November and December 2013 - new websites on the genealogy and history of the noble
Konstantynowicz family in Russia 1772 - 1918, Poland 1918 - 1939 and next at a Polish territory
1939 - 2012. The family history of the Konstantynowiczs in Tsarist Russia. In Viljandi, Tallinn, Parnu / Parnawa, Riga / Ryga, Moscow, Petersburg, Ufa, Miezonka, Hapsal / Haapsalu,
Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti.
With:
Melik - Beglyarov or Melik-Beglarov, Demonets / Demonet or Demontet, Breguet, Brown, Wilde,
Nikitin, Katenin, Gruzinski, Bagrationi, Drzewiecki, Orlov-Denisov, Martynov, Paszkowski, Kalinowski, Zarako Zarakowski,
Malkiewicz, Horodecki,
Zbieranowski,
Szostak,
Nobel, Masson, Hacker / Hakker, Kammer, Briling, Vologdin,
Azbelev, Benckendorf or Benkendorf, Pushkin, Kropotkin, Chikin,
Bakst, Trubecki / Trubiacki / Troubetzkoy / Troubetskoi,
Beklemishev, Rosenberg, Wittgenstein,
Dadian-Mingrelsky / Dadiani Mingrelskij,
Radziwill, Piottuch-Kublicki, Soltan, Oginski, Japaridze, Rosen,
Gernet, Rehbinder, Schilling, Nakachidze, von Zarnekau, Yurievsky, Duke of Oldenburg, Nikoladze, Maipariani or Maypariani, Saparov, Armand, Diseren, Duflon, Rey, Paat / Paats, Karamyan.
My research concerns many state intelligence networks created in the first half of the 18th century.
Initially it was a global political network of the Russian intelligence infiltrated by the British [1791], French
[from the 40s of the 18th century] and Germans [1769/1776], and by the Polish independence conspiracy [was
established 1792/1799] starting from a years 1870/1878.
Compare three dates:
1.
6 km to the south of the BRZEZIE was the palace in Wieniec founded in the early nineteenth century by the family
of Miaczynski; in 1868 the property bought a Warsaw banker of Jewish origin and a great Polish patriot - Leopold
Kronenberg.
2.
1870, Brown of London - takes over the Breguet company [below];
3.
and the letter of 1871 from Albert Pike to Mazzini.
Breguet cooperated also with Chambrier, V. Foy, the French government (dial telegraph in 1845), the Telegraph
Company in 1863 (electric telegraph - Breguet System, late 19th century), in Britain in the 1860s and 1870s with
Wood, Edward George b. in Clerkenwell, Islington, January 1812, d. 1896 from Cheapside, City of London, who was
friend of Thomas Cooper, the Chartist (galvanic telegraph, Crossley's Telegraph in Halifax), d'Arlincourt (transmitter);
Breguet patented a Telegraph Communicator - Breguet Alphabetical Type, circa 1870; manufactured the telephone
transmitter (Boudet, Laborde, Breguet, Ader, Du Moncel, and others) and telephone receivers (Bell, Breguet, and
others).
In 1877 telephones appears in Russia but in the Russian army experiments on telephone made in 1878.
L. Dyuflon and Dizeren in St. Petersburg established the Electrotechnical workshop on 1892, June
27. On 1896, December 14, L. Dyuflon, J. Dizeren and A. V. Konstantinovich [Apollon Konstantynowicz son of
Wasyl Konstantynowicz] in St. Petersburg established The Factory of electromechanical structures when Tesla
received a British patent on the design of the spark gap - rotating strap. 1898, K. F. Siemens, W. Siemens, A. V.
Gvineria and A. Y. Rothstein in St. Petersburg established the Russian joint stock company of electrical plants
'Siemens and Halske'. 1899 were starting experiments on radio in Russian War Department. 1902 (1901), the Plant of
electromechanical structures reorganized into a joint stock company 'Dyuflon, Konstantynowicz & Co', DECA.
Albert Pike [Albert Pike b. 1809, died 1891, was an attorney, soldier, writer, and Freemason, elected Sovereign Grand
Commander of the Scottish Rite's Southern Jurisdiction in 1859, of thirty-two years] described in a letter wrote to
Mazzini [Giuseppe Mazzini, 1805 - 1872, an Italian politician, journalist; "William R. Denslow lists Mazzini as a
Mason, and even a Past Grand Master of the Grand Orient of Italy"], dated August 15, 1871, plans for three world
wars necessary to bring the One World Order, and it is a "commonly believed fallacy that for a short time, the Pike
letter to Mazzini was on display in the British Museum Library in London, and it was copied by William Guy Carr...".
It was the plan known as The Society of the Elect, and an outer circle, to be known as The Association of Helpers,
and within The Society of the Elect, the real power was to be a 'Junta of Three'. The leader was Rhodes with Stead,
Brett, and Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner who was added to the society by Stead.
Rhodes had been planning this event for more than seventeen years (before 1872).
See: the letter of Pike to Mazzini in 1871, and Edward Brown - Breguet Company in 1870.
Stead had been introduced to the plan on 4 April 1889, and Brett had been told of it on 3 February 1890. In modified
form, it exists to this day.
Russo-Turkish War (1877-1878) and Polish officers:
Army commandant in 1877:
Nikolaj Nikolajevic senior, Romanov;
that is Mikolaj Mikolajewicz Romanow, b. 1831, d. 1891; Grand Duke, General Adjutant - 1856, General
Field Marshal - 1878. Third son of Tsar Nicholas I and Tsarina Aleksandra Fedorovna, born as Charlotte /
Charlotta Princess of Prussia. His older brothers were Tsar Alexander II and Grand Duke of Russia, Konstanty
Mikolajewicz.
"... The Knights of the Order of the Garter are the leaders of the Illuminati hierarchy ...
[Queen Victoria, Alexandrina Victoria b. 1819 was daughter of
Edward, Duke of Kent
(son of George III {his father Frederick, Prince of Wales and mother Augusta of Saxe-Gotha} + Charlotte of
Mecklenburg-Strelitz 1744 - 1818 {her father Duke Charles Louis Frederick of Mecklenburg, Prince of Mirow, and
mother Princess Elizabeth Albertine of Saxe-Hildburghausen})
and Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld 1786 - 1861
(1803 at Coburg, she married 1st to Charles, Prince of Leiningen; 2nd to Prince Edward, Duke of Kent {the
TEMPLARS} and Strathearn, in 1818 at Amorbach. Victoria's father was Francis, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and
mother Countess Augusta of Reuss-Ebersdorf daughter of Karoline Ernestine of Erbach-Schönberg)]
... [mentioned above] Charlotte was the grandmother of Queen Victoria {Maltese Orders}, and whose son married
the daughter of Frederick III of Hessen-Kassell {Frederick III of Hessen-Kassel / Friedrich III von Hessen-
Kassel, born in 1747, the father of Auguste Wilhelmine Luise von Hessen-Kassel b. 1797 married Prince
Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, the son, of George III of the United Kingdom and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-
Strelitz}.
Charlotte's brother was Charles II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, whose daughter married the heir of the
Prussian crown, Frederick William III.
Frederick II of Prussia was succeeded by his nephew, Frederick William II, who married Louise of Brunswick-
Wolfenbuettel.
She was the sister of Frederick Duke of Brunswick, the Grand Master of the Strict Templar Observance,
and who had convened the great Masonic convention at Wilhelmsbad in Hessen-Kassel.
Frederick Wilhelm II of Prussia was the father of Frederick William III, who became a member of the Order of the
Garter.
Named
Meshonka: here lived Antoni
(the
first son of
Dominik derived from area of Krycau -
the first two maps depict the area on the eastern border of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the Mscislaw area, where the Konstantynowicz family had possessions in the 17th and 18th centuries, and from where moved to Miezonka - and
verified noble descent in the Hrodna government
1861)
and his son
Stanislav Konstantynowicz
(born
c. 1855) with
wife Anna nee Malkiewicz (Malkevicius
of Tarnawa arms and others, mainly in districts of Panevezys
and Siauliai)
came from the Dryssa
ujezd (=
the Werchnedwinsk district; the place
Asveja) in
the Government of Vicebsk; she was near related
to the families Brzezinski / Bžezinskis
(Konstancja
Bžezinskis / Brzezinski), Ostrowski (from
Piotr Ostrowski de
Kaki in
1697;
1760 by the Czerowacz
lake in
Livonia) and Filipowicz
(Pilipavicius
or Pilipaitis with Pobog
and Prawdzic coat of arms verified the
armorial bearings in Vilna 1821:
Jozef, Mateusz, Michal, Antoni, Szymon, Izydor, Benedykt and
Joachim); family
of my grandfather had Georgians
next
of kin.
Miezonka
was situated in
the Ihumen district (in
the GOVERNMENT OF MINSK, the parish of BERAZINO or BERESINO,
the POHOST or Pogost region = Pogostskaya "volost" that is
similar to county; PRECINCT BERAZINO = Uchastok No 2:
Uyrevichskaya, Pogostskaya and the Belichanskaya volost; in
fourth military constabulary) near to
villages Duleba or
Duleby by the Olsa river and Druczany - inheritance of Korsak
family. In the small noble locality
Druczany was the poor nobility, too and they
spoke Belorussian to themselves every day. In the village
Duleba lived mainly persons with
Cedryk surname (1881).
Besides
close by villages: Iglica, Borowic(a), Zapole, Jagodka (Small
Berry), Maczeski and
Teresin.
The residents in this Polish noble locality at
the beginning of the 20th cent.:
- Umecki
-
Tumilowicz
(Miezonka and
neighbourhood) Jan and Florian sons of Jozef, Leon
and Piotr sons of Foma, Wasyl and Felicjan sons of Ilin, Jakub and Maciej
sons of Wincenty and others; close to Dzierzynski family
(brother of
Felix); one of
them Boleslav
worked at the
Monitz factory, was born c. 1901 in Miezonka number 9, he had two sisters and
brother Bronislav, nowadays in Poland
-
Bronowicki
- madam
Zaleski
-
Barszczewski
(Adam the son of Wincenty and Jan the son of this
Adam)
-
Soroko
(= Soroka)
-
Konstantynowicz
-
Szostak, from this family was colonel of armoured
weapon Stanislav / Stanislaw
Szostak, person
of the same age what my grandfather, defender of the Winter Palace
1917;
Szostak or Sastakas with the Dabrowa (i.e. "Oak forest" - a first Michal Szostak near by
Kolno) and Swan
coats of arms (in
the Vilna province with Swan arms - baptized
Tartars); Antoni Szostak in the Lida area in 1764: they verified the own
coat of arms in Minsk, Vicebsk (from Hrehory Szostak in the Polack province
- Zarzecenice
estate here
in 1700, and
also Lutowo
inheritance
called Sachnowszczyzna, Vielidzicze or Wieliszkowicze
and Bereszevo in the Vicebsk province; verified on 17.08.1835; the Hrodna and Vilna
branches from them), Hrodna and
Vilna (verified in
1835; they were from the Svencionys district i.e. "Behind
Vilija"); the
Szostak house in the Dzisna district was related to the Arcimowicz family with Plavski nickname from the
Braslau district
-
Witkowski
(= Vitovsky in 1860; among others: Antoni and
Wincenty, the sons of Mikolaj, and also Jan who was son of Franciszek, in period
of the January Insurrection 1863
-
64)
-
Malkiewicz
- information of
1958 according to Narcyz Soroko from Siberia; they had relatives in the Paluse estate
i.e.
Pluszcze, and
also Mrs Izabella Horodecki - Malkiewicz
i.e.
Izabela
Horodecki was from them; daughter of Genowefa Werakso from Minsk
and Wladyslaw Malkiewicz; great grand-daughter of Wiktor Waraksa / Weraksa b.
circa 1820 son of Jan. She was famous for activity during the Second world war
in Warsaw; was born in Moscow on 01 May 1908
-
Zbieranowski, one from them, Mr. Alexander Zbieranowski was convicted during "shahtynski" lawsuit
of
1928 - he was
radio engineer and the specialist of valves, educated at the polytechnic of Berlin
(the foremost expert in valves in the tsarist
Russia was a certain Boncz -
Brujewicz); other - Vladyslav Zbieranowski who was messenger of
the Polish
Military Organization in the district of Babrujsk A.D.
1918
-
Huszcza; the families Huszcza (Guscis or Gustis with Horseshoe and Puchala
coats of arms)
and Tumilowicz that is rural "badger
nobility", the Polish strongly. The Borsuki village
(Badgers) is situated 15 km north - east from Miezonka, according
to M. K.
Pavlikovski who
described history of
Ipohorski
- Irtenski
family
from the
Berazino parish
(in
Backov,
3 km from the Berezina
river); sons of
Jerzy: Kazimierz, Hilary, Aleksander, Julian and Maciej
Huszcza; peers of this Jerzy: Jan Huszcza, Semen, Fiodor and Kondrat Huszcza in
the period of the January Insurrection. The Huszcza family derived
from the province of Polack and an area of Mahileu. They verified the noble
descent in Minsk of 1825 (Dominik, Teodor, Tadeusz, Maciej, Stefan,
Wincenty Tomasz, Franciszek and Kazimierz).
Estonia: Balachowicz, Constantinovich / Konstantinovich, Trubetzkoy / Troubetskoy / Trubecki, Dadiani, Dunkel, von Krauze / Krause, Gernet, Toll, Rehbinder / Rebinder, Croy - the Baltic German nobility. История фамилии Константинович - генеалогия семьи.
I
search for all information about the village MIEZONKA / Мяжонка / Меженка
where my grandfather
was born on 23
April 1898 either 1897 or 23 April
1900; Belarus now, the Bjalynicy (= Belynichi) region in the Mahileu (= the Mogilev
province) "oblast";
the village is situated among grand forest and southwards was big
marsh - Miezonka was at a territory of enormous estates the Radziwilles before
A.D. 1840;
the Combat Organization
of the Polish Socialist Party
conducted a contraband of weapon from Russia to Austria - Hungary at the
beginning of the 20th century keeping in touch with Josef Pilsudski
(b.
1867) and
that track led out of Petersburg among other things across Miezonka and
Lodz (the Tuvim
street) in the direction to Galicia; a family of ANDRZEJAK from
Lodz involved in this activity occupied quarters in Miezonka
(among other
things) all over the first World War and thus they became
technolators of
aviation and the basis of the
amateurish movement of aviation sports in Lodz after 1920.
The Polish school of Berazino precinct was here in 1918 under German
occupation
Andrej M. K. Mikalajeu-Paszkiewicz wrote about Hajduk Sloboda village, acc.to: Zdzislaw J. Winnicki, "Kojdanowsko-Polski Rejon Narodowosciowy w BSSR. Uwagi o genezie oraz przeslankach funkcjonowania. Stan badan problematyki."
(others Polish schools in this constabulary in
1918 with following of the Germans:
Cerven, Poticzolo near to Cerven,
Pieczyszcze, Tadulicze and Stara Droga near to Ljady, Malinnik and Nowinki near to Chutar,
Raczyborek
and
Wysoka
Gora near to
Bahusevicy, Berazino, Wiazyczyn, Ravanicy, Bieliszczany, Bryjelow and Hajduk Sloboda - NW of Berazino,
Rubiez, Studzienka and Wasilewszczyzna - the east of Berazino,
Zukowiec
by Bjarezina
= the Berezyna river);
farm - houses in Borovina and Miezonka estates were burned
down and sequestered by the Soviets in the second half of November 1918
(Lenin in
agreement with Germany occupied Belarus since 14.11.1918) and many perished.
Displacement at Ural and Siberia
(the governments of Perm and Omsk)
from here in winter 1928/29 and 1937 - 1951.
With the webpage
http://forum.globus.tut.by/viewtopic.php?p=35022&sid=343fd246deccd9f80daed406026c54e3 you can look at new photos of our Miezonka village and here 'alexBel' was writing: 'Mezhonka. At the local cemetery are ruins of the base of a church, the church itself was demolished in 1930. The Catholic cemetery has about 200 years (according to local), on it a lot of old monuments with inscriptions in Polish. An interesting story that we told the local granny: "After the revolution began mass repressions against Poles living in the country; Catholics, some exiled, others have time to run home. Immediately after the church was destroyed, all the values that were in it, a group of parishioners were buried at the cemetery in the guise of the grave, and the parishioners themselves fled to Poland. In the early 2000s, the son of one of the survivors came to Mezhonka / Mezonka / Miezonki / Meshonka and asked to see the cemetery, the locals took him and showed a cemetery and a ... site of the grave, (photo below), which had recently unearthed unknown. In this place, lay tombstones and stone with an inscription in Polish, which, as he explained later descendant, said: "take away the one who left"...". I realize that such stories in every village, but it seemed to me true, though perhaps no "belongings" were not there.
Another interesting fact: the village Mezhonka located at the border of the Minsk area, and if in the village our navigator showing that we are in the Mogilev region, then to the cemetery (the cemetery belongs to Mezhonka), he argued that we are in the Minsk region. Coordinates: 53.779296 29.412777.
Below is showing the place where was the church...'. And stone with name 'Boleslaw Nejmowski'.
The Roman Catholic chapel was in the
village on the German map of 1941.
On the Miezonka river was a mill owned by the Szostak family from the 60's of the nineteenth
century.
The Miezonka aristocratic locality partially abolished after 1937, and finally after the Second World War in 1944 - before eighties of the twentieth
century.
Only the Miezonka village area remaining south of the nobility houses, which were plowed.
In 2012, there were remnants of the Catholic cemetery - photos on my domain 'konstantynowicz.info'.
The cemetery has a long history. The origins of the first half of the nineteenth century, when it was leased by the Czapski noble family from the Radziwill family. After 1842 the property was in the Konstantynowicz hands. Since the sixties of the 19th century settled here Szostak and other Catholic gentry. They were also the Zbieranowskis who received a land from the Radziwill family for their service to this aristocratic family. We had affinities with the Radziwills.
After 1937 the Bolsheviks killed the Poles suspected of collaborating with the Polish military intelligence.
After 1944 the Soviets demolished all the houses of the nobility, but some fundamentals remained visible in the photographs. Land was plowed, planted with grass
and turned into pasture land and a hill align up even, on which were the first noble houses in 1850, belonging to the Konstantynowiczs.
The chapel was destroyed, but the remaining stones.
From the small Catholic cemetery in the area of the former noble Miezonka locality, remained only some graves, among others the Witkowskis.
Currently, the south-east of the cemetery is a Belarusian village Miezonka where ca 2000 older people known on Polish Catholic nobility of the noble Miezonka village.
A revenge on the Poles from Miezonka in the Soviet was terrible. Nothing was supposed to remain after their ancestors.
In the colony of the Soviet - in Communist Poland - their descendants were destroyed and controlled. A graves and memory on the Polish nobility in Belarus were destroyed.
Not only in Belarus, but also in other countries of Eastern Europe. This Asian way of revenge is difficult to describe.
Destruction of the cradle of the Polish nobility is Polish extermination hourglass.
Only in this way and in this context should be understood edition of my websites on a deadly revenge on the one
noble village among hundreds of similar localities.
Yes, Miezonka is an icon of resistance, at the same time a symbol of aggression and occupation of Belarus by Soviet.
Our photos are documents about the invasion, occupation and final destruction of the symbol.
It's the ritual revenge and retaliation.
Polish troops achieved the Bjarezina river, north of Berazino,
on August 19th, 1919 and conquered Berazino on August 20th, 1919 when Poland was fighting with the
Bolsheviks in defense of its independence 1919 - 1920
(during the war of liberty,
Polish army achieved for example:
Barysau
on 19/20th,
Bahusevicy
on August
19th, 1919; Svislac by the Bjarezina river on August 20/21st,
Babrujsk
on August
28th, Jasen'
station near
by Babrujsk on August 23rd, 1919).
Curiosity: Izrael Gelfond or Aleksander Izrael Lazariewicz Helphand,
Alexander Israel Helphant i.e. Alexander Parvus was born in Berezino, the Minsk government in 1867, he was revolutionary, friend
of Lejb Bronstein (i.e. Lew Trocki) and acted together in Petersburg A.D. 1905;
Parvus served for the intelligence service of imperial German Army as some
write and "produced" money to Lenin.
On the Wernadski and Modzelewski families you can read at my domain 'konstantynowicz.info'.
Probably
our ancestry with the name of Konstantynowicz derive from belorussian
family (Senko Czyzewicz
and his son Konstanty
Czyz) Czyz;
Polish as early as the 16th
century and professing
catholicism, owned arms of FOX proper since
1534
id
est Marcin
Konstantynowicz Czyz from Nieciecza
either
Marcin
Czyz Konstantynowicz from Nieczyca
or
Marcin
Czyz Nieczycki (or
Nietecki) who was born c. 1495.
Konstantynowicz
Czyz unknown of name (or Konstantinowicz who was born c. 1530
or
Michno
Konstantynowicz
?) was
withdrawn in the last will and testament of his father of
1547
and
destitute of a legacy which daughter Margaret
inherited;
she had got some brothers.
Part
of these Czyz from neighbourhood of LIDA (either
Nieciecz or Nieczyca 9 km from Lida)
c.
1550
have
accepted the surname Konstantynowicz (from
Christian name of father according to Leszczyc 1908/13)
adopting the armorial bearings of FOX proper and moved out to the
Trakai district and
thence to the MINSK province
c. 1570.
A
famous
Michno
Konstantynowicz
received
the big estate, an arable ground and forested land from the king Sigismund
Augustus on
04
January 1554
i.e.
the farmland
Merecz
Michnowski
and
the same Michno possessed a landed property
Zaleskowszczyzna
49
km N-W-N of Lida in the Troki district, too (close by a south -
easterly border of the former Trakai district) as early as
1552
and
it seems he owned a farmland Merkine in addition id est
Merecz
Michnowo
by
initial course of Merkys river in the Turgeliai parish, 38 km S-E-S of
Vilnius.
This
fact noted down in armorials of the Grand duchy of Lithuania:
1578 Konstantinowicz
who was born c. 1530
1584 Michal
Konstantynowic
1648 Konstantinowicz
or Konstantynowicz
The
family Konstantynowicz used the call POCHOWICZ (or
the Pohozy, Pohosha, Pohowicz, Rohoz, Rokoz and Pokoz nicknames,
information of 1937) at
first in the Minsk province, Belorussia since A.D.
1600
Mikolay
Pohosha Konstantynowicz has got a
privilege in the Minsk province handed
over to him by the king Vladislav IV Vasa on
07
March 1643
Just
after
1661
they
partly moved house to the East Belorussia in the MSCISLAU province near
to:
KRYCAU
= Kritschew or Kritchev, MSCISLAU
= Mstislavl (next
of kins the Golynskij or Holynski family; kin to family Hurko;
neighbourhood: families Hryniewicz or Gryniewicz = Grinevicius,
Hrynkiewicz or Grinkevicius in Iwanowszczyzna, Halko (Galkus),
Goluchowski or Goluchovskis in the Mscislau province of 1669,
Myszkowski or Miskauskas arms Jastrzebiec, Petryzycki or Pietrazycki,
Oleszkowski, Olesza, Skorupa, Dudka, Oziemblowski, Woroniec, Kisiel,
Romanowski, Pleskaczewski, Ostrowski, Mezynski, Gorski or Horski of
1654/1663 and Madalinski) and
in the region northwards of MSCISLAU (the villages Samava
= Chamovo at the map of
1834, Kopceuka, Niesterevo
– the Berezetnia
estate), where Swedes looted
them estates during campaign of Charles XII in summer A.D.
1708.
The
family Konstantynowicz from eastern Belorussia
(near to
Krycau – Antoni
2nd Konstantynowicz was
born c. 1833,
Mscislau, Samava) is my ancestors.
1772
this
territory was already in Russia, as the Government of Mahileu after the
1st Partition of POLAND, I am afraid.
They
partly have moved out to the easternmost
parts of the MINSK government to
the Berezino parish
after
c. 1840
id
est in the villages BOROVINA and
MIEZONKA (the village is situated 28
kilometres south - east of
Berazino = Beresino either
Byerazino
or Berezina).
История фамилии Константинович - генеалогия семьи. Genealogy and history of
the Kanstancinovič / Konstantinovich / Konstantynowicz, Trubetzkoy / Troubetskoy / Trubecki, Orlov-Denisov / Orlow Denisow, Dadiani, Nikitin, Wittgenstein, Golicyn / Golitsyn, Bagrationi / Bagration-Gruzinski / Bagration Gruzinsky, Pashkovsky / Paszkowski, Duflon / Dyuflon, Siedych / Sedoch / Staroch-Siedoch, Armand, Demonets / Demonet in the XVIII and XIX centuries in Russia
История фамилии Константинович - генеалогия семьи. Genealogy and history of
the Kanstancinovič / Konstantinovich / Konstantynowicz family in the XVIII and XIX centuries in Russia. The Lenin Revolution 1917 - 1918.
История фамилии Константинович - генеалогия семьи. Genealogy and history of
the Wernadski, Modzelewski and Kanstancinovič / Konstantinovich / Konstantynowicz family in the XVIII and XIX centuries in Russia.
История фамилии Константинович - генеалогия семьи. Genealogy and history of
the Dubbelt / Dubelt, Pushkin / Puszkin, Gernet, Toll, Croy, Rehbinder, Konstantinovich / Constantinovich / Constantinowitz, Armand, Paszkowski, Demonet, Kalinowski, Trubecki / Troubetzkoy / Troubetskoj, Sedykh / Siedoch, Zarako Zarakowski / Zarakovskij, Dyuflon / Duflon, Nobel, Vernadskij, Modzelewski families in the XVIII and XIX centuries in Russia (Moscow, St Petersburg, Alexandrovsk, Miezonka, Berezyna, Orsha, Mahileu, Mscislaw, Riga, Tallinn, Kronstadt, Viljandi, Parnu / Parnawa, Daugavpils, Harku, Saku, Nomme, Kazan).
Konferencja naukowa 22 pazdziernika 2012 - Katastrofa
Smolenska 2010. Wnioski ze sledztwa. Wypadek lotniczy, jego przyczyny i przebieg
- Smolensk 2010 rok. Czesc szosta.
Sledztwa polskie w sprawie katastrofy samolotu rzadowego w
Smolensku w 2010 roku. Wypadek lotniczy, jego przyczyny i przebieg - Smolensk
2010 rok. Czesc siodma.
Genealogy and history of the Konstantinovich,
Troubetskoy, Bagration-Gruzinski, Kalinowski, Oginski, Paszkowski, Dyuflon,
Staroch Siedoch, Armand, Pociej, Radziwill and Piottuch Kublicki family in the
18th and 19th centuries in Russia, Estonia and
Belarus. |
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New!
Photos of the Polish noble village Miezonka -
genealogy and history of the Konstantinovich family in the 19th century in
Russia and Belarus. Part one.
Photos of the Polish noble village Miezonka -
genealogy and history of the Konstantinovich family in the 19th century in
Russia and Belarus. Part two.
Photos of the Polish noble village Miezonka -
genealogy and history of the Konstantinovich family in the 19th century in
Russia and Belarus. Part three.
Photos of the Polish noble village Miezonka -
genealogy and history of the Konstantinovich family in the 19th century in
Russia and Belarus. Part four.
Photos of the Polish noble village Miezonka -
genealogy and history of the Konstantinovich family in the 19th century in
Russia and Belarus. Part five.
|
COPYRIGHT BY BOGDAN KONSTANTYNOWICZ
11 October
2013.
Berezino and Miezonka - history, geography, maps and people. Warning: the false domain
dananos.brinkster.net/geocities/lowercase/b/o/bogdanbogdan2003d/ - without my permission, somebody copy the contents of my website. This is a crime. Swindler has the Domain named dananos.brinkster.net and in June 2013 he published a fake website. Dananos.brinkster.net is currently hosted at Brinkster Communications Corporation. This domain is connected to IP address 65.182.101.106 which is hosted on a server that appears to be located in Phoenix, United States.
|
These all
papers are
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these papers / all websites are sold for private home use only.
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to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of
grievances". To provide such guarantees, the First Amendment - along
with the rest of the Bill of Rights - was submitted to the states for
ratification on September 25, 1789, and adopted on December 15, 1791
(Wikipedia).
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©
All rights reserved. No part of all these works covered by copyright hereon may be
reproduced in any form or by any means - graphic,
electronic, or mechanical - including photocopying, recording,
downloading, uploading, taping, or storage in an information
retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the
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|
November and December 2013 - new websites on the genealogy and history of the noble
Konstantynowicz family in Russia 1772 - 1918, Poland 1918 - 1939 and next at a Polish territory
1939 - 2012.
Cryptography, ciphers, radio and telegraph in Sweden, Switzerland, Russia (Nobel, Damm, Hagelin and Schilling)
in 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century. The Breguet Company and Edward Brown of Clerkenwell.
Cryptography, ciphers, radio and telegraph. History on the noble Constantinovich family in Russia in 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century. The Breguet Company and Duflon & Constantinovich Company 1892 - 1918.
The noble Konstantynowicz family in new Poland 1945 - 2013.
Breguet, Brown, Masson, Rey, Armand, Constantinowitz / Konstantynowicz, Duflon and history of research on telegraph, radio and electricity. Deka Company
in Petersburg, Moscow and Zaporoze - Russian engines and airplanes.
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Polish conspirators 1793 / 1819 / 1821 / 1833:
Jan Mikolaj Oskierka born Dec. 1735, died in exile in 1796 - Tobolsk and here he was buried.
The son of
Rafal Alojzy Oskierka 1708-1767 and Stanislawa Teresa OGINSKA.
Stanislawa Teresa Oskierka Oginska, 1724 - 1744, the daughter of Martian Michal Oginsky, b. 1672 in Witebsk.
Named Marcjan (Marcin) Michal Oginski 1672 - 1750, the Witebsk governor in 1730, Vitebsk castellan 1703-1730,
marshal of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, in 1712, 1718, 1723, prince.
Son of Szymon Karol Oginski and Teodora.
Husband of Tekla Ana / Anna Larska; Teresa Tyzenhauz; Teresa Oginska; and Krystyna Oginska.
Father of Stanislawa Teresa OSKIERKA / Oskierko
[with a daughter Marianna Straszewicz b. ca 1740.
Mother of Teresa; Aleksandra; and Alojzy Rokicki b. 1760;
and grandson Michal ROKICKI b. 1790 + KORNELA PROZOR;
great-grandson Ludwik Rokicki b. 1820/1830.
Maybe from ALOJZY was a daughter TEKLA ROKICKA married PROZOR, died 1860 with the son Mieczyslaw
PROZOR b. 1830 + Zofia Oskierka 1830-1878,
and with granddaughter Stanislawa Prozor b. 1862, m. Jan Olizar-Wolczkiewicz 1855-1913.
The mother of named JAN OLIZAR WOLCZKIEWICZ was Wiktoria Modzelewska 1828-1903 born Szymanowska!];
Marianna;
Barbara Pac;
Ignacy Oginski Duke; Stanislaw Jerzy Oginski.
Brother of Boguslaw Kazimierz Oginski; Krystyna Tyszkiewicz; Eleonora Oginska and JERZY Oginski.
Half brother of Zofia Oginska and Aleksander Oginski.
Jan Mikolaj Oskierka / Ivan Oskirka, statesman of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
He was the son of Rafal Aloizy.
Together with his brother Antoni Joachim Oskierka studied in Warsaw. Participated in the seven-year war of 1756-1763.
In 1764 he took Czartoryski's side and of King Stanislaw Poniatowski.
He was the confederary Mozyr judge; was a deputy from the Mozyr County.
In 1781, he was elected to the Tribunal of Lithuania. In August 1784, he was invited by Karol Radziwil to Nesvizh in connection with
the King's visit planned there.
In August 1786, he signed a petition to the king asking for the border regiment.
In 1788, together with Konstantin JELENSKI, he was a deputy to the Polish-Lithuanian Parliament from the Mozyr County.
In 1790, he gave up his son Rafal Oskierka to the top post in Lithuania.
The Constitution of May 3, 1791 greeted with his great enthusiasm. He was the richest owner in Lithuania,
heir to a huge fortune (7 million zl). He owned Narovlei / NAROWLA (in the HOMEL county and close to KONOTOP - with the
villages of Antonovo, Mukhoyedy, Ugly, Golovchitsy), Karpovichi in the Mozyr County; Barbarovo and Konotopy in Rechytsky /
RZECZYCA COUNTY.
In early August 1793, together with his son Rafal Michal Oskierka
[born after 1761 - d. 1818; official in MOZYRZ, in 1791 served at the Royal Court, CONSPIRATOR in 1793 ! He married to
Maria Oskierka b. ca 1790, the daughter of ANTONI OSKIERKA b. ca 1740. RAFAL's son - Jan Oskierka b. 1819 + Julia
Oskierka the daughter of Pawel Oskierka official in RZECZYCA and granddaughter of Leopold Oskierka],
took part in the conspirative congress of the nobility in the estate of Karol Prozor in Khoyniki, whose goal was to prepare
an armed attack against the Russian Army and for the revival of the Constitution on May 3, 1791.
Karol Prozor and Captain Hamilcar Kasinsky / KOSINSKI left the Khoyniki on April 20, 1794 in JUREWICZE / Yurovichi.
However, Jan Mikolaj Oskerko, through his envoy, warned that Russian soldiers were waiting for them in Jurewicze.
Thus he saved friends, but he himself was arrested on the first day of Easter in 1794.
After the Smolensk investigation, by decree of Catherine II of June 20, 1795, ranked among the first category of convicts;
Oskerka was exiled to "the most remote Siberian cities." His property was confiscated and was distributed to Russian nobles, in
particular, in 1793 his estate Barbarovo was transferred to the real secret adviser Sivers.
From Irkutsk, Oskerka was moved to Zhigansk in the Yakutsk region of Irkutsk province, where he brought
122 silver rubles.
Released under the amnesty of Paul I in 1796 but he was died of apoplexy in Tobolsk in 1796, where he was buried with honors by the
son Dominik Oskierka, accompanying his father on his way back to his homeland.
Jan Mikolaj Oskierka born Dec. 1735, died in exile in 1796 - Tobolsk had 3 children:
1.
Rafal Michal Oskierka 1761-1818 + Maria Oskierka
[with 1. Jan Oskierka b. 1820 + Julia Oskierka;
2. Emilia Oskierka + Hubert Artemiusz Swiatopelk;
3. Teresa Oskierka + Romuald Jelenski];
2.
Dominik Oskierka b. ca 1770 + Salomea Gizycka
[with 1. Maria Oskierka b. ca 1790 + Jan Gizycki and
2. Kajetan Oskierka b. 1821 + Pss Stefania Julia Radziwill - the owner of MIEZONKA !];
3.
Aniela Oskierka 1770-1804 + Ignacy Kajetan Prozor
[with 1. Kornela Prozor 1800-1835 + Michal Rokicki
2. Henryk Prozor b. ca 1800;
3. Maurycy Prozor h. wl. 1801-1886
+ Anna Chlopicka - see more details at my domain !].
After the death of Oskierka, the Russians to return only a small part of the property (Konotopy). The memory of the loss of the huge
estates of Oskerka was preserved in the Belarusian proverb: "It disappeared, like Oskierka assets. [above inf. under copyright by the
Russian Wikipedia]"
Maciej Mielzynski (1636 or born 1638-1697) married Katarzyna MYCIELSKA GORZYCKA MIELZYNSKA
MACIEJ MIELZYNSKI m. 3rd in Pawlowice in 1684 to Katarzyna Mycielska, daughter of Krzysztof MYCIELSKI and Teresa Grodziecka;
KATARZYNA was the widow after Adam Gorzycki.
MACIEJ's children:
1.
Elzbieta, m. Franciszek Wessel, official in Zakroczym;
2.
Urszula MIELZYNSKA + Antoni Walknowski
{
[BRYGIDA BARDZKA was the daughter of Wojciech Marek Bardzki d. 1770]
- see Jakub KIEDRZYNSKI junior}.
On above junior, Jakub Kiedrzynski:
Jakub Kiedrzynski from Kalisz, born in WILCZKOW, was the son of Andrzej Kiedrzynski born ca 1715/1720, was the owner of Orpiszewek
[born in 1738 in WILCZKOW in the GLUCHOW parish; died in 1798].
Above JAKUB Kiedrzynski, and Antoni Psarski in 1792 [Antoni PSARSKI m. Lucja Czekulin] were next of kin to the Madalinski family.
Her father
Wojciech Marek Bardzki, 1699-1770, mother Helena Teresa Kozminska, 1706-1792.
Her brothers:
Augustyn Bardzki of Wrzesnia, died in 1793, and
Rafal Tadeusz Jan Bardzki, 1739-1758.
Her children:
Franciszek Wierusz Walknowski b. 1769 or before, and
Teresa Wierusz Walknowska;
and with JAKUB Kiedrzynski:
Juliana Konstancja Kiedrzynska ARNOLD, b. 1770
{in Sobotka, 1798, Jan Arnold 1751-1840, the owner of Pecherzow, married Juljanna Kiedrzynski [2nd], b. ca 1770 / or in
1772-1811; he was 1st married Ruszkowska, widowed, the owner of Wierzchoslaw. Witness Maciej Bogdanski, official in KALISZ},
and Petronela Kiedrzynska - more on 'ZWIAZEK LECHITOW'.
Above PETRONELA KIEDRZYNSKA married to Melchior Jan Pradzynski [compare the Pradzynskis and the Kiedrzynskis of WOLA
WIAZOWA ! - the family of the author to this domain].
3.
Marianna Krystyna;
4.
and son Krzysztof Ignacy Mielzynski b. 1670, d. in Pawlowice in 1721, in 1693 official in KCYNIA; 1717 governor of Przemet.
Maciej married in 1667 to Elzbieta Baranowska - she died in 1682.
Krzysztof MIELZYNSKI married in 1682 to Anna Goszycka / Gorzycka - she died in 1733, the daughter of Andrzej Goszycki / GORZYCKI
and KATARZYNA MYCIELSKA, d. 1712.
MACIEJ MIELZYNSKI m. 3rd in Pawlowice in 1684 to Katarzyna Mycielska Gorzycka, daughter of Krzysztof MYCIELSKI and Teresa
Grodziecka; KATARZYNA was the widow after Adam Gorzycki or Andrzej Gorzycki.
Krzysztof had the son Andrzej Walenty Mielzynski, 1698-1771; born in 1698 - Goscieszyn close to - Wolsztyn (Wollstein); 9 km south-east
to WOLSZTYN,
8 km north-east to WRONIAWY; north-west to PRZEMET; 18 km north-west to WILKOWO POLSKIE of Kiedrzyski-Zamoyski family. See
Pradzynski-Kiedrzynski line. Compare Wola Wiazowa.
Andrzej Mielzynski d. 1771 in Pawlowice. Married in 1734 to Anna Petronella Bninska, b. before 1720 in GLOGOW - d. 1770, the daughter
of Stanislaw Bninski + JOANNA Krzycka.
Andrzej's son -
Maksymilian Antoni Mielzynski, 1738-1799,
born in Laszczyn - Cieladz [close to RAWA MAZOWIECKA]; d. in Pawlowice. Married in 1771 in Mierzeszyn (Meisterswalde) close to
Trabki Wielkie, the Gdansk Pomeranie, to Konstancja Czapska, 1749-1813.
Her daughter:
Katarzyna Regina Barbara Cecylia Mielzynski, b. in 1775 in Rabin (Rombin), close to Koscian; d. 1817 in the Chobienice - Siedlec estate
near Wolsztyn, and the PRUSSIAN border.
Married in 1793 in Pawlowice (Pawlowitz) to Prokop Rufin Jozef Mielzynski, 1763-1800, the son of Hipolit Maciej Jozef Mielzynski
1733-1797 + Seweryna Lipska d. 1801,
with daughter
Gabriela Maria Konstancja Józefa Mielzynski POTULICKA OGINSKA, b. 1798 in Kotowo - Granowo, close to Grodzisk Wielkopolski and
south-west to Poznan; d. 1822 in Nice, France.
Olga Kalinowska born 1818 or 1822 was married to Ireneusz Kleofas Oginski b. 1808 d. 1863 from Belarus, in 1844, and her son Bohdan /
Bogdan Oginski was born in 1849.
She was lover of Alexander II, tsar of Russia who was born in Moscow on 29. 04. 1818. This Emperor has children from two marriages and
children with two different women: with a princess Lubomirska ca 1867 and with above Olga, countess Kalinovsky / Olga nee Kalinowska
was son Michael-Bogdan or Bogdan / Bohdan, prince Oginski born 10. 10. 1848 or 1849 who married to Gabrielle-Marie, countess
Potulicka / Maria Potulicki
[compare above mentioned MIELZYNSKI of PAWLOWICE and the WOLSZTYN district].
Let us remember, however, that in 1819 Gabryel Kiedrzynski made a testamentary record in the event of his possible death
[if he belonged to LECHICI ? - an organization formed in 1819]
and in January 1833 he changed his name
[compare Wola Wiazowa - Kreski, Bleszynski, Arcichowski, Psarski, Walewski, Madalinski, Kalinowski {+ Trubecki,
Konstantynowicz - Estonia, Orsha, Cracow, St Petersburg}, Oginski {+ Soltan, Piottuch-Kublicki, Konstantynowicz (+ Armand and
Japaridze - Oldenburg - Saparov) and Szumski (see: Baron Bouvier)}].
After all, we have 5 brothers,
1. Floryan Kiedrzynski + Barbara Mikolajewska, with son Leon Kiedrzynski - inf. 1837;
2.
Franciszek Kiedrzynski with the son Adam Kiedrzynski, and the grandson Adam Klemens Kiedrzynski - inf. 1848 in the Congress
Poland.
3.
Jakub Kiedrzynski / Jakob Kiedrzynski
[born 1738, and lived near ERAZM MYCIELSKI and TEODOR BILLEWICZ + Kozuchowski - read about the village of
KARSY. Teodor Billewicz - Chamberlain of King Stanislaw August Poniatowski from 1765; the member of the Bar Confederation
of the Duchy of Samogitia.
Andrzej Bardzki Colonel, 1730-1819 was the friend of ERAZM MYCIELSKI.
Jakuba's family has family ties with Pradzynski, Madalinski, Psarski - and then Pradzynski and Uminski combines family ties with
Kiedrzynski in the Kujawy, and also to MIEROSLAWSKI. Jakob Kiedrzynski of Kalisz, had the son Józef Kiedrzynski, living in
the Congress Poland - inf. 1837],
4.
Izydor Kiedrzynski
[maybe as Izydor Jan Kiedrzynski + Helena, after about 1776 staying in JEDLNO; his family joins family ties with Bleszynski],
5.
and Kasper Kiedrzynski
[his son owned Bedziechow / Bedziechowo - then the estate owns SOKOLOWSKI from Brzesc Kujawski {there are Uminski,
Madalinski, Mielzynski
families}. Kacper Kiedrzynski + Maryanna Arcichowska, with the sons: Andrzej Kiedrzynski the owner of Zydowo,
and Walenty Kiedrzynski the owner of BEDZIECHOWO in the Kalisz governorate].
The Permanent Council - the highest authority of administration of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, established in 1775:
The Permanent Council consisted of a king (with 2 voices), 18 senators and 18 representatives of nobles (deputies); divided into 5
departments (foreign interests, army, police, treasury and justice). The Permanent Council managed the administration, prepared a
parliamentary acts, controlled the law and gave its interpretation; to limit the king's power and resist reforms. The Council was
liquidated in 1789 by the Four-Year Parliament - reactivated in 1793 by the Grodno Parliament.
A counselors of the Permanent Council in 1775/1776 - 1788/1789 and 1793-1795:
1.
Anastazy Walewski,
KAZIMIERZ Tyzenhauz / Kazimieras Tyzenhauzas [see above] b. ca 1740 - son of Benedykt Tyzenhauz SENIOR - was the husband of
above Barbara Gielgud, and father of ZOFIA Tyzenhauziene. Kazimierz Tyzenhauz was the brother of Barbara Wawrzecka; Benedykta
Niezabitowska; Aleksandra Anna Morykoni; Teresa Tyzenhauz, and Magdalena Maria Ewa Walewska.
Named above Magdalena Maria Ewa Tyzenhauz-Walewska, was the wife of Anastazy Walewski / Colonna-Walewski, b. ca 1730, died in
1815 in Walewice [or Atanazy Colonna-Walewski 1733-1815], close to Lowicz.
Atanazy Colonna-Walewski was the son of Józef Kazimierz Walewski and Ludwika;
husband of
Magdalena Maria Ewa Tyzenhauz
and Joanna PULASKI daughter of Jozef PULASKI;
ATANAZY was the ex-husband of Marie d'Ornano
[above Maria Countess Walewska nee Laczynska, 1786 - 1817, a mistress of Emperor Napoleon I. In 1805 she married Atanazy
/ Anastazy Walewski / Athenasius Colonna-Walewski of Warka district b. ca 1733, d. 1815 or 1814, and a chamberlain to the last Polish king,
Stanislaw August Poniatowski. She 2nd married count Filip Antoni d'Ornano / Philippe Antoine d'Ornano, an Napoleonic officer from
Ajaccio. Maria was born in Kiernozia; she known Nicholas Chopin, Frederic Chopin's father];
father of Ksawery Walewski, Teresa Walewska, Józefa Witkowska and Antoni Bazyli Rudolf Walewski; brother of Teodora Walewska.
Maria partnered Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon was born in 1769, in above Ajaccio. They had one son Aleksander Florian Józef Walewski.
Named above Anna nee Pulaska / Joanna Pulaska, b. 1742 in Grabowo, was the daughter of Józef Pulaski; she was the sister of KAZIMIERZ
PULASKI / Casimir Pulaski, US Revolutionary Hero, the Polish conspirator.
2.
Ksawery Walewski,
Kunegunda Ewa Anna Maslowska b. 1743 in Ruda; m. 1759-64, to Franciszek Ksawery Walewski owner of Wola Wiazowa, son of
Franciszek Walewski and Teodora Walewska.
In 1781 named above owner of Wola Wiazowa, Franciszek Walewski / Franciszek Ksawery Walewski, 1739 - 1796, an official in
Ostrzeszow in 1765, 1772, 1775, 1778 - 1796,
m. in 1784, in the Kobyla Góra parish, in MYSLNIEW, 4 km to Silesia, to Konstancja Psarska b. before 1770, daughter of
Fryderyk Jakub Psarski 1730-1805 and his wife Ksawera Franciszka Bardzinska, 1753-1814.
Franciszek Ksawery Walewski, 1739 - 1796, was married three times: TERESA NIEMOJOWSKA-PSARSKA, b. ca 1730 - a
marriage in 1760; unknown - marriage ca 1778 [or to Kunegunda Ewa Anna Maslowska b. 1743 in Ruda, marriage in 1759-64]; and in 1779
or in 1784, in Myslniew, west to Ostrzeszow, to Konstancja Psarska a daughter of Fryderyk Jakub Psarski.
Franciszek Ksawery Walewski owner of Wola Wiazowa, was the son of Franciszek Walewski with his 3rd wife [a marriage in STRONSKO].
Franciszek senior was born ca 1675 / 1690 / 1710 - died in 1745 in Rusiec; Franciszek's the 3rd wife was Teodora Walewska.
PSARSKI ALEKSANDER MAREK died ca 1726, m. Marianna
with:
A. MIKOLAJ Psarski died 1762 (branch of Tomasz Psarski married Kiedrzynska) m. Teresa Skrzynska [see below];
B. FRANCISZEK KSAWERY 1691 - 1772, owner of Cieszanowice, Poradzew, Gawlowice, part of Biala, Unikow, Myslniew, Szklarka and
m. Teresa Silnicka / Sielnicka in 1726.
Teresa Sielnicka b. 1700.
Above FRANCISZEK KSAWERY Psarski b. 1691, had children:
1. Marianna b. ca 1740, m. Jan Nepomucen Kosma Damian Adam Olszowski b. 1733 in Baranow;
2. Wojciech Stefan Psarski owner of Szklarka, m. Marianna / Magdalena Walewska;
3. Jadwiga 1740-1808 m. Ludwik Bylina, son of Anna nee Madalinski;
4. Jan Kanty Psarski owner of Wielgie and DYMKI, m. Teodora / Honorata Pstrokonska b. 1730,
with a. Tomasz m. Jablkowska;
b. Honorata Psarska 1770-1831 m. Jakub Madalinski 1775-1833;
5. Jakub Fryderyk PSARSKI, born ca 1730, d. 1805, owner of Myslniew close to Ostrzeszow;
6. Konstancja Psarska m. in 1784, to Franciszek Ksawery Walewski d. ca 1805, owner of Wola Wiazowa !!! - son of Franciszek.
Above TOMASZ Psarski (born - ? - ca 1730-1807), was son of above named Mikolaj Psarski owner of Zielonczyn and Teresa Skrzynska, in
1786 owner of Wola Dzierlinska.
Tomasz married to Dorota Kiedrzynska daughter of Andrzej Kiedrzynski and Franciszka Jackowski, she was 1 voto Wawrzyniec Grabinski;
Tomasz Psarski was 2nd voto Franciszka Rupniewska died 1826.
Dorota m. 3rd to Kajetan Madalinski 1740-1784, with son Józef MADALINSKI, b. 1774, died after 1809, Captain in 1809.
Tomasz Psarski had daughter Marianna Psarski owner of Wola Dzierlinska, m. Mikolaj Sulimierski son of Michal Sulimierski and Jadwiga
Jaroszewska.
3.
Romuald Walewski,
Mentioned Romuald Walewski b. ca 1738, died on June 14, 1812, was Major General, Adjutant General of Stanislaw August Poniatowski,
the King of Poland, a captain of cavalry in 1789, Crown Court judge, six-time Member of Parliament. In Cracow from 1773 to 1775 joined
the confederation Adam Poninski; member of Parliament in 1778 of the Cracow province; member of Parliament in 1786; member of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Military Commission in 1788; in 1792 he was awarded the Order of the White Eagle, in 1781 received the
Order of St. Stanislaus.
Romuald Walewski, 1738 - 1812, m. 1st to Zuzanna Polchowska b. ca 1730 with:
Felicjanna Walewska 1760-1846, and
Magdalena Helena Walewska b. 1762 (Helena Walewska married probably IZYDOR KIEDRZYNSKI of Jedlno - Wola Wiazowa) in
Stradom, Cracow;
Romuald m. 2nd Teresa Dunin-Karwicka b. ca 1760.
4.
Hieronim Wielopolski,
5.
Jozef Wilczewski,
6.
Antoni Wollowicz,
Mentioned above Antoni Wollowicz {Count in 1798 of Prussia}, 1750-1822 was son of Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720 and Magdalena
Ludwika Marianna Michniewicz; husband of Józefata Piasecka and Teofila Matuszewicz;
father of Joachim Józef Wollowicz and Eustachy Wollowicz; brother of Michal; Balbina Jelenska; Benedykt Wollowicz;
Kazimiera, and Katarzyna.
Above Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720, d. 1779, was the son of Jerzy Wollowicz [b. ca 1690, died 1724, who was son of Krzysztof Wollowicz]
and Barbara Adamkowicz.
The WOLLOWICZ clan:
Teresa RONIKIER, 1845-1900 [the sister of ROMAN RONIKIER] m. Michal Wollowicz 1812-1882: he was the grandson of Count
Antoni Wollowicz, 1750-1822 + Teofila Matuszewicz.
Antoni Wollowicz, Count in 1798 of Prussia, 1750-1822 was son of
Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720 and Magdalena Ludwika Marianna Michniewicz [see below on SWIACK];
husband of Józefata Piasecka and Teofila Matuszewicz;
father of Joachim Józef Wollowicz and Eustachy Wollowicz;
brother of Michal Wollowicz; Balbina Jelenska; Benedykt Wollowicz; Kazimiera, and Katarzyna.
Above Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720, d. 1779, was the son of Jerzy Wollowicz
[b. ca 1690, died 1724, who was son of Krzysztof Wollowicz / Krzysztof Kazimierz Wollowicz b. ca 1670 / 1675]
and Barbara Adamkowicz.
Now about Wollowicz in the Grodno district:
Swiack - in the Hrodna / Grodno district, ex-Augustow county; close to Wollowiczowce; in the 18th - 19th centuries in the Troki province -
belonged to the Wollowiczs; a palace built the Grodno marshal - Józef Wollowicz (d. 1779)
{Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720 and married Magdalena Ludwika Marianna Michniewicz. Above Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720, d. 1779, was the
son of Jerzy Wollowicz [b. ca 1690, died 1724, who was son of Krzysztof Wollowicz] and Barbara Adamkowicz}.
The palace finished his son Antoni Wollowicz, the official in Merecz, senator in the Congress Poland; Antoni Wollowicz d. 1822, and the
estate took
his oldest son Joachim Józef Wollowicz (1783-1842) married Css Maria Starzenska.
Then all SWIACK belonged to Michal Wollowicz (1812-1882), m. Teresa Ronikier.
Michal's daughter Jadwiga Maria Wollowicz married Count Józef Miaczynski - they were owners of SWIACK.
Above JOZEF WOLLOWICZ:
Józef Wollowicz b. ca 1720, d. 1779; m. Magdalena Ludwika Marianna Michniewicz. Son of Jerzy Wollowicz and Barbara Adamkowicz -
see above. Husband of Magdalena Ludwika Marianna Michniewicz. Father of Antoni Wollowicz; Michal Wollowicz; Balbina Jelenska;
Benedykt Wollowicz; Kazimiera Wollowicz. Half brother of Joanna Alexandra Wollowicz.
We back to the OGINSKIS:
Witold Zygmunt Joachim Wollowicz 1825-1875, married to Amelia Oginska [with son OLGIERD / Olgierd Michal Wollowicz 1869-1900],
daughter of
Tadeusz Antoni Oginski b. 1798, d. 1844, and Marianna Tekla von Rönne (Borewicz, Oginska).
Amelia Oginska Wollowicz was granddaughter of Michal Kleofas Oginski 1765-1833
[Kleofas was father of Franciszek Ksawery Oginski; above Tadeusz Antoni
{Tadeusz was father of above Gabriele Marija Rene; Natalia Gawronska and named above Amelia Wollowicz / Amelija
Wollowicz};
Amelia Zaluska; Ireneusz; Emma Wysocka; and Ida]
and Felix von Rönne 1770-1827.
Witold Wollowicz was grandson of
Antoni Wollowicz Count, [in 1798 of Prussia] 1750-1822 and
Stanislaw Kajetan Krystian Breza 1752-1847,
Teofila Matuszewicz, and
Antonina Maria Radolinska 1771-1845.
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