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.
Of Frederick William III and Louise' four children, three married the brothers and sisters of Csar Alexander I.
Frederick William III's daughter, Charlotte of Prussia, married Paul's son, Czar Nicholas I, who succeeded Alexander
I, and who also belonged to the Order of the Garter.
Frederick's son Wilhelm I married Augusta of Saxe-Weimar, the daughter of Nicholas' sister Maria Romanov.
A third child of Frederick, Friedrich Karl Alexander of Prussia, married Maria's Romanov other daughter, Marie Luisa
Alexandrina von Saxe-Weimar.
The son of Csar Nicholas, Constantine Nicholaievitch Romanov, Grand Duke of Russia, fathered Olga
Constantinovna Romanov, who married George I King of Greece. George was a member of the Order of the Garter, as
was his father, Christian IX of Denmark. ...".
Mikolaj Mikolajewicz married his cousin Aleksandra Oldenburg
[see Oldenburg in St Petersburg and the Duflon & Konstantynowicz Company. She was the daughter of
Konstantin Friedrich Peter Georgievich Oldenburg (1812-1881).
Konstantin Friedrich Peter von Oldenburg, 1812-1881, m. Therese Wilhelmine Friederike Isabella Charlotte von
Nassau, 1815-1871, with children:
1. Alexandra Friederike Wilhelmine von Oldenburg, m. Nikolaj Nikolajewitsch of Russia, 1831-1891
[Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia / Nicholas Nicolaievich the Elder, 1831 - 1891, was the third son of
Tsar Nicholas I of Russia and Alexandra Feodorovna. Field Marshal and the commander of the Russian army of the
Danube in the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878]
with son: Peter Nikolajewitsch, 1864-1931;
2. Alexander Friedrich Konstantin von Oldenburg, 1844-1932, with son Peter Friedrich Georg von Oldenburg, 1868-
1924;
3.
Konstantin Friedrich Peter von Oldenburg, 1850-1906 m. in 1882, Agrippina Djaparidse / Agrippina JAPARIDZE,
1855-1926,
with daughter Alexandra von Oldenburg, Gräfin von Zarnekau, 1883-1957.
The JAPARIDZES - see Armand - PASZKOWSKI - DEMONSI home in Moscow and Konstantynowicz line of
Moscow- Swolna-Miezonka-Lida.
Duke Konstantin Friedrich Peter Georgievich von Holstein-Gottorp of Oldenburg was the grandfather of Duke Peter
Alexandrovich of Oldenburg as well as grandfather of Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich, General of the Imperial
Russian Army during World War I.
Above
Konstantin Friedrich Peter Oldenburg or Constantine Petrovich of Oldenburg began a flirtation with Agrippina;
Agrippina's husband, Prince Tariel 'Daniel' Dadiani, was one of the officers under Duke Constantine's command;
Dadiani were a branch of the Bagrationi Dynasty;
Agrippina was Tariel Dadiani's second wife but Agrippina in 1882 divorced Dadiani. 1882, Constantine entered into a
morganatic marriage with Agrippina Japaridze; by the early 1890s, they were doing business in Odessa and
Alexandrovsk (Zaporozhe).
See the Armands and Konstantynowiczs in Moscow and Alexandrovsk.
Prince Tarieli Taia Aleksandri Dadiani, b. 1842, m. first to Princess Sopio Dadiani b. 1838 daughter of Prince Levanti
Shervashidze of the Guria. On June 28, 1882, Agrippina divorced Dadiani.
His father:
Prince Aleksandri Manuchari Dadiani.
And his grandfather:
Major-General H. E. Prince Nichola Giorgi Dadiani / Nikolai Georgievitch Dadianov / Bolshoi Niko, Lord of Kurdzu,
b. 1764 - Duke of Mingrelia, fourth son of Katsia II Dadiani, Duke of Mingrelia.
Prince Aleksandri Kviti Niko Dadiani, b. 1864, m. Princess Nino Dadiani (b. 1868), younger daughter of Prince
Tarieli Taia Dadiani, by his second wife, Princess Agrafina Countess von Zarnekau, daughter of Prince Konstantini
Japaridze.
Eugene's ARMAND of Moscow brother - Emil E. ARMAND was married to Zofia Hacker / Sophia nee
Osipovna Hecke (Hakker, Hacker, Hekke) from Estonia.
They had six children:
LEW ARMAND / Leo (1880 - 1942) + Japaridze-Saparov [Saparova Tamara Arkadevna - Japaridze married 2nd to
Leo Emilievich ARMAND.
Saparov Arkady (1854 - before 1921), was married to Varvara Maypariani with the daughter
Tamara Arkadevna SAPAROV married 1st to Ivan Konstantinovich Japaridze, and
TAMARA SAPAROV - JAPARIDZE was 2nd married to Lev ARMAND / Lion Emilievich Armand (Inessa Armand
relatives).
Ivan Iaparidze was the son of Constantine Japaridze / Constantin Japaridze (Ivan b. ca 1860; his father Konstantyn
died in 1860 !) from the upper Racha region of Georgia. Ivan Japaridze b. ca 1860, had sister Agrippina, Countess
von Zarnekau, b. 1855, nee Agrippina Constantines Japaridze, and Ivan Japaridze's parents were Constantine and
Melania Japaridze; named father Constantine died 1860].
His {Mikolaj Mikolajewicz} brother was Michal Mikolajewicz Romanow b. 1832, d. December 1909;
Grand Duke of Russia, field marshal, chairman of the Council of State (1881-1905). In 1862-1882 he was the
general-governor of the Caucasus. He worked in Tbilisi.
Grand Duke Mikhail Nikolayevich had son Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich - Sandro / Sasho who was a key
figure in the development of the Russian air force; Alexander Mikhailovich (Sandro), b. 01 April 1866 in Tbilisi died
1933, Nice, France.
Alexander Mikhailovich (Sandro): Chief of the Commercial navigation and ports (1902-1905), during the First World
war was in charge of the aviation in the army: paid much attention to the development of aviation industry in Russia
[Duflon and Konstantynowicz Company], on his initiative, established flight schools, began preparing the first national
flight training and 1914 appointed head of the organization of aviation business in the armies.
Alexander Mikhailovich (Sandro) was the Freemason, and he called himself Philalethes.
Receiving education at home in Georgia, Alexander Mikhailovich (Sandro) often went for long voyages: 1886 -
1889 made a voyage round the world on the corvette 'Rynda' and in 1890 - 91, at his own yacht 'Tamara' traveled to
India, described in his journals.
Grand Duke Michael Nikolaevich b. 1832, the fourth son of Tsar Nicholas I, died in Cannes on 18 December 1909;
the funeral was in Russia; Field Marshal.
Mentioned
Nicholas I, Tsar of Russia was partner of Countess Olga Kalinowska [see Trubecki, Konstantynowicz, Oginski and
Wola Pszczolecka] but she happened to be the mistress of Tsarevitch Alexander, the son of Tsar Nicholas I. Olga was
pregnant by either the Tsarevitch or his father Nicholas I. On 10 October 1848 or in 1849 Olga gave birth to Prince
Bogdan or Michael-Bogdan - Oginski by name and Romanov by gene.
I am presenting here below several Poles fighting in the Russian army during the war 1877-78:
Artur Niepokojczycki / Niepokójczycki (1813-1881)
-
Russian general. Pole. After graduating for some time he served in the General Staff.
NIEPOKÓJCZYCKI Artur, born in 1813 in the Niepokójczyce estate close to ZABINKA, died in
Petersburg.
Arthur Adamovich Nepokojchitsky wasn't born in Slutsk.
His father ADAM NIEPOKÓJCZYCKI / Niepokojczycki was the district leader of the nobility -
the Sluck marshal of nobility.
Arthur Adamovich Nepokojchitsky was born when the war with Napoleon rattled. Originated from the old German
clan von UNRUH [not von-Upru], who moved to Poland.
The Niepokojczyce chapel of the Helvetic congregation was operated under the auspices of the family Rayski
[Evangelische Kirche Helvetischen Bekenntnisses / Evangelische Kirche, is the Calvinist church of the reformed
trend; Calvinism is the dominant confession in Scotland and in the many cantons of Switzerland].
Niepokojczyce, is situated near Jamna / Jamno / Yamno [east district in BRZESC], the Kobryn county,
Polesie; rural commune of Zbirohi / ZBIROGI [18 km north-east to the center of BRZESC] by the
Muchawiec river; near Zabianka.
Compare:
Rasna
-
in the second half of the nineteenth century, RASNA was bought by Calvinist Count Jan Grabowski born in
1827.
Already from the beginning of the nineteenth century, a small Calvinist church in the village stood where the
mausoleum of the Grabowski family was located. Count Adam Jan Pius Waclaw Goetzendorf-Grabowski b.
in 1827 in Lukow close to Oborniki, as the oldest son of Józef Goetzendorf-Grabowski the owner of Lukow.
Jozef Grabowski was Napoleon's officer, director of the Credit Bank in Poznan.
Jozef GRABOWSKI married Klementyna Wyganowski.
Jozef's father - Adam Mateusz Grabowski the owner of Welno and Parkow, the Royal Court official of
August III.
Adam Jan Pius Waclaw Goetzendorf-Grabowski b. 1827, married 1853 to Jadwiga, the daughter of
Duke Konstanty Lubomirski. His daughter Maria m. Duke Hieronim Drucki-Lubecki.
The Grabowskis came from Grabówki, in the Sieradz county: here Elzbieta the wife of Mikolaj Hanczel
of Mokrsko, close to WIELUN - inf. in 1508;
Jan Grabowski, the zealous Calvin, moved to Lithuania, where he left a few sons, of whom Krystyan Grabowski,
the official in Lithuanian Brest, and Marcin Grabowski, a Vitebsk official; they acted in the Kaunas county, and
Jan signed the choice of the king Jan III. Stefan Antoni Grabowski, the official in Brzesc Litewski in 1696.
Albert GRABOWSKI, the Prussian Count in 1816, Major, died in 1819 [or in 1799 ?], married Wilhelmina
von Winterfeld,
with the son Wilhelm Grabowski and the daughter Albertyna Grabowska ROSEN
[b. 1784 or 1786 - Wartenburg, d. 1856 - Warszawa].
The great-grandparents of Albertyna / ALBERTINA ROSEN:
Stefan Grabowski
1680-1756; and Teodora Stryjenska.
Stefan Grabowski was the son of a Brzesc Litewski official.
Albertina Grabowska married to Aleksander Rosen, baron, b. ca 1780; Alexander Vladimirovich von Rosen
3rd, born in 1780 in Ostrogorsk, was the son of
Woldemar (Vladimir Ivanowitsch) von Rosen born in 1742;
the grandson of
Hans Christian von Rosen, of Sonorm, b. 1717 in Linden.
Albertina had children:
Woldemar von Rosen;
Alexei von Rosen;
Maria Ledochowski b. 1814 married PAWEL LEDOCHOWSKI / Paul count Ledochowski;
Elisabeth von Möller and
Grigori von Rosen.
Note:
David Dadiani of the House of Dadiani, was Prince of Mingrelia, in western Georgia, from 1846.
David was sent to Tiflis to be educated under the guidance of the Russian generals Vasili Bebutov and Georg
Andreas von Rosen.
Baron Rosen's son-in-law, Colonel Prince Alexander Dadiani.
Lydia Grigorievna Dadianov (von Rosen) b. 1817, married Alexander Leonevitch Dadiani of Mingrelien, b.
1800
[Lydia Dadiani was the mother of Praskovya A. nee Dadiani married to FERDINAND Sayn-Wittgenstein-
Berleburg. She was born 1846 or 1847 = Paraskewa princess Dadiani / Dadian 1847-1919];
LYDIA von ROSEN DADIANI was the daughter of
Gregor (Grigori Vladimirovitch) von Rosen 2-nd
and granddaughter of
Woldemar (Vladimir Ivanowitsch) von Rosen, b. 1742 in Reval
[baron Vladimir I. Rosen, born 1742, died 1792, married Olympia Raevskaya / Olimpia / Olimpiada
Rajewska born ca 1746];
and great-granddaughter of
Hans Christian von Rosen, of Sonorm, born in 1717 in Linden.
Above Alexander Leonevitch Dadiani of Mingrelien b. 1800, was the son of Leon A. Dadiani and the grandson
of Alexander P. Dadiani b. 1753 and
Leonovna Anna Bagration-Gruzinskaja of Mukhrani [2nd ] born 1753 died 1812.
The parents of above Alexander:
Peter G. Dadiani and Anna Bagration-Gruzinskaja [1st] died March 19, 1780.
Parents of above Piotr / Peter:
George / Egor Levanovich Dadiani b. 1683 and
Sophia A. Imereti of Mukhrani b. 1691 died 1747.
Above mentioned Ferdinand Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg, b. 1834, died 1888, married in 1868 to Paraskewa
princess Dadiani / Dadian, 1847-1919.
Praskovya A. nee Dadiani / Paraskewa Alexandrovna married to Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg; she was born
1846 or 1847; her father was Aleksandr Leonovich Dadiani b. 1800.
Ferdinand Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg b. 1834, the son of August Ludwig zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg; and
Ferdinand was grandchild of Christian Heinrich Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg, 1753-1800 (married 1775 Charlotte
Friederike countess of Leiningen-Westerburg 1759-1831),
great-grandchild of Ludwig Ferdinand 1712-1773, and
great-great-grandchild of Casimir 1687-1741.
His father Ludwig Franz Sayn-Wittgenstein, 1660 - 1694.
Note on the Rosen family:
From Carl Gottlieb Gernet b. 1700 d. 1791:
Hedwig Charlotte von Rosen nee von Gernet b. on March 30, 1821 in Reval / Tallinn and died 1884 in
Reval,
her father -
Karl Johann von Gernet 1776 Lehhola / Lehola - 1857 in Lauenhof / Love, Podrala, Valdamaa,
Estland;
and her grandfather -
Carl Gustav von Gernet 1747 - 1812,
and her great-grandfather -
Carl Gottlieb von Gernet b. on March 18, 1700 and died on May 4, 1791 in Lehhola.
Hedwig Charlotte von Rosen nee von Gernet b. on March 30, 1821 in Reval / Tallinn married
Karl Gustav Woldemar Amandus / Woldemar von Rosen 1813 - 1892
and his father -
Hans Wilhelm Gustav von Rosen 1780 - 1862;
grandfather
Robert Friedrich von Rosen b. 1748 in SONORM, Estland;
great-grandfather was
Hans Christian von Rosen b. 1717 in LINDEN, Estland.
Above Karl Gustav Woldemar Amandus von Rosen, b. 12 Jan 1813 at Resna, m. 1844 at Hapsal / Haapsalu to
Hedwig Charlotte von Gernet b. at Reval,
the daughter of Johann von Gernet and his wife Hedwig Elisabeth von Patkul of Habbinem.
Sons of above named Hedwig:
1. Johann Wilhelm Fabian Richard von Rosen, b. at Neuenhof near Hapsal, m. at St. Petersburg to Sophie Valentine
Schottländer d. 28 Sep 1912 at Reval,
2. Leo Felix Karl von Rosen, b. in St. Petersburg, m. 2ndly in 1927 at London to Magna Smith daughter of
Nadeschda Kowalewskaja Smith / Kowalewski.
The palace of Herrenhaus Neuenhof that is Uuemoisa mois east part of Haapsalu at present.
The noble Schillings / Schilling family moved to Estonia / Estland from Courland (Kurland). Karl Gebhard von
Schilling began his service in the Russian army, married to Helene Charlotte von Römer of Müüsleri / Seinigal and
Orina / Orgena - 2 km north-east of Jarva-Jaani (Orina, Järva-Jaani vald).
Müüsleri (Seinigal by German) is a village in the rural community Kareda - ca 80 km east-south of Saku, close to
Jarva-Jaani.
Pauline Amalie Sophie von Schilling b. 1806 in Reval / Tallinn, Estland / Eesti, her mother Anna Juliane
von Rosen b. 1770.
Explanation to
Alexander P. Dadiani b. 1753:
he married Leonovna Anna Bagration-Gruzinskaja of Mukhrani [2nd] born 1753 died 1812.
Above named Anna Bagration-Gruzinskaja of Mukhrani born 1753, died in Moscow, February of 1812, married
Alexander Petrovich Dadiani b. 1753/54, died in Moscow on 26 Jan. 1811.
Her father Levan Bagration-Gruzinsky, born Moscow 1739, or 1730 acc. to me!
He was in 1753 married to Alexandra Yakovlevna Sibirsky b. 1728.
Her grandfather Bakar I King of Kartli, born Kutaisi in 1700, married Anna Eristavi of Aragvi b. 1706.
Her great-grandfather Vakhtang VI King of Kartli, b. 15 Sept. 1675.
Brief to Georgian genealogy:
Alexander [son of Bakar] or Aleksandr Bakarovich Gruzinsky, born 1726 died 1791, was a Russian-born Georgian
prince of the Mukhrani branch of the Bagrationi royal dynasty. Aleksandre was born ca 1724 / 1728, in Moscow.
Alexander was married to Princess Daria Aleksandrovna nee Menshikov, d.1817.
Named
BAKAR, 1699 / 1700 - 1750, was the son of Vakhtang VI King of Kartli, b. 15 Sept. 1675 - died on March 26, 1737.
Vakhtang VI married in Imereti, in 1696, a princess Rusudan (died in Moscow, on December 30, 1740). They had
children:
named above Prince Bakar (1699 / 1700 - 1750), ruler of Kartli;
Prince George (1712 - 1786), general of the Russian Empire;
Princess Tamar (1696) married, in 1712, Prince Teimuraz, the future king of Kakheti and Kartli;
Princess Anna (Anuka) (1698), married, in 1712, Prince Vakhushti Abashidze;
Princess Tuta (1699), married the Imeretian nobleman of the ducal family of Racha, Gedevan, Duke of the Lowlands.
We back to the Grabowskis:
Count Wilhelm GRABOWSKI, the son of Albert Grabowski, d. 1851, m. Zofia Zawisza,
Count in Russia in 1840. He had 8 sons:
Count Karol Oktawian GRABOWSKI, d. 1893, the owner of Rasna,
Szymonowicze and Eustaszyn, m. Zofia Horwat.
Zofia HORWAT GRABOWSKA had daughter
Zofia m. Count Konstanty Broel - Plater,
and Zofia Horwat had a son Aleksander Grabowski, b. 1852, the owner of Tolkaczewicze, in the MINSK
governorate, m. Maria Reytan, with a daughter
Magdalena Grabowska m. Antoni Kieniewicz.
The Calvinist chapel of the RASNA parish was in Niepokojczyce under the patronage of the Rayskis.
Here in RASNA / Rasna, 1765 Tadeusz Matuszewicz was born - Polish politician, Minister of the Treasury of the
Kingdom of Poland and Minister of Treasury of the Warsaw Duchy
{Tadeusz Wiktoryn Matuszewicz -
born 1765 in Rasnia, died 1819 in Bologna, Polish speaker, publicist, translator, poet and theater critic. Minister
of the Treasury of the Kingdom of Poland in 1815-1817, member of the Provisional Government of the Kingdom of
Poland in 1815. A member of the Central Military Government of the Galicia in 1809, a Freemason. He was the
son of Marcin Matuszewicz, of Brest, and Anna Niemirowicz-Szczytt, daughter of Józef, and Petronella
Wolodkowicz}.
Niepokojczyce - in the Kobryn county, near Zabinka.
Grabanów close to Biala Podlaska;
in 1818, Grabanów is already the court property of Adam Niepokojczycki, the father of GENERAL
ARTUR Niepokojczycki
[Adam Niepokojczycki born ca 1760/1780
{see also: 1.
Karol Niepokojczycki the son of Piotr Niepokojczycki and Zofia Wierczak; Karol Niepokojczycki was the
Lieutenant of the Lithuanian regiment in 1827, born 1800, in 1839 widowed and married 2nd to Dorota
Puzewicz, the daughter of Ludwik.
2.
Benedykt Wilhelm Niepokojczycki, 1796 - 1865, the President of the Polish Bank}].
Adam Niepokojczycki had wooden residential building made of oak tree.
1822, Grabanow farm was bought from the Radziwills by Poplawski. Shortly thereafter, these estate
passed on to the property of the Grabowski family.
Kozula's mill in the Grabanów farm in 1781, belonged to the Radziwills, who had a hunting lodge here - near
BIALA PODLASKA.
GENERAL ARTUR Niepokojczycki in 1841, was sent to the Caucasus under General Grabbe.
Artur A. Nepokojchitsky owned the estate Ostashevo. Until 1861 it was called Aleksandrovskoe-Ostashevo
on the left bank of the Ruza Reservoir, 21 km from the Volokolamsk suburb near Moscow.
The Polish origin had the actual commander-in-chief of the 1877/1878 Army, the Chief of Staff, General Artur
Niepokojczycki and his deputy, General Karol Lewicki, and two leaders of the Bulgarian uprising,
dictator and commander-in-chief - Stanislaw StClair, and major Ludwik Wojtkiewicz.
Artur A. Nepokojchitsky was next of kin to the KRUPSKI family.
Krupski Bonifacy, the son of Urban Krupski and Katarzyna Antoniewicz,
was born in 1822 in Ihnatow in the MINSK county in Belarus;
he studied in SLUCK; then Bonifacy lived in the BOBRUJSK county in the Wittgenstein estate [see
SZUMSKI]. 1856, his father Urban bought from Korsak the Mieciawicze estate in the Sluck county,
and in 1861 from Ratyski bought Nowosióki in the IHUMEN county.
Bonifacy Krupski in 1861 was married Stefanja widow, born ca 1830, the daughter of Florjan SWIDA,
and Konstancja Niepokojczycki Swida, b. ca 1805.
{Erazm Swida-Polny, b. 1882 - Mieciawicze, d. 1928 - Malecz; a brother of his father was Wladyslaw
Swida-Polny b. 1842, d. 1924 - Siechniewicze near Pruzany. Wladyslaw Swida was the son of
Florian Jakub Swida-Polny and named Konstancja Niepokojczycka born ca 1805.
Wladyslaw Swida-Polny 1842-1924 m. Jadwiga Rewkowska, 1850-1922}.
In Nowosiólki was a folk school, under Ligenza from Kiev.
B. Krupski fought in 1863 in the Ihumen county.
Niepokojczycki had the WAGA coat of arms - together with Abramowicz, Korzeniowski, Pociej.
Rózana and BEREZYNA-LUBOSZANY:
After the November Uprising in which Eustachy Kajetan Sapieha took part, Rózana was confiscated by the Tsarist
authorities. Rózana was one of the main headquarters of the Rózana line of the Sapieha family. In 1644,
Sapieha received King Wladyslaw IV in Rózana. Eustachy Kajetan Ostafi Sapieha was born in Werki [now in
WILNO] in 1797, died in PARIS in 1860; Insurgent of 1831; the son of Franciszek Sapieha born in 1772
[Franciszek Sapieha was the son of Aleksander Michal SAPIEHA and Magdalena Lubomirski - Magdalena
Agnieszka was the daughter of Antoni Benedykt Lubomirski. Magdalena Agnieszka Sapieha Lubomirska was
the Polish mistress of King Stanislaw August Poniatowski; her son Michal Cichocki, and her daughter Konstancja
Zwan Szwan, RUZYCKA PETERS CICHOCKA];
EUSTACHY SAPIEHA, due to the failure to give the oath to the Emperor Mikolaj I, was confiscated all the
goods in the country. In exile, he was associated with the Lambert Hotel camp. Eustachy Sapieha was married to
Róza Mostowski, daughter of Tadeusz Antoni Mostowski; father of Jan Pawel Aleksander and Eustachy Franciszek
Sapieha (1836-1909) and Maria Aniela, wife of Wladyslaw Branicki.
The great-grandfather of named above Eustachy Kajetan Ostafi Sapieha was Kazimierz Leon Karol Sapieha,
1697 in Warsaw - 1738, General, in 1738 the BRZESC LITEWSKI governor, 1718/1719 took
Dubrovna/Dabrowna or DUBROWNA situated 42 km south to BABINAVICHY of the Oginskis and south to
KRYNKI of the Hurko family - it is a total distance around 73 km from Krynki to Dubrowna. In 1728-1731
intimate friends to Oginski. 1726 - the DRUJA owner; 1730 - IWIE in the Oszmiany county; Dyrwiany and
Zogoty in LIVONIA; Niechniewicze of his wife; after death of his father took OSWIEJA / Oswieje until
1735; Balbierzyszki in the KOWNO county; CZEREJA in the Orsha / Orsza county from his uncle Michal
Jozef Sapieha; KOCK, Wysokie and SIEMIATYCZE in the Brzesc Litewski province. Kazimierz Leon Karol
Sapieha died in WSCHOWA were he met the King.
The ROZANA residence built in the early 18th century was almost completely destroyed during the Northern War.
Another residence was built as a palace in 1784-1786 and it was one of the largest in the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth, with its own picture gallery, theater and library.
The palace was after the November Uprising 1831 confiscated by the Tsarist authorities. Wonderful paintings,
a rich library and the SAPIEHA archive of Rózana and Dereczna were taken by the Russians to St. Petersburg.
More on the SAPIEHA family:
Franciszek Ksawery Lubomirski born in 1747, was the son of Stanislaw Lubomirski, born in 1704, d. 1793, married
in 1740 to Ludwika Honorata Pociej. They owned Dubrowno in the Sienno (north-east of Miezonka) catholic
area; the Orsha county, Moghilev government; at present in the Vicebsk oblast; 90 km to Vicebsk, 19 km north-east of
Orsza / Orsha.
Dubrovno was owned by SAPIEHA to 1774.
Then by Count R. A. Potiemkin / G. A. Potemkin to 1791 (a watch factory!), close to Ksawery Lubomirski estate
(and his daughter Klementyna girlfriend of Piotr Kroer); since 1791 Lubomirski taken Dubrovno - now this place is
"capital" of the government;
then to Eugeniusz Lubomirski - 1809 new Orthodox church; Dubrovno was the Lubomirski family
estate to 1917!
DUBROWNA is situated 42 km south to BABINAVICHY of the Oginskis and south to KRYNKI
of the Hurko family - it is a total distance around 73 km from Krynki to Dubrowna.
And now about the Sulkowski - Sapieha line:
ALEXANDER JOSEPH SULKOWSKI, b. 1695 in Cracow, d. 1762 in Leszno [see MIELZYNSKI and
ROKOSSOWSKI], a companion of August III, son of August II, and was his Minister of State in Saxony from 1733
to 1738; a Count of the Holy Roman Empire in 1733; Prince by Empress Maria Theresa of Austria in 1752; bought
the estates of Rydzyna and Leszno from the exiled ex-king of Poland Stanislaw Leszczynski, and estates of Bielsko in
Cieszyn Silesia;
he married Baroness Maria Francis Stein zu Jettingen, and had
four sons and three daughters:
1. August Casimir (Kazimierz) SULKOWSKI, b. 1729, general of the royal army, Marshal of the Polish parliament
1775 - 1776, married Louise Mniszech in 1766;
2. Alexander Antoni Sulkowski, b. 1730, General of the royal army 1785, married Elenor Cetner in 1755;
3. FRANCIS (FRANCISZEK Sulkowski), b. 1733, d. 1812, the Bielsko estates,
4. ANTONI PAUL / Antoni Pawel Sulkowski, b. 1734, the RYDZYNA line;
5. Marianna, b. 1728, d. 1749, married Franciszek Jakub Szembek in 1747;
6. Joanna Sulkowska, b. 1736, d. 1800, married Prince PIOTR SAPIEHA / Peter Sapieha in 1750
{Piotr Pawel Sapieha b. 1701 in DRESDEN, the son of
Jan Kazimierz Sapieha died in 1730 in RAWICZ
and the grandson of Franciszek Stefan Sapieha ca 1647 - 1686/1688 in Lublin + Anna Krystyna
Lubomirska, the daughter of JERZY SEBASTIAN LUBOMIRSKI;
the great-grandson of PAWEL JAN SAPIEHA 1609 - 1665,
the great-great-grandson of Jan Piotr Sapieha b. 1569};
7. Josepha Petronela / Jozefa Petronela Sulkowska, b. 1737, married Prince Ignacy Potocki in 1753.
The Potockis - CONSPIRATORS:
Leon Dembowski born on October 16, 1789 in Pulawy; the head of internal affairs, justice and war departments in the
Provisional Government in the Kingdom of Poland in 1815; Minister of the Treasury of the National Government of
the Kingdom of Poland during the November Uprising, 1831, a trusted collaborator of the prince Adam Jerzy
Czartoryski.
His parents were Józef Dembowski and Konstancja Narbutt - the owner of Harmaki and Haluzinka, the captain of the
national cavalry.
Leon Dembowski organized National Guards and reserve divisions of the Lublin department in the war of 1812.
During the November Uprising he was a member of the Administrative Council.
In 1861-1867 he was a member of the Council of State of the Kingdom of Poland; the director of the Justice
Commission. The owner of Bronice and Drzewica. Married Julia Kochanowski; 2nd to Seweryna Chledowski.
Leon Dembowski was a master of the Freemasonry 'Freedom Regained' in 1815.
Józef Lipinski, b. 1764 in Tetyjow in Ukraine; Polish activist, educator, novelist, poet, translator, literary and theater
critic.
Collaborator of Stanislaw Kostka Potocki; a Freemason. He approached I. Potocki.
After the Third Partition of Poland, he settled in the countryside. During the time of the Warsaw Duchy, a member of
the Civil and Administrative Chamber. 1821 general inspector of the schools of the Kingdom of Poland. 1805, a
member of the Society of Friends of Sciences in Warsaw.
Mentioned Stanislaw Kostka Potocki / Un Polonais, born in November 1755 in Lublin;
Polish politician, count in the Congress Kingdom in 1820; member of the Warsaw Jewish Education
Chamber in 1808; Member of the Patriotic Party in the Four-year-Parliament;
freemason, president of the Council of State and the Council of Ministers of the Warsaw Principality, president of the
Senate of the Kingdom of Poland in 1818-1821,
memoirist, poet, playwright and translator.
He was the son of Eustachy Potocki, general of the Lithuanian artillery,
and Marianna Katska / Koncka or Kacka;
the brother of Ignacy Potocki.
In 1772-1775 he traveled a lot around Europe, visiting Italy, France, Switzerland and Germany; and in
1777, 1779-1780, 1783, 1785-1786 and 1796-1797.
Above
Roman Ignacy Franciszek Potocki / Jan K. Szabranski, born February 28, 1750 in Radzyn Podlaski, police minister in
1791, great Lithuanian marshal in 1791-1794; the Department of Foreign Interests of the Perpetual Council in 1779;
member of the National Education Commission in 1773-1791;
in 1781-1784 Grand Master of the Polish National Grand Orient,
Polish politician and patriotic activist, publicist, playwright, poet, pedagogue, historian and translator.
The first on JAN Potocki:
in 1785, Jan Potocki in Warsaw married Julia (1767-1794), the daughter of Izabela Lubomirski and the cousin to
Adam Jerzy Czartoryski (1770-1861). They moved home to Paris for 2 years. 1786, was born
Alfred (1786-1862).
Potocki make friends with Lady de Staël. 1787, was born
Artur (1787-1832).
Potocki come to Spa, with Anna Teresa and Lady de Genlis [see below]. Potocki stayed in Antwerpia,
then in England; back to Paris. 1788 - he met Stanislaw August the King.
Moved to Ukraina; met Stanislaw Szczesny Potocki; he, in Lublin, met Seweryn Potocki.
In Poznan and Sroda - he is elected a Great Poland deputy.
JAN Potocki corresponds with his brother-in-law, Ignacy Potocki; Jan inherited together with Seweryn Potocki the
property of Józef Potocki and Wincenty Potocki in Ukraine. In November, a political club with 150 members was
founded in Warsaw.
According to the accounts of the orientalist Wladyslaw Kotwicz, Jan Potocki goes to Berlin, where he approached to
Frederick William I and his uncle, Prince Henry. It is likely that he was working in the libraries of Ewald Hertzberg
(1725- 1795), the minister of the king, and geographer Anton Friedrich Büsching (1724-1793).
In October he goes to France and then in Leipzig and Landau. In Paris, he met Baron de Staël, the ambassador of
Sweden.
Alexandra Feodorovna, born Princess Charlotte of Prussia (1798 - 1860), was Empress consort of Russia. She was the
wife of Emperor Nicholas I, and mother of Emperor Alexander II.
Charlotte was born the eldest surviving daughter of Frederick William III of Prussia, and Louise of Mecklenburg-
Strelitz.
In 1814, her marriage was arranged for political reason with Grand Duke Nicholas Pavlovich of Russia, the future
Tsar Nicholas I.
Mentioned
Frederick William III / Friedrich Wilhelm III (1770 - 1840) was king of Prussia from 1797 to 1840. His parents:
Frederick William II of Prussia + Frederika Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt.
Above named
Frederick William II / Friedrich Wilhelm II, b. 1744, was King of Prussia from 1786. His father Prince Augustus
William of Prussia, August Wilhelm, b. 1722, was Prince of Prussia and
a younger brother of Frederick II.
Augustus was the second surviving son of Frederick William I and Sophia Dorothea.
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.
Of Frederick William III and Louise' four children, three married the brothers and sisters of Csar Alexander I.
Frederick William III's daughter, Charlotte of Prussia, married Paul's son, Czar Nicholas I, who succeeded Alexander
I, and who also belonged to the Order of the Garter.
Frederick's son Wilhelm I married Augusta of Saxe-Weimar, the daughter of Nicholas' sister Maria Romanov.
A third child of Frederick, Friedrich Karl Alexander of Prussia, married Maria's Romanov other daughter, Marie Luisa
Alexandrina von Saxe-Weimar.
Baron Erik Magnus Staël von Holstein, born in 1749 in Loddby, Sweden, died in 1802 in Poligny; Swedish
ambassador in France.
His daughter Hedvig Gustava Albertina, born 1798, died in Paris on September 28, 1838. She was married to Victor
de Broglie in 1816. Her biological father could be Benjamin Constant.
Henri Benjamin Constant de Rebecque born 1767 in Lausanne, died in 1830 in Paris; French writer, philosopher and
liberal politician of Swiss descent.
In 1786 he came to Paris, where he met with politicians and thinkers preparing revolutions. There, he made an affair
with Isabelle de Charriere. In 1796-1797 Constant published three brochures on the current French policy. Jacobin's
terror has condemned them. In 1799, with the consent of Napoleon Bonaparte, he was appointed a member of the
Tribunate.
Above Stephanie Felicite du Crest de Saint-Aubin, Comtesse de Genlis, born in 1746, died in 1830, was the French
writer.
Author of didactic-moral novels for young people and her memoirs.
We back to Artur Stanislaw Potocki.
ARTUR POTOCKI was the Count, the owner of the Krzeszowice and Lancut estates,
graduated of the Ernangen Protestant University, officer of the Polish army,
the adjutant of Prince Józef Poniatowski in 1812,
the adjutant of the emperor of France [fligiel- adjutant of Emperor Napoleon I] - Napoleon I - in 1815
[Napoleon Bonaparte I abdicated on 22 June 1815 in favour of his son Napoleon II. On 24 June the Provisional
Government proclaimed the fact to the French nation and the world].
Wojciech Paszkowski [the half-brother of General Franciszek Paszkowski] was the manager of KRZESZOWICE
owned by Artur Potocki.
Wojciech Paszkowski managed also Trzebniew / Trzebniow [not Trzebnica !] of BYSTRZANOWSKI.
CAPTAIN Wojciech Paszkowski, 1780 - 1856, the brother of famous General Franciszek Paszkowski [close to the
TEMPLARS - in Cracow] who was the friend of General Tadeusz Kosciuszko [Kosciuszko was the friend of Thomas
Jefferson b. 1743 - Illuminati].
Wojciech Paszkowski, 1780 - 1856, was the plenipotentiary [1821-1832] of Artur Potocki / Artur Stanislaw Potocki
(b. 1787 in Paris / Paryz, died in 1832 in Wien / Wieden - Artur Potocki, the Templar masonic degree, in
1830-1832 in CRACOW closely cooperated with GENERAL FRANCISZEK PASZKOWSKI in The Committee for
the Reconstruction of the Krakow Castle in the Free City of Krakow and its District (1830 - 1836).
The Committee, whose work was supervised by Maciej Rembowski, the first - only nominal president was Count
Artur Potocki - followed by general Franciszek Paszkowski, was never formally resolved, his activity decreased in
1833, and from 1836 his last documents came),
Napoleonic officer.
Wojciech Paszkowski was Commissioner General to Artur Potocki.
ARTUR POTOCKI married to Zofia Countess Branicka, probably granddaughter of Empress Katarzyna II.
He bought a Palace in Cracow; and in Krzeszowice he built a summer residence
{the cousin of named General Franciszek Paszkowski - Paszkowski Franciszek (1818-1883), painter, landowner,
deputy to the Galician parliament, economic activist. He was the son of Dominik Paszkowski and Anna Niemojewska
(died 1872), the younger brother of Józef Edmund. He learned painting with Rafal Hadziewicz, and then with
Wojciech K. Stattler in Cracow, where he lived with his uncles Franciszek PASZKOWSKI, general, and Wojciech
PASZKOWSKI, junior, a member of the Galician government in 1809, the manager of the Trzebniow estate and
Krzeszowice. Franciszek Paszkowski - painter - went to Düsseldorf (1838), Dresden and Rome for further studies. He
painted religious paintings, and many portraits: his father, brother and uncle, General Franciszek PASZKOWSKI in
1814 [in Warsaw], Tytus Chalubinski, and Antonina Jachowicz}.
In 1818, Artur Potocki became an adept of the 33rd degree of the Scottish Masonic Lodge.
And now about SOLTYK - SAPIEHA line: Maciej Soltyk senior, died in 1780 - Krysk; he had sons:
1.
Józef Soltyk - MP and the official in Zawichost (1786-1795), 1750-1803 + Józefa Urbanska;
2.
Maciej Kajetan Soltyk junior, 1750-1804;
3.
Stanislaw Soltyk, MP in 1830-31, acted in 1791; born 1751/1752 - died in 1833 + Karolina Sapieha
{Karolina Sapieha 1759-1814, was the wife to TEODOR POTOCKI
(Teodor Potocki, 1730-1812, was the son of JAN POTOCKI = Jan Kanty Potocki, b. 1693;
the grandson of Józef Stanislaw Potocki born ca 1645; the great-grandson of Pawel Potocki b. ca 1612, who
was the son Stefan Potocki b. 1568, and grandson of Mikolaj Potocki)
and named STANISLAW SOLTYK.
KAROLINA Sapieha was half sister of Nil Sapieha; Konstancja ZWAN b. 1768, and Michal
Cichocki / Mykolas Cichockis / Michal Mikolaj CICHOCKI born in 1770 in Warsaw.
KAROLINA Sapieha Soltyk was born in 1759, the daughter of
Aleksander Michal Sapieha b. 1730 in Wysokie / Vysokoje - died in 1793 in Warsaw, and
the granddaughter of Kazimierz Leon Karol Sapieha, b. 1697 in Warsaw; d. 1738 in WSCHOWA;
the great-granddaughter of Aleksander Pawel Sapieha born in Warsaw in 1672;
the great-great-granddaughter of Kazimierz Jan Sapieha b. 1637/1742, Duke in 1700, commanded the
Lithuanian Army -
the son of Pawel Jan Sapieha
(1609-1665; the owner of RETOW, SZAWLE, Wolpin.
PAWEL JAN Sapieha was the father of
Kazimierz Jan;
Benedykt Pawel;
Franciszek Stefan;
Leon Bazyli SAPIEHA)
the enemy of the Radziwills,
the grandson of Jan Piotr Sapieha.
Named PAWEL JAN Sapieha passed on to his sons in 1665:
Kazimierz Jan Sapieha - the godfather was LEON SAPIEHA - took Szkudy, Kretynga, Szawel,
Ikazn, Druja, Sapiezyn, Oswiej / Oswieja, Ormiej, BYCHOW, Wolpin.
Benedykt Pawel Sapieha took CZERCIA, LUBOSZANY + Berezyna; Wojskie, Siemiatycze,
RETOW.
Franciszek Stefan Sapieha - Tronienice, BOCKI, LACHOWICZE.
Leon Bazyli SAPIEHA - ROZANA / Rozanna, Kossow / Kosow Poleski, Lewpun, Poniemun}
+ 2nd to Agnieszka
Komorowska,
with the son -
Roman Soltyk 1790-1843.
Above Benedykt Pawel Sapieha d. 1707, took CZERCIA/ Czereja + Mieleszkowicze and Horodek in the
Vicebsk province; Wysokie; Roslaw in the Smolensk prov.; RETOW in 1664 until 1700 - then his son Michal
Sapieha; Korelicze; Siemiatycze and ROSNA after a brother Leon Bazyli Sapieha; DZISNA; and
LUBOSZANY in 1665 [near Miezonka] with Berezyno Ihumenskie by the Berezyna river. Ca
1693, Michal Siesicki back him Luboszany, the Witebsk / Vicebsk prov., and Benedykt Pawel Sapieha gave
it to his son Michal Jozef Sapieha in 1699.
Benedykt Pawel Sapieha d. 1707 was living in ROZANA. Acted in Kobryn, Biala Podlaska, Wysokie,
and Brzesc Litewski.
Michal Sapieha - Michal Józef Sapieha (1670 - 1738 in Chalons-sur-Marne), the governor of Podlasie,
the son of mentioned Benedykt Pawel Sapieha + Izabella Tarlo. Supporter of Jakub Sobieski.
In 1699 - owner of Luboszany and Berezyno Ihumenskie / BEREZYNA.
In 1714 General Lieutenant. 1735 moved to France.
After 1738 until 1793:
Luboszany / Luboszany - years 1735-1750 were very difficult for the Sapiehas after death of Michal
Józef Sapieha in 1738. Benedykt Pawel Sapieha d. 1707, took CZERCIA/ Czereja + Mieleszkowicze and
Horodek in the Vicebsk province; Wysokie; Roslaw in the Smolensk prov.; RETOW in 1664 until 1700 - then
his son Michal Sapieha; Korelicze; Siemiatycze and ROSNA after a brother Leon Bazyli Sapieha; DZISNA;
and
LUBOSZANY in 1665 [near Miezonka] with Berezyno Ihumenskie by the Berezyna river. Ca
1693, tenant Michal Siesicki back him Luboszany, the Witebsk / Vicebsk prov., and Benedykt Pawel Sapieha
gave it to his son Michal Jozef Sapieha in 1699.
Benedykt Pawel Sapieha d. 1707 was living in ROZANA. Acted in Kobryn, Biala Podlaska, Wysokie,
and Brzesc Litewski.
Michal Jozef Sapieha owned Luboszany in 1699 but LUBOSZANY was taken by
Aleksander Michal SAPIEHA, b. 1730 in Wysokie - died in 1793 in Warsaw.
Aleksander Michal Sapieha acted in Brzesc Litewski in 1696; he owned Luboszany - Berezyna in the
Vicebsk province since 1697. Luboszany was officially handed over to Aleksander Michal Sapieha by his
father on 30 July 1699, and Aleksander Michal Sapieha ceded it in 1710 to Antoni Nowosielski as a tenant.
Senator Antoni Karol Nowosielski b. 1675, died 1726, the son of Wawrzyniec Nowosielski + Helena
Wrobek-Lettaw / von Lettow-Vorbeck; Antoni had a son Leon Nowosielski b. ca 1700/1706, and grandson Józef
Nowosielski. Antoni was the Orsha official and in Nowogrodek in 1709-1725.
Leon NOWOSIELSKI married in 1726 to the daughter of Jerzy Stanislaw Sapieha 1668-1732,
the granddaughter of Kazimierz Jan Pawel Sapieha b. ca 1642;
the great-granddaughter of Pawel Jan Sapieha born in 1609,
son of Jan Piotr Sapieha b. 1569, d. 1611 in MOSCOW.
Pawel Jan Sapieha (1609-1665), was the owner of Luboszany and Berezyna / Berezino.
Aleksander Michal SAPIEHA, b. 1730 in Wysokie - died in 1793 in Warsaw. After his death, in 1793
Berezyno and Luboszany was taken by Tyszkiewicz, then to POTOCKI.
Note to
TYSZKIEWICZ - POTOCKI of Luboszany / Lubuszany and Berezyna, with the POTOCKI [the
TEMPLARS] - PASZKIEWICZ [+ Bystrzanowski] branch of Trzebniow-Cracow-Tonie:
Anna Maria Ewa Apolonia Tyszkiewicz, I voto Potocka, II voto Dunin-Wasowicz (1779 - 1867 in Paris) -
Poland diarist; the landowner of LUBOSZANY - BEREZYNO / BEREZYNA
[remember - Aleksandra Potocka, with nick-name Aleksandryna
(1818-1892, born in St Petersburg, the daughter of Stanislaw Septym Potocki; the granddaughter
of Stanislaw Szczesny Potocki 1751-1805;
the great-granddaughter of Franciszek Salezy Potocki, 1700-1772,
who was the son of Józef Potocki (died 1723),
and grandson of Feliks Kazimierz "Szczesny" Potocki (1630-1702),
the great-grandson of Stanislaw "Rewera" Potocki, 1589-1667),
married her cousin August Potocki
(= August Aleksander Potocki b. 1805; the son of Aleksander Stanislaw Potocki b. 1778;
the grandson of Stanislaw Kostka Potocki b. 1755;
the great-grandson of Eustachy Potocki born in 1720; the great-great-grandson of Jerzy Potocki
who was the son of Feliks Kazimierz Potocki 1630-1702, and grandson of Stanislaw Rewera Potocki).
Aleksandra Potocka sold ZATOR and Berezyna-Luboszany
(K. Lipinski - the manager of
Berezyna, Tepliki, Zwinogród),
to hands of Krystyna nee Tyszkiewicz
(born in RIGA in 1866; the daughter of Jan Witold Emanuel Tyszkiewicz b. 1831 in WOLOZYN;
the granddaughter of Jozef Tyszkiewicz b. 1805 in PALANGA; the great-granddaughter of Michal Tyszkiewicz
Count, b. 1761 in BIRZAI / Birze;
the great-great-granddaughter of Józef Ignacy Tyszkiewicz b. 1724, d. 1815 in Valozyn),
wife of the Galicja governor -
Andrzej Potocki
(died in 1908 =
Andrzej Kazimierz Potocki born in KRZESZOWICE in 1861, died in LWOW, the owner of
Krzeszowice, the orderly officer of Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria, Andrzej's wife KRYSTYNA was the owner
of LUBOSZANY - near MIEZONKA and Berezyna
[they had children: Maria Teresa Tyszkiewicz;
Izabela Maria Krasinska; Kystyna Siemienska-Lewicka; Adam Wladyslaw Franciszek Potocki; Artur Antoni
Bonawentura Hubert Maria Potocki born in 1899 in Krzeszowice close to CRACOW.
But the last owner of BEREZYNA in 1917 / Dec. 1918 was Maurycy Stanislaw Potocki b. May
1894 in Jablonna, died in 1949
- the son of August Adam Potocki b. 1847;
the grandson of Maurycy Eustachy Ludwik Potocki b. 1812;
the great-grandson of Aleksander Stanislaw Potocki b. 1778
{the husband of Anna Maria Ewa Apolonia Dunin-Wasowicz [the daughter of Ludwik Tyszkiewicz b.
1748 in WILNO - the owner of Poloziny in the IHUMEN county and BEREZYNA - LUBOSZANY in 1793 after
Sapieha] and Izabella Potocka MOSTOWSKA [her son Stanislaw Potocki Count, ca 1824 - 1887].
Partner of Aleksandra Stokowska};
the great-great-grandson of
Stanislaw Kostka Potocki 1755 - 1821, the FREEMASON];
the son of Adam Józef Mateusz Potocki died in Krzeszowice in 1872 - acted in STASZOW;
the grandson of Artur Potocki 1787-1832 and Zofia Branicka 1790-1879.
The great-grandson of Jan Nepomucen Potocki 1761-1815, who was the son of Józef Potocki
1735-1802, and the grandson of Stanislaw Potocki 1698-1760 and Helena Zamoyska 1717-1760
and the great-grandson of
Michal Zdzislaw Saryusz Zamoyski - the Smolensk governor, 1679-1735 {see Wilkowo Polskie -
Kiedrzynski - Pradzynski - Szoldrski};
Józef Stanislaw Potocki (1673-1751) = Józef Potocki in Cracow in 1748
- who was the son of Andrzej Potocki died in 1691 in Stanislawow;
and the grandson of Stanislaw Potocki Rewera b. 1589 in Podhajce, d. 1667).
Berezyna - Luboszany of Potocki [Maurycy Stanislaw Potocki (1894 - 1949)], Kaluzyca of Wankowicz and
Miezonka of Konstantynowicz were the core of Polish underground movement in Belarus at the turn of the
centuries, 19th on 20th.
Named Aleksandra Potocka, Aleksandryna (1818-1892), born in Petersburg, as a child of Stanislaw
Septym POTOCKI + Katarzyna Branicki;
the granddaughter of Stanislaw Szczesny Potocki.
Stanislaw Potocki died in 1831; then Aleksandryna Potocka was living under care of Zofia, the wife of
Artur Potocki - the Templar - in Biala Cerkiew, St Petersburg and Krzeszowice.
ARTUR married to Zofia Countess Branicka, probably granddaughter of Empress Katarzyna II.
He bought a Palace in Cracow; and in Krzeszowice he built a summer residence
{the cousin of General Franciszek Paszkowski - Paszkowski Franciszek (1818-1883), JUNIOR, painter, landowner,
deputy to the Galician parliament, economic activist. He was the son of Dominik Paszkowski and Anna Niemojewska
(died 1872), the younger brother of Józef Edmund. He learned painting with Rafal Hadziewicz, and then with
Wojciech K. Stattler in Cracow, where
he lived with his uncles Franciszek PASZKOWSKI, general, and Wojciech PASZKOWSKI junior, a
member of the Galician government in 1809, the manager of the Trzebnica estate and Krzeszowice.
Franciszek Paszkowski - painter - went to Düsseldorf (1838), Dresden and Rome for further studies. He painted
religious paintings, and many portraits: his father, brother and uncle, General Franciszek PASZKOWSKI in 1814 [in
Warsaw], Tytus Chalubinski, and Antonina Jachowicz.
Compare - MARIA WILHELMINA PASZKOWSKA ARMAND of MOSCOW}.
ARTUR POTOCKI in 1818, became an adept of the 33rd degree of the Scottish Masonic Lodge.
Aleksandryna Potocka became friends with her cousin, Eliza Branicka, the later Eliza was the wife of
Zygmunt Krasinski, in 1835 until 1876. Miss Potocka formally remained under the care of Tsar Nicholas I.
Around 1836, she became the lady of the imperial court. On her marriage with her cousin August Potocki from
Wilanów recalled Jadwiga Dzialynski Zamoyska years later].
TRZEBNIOW of Sebastian Bystrzanowski - Krzeszowice of Artur Potocki:
Sebastian Bystrzanowski inf. in Bystrzanowice in 1783; in Dabrowno in 1783.
Dabrowno - the LELOW parish; near NIEGOWA.
Sebastian Bystrzanowski was the Checiny official (1774-1783), he was the owner of Bebelno / BEBELNO-
KOLONIA - north-east to LELOW and 12 km south to WLOSZCZOWA; landlord in Cieletniki in 1792, the owner of
Sekursko, south to ZYTNO - in 1761 bought from Józef Bystrzanowski; of Raczkowice and Nowa Wies (in the Kalisz
prov.); b. ca 1730, d. 1795.
Cieletniki - 4 km west to SEKURSKO; and close to Zytno. In 1742 - 1761, Cieletniki was owned by Józef
Bystrzanowski; then his nephew [the son of his brother] Sebastian Bystrzanowski.
ZYTNO - north-east to Cieletniki - ca 7 km; Zytno is situated north to LELOW.
SEBASTIAN Bystrzanowski - b. ca 1730, d. 1795 - married to Magdalena Soltyk b. ca 1750, the daughter of Maciej
Soltyk 1720-1780 and Salomea Nakwaska 1728-1778.
Emilia maybe was the daughter of named Sebastian and Magdalena Bystrzanowski-Soltyk or of
KAJETAN BYSTRZANOWSKI?
Emilia was born ca 1775/1780. Emilia Bystrzanowska married Wojciech Paszkowski b. 1780 - he was the half-
brother of General Franciszek Paszkowski. Magdalena Bystrzanowska was the sister of
Józef Soltyk - MP and the official in Zawichost (1786-1795), 1750-1803,
who married twice:
1. Józefa Urbanska,
2. Justyna Kalinowska b. ca 1750.
Justyna's parents:
Ignacy Kalinowski b. ca 1710 + Justyna Borzecka b. ca 1720.
Justyna's sisters:
1. Agnieszka Kalinowska b. ca 1750,
2. Franciszka Kalinowska b. ca 1760/1765 + Olszewski / OLSZOWSKI.
3. Józefa Kalinowska b. ca 1750 + Jan Sadel Sadlo + 2nd time to Glogowski,
4. Antonina Kalinowska b. ca 1750 + Ludwik Walewski.
Justyna's brother:
Seweryn Ksawery Kalinowski b. 1759 + Elzbieta Bielska.
And again back to
Wojciech Paszkowski born in 1780, the son of Jan Paszkowski b. 1742, and Petronela Paszkowska born Kulikowska.
Petronela was born ca 1755. Wojciech had 2 brothers [or more]: Dominik Paszkowski and General Franciszek.
Wojciech married [ca 1805 ?] 1st Emilia Paszkowska born Bystrzonowska / Bystrzanowski. Emilia Bystrzanowska
was born in Brody [here was born General Franciszek Paszkowski].
Note to TRZEBNIOW:
Nearby Gorzków Nowy owned by Bystrzanowski, ca 1730 - ca 1770; at half way from Trzebniow to
Bystrzanowice-Dwor.
New Gorzkow-Trzebniow parish cover the area: Gorzków Nowy, Gorzków Stary, Góry Gorzkowskie, Ludwinów and
Trzebniów. 1739 - 1763 Gorzków paid to the Bystrzanowski chapel in Lelow.
Ludwinow - 3 km north-east to TRZEBNIOW; west to Gorzkow Nowy. In Ludwinow, Ludwina Martyniewicz lived.
Bystrzanowice - 9 km north-west to LELOW:
1385-1833 in Bystrzanowice, the Bystrzanowski family had their headquarters. 1680 - Andrzej and Marcin
Bystrzanowski;
1783 until 1791 - Sebastian Bystrzanowski, the official in Checiny; he bought Cieletniki, and moved home there.
1833-1852 owned by Wincenty Komornicki. Then to Wincenty Krasinski (1852-1878), and after him - Count
Raczynski (1878-1945).
Bystrzanowice - Sebastian Bystrzonowski shared the village with Sulewski / Sulejowski. Sebastian Bystrzanowski b.
ca 1730, d. 1795 - was the son of
Karol Bystrzanowski the official in Checiny, 1710-1752 + Apolonia Misiowska.
SEBASTIAN Bystrzanowski married to Magdalena Soltyk b. ca 1750, the daughter of Maciej Soltyk 1720-1780 and
Salomea Nakwaska 1728-1778
Luboszany / Libushany / LIBUSZANY is situated close to MIEZONKA [Libuszany is 13 km west-
north-west to noble Miezonka locality, the gentry area; Miezonka village is 2 km yet further. Libushany - 12
km east to Kaplancy, and 6 km east to Milastava / MILOSTOW], Berezyna [south-east], Pohost [south-east]
and Kozlowy Brzeg / Kozlowyj Bierieh [south-west to Kozlowy Brzeg] in BELARUS !
Anna Maria Ewa Apolonia Tyszkiewicz, I voto Potocka, II voto Dunin-Wasowicz, was the daughter of
Ludwik Tyszkiewicz, and Konstancja Poniatowski, the king's niece
[Konstancja, 1759-1830;
Stanislaw August Poniatowski had a brother KAZIMIERZ Poniatowski born 1721].
Konstancja was the daughter of Apolonia Ustrzycka, 1736-1814,
and Duke Kazimierz Poniatowski (1721-1800), General,
the brother of named King, Stanislaw August Poniatowski.
The brother of mentioned Konstancja was Stanislaw Poniatowski (1754 - 1833);
the sister - Katarzyna Poniatowska b. 1760.
Konstancja in 1775 married Ludwik Tyszkiewicz (1750-1808), MP, the Lithuanian Marshal in 1793.
Konstancja's daughter: