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Antoni Stanisław Czetwertyński-Światopełk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antoni Stanisław Czetwertyński-Światopełk
Coat of armsPogoń Ruska
Born1748
Died1794 (age 46)
Warsaw
FamilyCzetwertyński
Spouse(s)Tekla Kampenhausen
Koleta Myszka-Chołoniewska h. Korczak
FatherWłodzimierz Światopełk-Czetwertyński
MotherTeresa Szampach-Bośniacka

Prince Antoni Stanisław Czetwertyński-Światopełk (1748–1794) was a nobleman (szlachcic) and politician in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Life and career

He was one of the Polish magnates who took the side of the Russian Empire, and a member of many Sejms, including the ones of 1772 and 1775, and the partition Sejm. He was a member of the commission negotiation the First Partition of Poland, an opponent of the Constitution of 3 May and a participant of the Confederation of Targowica. He was awarded the Order of Saint Stanislaw in 1785, and he was the Castellan of Przemyśl from 1790.

In the aftermath of the Warsaw Uprising during the Kościuszko Uprising, he was imprisoned by the Polish revolutionaries. On 28 June 1794, an angry mob stormed the prison, and he was hanged together with other people declared traitors, like bishop Ignacy Jakub Massalski. His family was smuggled to St. Petersburg, where his daughter Marie became a mistress of Alexander I of Russia.

Remembrance

Światopełk is one of the figures immortalized in Jan Matejko's 1891 painting, Constitution of May 3, 1791.


This page was last edited on 18 December 2021, at 06:10
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