlowska z Wielkiego Szydlowa h Lubicz M J Minakowski Genealogia potomkow Sejmu Wielkiego Sejm wielki pl Retrieved 16 June 2012 Further reading EditButterwick Richard 14 May 1998 Poland s Last King and English Culture Stanislaw August Poniatowski 1732 1798 Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 820701 6 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Butterwick Richard 2001 The Enlightened Monarchy of Stanislaw August Poniatowski 1764 1795 In Richard Butterwick ed The Polish Lithuanian Monarchy in European Context c 1500 1795 Basingstoke and London Palgrave Macmillan pp 192 217 ISBN 978 0 333 99380 4 Dembinski Bronislaw ed 1904 Stanislaw August i ksiaze Jozef Poniatowski w swietle wlasnej korespondencyi Stanislaw and Prince Joseph Poniatowski in the Light of Their Private Correspondence in Polish Naklad Towarzystwa dla Popierania Nauki Polskiej Lviv Kilinski Jan 1899 1818 Drugi pamietnik nieznany o czasach Stanislawa Augusta Recollections of the Times of Stanislaw August in Polish Aleksander Kraushar Kwiatkowski Marek 1983 Stanislaw August Krol Architekt Stanislaw August King Architect in Polish Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich ISBN 978 83 04 00850 2 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Lindemann Mary 2006 Liaisons dangereuses sex law and diplomacy in the age of Frederick the Great JHU Press ISBN 08 01883 17 2 Lojek Jerzy 1998 Stanislaw August Poniatowski i jego czasy Stanislaw August Poniatowski and His Times in Polish Wydawn Alfa ISBN 978 83 7179 023 2 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Schulz Forberg Hagen 2005 Unravelling Civilisation European Travel and Travel Writing Peter Lang ISBN 90 52012 35 0 Zamoyski Adam 1992 The last king of Poland J Cape ISBN 0 224 03548 7 Bibliography EditMarek Zukow Karczewski Stanislaw August w Petersburgu Stanislaw August in Saint Petersburg Zycie Literackie No 43 1987 p 1 6 in Polish External links Edit Media related to Stanislaus II August of Poland at Wikimedia Commons Biography at www lazienki krolewskie pl Official page of the Royal Lazienki Museum in Warsaw Poniatowski in The Historical Geography of the Ciolek clan AD 950 1950 Stanislaw August w Gdansku Poniatowski s memoirs Works by Stanislaw August Poniatowski in digital library PolonaStanislaw August PoniatowskiHouse of PoniatowskiBorn 17 January 1732 Died 12 February 1798Regnal titlesPreceded byAugustus III King of Poland1764 1795 Succeeded byLeopold II Holy Roman Emperoras King of Galicia and LodomeriaSucceeded byFrederick Augustus I of Saxonyas Duke of WarsawSucceeded byFrederick William III of Prussiaas Grand Duke of PosenSucceeded byAlexander I of Russiaas King of PolandGrand Duke of Lithuania1764 1795Portals Biography Poland This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Poniatowski Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 61 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanislaw August Poniatowski amp oldid 1135398364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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