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Załuski Library

The Załuski Library (Polish: Biblioteka Załuskich, Latin: Bibliotheca Zalusciana) established in Warsaw in 1747 by Józef Andrzej Załuski and his brother, Andrzej Stanisław Załuski, both Roman Catholic bishops, was a public library nationalized and renamed upon its founders' death into the Załuski Library of the Republic (Polish: Biblioteka Rzeczypospolitej Załuskich) which existed until the final demise of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the Third Partition of Poland in 1795.

Załuski Library
Załuski Library's original seat: now "House Under the Kings" (Dom Pod Królami), Warsaw
General information
Architectural styleRococo
Town or cityWarsaw
CountryPoland
Construction started1621
Completed1624
ClientJózef Andrzej Załuski,
Andrzej Stanisław Załuski
Design and construction
Architect(s)Francesco Antonio Melana (1736-1745)

Overview edit

The library was the first Polish public library, the largest library in Poland, and one of the earliest public libraries in Europe.[1][2] After the Kościuszko Uprising (1794), Russian troops, acting on orders from Czarina Catherine II, seized the library's holdings and transported them to her personal collection at Saint Petersburg, where a year later it formed the cornerstone of the newly founded Imperial Public Library.[2] In the 1920s the government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic returned some of the former Załuski Library holdings to the recently established Second Polish Republic following the Treaty of Riga, and they were later included in the National Library (Biblioteka Narodowa), founded in 1928[2] (hence, the latter considers itself the continuation of the Załuski Library). The majority of the original Załuski collection was, however, deliberately destroyed by the German troops during the planned destruction of Warsaw in October 1944, following the collapse of the Warsaw Uprising.[2][3]

History edit

Creation edit

The Załuski brothers' greatest passion was book collecting, including collecting historical manuscripts and incunabula. Józef Andrzej Załuski and his brother Andrzej Stanisław Załuski acquired the collections of earlier Polish bibliophiles such as Jakub Zadzik, Krzysztof Opaliński, Tomasz Ujejski, Janusz Wiśniowiecki, Jerzy Mniszech and Jan III Sobieski (the latter, from his granddaughter, Maria Karolina Sobieska). Beginning from the 1730s the brothers planned the creation of a public library.

Operation edit

The Załuski Library was considered the first Polish public library[4] and one of the largest libraries in the contemporary world.[2] In all of Europe there were only two or three libraries that could boast such holdings.[5] The library initially held some 200,000 items, which grew to some 400,000 printed items, maps and manuscripts[2][6] by the end of the 1780s. It also accumulated a collection of art, scientific instruments, and plant and animal specimens.

This library, open on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., asked patrons to be quiet and to say a prayer in the intention of the Załuski brothers.[5] The library initially lended out its collection items, but soon reversed this policy by prohibiting to take the books outside the library, as the book theft became a growing problem, to an extent that the bishop patrons decided to ask the pope for help.[5] Responding to their request, in 1752 pope Benedict XIV issued a papal bull that threatened to excommunication individuals taking the books from this library; even that did not eliminate the problem completely.[5]

 
Załuski Library exlibris

After the brothers' deaths, the newly formed Commission for National Education took charge of the library, renaming it the Załuski Library of the Republic.

Looting and destruction edit

Twenty years later in 1794, in the aftermath of the second Partition of Poland and Kościuszko Uprising, Russian troops, on orders from Russian Czarina Catherine II, emptied[2][7] the library and dispatched the whole collection to Saint Petersburg. The looted books formed the foundations of the Imperial Public Library on its formation a year later; meanwhile, its looted Polish predecessor was abolished and destined by the victorious three powers to be sent into oblivion along with its owner, the Polish state itself.[2][8]

Parts of the collections were damaged or destroyed as they were mishandled while being removed from the library and transported to Russia, and many were stolen.[2][5] According to the historian Joachim Lelewel, the books from the Zaluskis' collection "could be bought at Grodno by the basket".[2] The collection was later dispersed among several Russian libraries.

Successor edit

Some parts of the Zaluski collection returned to Congress Poland on two separate dates in the nineteenth century: 1842 and 1863.[2] In the 1920s, in the aftermath of the Polish-Soviet War and the Treaty of Riga[6][9] around 50,000 collection items were repatriated to Poland by the RSFSR's government.[2] which served as the cornerstone of the National Library of Poland re-established in 1928. The latter has therefore always regarded itself as the direct continuation of the Załuski Library with its service to be considered merely "interrupted" by the Partitioning Powers for 133 years, and has continued to officially state the year 1747 as its date of foundation, as well as to number and celebrate its anniversaries accordingly.

Repeated destruction edit

In World War II, the German soldiers deliberately destroyed the collection (held in the Krasiński Library at the time) during the planned destruction of Warsaw in October 1944, after collapse of the Warsaw Uprising.[2][3][5] Only 1800 manuscripts and 30,000 printed materials from the original library survived the war. [10]

Present times edit

After the war, some of the items were successfully recovered and returned to the National Library of Poland, the successor to the Załuski Library. In 2023, George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews, a member of the British Royal Family, personally handed over the 1523 L’histoire de Primaleon de Grece by Francisco Vázquez after he realized the provenance of this book in his collections.[11]

Building edit

For the purpose of establishing the library, the brothers acquired the 17th-century Daniłowicz Palace in Warsaw, originally built for Mikołaj Daniłowicz of Żurów and ruined during the Swedish Deluge. [2][10]

The building's reconstruction in rococo style was accomplished by Francesco Antonio Melana and his brother in 1745,[12] thus enabling the Załuski brothers to officially establish the Załuski Library (Biblioteka Załuskich) two years later. The establishment had two stories, with a large and lavishly decorated reading room located on the second floor, and was topped with a small tower containing an astronomical observatory.[2]

Following the library's looting and closure, its original seat was used for flour storage after 1807, and was subsequently altered into a tenement house in 1821.[10] The building was destroyed by the Germans during World War II.

After the war, the original building was rebuilt under the Polish People's Republic. During the building's reconstruction, the busts of Polish monarchs that had originally adorned the library's interiors, and which had been hidden during the Partitions of Poland, were discovered and placed on the building's facade; hence the building has come to be called the "House Under the Kings" (Dom pod Królami).[10] It has thereafter served as the headquarters of the Society of Authors ZAiKS.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ S. D. Chrostowska. . utoronto.ca. Archived from the original on 2008-02-03. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Maria Witt (September–October 2005). . The Strange Life of One of the Greatest European Libraries of the Eighteenth Century. FYI France. Archived from the original on 2021-03-01. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  3. ^ a b Rebecca Knuth (2006). Burning books and leveling libraries: extremist violence and cultural destruction. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 166. ISBN 0-275-99007-9.
  4. ^ . polbox.pl. Archived from the original on 2008-03-14. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Lech Chmielewski. . Welcome to Warsaw. Archived from the original on 2009-02-03. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  6. ^ a b Kent, Allen; Lancour, Harold; Daily, Jay E. (1978-01-01). Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 23 - Poland: Libraries and Information Centers in to Printers and Printing. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8247-2023-0. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  7. ^ Katarzyna Czechowicz (August 14, 2007). . eduskrypt.pl. Archived from the original on 2017-08-14. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  8. ^ Nicholas A. Basbanes (2003). A Splendor of Letters: The Permanence of Books in an Impermanent World. Warsaw: HarperCollins. p. 155. ISBN 0-06-008287-9. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  9. ^ Jonathan Rose (2001). The Holocaust and the Book: Destruction and Preservation. Warsaw: Univ of Massachusetts Press. p. 145. ISBN 1-55849-253-4. Retrieved 2008-02-17. Zaluski library.
  10. ^ a b c d "Dom pod Królami". warszawa1939.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  11. ^ Stuart Dowell (17 May 2023). "British Earl returns 16th century literary treasure to National Library". thefirstnews.com. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  12. ^ Witold Stankiewicz, ed. (1984). 50 lat Biblioteki Narodowej, Warszawa, 1928-1978 (50 years of the National Library, Warsaw, 1928-1978) (in Polish). Biblioteka Narodowa. p. 16. ISBN 83-7009-000-1.

References edit

  • Jan Kozłowski, Szkice o dziejach Biblioteki Załuskich. Publisher: Zakład Narodowy Imienia Ossolińskich, Polish Academy of Sciences, Wrocław, 1986. Retrieved October 23, 2011.
  • Heinz Lemke, Die Brüder Zaluski und ihre Beziehungen zu Gelehren in Deutschland und Danzig, Berlin 1958
  • Marian Łodyński, Z dziejów "Biblioteki Rzeczypospolitej Załuskich zwanej" w l. 1785-94, Warszawa 1935
  • Jan Kozłowski, Biblioteka Załuskich w dwunastu odsłonach, "Roczniki Biblioteki Narodowej" 33:2001
  • Jan Kozłowski, Źródła do rekonstrukcji Biblioteki Załuskich, Z badań nad polskimi księgozbiorami historycznymi, 15(1993)
  • Stanisław Roszak, Środowisko intelektualne i artystyczne Warszawy w połowie XVIII w. Między kulturą Sarmatyzmu a Oświecenia, Toruń 1997
  • Tadeusz Zarzębski, Biblioteka Rzeczypospolitej Załuskich zwana (Fakty z dziejów), "Roczniki Biblioteki Narodowej" 27/28:1991/92
  • Pamiątki dziejów Biblioteki Załuskich, opr. Joanna Płaza i Bożena Sajna, Biblioteka Narodowa, Warszawa 1997
  • Piotr Bańkowski, Ze studiów nad rękopisami byłej cesarskiej biblioteki publicznej w Petersburgu Nakładem "Przeglądu Bibliotecznego", Kraków 1937

External links edit

  • FYI France Essay 2013-12-09 at the Wayback Machine The Strange Life of One of the Greatest European Libraries of the Eighteenth Century: the Zaluski Collection in Warsaw
  • In the House under the Sign of the Kings

52°14′43″N 21°00′27″E / 52.245408°N 21.007541°E / 52.245408; 21.007541

załuski, library, polish, biblioteka, załuskich, latin, bibliotheca, zalusciana, established, warsaw, 1747, józef, andrzej, załuski, brother, andrzej, stanisław, załuski, both, roman, catholic, bishops, public, library, nationalized, renamed, upon, founders, d. The Zaluski Library Polish Biblioteka Zaluskich Latin Bibliotheca Zalusciana established in Warsaw in 1747 by Jozef Andrzej Zaluski and his brother Andrzej Stanislaw Zaluski both Roman Catholic bishops was a public library nationalized and renamed upon its founders death into the Zaluski Library of the Republic Polish Biblioteka Rzeczypospolitej Zaluskich which existed until the final demise of Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in the Third Partition of Poland in 1795 Zaluski LibraryZaluski Library s original seat now House Under the Kings Dom Pod Krolami WarsawGeneral informationArchitectural styleRococoTown or cityWarsawCountryPolandConstruction started1621Completed1624ClientJozef Andrzej Zaluski Andrzej Stanislaw ZaluskiDesign and constructionArchitect s Francesco Antonio Melana 1736 1745 Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 Creation 2 2 Operation 2 3 Looting and destruction 2 4 Successor 2 5 Repeated destruction 2 6 Present times 3 Building 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksOverview editThe library was the first Polish public library the largest library in Poland and one of the earliest public libraries in Europe 1 2 After the Kosciuszko Uprising 1794 Russian troops acting on orders from Czarina Catherine II seized the library s holdings and transported them to her personal collection at Saint Petersburg where a year later it formed the cornerstone of the newly founded Imperial Public Library 2 In the 1920s the government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic returned some of the former Zaluski Library holdings to the recently established Second Polish Republic following the Treaty of Riga and they were later included in the National Library Biblioteka Narodowa founded in 1928 2 hence the latter considers itself the continuation of the Zaluski Library The majority of the original Zaluski collection was however deliberately destroyed by the German troops during the planned destruction of Warsaw in October 1944 following the collapse of the Warsaw Uprising 2 3 History editCreation edit The Zaluski brothers greatest passion was book collecting including collecting historical manuscripts and incunabula Jozef Andrzej Zaluski and his brother Andrzej Stanislaw Zaluski acquired the collections of earlier Polish bibliophiles such as Jakub Zadzik Krzysztof Opalinski Tomasz Ujejski Janusz Wisniowiecki Jerzy Mniszech and Jan III Sobieski the latter from his granddaughter Maria Karolina Sobieska Beginning from the 1730s the brothers planned the creation of a public library Operation edit The Zaluski Library was considered the first Polish public library 4 and one of the largest libraries in the contemporary world 2 In all of Europe there were only two or three libraries that could boast such holdings 5 The library initially held some 200 000 items which grew to some 400 000 printed items maps and manuscripts 2 6 by the end of the 1780s It also accumulated a collection of art scientific instruments and plant and animal specimens This library open on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7 00 a m to 7 00 p m asked patrons to be quiet and to say a prayer in the intention of the Zaluski brothers 5 The library initially lended out its collection items but soon reversed this policy by prohibiting to take the books outside the library as the book theft became a growing problem to an extent that the bishop patrons decided to ask the pope for help 5 Responding to their request in 1752 pope Benedict XIV issued a papal bull that threatened to excommunication individuals taking the books from this library even that did not eliminate the problem completely 5 nbsp Zaluski Library exlibrisAfter the brothers deaths the newly formed Commission for National Education took charge of the library renaming it the Zaluski Library of the Republic Looting and destruction edit Twenty years later in 1794 in the aftermath of the second Partition of Poland and Kosciuszko Uprising Russian troops on orders from Russian Czarina Catherine II emptied 2 7 the library and dispatched the whole collection to Saint Petersburg The looted books formed the foundations of the Imperial Public Library on its formation a year later meanwhile its looted Polish predecessor was abolished and destined by the victorious three powers to be sent into oblivion along with its owner the Polish state itself 2 8 Parts of the collections were damaged or destroyed as they were mishandled while being removed from the library and transported to Russia and many were stolen 2 5 According to the historian Joachim Lelewel the books from the Zaluskis collection could be bought at Grodno by the basket 2 The collection was later dispersed among several Russian libraries Successor edit Some parts of the Zaluski collection returned to Congress Poland on two separate dates in the nineteenth century 1842 and 1863 2 In the 1920s in the aftermath of the Polish Soviet War and the Treaty of Riga 6 9 around 50 000 collection items were repatriated to Poland by the RSFSR s government 2 which served as the cornerstone of the National Library of Poland re established in 1928 The latter has therefore always regarded itself as the direct continuation of the Zaluski Library with its service to be considered merely interrupted by the Partitioning Powers for 133 years and has continued to officially state the year 1747 as its date of foundation as well as to number and celebrate its anniversaries accordingly Repeated destruction edit In World War II the German soldiers deliberately destroyed the collection held in the Krasinski Library at the time during the planned destruction of Warsaw in October 1944 after collapse of the Warsaw Uprising 2 3 5 Only 1800 manuscripts and 30 000 printed materials from the original library survived the war 10 Present times edit After the war some of the items were successfully recovered and returned to the National Library of Poland the successor to the Zaluski Library In 2023 George Windsor Earl of St Andrews a member of the British Royal Family personally handed over the 1523 L histoire de Primaleon de Grece by Francisco Vazquez after he realized the provenance of this book in his collections 11 Building editFor the purpose of establishing the library the brothers acquired the 17th century Danilowicz Palace in Warsaw originally built for Mikolaj Danilowicz of Zurow and ruined during the Swedish Deluge 2 10 The building s reconstruction in rococo style was accomplished by Francesco Antonio Melana and his brother in 1745 12 thus enabling the Zaluski brothers to officially establish the Zaluski Library Biblioteka Zaluskich two years later The establishment had two stories with a large and lavishly decorated reading room located on the second floor and was topped with a small tower containing an astronomical observatory 2 Following the library s looting and closure its original seat was used for flour storage after 1807 and was subsequently altered into a tenement house in 1821 10 The building was destroyed by the Germans during World War II After the war the original building was rebuilt under the Polish People s Republic During the building s reconstruction the busts of Polish monarchs that had originally adorned the library s interiors and which had been hidden during the Partitions of Poland were discovered and placed on the building s facade hence the building has come to be called the House Under the Kings Dom pod Krolami 10 It has thereafter served as the headquarters of the Society of Authors ZAiKS Gallery edit nbsp Zaluski Library under construction by Vogel nbsp House of the Kings deliberately destroyed by the Germans in World War II nbsp House of the Kings today ul Danilowiczowska 14 corner of ul Hipoteczna 2 Warsaw See also editPolish National Library Jagiellonian Library Royal Library in Warsaw Minuscule 569 OssolineumNotes edit S D Chrostowska Polish Literary Criticism Circa 1772 A Genre Perspective utoronto ca Archived from the original on 2008 02 03 Retrieved 2008 02 17 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Maria Witt September October 2005 The Zaluski Collection in Warsaw The Strange Life of One of the Greatest European Libraries of the Eighteenth Century FYI France Archived from the original on 2021 03 01 Retrieved 2008 02 17 a b Rebecca Knuth 2006 Burning books and leveling libraries extremist violence and cultural destruction Greenwood Publishing Group p 166 ISBN 0 275 99007 9 Bygone Warsaw polbox pl Archived from the original on 2008 03 14 Retrieved 2008 02 17 a b c d e f Lech Chmielewski In the House under the Sign of the Kings Welcome to Warsaw Archived from the original on 2009 02 03 Retrieved 2008 02 17 a b Kent Allen Lancour Harold Daily Jay E 1978 01 01 Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science Volume 23 Poland Libraries and Information Centers in to Printers and Printing CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8247 2023 0 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Katarzyna Czechowicz August 14 2007 The 260th anniversary of opening the Zaluski Library eduskrypt pl Archived from the original on 2017 08 14 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Nicholas A Basbanes 2003 A Splendor of Letters The Permanence of Books in an Impermanent World Warsaw HarperCollins p 155 ISBN 0 06 008287 9 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Jonathan Rose 2001 The Holocaust and the Book Destruction and Preservation Warsaw Univ of Massachusetts Press p 145 ISBN 1 55849 253 4 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Zaluski library a b c d Dom pod Krolami warszawa1939 pl in Polish Retrieved 2008 02 17 Stuart Dowell 17 May 2023 British Earl returns 16th century literary treasure to National Library thefirstnews com Retrieved 19 May 2023 Witold Stankiewicz ed 1984 50 lat Biblioteki Narodowej Warszawa 1928 1978 50 years of the National Library Warsaw 1928 1978 in Polish Biblioteka Narodowa p 16 ISBN 83 7009 000 1 References editJan Kozlowski Szkice o dziejach Biblioteki Zaluskich Publisher Zaklad Narodowy Imienia Ossolinskich Polish Academy of Sciences Wroclaw 1986 Retrieved October 23 2011 Heinz Lemke Die Bruder Zaluski und ihre Beziehungen zu Gelehren in Deutschland und Danzig Berlin 1958 Marian Lodynski Z dziejow Biblioteki Rzeczypospolitej Zaluskich zwanej w l 1785 94 Warszawa 1935 Jan Kozlowski Biblioteka Zaluskich w dwunastu odslonach Roczniki Biblioteki Narodowej 33 2001 Jan Kozlowski Zrodla do rekonstrukcji Biblioteki Zaluskich Z badan nad polskimi ksiegozbiorami historycznymi 15 1993 Stanislaw Roszak Srodowisko intelektualne i artystyczne Warszawy w polowie XVIII w Miedzy kultura Sarmatyzmu a Oswiecenia Torun 1997 Tadeusz Zarzebski Biblioteka Rzeczypospolitej Zaluskich zwana Fakty z dziejow Roczniki Biblioteki Narodowej 27 28 1991 92 Pamiatki dziejow Biblioteki Zaluskich opr Joanna Plaza i Bozena Sajna Biblioteka Narodowa Warszawa 1997 Piotr Bankowski Ze studiow nad rekopisami bylej cesarskiej biblioteki publicznej w Petersburgu Nakladem Przegladu Bibliotecznego Krakow 1937External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zaluski Library FYI France Essay Archived 2013 12 09 at the Wayback Machine The Strange Life of One of the Greatest European Libraries of the Eighteenth Century the Zaluski Collection in Warsaw Welcome In the House under the Sign of the Kings52 14 43 N 21 00 27 E 52 245408 N 21 007541 E 52 245408 21 007541 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zaluski Library amp oldid 1188688913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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