A complex political, intelligence and genealogical structure operating under the influence of
Russian intelligence formed around 1720/1741 until now, December 2020:
in Zelechow + Krzynowloga Mala close to Przasnysz [H. Wodkiewicz Jaworska, M. Bogucka Sedzicka,
M. Zieleniewska, Zbigniew Natkanski of the Opoczno county together with the Lipski family,
Pelka + Roman, Malachowski of Bialaczow {Robert Bubis} + Krasicki + Rzeczycki of Pieniany] - Sedziszow Malopolski + Podhajce -
Wilkowyja and Kozmin + Berezyna and Lubuszany close to Miezonka -
Krzynowloga Mala and the Swiedziebnia commune + Smilowice and Golaszewo close to Chocen -
Pakoslaw, Chocen [Jaroslaw Slota, Maciej Igor Wojtczak] with Zelechow - Sedziszow Malopolski
[Andrzej Pisz] together with Krzeszowice, Zator, Berezyna and Lubuszany - Naimski, Neyman, General Jozef Niemojewski, General
Franciszek Maksymilian Paszkowski, Artur Potocki, Ignacy Wyssogota-Zakrzewski, Kalkstein + Roman + Zbigniew Brzezinski and Lech Walesa - together with the owner of Sedziszow Malopolski in 1787 or in 1790, Barbara Moszynska nee Rudzinska.
Maltese Order with Carsten Niebuhr and Cagliostro together with Illuminati - the Russian and German secret underground in Poland and USA: Krzynowloga Mala close to Przasnysz with Zbigniew Brzezinski, Pelagia Rodys and Konstanty Rokossowski and the Krasinski - Garczynski in Krasne - Smilowice, Golaszewo and Chocen near to Kowal with Pruszak, Lech Walesa, Ignacy Wyssogota-Zakrzewski of Zelechow, Bielinski - Bobrynsky, and link to Owsiany - Boryslawski line, and Gustaw Findeisen, Edward Jurgens with Leopold Kronenberg in 1863 - Swiedziebnia, 16 km north-east of RYPIN, together with Kalkstein, General Jozef Niemojewski, Gustaw Findeisen, Hutten-Czapski, Nostitz-Jackowski, Orbeliani and Tomasz Swiatopelk-Mirski. Stara Hancza and Miezonka with Chrapowicki, Oskierka, Ilinski, Poniatowski, Stefania Julia Radziwill branch, and the Konstantynowiczs.
Thus, we see - on 17 / 28 December 2020 - that the Russians created an anti-Polish intelligence network in the
lands of central Poland and acted ca 1741-2015/2020; this underground Russian diversionary uses together atheistic and deprived
of a historical and ideological background three national minorities: German,
Gypsy [Sinti and Romani] and Jewish. Romania and Spain are facilities for the diversion at present.
Of course, it is about individual families and individuals, people extremely alienated from the Polish
national community, and this does not apply to entire nations, which national minorities also suffered
from the Russian occupation after 1815 and lost a lot due to the fall of the Republic of Poland in 1795.
After killing three US presidents in the years 1885-1901-1963, the brain of anti-Polish and
anti-civilization Russian action moved to the USA. This network was established after 1858 in
Plock-Wloclawek-Warsaw-Przasnysz. These saboteurs infiltrated our independence movement [sample only:
Chocen-Smilowice-Golaszewo-Przasnysz + Kalkstein in the Swiedziebnia commune with Krzynowloga Mala in the Przasnysz county, the village Leszno and the Krasne estate near to Przasnysz; together with Wieniec-Brzezie close to Wloclawek] throughout the second half of the
19th century [since 1858/1868]. The Russians occupied from 1815 to 1915 what is now central Poland, creating the so-called
Congress Poland and the Vistula Country, and in 1988-1992 the so-called New Third Polish Republic.
Despite this, the Polish underground led to regaining independence in 1918, but lost in 1939 and lost
again in 1945-2015. The Polish underground had headquarters in the Berezina parish in Belarus from
around 1797 to November 1918 [Templar Artur Potocki in the 20' of the 19th century,
and his family + the Konstantynowiczs with the Armand-Paszkowski family branch after 1840].
This structure in Miezonka-Lubuszany-Berezyna Ihumenska actively collaborated with British intelligence
that formed the Round Table in England and the Illuminati movement [ca 1870] leading to the liquidation of
Russia's state structures in 1917 - 1922. The Russian intelligence operated in Poland from the 1740s,
co-creating the Masonic movement in Poland and the Maltese Order [Poninski-Szoldrski in Wilkowo Polskie
and in Kamieniec Podolski in 1767]. The Germans operated through Polish noble
families [Skorzewski-Ciecierski clan] from the Greater Poland from 1760s leading to the defeat of the Bar
Confederation in 1768-1771.
Under copyright by Bogdan Konstantynowicz on 28 December 2020.
ZELECHOW and the owners:
1722 - Stanislaw Mateusz Rzewuski.
Stanislaw Mateusz Rzewuski (1662-1728) was a Royal Colonel since 1690, General of foreign
mercenaries contingent; the son of Michal Rzewuski + Anna Dzierzek.
The owner of Zelechow died in 1728, and Zelechow took a son of Stanislaw Mateusz Rzewuski,
ie.
Waclaw Rzewuski, the owner of ZELECHOW until 1752.
Waclaw Rzewuski, the commander-in-chief in Poland in 1752 and in 1773-1778, the Cracow governor
in 1762-1778/1779, Senator in 1736-1779, the Kruszwica and Chelm Lubelski governor,
the Podole governor in 1736-1762, lived in 1705-1779 + Dss Anna Lubomirska,
ca 1720 - 1763.
Waclaw had a son Stanislaw Ferdynand Rzewuski, 1737-1786 + Dss Katarzyna Karolina Konstancja
Radziwill, 1740-1789. Her sister - Teofila Konstancja MORAWSKA b. 1738 in Nieswiez.
Waclaw's grandson was
Seweryn Rzewuski b. ca 1760, Colonel, MP of Kiev in 1790, m. ca 1800 to
Magdalena Pruszynska with a son
Count Florian Rzewuski, ca 1810 - 1859.
The owner of Zelechow in 1752 - Duke Jerzy Ignacy Lubomirski;
in 1753 - Jerzy's wife, Joanna m. Lubomirska.
In 1772 - 1784 acted in Zelechow Rabbi Lewi Izaak of Berdyczow.
The owner of Zelechow in 1782 - Fabian Sebastian Roman from Krzynowloga Mala in the Przasnysz
county;
in 1786 - Franciszek Placyd Roman;
in 1792 - Ignacy Wyssogota Zakrzewski until a death in 1802, MP.
In 1802 - Jan Nepomucen Sokolnicki; then his widowed wife, Konstancja Sokolnicka.
In 1813 - new landlord of Zelechow, Tadeusz Wyssogota Zakrzewski, the son of named
Ignacy Zakrzewski, MP, the grandson of Izydor Wyssogota-Zakrzewski.
In 1824 - Jan Ordega bougt Zelechow.
In 1825 - Zelechow was bought by the daughters of Baron Tomasz Michal DANGEL.
In 1827 - Karolina ORDEGA nee DANGEL. She was married above Jan Ordega. He rebuilt the palace
in 1838 and the cementary in 1852.
In 1829 - 1831 Joachim Lelewel acted here [his family had a family in Krzynowloga Mala].
In the 50' of the 19th century Romuald Traugutt served here for 8 years.
Jan Ordega, 1784-1871, the owner of Zelechow, m. in 1819, in Piotrkow Trybunalski,
to Karolina Wilhelmina Dangel, 1787-1851;
with children:
1.
Alfons Piotr Jan Ordega, b. 1820, m. Bronislawa Medrzecka. He was the owner of Zelechow.
2.
Olimpia Zofia SZYDLOWSKA Ordega, 1826-1906 + August Szydlowski, 1813-1894
[compare with Mikhail V. Shidlovskiy, the Director of the Russo-Baltic Wagon.
Major general Michal Szydlowski.
Sydney Gibbes - who was after appointed English tutor to the Tsar's children in 1908 -
spent the summer of 1901 with a family called SHIDLOVSKY = Szydlowski; he was taken on as tutor
to two boys and lived in St Petersburg and in their country "dacha" according to "The Romanovs
& Mr Gibbes (...)" by Frances Welch, ed. London 2002.
Sydney Gibbes / Charles Sydney Gibbes / Sydney Ivanovich (1876 in Rotherham, Yorkshire,
east of Manchester - 1963); a son of John Gibbs - he ran the bank on the corner of High Street
and Wellgate and they lived at Bank House - and Mary Ann Elizabeth Fisher,
the daughter of a watchmaker.
General Jan Jacyna kept in touch with e.g. Michal Szydlowski and Karol Jaroszynski =
Karol Yaroshinsky, who managed with a big loans especially during the First world war.
On Jaroszynski see Shay McNeal, "The Plots to Rescue the Tsar", ed. London 2001.
"The Russo-Baltic Wagon Company had a director Michal Szydlowski who was an ex-navy man with
connections to the Russian military and he managed to convince the Imperial Russian Air Force (IRAF)
to utilize the "Murometz" for reconnaissance and bombing purposes; in December 1914 Szydlowski
himself, with the rank of Major General, took over command of the "Squadron of Flying Ships"
known as the EVK
(Aleksander Serednicki; captain Jozef Baszko died in Riga 1946 - a
son of Stanislaw from the Vicebsk goverrnnnment; captain Robert Nizewski b. 02.05.1885 as Catholic
and captain Kazimierz Zagorski were pilots here, according to my research work);
Szydlowski (...) brought Sikorsky to his base and together they managed to overcome the
teething problems; (...) the pre-war Murometz was designed to use German-built engines,
which obviously were not available and Sikorsky experimented with a range of Russian (DEKA aeroengine
according to me) and British engines, but never achieved the desired level of performance; these
problems, together with the low level of Russian manufacturing, meant that only 75 (or 70 - 80)
of this outstanding aircraft were produced during the war; Szydlowski decided, after the revolution,
that he had no future in Russia, and he convinced Sikorsky to leave also; Szydlowski together
with his son, was captured trying to cross the border into Finland and they were shot,
Sikorsky was luckier and from Murmansk he managed to escape by ship to London" (quotation from
ARI UNIKOSKI; this quotation without the Author's written permission).
Igor I. Sikorsky (or Sikorski) born 1889, he spent three years at the Naval College
in St. Petersburg 1903 - 1906; Sikorsky's success helped win him a job as head of the airplane
division of the Russian Baltic Railroad Car Works in Petersburg 1912 - 1917, that is where he
developed his first major new airplane design. The R-BVZ manufactured trains, airplanes, engines
and automobiles, and it was run by M. W. Szydlowski, who had insight into the importance
of aviation's future; the engineering and technical staff at the R-BVZ was expanded by
Sikorsky who brought many of them along with him from Kiev; the first airplane built by
Sikorsky and his staff at the R-BVZ was the S-6B which was a modified version of the S-6A
(by Carl Bobrow - this quotation without the Author's written permission).
In 1920 a business - company of 'Sikorsky - Ukraine', was half of state company,
started to operate].
3.
Jan Artur Wojciech Ordega, Jr. - the owner of Stary Goniwilk and ZELECHOW.
He was born in 1828, d. in 1898 in Zelechow,
the son of Jan Ordega and Karolina Wilhelmina Dangiel / Dangel / Ordega.
Jan Artur married Michalina Maria Gertruda Bienkowska, b. ca 1820.
Jan Artur was the father of Michal Euzebiusz Ordega
[Michal ORDEGA, b. 1862 - d. in 1927 in Warsaw + Emilia BLOCH Holynska, 1870-1940, 1-voto
KSAWERY HOLYNSKI, b. 1856 in Chelmsk,
the son of Walerian Holynski + Ewelina Ewa Broel-PLATER;
the grandson of
Michal Holynski, 1784-1854 + Elzbieta TOLSTOJ;
the great-grandson of Jan Holynski / Ivan Holynsky, 1746-1817 + Barbara KASZYC;
the great-great-grandson of
Jozef Antoni Holynski b. ca 1728 + Petronela ZUKOWSKA;
the son of
Kazimierz Holynski b. ca 1670 + Teofila Moskiewicz.
Kazimierz was the son of Stefan Kazimierz Holynski, b. 1630 / ca 1640, d. 1701
+ Izabela OSTANKIEWICZ b. ca 1650.
Jozef Hurko-Romejko JUNIOR, b. ca 1750/1760, was the son of SENIOR Jozef Hurko / JOZEF HURKO -
ROMEJKO, born ca 1710 - in 1759-1780 the Vitebsk chamberlain.
Jozef Hurko / Gurko, senior, was maybe the son of JAN HURKO, born ca 1680 from KROTOWSZE-KRYNKI.
Christina Golynskaya (Krystyna Holynska) was the third daughter of Stefan HOLYNSKI /
Stephen Holynski b. ca 1630/1640.
She gave her estate in will to her brother Kazimierz HOLYNSKI, and to her sister Frantiska /
Franciszka Holynska. In 1718, she sold the Chodun estate in the hands of the Order of Jesuits.
Frantisek Rogosa / Franciszek Rohoza Konstantynowicz /
Franciszek Konstantynowicz with the Fox coat of arms, born ca 1670 - but not the Srzhenyava (Szreniawa)
arms - was the first husband of KRYSTYNA HOLYNSKA;
the second husband: Jan Gurko (Jan Hurko born ca 1680 of Krotowsze-Krynki) was the Vitebsk
province clerk and was mentioned in 1714.
Acc. to 'Secret Memoirs of the Court of Petersburg...' Zachary Konstantynowicz /
Zachary Constantinowitz in 1796 was a valet (servant) of Yekaterina Alexeevna or Catherine II the Great,
Empress of Russia.
Stephen (Stefan HOLYNSKI) Golynsky (= Stefan Kazimierz Holynski born ca 1630/1640) was the
third son of
Davyd / Dawid Holynski, owned the estate Soin (Soino, Soino Wielkie, Woronowe Slobody).
In 1663 Golynsky / Holynski mentioned, Mayor Zhmudsky, served in the regiment of Ilya Surin
(mother of Stepan Holynski was kind of Surin ancestry).
On January 31, 1664 a priest of the Mstislavl Church, Herman Konstantynowicz filed a complaint
against Paul Moskevich and Stephen Golynsky / Stefan Holynski for armed mob to his house, for
loot his grain bread and torturing her daughters (a data extracted from the Vitebsk and Mogilev
documentary province books, stored in a central repository in Vitebsk, and published under
the editorship of M. Verevkin, T. 24, Vitebsk 1893, p. 455-457).
The Wollowiczs were near and dear in the Mscislau / Mstsislaw territory of the Konstantynowiczs!
They owned A.D. 1778:
Staje, Berezetnia, Horowatka, Ray - i.e. Bolschoj Raj in present Russia and near by border
between Belarus and Russia, Miteykow i.e. Miljejkova close by current border, Kozuchowicze - i.e.
Koshuchowitschi in Russia now, Polachowszczyzna, Jurginow and Pietrowicze i.e. Petrovici estate - 810 ha.
and 10 km E of Soino - in Zahustyn area, the Klimavicy district A.D. 1784, Russia now -
close to the Konstantynowicz's estates.
WOLLOWICZ or Volovitch since 1590 in this territory, next of kin with the Szemiot family in 1700,
owned A.D. 1778: Staje, Berezetnia, Horowatka, Ray - i.e. Bolschoj Raj in present Russia.
Related to Kamienski - inf. of 1623; others in Mscislau in 1634, too].
Jan Artur Ordega was the brother of Olimpia Szydlowska.
Karolina Ordega nee Dangel died in 1851.
KRUSZYNA - 16 km south to JEDLNO; north-east to Koscielec, Madalin, Marianka Redzinska
[see on BLESZYNSKI and KOSCIELEC].
Dubrowna by the DNIEPR river;
ca 19 / 28 km north-east to ORSZA [see TRUBECKI family and Tallinn]. At present in the Witebsk
district; in the 18th century in the Orsza county, of the Witebsk province.
DUBROWNA belonged to the Hlebowiczs, the to Sapieha; the land included in 1772 to Russia; in the 19th
century owned by the Lubomirskis.
Eugeniusz Adolf Lubomirski, Duke, b. 1825 in Dubrowna, d. 1911 in Kruszyna, north to Czestochowa
and south to JEDLNO of the Walewskis. He was political activist, art collector and bibliophile.
The son of Eugeniusz Lubomirski senior and Maria Czacka.
Eugeniusz Adolf Lubomirski, Duke, the 1st marriage in 1850 in Warsaw to Krystyna Lubomirska;
2nd to Roza Zofia Zamoyska in 1859, with 6 children:
Roza Zofia Lubomirska + Artur Wladyslaw Potocki [SEDZISZOW MALOPOLSKI in 1882-1890];
Krystyna Maria + Wladyslaw Tyszkiewicz.
Eugeniusz Adolf Lubomirski, Duke, was the owner of: Dubrowna, Uchanie and Kruszyna {1862}.
Above Eugeniusz Lubomirski senior, 1789 - 1834, the owner of Dubrowna by the DNIEPR river
close to ORSHA. Eugeniusz Lubomirski senior, 1789 - 1834, was the son of
Ksawery Lubomirski and Teofila Rzewuska;
the brother of the Russian General Konstanty Lubomirski.
Eugeniusz Lubomirski senior, married Maria Czacka.
Above Ksawery Lubomirski / Franciszek Ksawery Lubomirski, 1747 - 1819, the Sieciechow official,
the Russian General. The son of
Stanislaw Lubomirski, of Kiev; in 1772 official in Sieciechow;
an owner of 9 small cities - Smila. In 1777 served the Russian Army; 1783 General Major;
in 1787 he sold Smila and Szpola to Grigorij Potiomkin. He was married three times:
Antonina Potocka, the daughter of Franciszek Salezy Potocki;
Teofila Rzewuska;
Maria Lwowna Naryszkina.
Eugeniusz Adolf Lubomirski the owner of Kruszyna since 1862, d. 1911 [compare Kruszyna and
Jedlno; also on Dubrowna by the DNIEPR river close to ORSHA], come from Ksawery Lubomirski / Franciszek
Ksawery Lubomirski 1747-1819, and Teofila Rzewuski.
I emphasizes once again on
Jozef Kazimierz Broel-Plater / PLATER 1796-1852, writer, born 1796 - Kraslaw, died in 1852 -
Wilno, married in 1819 to Antonina Soltan 1800-1871, a daughter of Benedykt Soltan b. 1770 and
Jozefa Benislawska b. 1770.
The great-grandparents of Jozef Kazimierz Broel-Plater / PLATER 1796-1852:
1.
Jan Ludwik Plater born in 1686 or 1690-1736, the son of Jan Andrzej Henryk Plater and
Ludwika Maria von Grothuss.
2.
Jozef Tadeusz Oginski, 1693 - 1736, a son of Kazimierz Dominik Oginski and Eleonora.
3.
Waclaw Rzewuski, b. 1705 / 1706 - d. 1779; the owner of ZELECHOW.
4.
Prince Michal Kazimierz Radziwill born in 1702, Olyka and died in 1762, nick-name Rybenko,
an owner of Birzai, Dubingiai, Slutsk, Kopyla and Shumsk. He was Court Marshal of Lithuania since 1734,
Field and Grand Commander-in-Chief of Lithuania and in 1725 in Biala Krynica he married
Urszula Franciszka Wisniowiecka, 2nd time married Anna Luiza Mycielska in 1754 in Lviv.
His lover was Maria Karolina Sobieska, grand daughter of John III Sobieski.
5.
Rozalia Brzostowska, 1690-1746;
6. Anna Wisniowiecka, 1695-1732;
7.
Anna Lubomirska, 1717 - died 1763, m. in 1732 to Waclaw Rzewuski of Cracow, the Grand
Commander-in-Chief of Poland, 1706 - 1779.
8.
Urszula Franciszka Wisniowiecka, 1705-1753.
Grandparents of Jozef Kazimierz Broel-Plater / PLATER, 1796-1852:
1. Konstanty Ludwik Plater, 1722-1778,
2. Augusta Oginska, 1724-1791,
3.
Stanislaw Ferdynand Rzewuski, 1737-1786,
4.
Katarzyna Karolina Konstancja Radziwill, 1740-1789.
Jozef Kazimierz Broel-Plater studied in Kroze (the Rossienie county) in Zmudz / Samogitia, then
in 1815 studied at the Wilno Univ.; he was heir of Kombula / Kombul and Kazanow in Livonia / the Polish
Inflanty, also Sickeln and Rozaliszki in Courland. He was elected nobility Speaker of the Rzezyce /
Rezekne county in Livonia; after the November Uprising 1831 was persecuted by the Russian authorities
as a relative of participants of the uprising: Emilia Plater and Cezary Plater.
Jozef Kazimierz Broel-Plater was sentenced to settlement in Smolensk, where he lived with his
family to 1846. In Smolensk he has established a contact with Jozef Ignacy Kraszewski.
After 1846 he returned to Kombula, in 1847 was elected assessor of the Criminal Chamber
of the Novgorod province. Writer under nick-name Joseph Plaskoziemski in 1846, gave his own theory
of light, heat and electricity, but not supported by experiences in the mid-nineteenth century.
He was also the author of the short history and geography of Livonia; died in 1852 in Vilnius,
was buried in Kraslaw.
He was married from 1819 to Antonina Soltan (1800-1871).
His son Leon Plater, b. ca 1836, d. on May 28 / June 9, 1863 in Daugavpils, Earl, a
participant of the January Uprising in 1863. Shot at the Dyneburg fortress because of a
successful attack on the transport of weapons on 25 May 1863, after which, was captured -
protecting the actual organizer and commander Zygmunt Bujnicki - buried in the place of execution but the body was dug and transported to another location in a unknown place.
The Zelechow owner - inf. in 1788 on Franciszek Placyd Roman.
In 1790/1792, Ignacy Wyssogota Zakrzewski, in 1795 Zelechow took Austria. In 1802, Ignacy Wyssogota Zakrzewski died.
Romuald Traugutt in 1845 was living in Zelechow.
In 1867 Zelechow lost its status as a private city.
The Lubomirski family and Sedziszow Malopolski, Zelechow, Dubrovna close to Orsha,
and Jozef Pilsudski in Warsaw in 10-11 November 1918:
Duke Zdzislaw Lubomirski (1865-1943) was the lawyer.
On November 10, 1918, Zdzislaw Lubomirski welcomed Pilsudski at Warsaw's Rail Station, and four
days later, Pilsudski became the head of Polish state.
Zdzislaw Lubomirski (1865-1943) b. in Nizhny Novgorod, was the son of
Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski, 1826 in Stanislawow, d. in 1908 + Maria Zamoyska.
The grandson of
Eugeniusz Lubomirski, 1789 in Krakow, d. 1834;
the great-grandson of Duke Franciszek Ksawery Lubomirski, 1747-1819 + Antonina Adelajda Potocka.
The great-great-grandson of
Stanislaw Lubomirski, 1704 in Braclaw - 1793 + Ludwika Honorata Pociej.
Stanislaw was the son of
Jerzy Aleksander Lubomirski, 1666 in Nowy Sacz - 1735;
and the grandson of Aleksander Michal Lubomirski died in 1675, who was the son of
Prince Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski, 1616 in Nowy Wisnicz - 1667 in Wroclaw + Konstancja LIGEZA.
It was 1914, the start of the Great War.
But when this war finished, Beseler, as German Governor-General in 1916, proclaimed the -
and Austria - Hungary agreed - establishment of an independent Kingdom of Poland.
With active help of his close employee Bogdan Hutten - Czapski, he created the new Polish-language
Warsaw University and the Technical University of Warsaw.
On 10 November 1918, back to Warsaw, Jozef Pilsudski; Zdzislaw Lubomirski and Adam Koc in the
night 09/10 November, 1918 received message about Pilsudski; by Lubomirski's car, Pilsudski arrived
to Lubomirski house.
Count Bogdan Hutten-Czapski, was looking at this situation from distance, but at Warsaw Castle
talked with Hans Hartwig Beseler on Pilsudski; at this moment Sosnkowski moved at Moniuszki avenue.
Beseler fled on November 12, with his two aides and Polish officers on a ship on the Vistula
river, from Warsaw to Thorn and from there to Berlin.
His contemporaries Hutten - Czapski, Prince Hermann von Hatzfeld and Maria Princess Lubomirska - the
wife of Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski - expressed their praise of him; Hutten - Czapski:
'The Inspector General of the engineer and pioneer corps and the fortresses had also
acquired management experience. ... with a refined and perfect - looking character...'.
Above Prince Zdzislaw Lubomirski, a Polish aristocrat, landowner, chairman of the "Central Civil
Committee" in 1915. 1917 to 1918 member of the Regency Council. Zdzislaw Lubomirski born 1865 in
Nizhny Novgorod, the son of Prince Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski, and Maria Zamoyska; he attended Krakow's St.
Anna High School; Jagiellonian University and University of Graz.
Maria Lubomirska b. 1841, d. 1922, the daughter of Zdzislaw Zamoyski Count; she was wife of
Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski Prince, and she was mother of Zdzislaw Lubomirski (b. on April 4, 1865,
in Nizny Nowogrod, d. 1943);
above Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski b. 1826 in Dubrowna in the Mohylow region, d. 1908, m. Maria nee
Zamoyska;
Zdzislaw Lubomirski m. Maria nee Branicka;
mentioned above Nizhny Novgorod / Nizhniy Novgorod / Nizhny Novgorod in Russia.
Above Zdzislaw Zamoyski Count, 1810 Warsaw - d. 1855 in Vienna, Austria, the
son of Stanislaw Kostka Franciszek Zamoyski and Zofia; husband of Jozefa Jadwiga Zamoyska; father of:
Stefan Zamoyski, above Maria Lubomirska;
Wanda Grocholska and Zofia Tarnowska.
On October 7, 1918, on initiative of Prince Zdzislaw Lubomirski, Polish declaration of
independence was announced and 14th October 1918, Polish Army soldiers pledged allegiance to the Polish
flag.
Zdzislaw Lubomirski supported Pilsudski's nomination (on 10th Nov. 1918 - 14th Nov.) for the
post of the head of state.
Above mentioned Jan Tadeusz Lubomirski b. 1826 in Dubrowna / Dubrovno, the Moghilov government;
d. 1908, the son of Eugeniusz Lubomirski, studied in St Petersburg. Then in France and England.
In 1863 the Foreign Affairs of Polish Government.
Above named Dubrowno in the Sienno (north-east of Miezonka) catholic area; the Orsha county,
the Moghilev government; at present in the Vicebsk oblast; 90 km to Vicebsk, 19 km north-east of Orsza /
Orsha. Dubrovno to 1774 to Sapieha; then 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; next to
Eugeniusz Lubomirski - 1809 new Orthodox church; Dubrovno was the Lubomirski family estate to 1917!
Eugeniusz Lubomirski b. 1789, d. 1834, the landowner of Dubrovno close to Orsha from his father;
the son of
Ksawery Lubomirski (Franciszek Ksawery Lubomirski, 1747-1819) and Teofila Rzewuski /
Teofila Beydo-Rzewuska, 1762-1831.
Above Franciszek Ksawery Lubomirski, 1747-1819, 2nd married to Maria Lvovna Naryshkina /
NARYSHKIN, born in 1766.
Mentioned Franciszek Ksawery Lubomirski born in 1747, was the son of
Stanislaw Lubomirski, born in 1704, d. 1793, married in 1740 to Ludwika Honorata Pociej,
1726-1786.
The grandson of
Jerzy Aleksander Michal Lubomirski, 1666 in Nowy Sacz - 1735 + Joanna Karolina Zuzanna
Startzhausen b. 1675;
the great-grandson of Aleksander Michal Lubomirski who come from
Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski b. 1616 in Nowy Wisnicz;
the son of Stanislaw Lubomirski oldest, b. 1583,
Konstancja Malgorzata Lubomirski Rzewuska (born 1761, died 1840 in Kamieniec Podolski),
was the daughter of
Stanislaw LUBOMIRSKI younger, and Izabela Czartoryski Lubomirska.
Painter, circa 1780, made a series of drawings; 1782, she married her cousin Seweryn Rzewuski
and was mother of Waclaw RZEWUSKI, junior.
Since 1817 or in 1819, KONSTANCJA RZEWUSKA lived in Podhorce; and after confiscation of
her son's property for participation in the November Uprising of 1831, she moved home in
Kamieniec Podolski, and she was living in scarcity.
Bogdan Hutten - Czapski
had met with the family of Dorothy Maria Leopoldina Hutten-Czapska in 1892.
She was the daughter of George and Josephine, and was born in Prague. Her mother came from the
highest aristocracy of the Roman Empire. Maria was a prominent figure who has registered in
history primarily as an editor collaborating with Paris 'Culture'. Also worked on biographies
of her family, written in collaboration with her brother Jozef Czapski / Joseph.
Dorothy Maria Leopoldina Czapska / Countess Hutten-Czapska, b. 1894 in Prague, died in 1981,
Maisons-Laffitte;
the granddaughter of
Emeryk Czapski / Emeric Hutten-Czapski
of the family who had a huge estates from Radziwill, around Minsk, in Curland, Lithuania and
Volhynia, acc. to Bogdan Graf von Hutten-Czapski, vol. 1-2, Berlin 1936.
Ferdinand Radziwill of the Polish Knights of Malta, has come after Bogdan Hutten-Czapski,
an old friend of the Prussian court and military.
The estate of Pryluki belonged to the Hutten - Czapskis was situated on Ptych river; a house of 1882
and terraced park.
Pryluki / Priluki ca 14 km south-west of the Minsk core, and 15 km west of
Koroliszczewiczi / Korolishchevici of the Konstantynowiczs; 13 km west of Gatovo / Hatowo, and 23 km
north-east of Kojdanow / Koidanov; south-west of Minsk in Belarus, on way to Dzierzynsk / Dzierhinsk /
Kojdanow / Koidanov.
Kuchcicze / Kuhtichi of Zawisza and the Radziwill family at the Minsk district; the palace
complex, the facade with stone accents.