Pakoslaw: Izydor Zakrzewski and Ignacy Wyssogota-Zakrzewski of Chocen - Joanna Grudzinska Romanov, the Duchess of Lowicz - Kasper Kiedrzynski of Bieganin and Marianna Arcichowska of Chodziez close to Margonin with the net to Marianna Ciecierska Skorzewska.
Strangely connected story about which I'm writing now,
with the current history of several countries in the 21st century.
It turns out that liberal sexual policy is the domain of Russian intelligence.
You must enter the keyword 'sex' or 'sexual' at this webpage. You will find
over 20 times a combination of history, genealogy, Freemasonry, Templars,
the Illuminati, globalists, Russian intelligence, with today's in 2020, LGBT activities.
Bieganin and Raszkow of Kiedrzynski; Gorzenski of Gutow; Sobotka of Wyssogota-Zakrzewski; Skorzewski of Margonin and Wyssogota-Zakrzewski in Gutow, Chocen, Koscian and Bialcz; Nostitz-Jackowski with Swiatopelk-Mirski, Skorzewski and Kiedrzynski - the Polish conspiracy and Illuminati.
A great criminal and political curiosity is that the witness of Adam Mickiewicz's
death in Istanbul in 1855 came from the Wilkowo Polskie - Przemet region.
Jan Boryslawski b. 1740, m. Aniela OWSIANY, b. ca 1745/1750.
The Jurki court in the Pniewy commune:
JAN Boryslawski was the owner in Ukraine, the Boryslaw district,
of Tustanowice. Tustanowice was situated in the Drohobycz district,
9 km south-west to Drohobycz.
Jan Boryslawski b. 1740, m. Aniela OWSIANY, b. ca 1745/1750; Aniela Owsiany, Boryslawska b. 1745/1750, was the sister to Feliks Owsiany, junior, b. ca 1745.
Jan Boryslawski, the PRZEMYSL official, married Owsiana.
We back to BORYSLAWSKI:
Jan Boryslawski married in 1766, Warsaw, to Aniela Owsiana.
Hutten-Czapski and Mielzynski - Owsiany in Wielichowo:
Bogdan Franciszek Serwacy Hutten-Czapski:
A note to above JAKUB Hutten-Czapski:
Pakoslaw east to RAWICZ - 10 km north-east to Stwolno of Feliks Cetkowski / Feliks
Centkowski, next the owner of Orpiszewek
[before him Jakub Kiedrzynski and his wife Bogdanska 2-voto Madalinska].
Pakoslaw of Izydor Wyssogota-Zakrzewski
[see Chocen close to Wloclawek].
Maksymilian Antoni Jan Mielzynski, born in 1738 in Laszczyn, the Rawicz County,
died 1799 near Pawlowice. Feliks Centkowski had relatives in Laszczyn.
Western Borderlands of Poland. Owsiany and his relatives Brebor:
Dluzyna - Wloszakowice - Bukowiec Gorny - Machcin:
Hutten-Czapski and Mielzynski with Owsiany in Wielichowo. Owsiany in 1885, in Kamieniec close to Wilanowo. Owsiany in Pacholewo [north-east to WARGOWO] with the Pradzynskis. Tucholka, Garczynski, Skorzewski line; Wybicki - Dega line; Wybicki - Skorzewski - Kiedrzynski branch and my family Pradzynski - Kiedrzynski - Nostitz-Jackowski in Pacholewo of the Pradzynskis, Wargowo of the Skorzewskis, Wola Wiazowa of the Pradzynskis, Wilkowo Polskie, Jedlno, Raszkow, Bieganin, Orpiszewek, Karsy, Sobotka. The German and Russian intelligence services.
Wargowo
- Count, Royal General-Major Andrzej Tomasz Skorzewski, born in 1674 in Wargowo,
close to Oborniki - d. 1740; with his grandson Jozef Skorzewski
who leased Raszkow, south to Pleszew in 1802, from the Kiedrzynskis.
Rajmund Skorzewski died in 1859 in Bucz, in the WOLSZTYN county, 9 km east to Przemet,
was the son of named JOZEF Skorzewski.
Copyright by Bogdan Konstantynowicz of Ursus-Warsaw, on 28 March 2020.
Maria Szymanowska in the 20s of the 19th century was constantly traveling around Europe.
However, during her return to Warsaw, she always returned to the Wolowski house at Grzybowska
Rd.
In 1828, he settled permanently in St. Petersburg. Then she also retired from concert life.
She died there in 1831 during a cholera epidemic.
Meanwhile, the house with the brewery still belonged to the Wolowski family [FRANKISTS].
After the death of Franciszek WOLOWSKI and his wife, they were inherited by their
grandchildren, among others Celina Szymanowska, wife of Adam Mickiewicz.
As determined by prof. Marek Kwiatkowski, "before the death of the poet's wife,
the inheritance process was not completed." It was not until 1858 - after 1855,
the death of Celina and Adam Mickiewicz - that their daughter, Maria Mickiewicz,
baptized with the name of her famous grandmother, received her assets in Warsaw.
She was the wife of Tadeusz Gorecki, a member of the Painting Academy in St. Petersburg.
Emil (Emilian) Bednarczyk (1812-1888) was the witness of the death of
Adam Mickiewicz in 1855.
Emil studied at the Polytechnic Institute in Warsaw. He fought in the Greater Poland
during the Uprising of 1848, and the January Uprising of 1863-1864; in
1866 he fought as a lieutenant. Since 1832 in France, worked close to Paris,
he was one of the first members of the Polish Democratic Society.
In the years 1833 - 1835 he was as an emissary in Galicia.
In 1853 stayed in
Constantinople, where he helped to General J. Wysocki. And he was a friend of
Adam Mickiewicz and witnessed his mysterious death. "November 26, 1855 Mickiewicz
woke up in the morning, he asked to give a cup of tea and fell asleep.
When at approx. 10 came to him Colonel Emil Bednarczyk, saw...".
Emil (Emilian) Bednarczyk (1812-1888) and his ancestors came from Dluzyna - a village
in the Przemecki Park. Here in the mid-nineteenth century began the history of the
House of Bednarczyk, ancestors of Anna Hudzik / Chudzik.
DLUZYNA lies 6 kilometres north of Wloszakowice, 19 km north-west of Leszno,
9 km south-east to PRZEMET;
14 km south-west to Wilkowo Polskie [Szoldrski + Poninski; Zamoyska-Kiedrzynska];
5 km south to BUCZ [Skorzewski];
22 km south to Wielichowo;
and 24 km south-west to Stary Bialcz [Wyssogota-Zakrzewski].
See -
TADEUSZ WOLANSKI [Illuminati - Courland + Pakosc] and Rajmund Skorzewski of Czerlejno /
Czerniejew / Czerniejew-Radomice, ie. Rajmund Jozef Jan Skorzewski, Count, b. 1791 in Nekla,
at the way from Kostrzyn to Wrzesnia.
Rajmund Skorzewski died in 1859 in Bucz, in the WOLSZTYN county, 9 km east to Przemet,
6 km south-west to Popowo Stare, 9 km south-west to WILKOWO POLSKIE of Szoldrski
and Zamoyska-Kiedzynska.
RAJMUND Skorzewski in 1823 married Marianna Balbina Seweryna Lipska.
Rajmund Skorzewski was the son of Jozef Skorzewski and Helena Lipska.
Jozef Skorzewski leased RASZKOW from the Kiedrzynskis.
Wargowo
-
Count, Royal General-Major Andrzej Tomasz Skorzewski, born in 1674 in Wargowo,
close to Oborniki - d. 1740. His grandson Jozef Skorzewski
leased Raszkow, south to Pleszew in 1802, from the Kiedrzynskis.
Rajmund Skorzewski died in 1859 in Bucz, in the WOLSZTYN county, 9 km east to Przemet,
was the son of named JOZEF Skorzewski.
Bucz, in the WOLSZTYN county -
[24 km south-east of Wolsztyn], 18 km south-west to STARY BIALCZ, 8 / 9 km east to
Przemet, 6 km south-west to Popowo Stare, 9 km south-west to WILKOWO POLSKIE of
Szoldrski and Zamoyska-Kiedzynska.
Jozef Skorzewski / Jozef Ignacy Skorzewski was the Gniezno official; Jozef Ignacy
Skorzewski leased Raszkow in 1802 from hands of Juljanna Arnold, the daughter of
Jakub Kiedrzynski; and from Helena Kiedrzynska widowed after death - bef. 1802 - of
Izydor Kiedrzynski in JEDLNO [my family].
BIALCZ / Stary Bialcz:
9 / 10 km east to Wilkowo Polskie;
16 km east-south-east to Wielichowo,
17 north-east to BUCZ;
7 km west to KOSCIAN;
10 km south to SEPNO.
And now we back to Wilkowo Polskie of Szoldrski [+ Adam Poninski, older and junior]
and of Zamoyska-Kiedrzynska, and to Stary BIALCZ of Izabela RADOMICKA,
m. in 1731 to Izydor Zakrzewski from Pakoslaw [b. ca 1710], east to Rawicz.
Ignacy Wyssogota Zakrzewski, b. 1745 in Stary Bialcz [not in Pakoslaw] and died in 1802
in Zelechow [he was living in CHOCEN close to Wloclawek], the first President of Warsaw,
the Poznan official in 1790-1795, 1787-1790, and in 1786-1787, MP, the Freemason,
was the son of
Izydor Zakrzewski [b. ca 1710], the SANTOK governor, and Izabella Radomicka,
the daughter of Wladyslaw Radomicki, the Poznan governor.
Stary Bialcz is situated north to Smigiel.
Izydor Zakrzewski [b. ca 1710], the SANTOK governor, m. Izabella Radomicka, the
daughter of Wladyslaw Radomicki, the Poznan governor. Izydor Zakrzewski [b. ca 1705/1715 -
died bef. 1775] was the son of
Andrzej ZAKRZEWSKI [b. ca 1670/1675 - 1738, the governor of SANTOK in the Great Poland]
and Franciszka Mielzynska, 1677 - 1764 [marriage ca 1699; she died in PAKOSLAW].
The grandson of
Aleksander Zakrzewski, b. ca 1640, d. bef. 1700;
and Marianna Suchorzewska;
Teresa Baranowska, died in 1682 + Maciej Mielzynski, b. in 1636, Niegolewo and he died in
April 1697 in Goscieszyn.
Czeslaw Bednarczyk, 1889 - 1980, ran the family chronicle, was born in Radomicko
[14 km east to DLUZYNA; 16 km south-east to BUCZ];
his parents Stephen Bednarczyk / Stefan Bednarczyk and Anastasia Skorupinska;
Stefan Bednarczyk / Stephen was involved in trade and moved (back probably!)
from the central Polish - around Lodz - to Radomicko ca 1888. Here he met
Anastasia Skorupinska. She was born 1860 in Radomicko.
Dluzyna is located 7 km east of Radomierz and north-west of Leszno,
close to ex-Polish border before 1793.
Radomicko north of Leszno, and 14 km east of above named Dluzyna.
Rydzyna of the Sulkowskis is located around 10 km south-east of above mentioned Leszno.
In the tradition of the family of Czeslaw Bednarczyk, he was a close relative of
Colonel Emilian Bednarczyk 1812 - 1888.
Emilian Bednarczyk 1812-1888, a soldier of the uprisings 1830/1 and 1848/9, 1863/4
- insurgent, a volunteer in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. An eyewitness to the
death of Adam Mickiewicz, buried in the cemetery in Krakow at Rakowice. Emilian Bednarczyk
was born around 1810 / 1812; awarded the Military Virtue.
The captain and commander in Pleszew in 1848;
the Baden infantry regiment of 1849; the Turkish troops in 1853.
The January Uprising in 1863. He died in Krakow in 1888.
Laurence Oliphant was the only child of Sir Anthony Oliphant (1793 - 1859),
a member of the Scottish landed gentry. Laurence spent his early childhood in Colombo
[Neuchatel and the FREEMASONRY],
and the Oliphant Estate in Nuwara Eliya.
In 1848 - 1849, he was in Europe,
1851 to Nepal, returned to Ceylon,
travel in Russia at the Black Sea in 1853
(Odessa ?; see below in 1855 on Adam Mickiewicz and Bednarczyk / Hudzik / Chudzik;
Zygmunt Milkowski / Theodore Thomas Jez b. 1824, 1855-1857 he was living in Constantinople,
then in 1858 he returned to London),
next - to 1861 Oliphant was secretary to Lord Elgin;
visited the Circassian coast during the Crimean War.
1861 Oliphant was appointed First Secretary of the British Legation in Japan,
a visit to Korea, where he discovered a Russian force;
met Alice le Strange, married in London, 1872.
"...Paris, May 30, 1848, meeting of the Society of Slavs. ... speaks Desprez.
When the French writer refers ... on Mickiewicz, at the place leaps
Leonard Chodzko:
'Mr. Mickiewicz authority is more than suspect, as we believe it all he is a Russian spy!'
Chodzko was not a dull fanatic, he has a reputation ...
He was written in French - the work of Polish history and literature (two-volume
history of the Legions, biographies Kosciuszko, Pulaski et al.), Editor, and what
is important: he was a friend - since college - of Mickiewicz in Vilnius,
activist of the Filaret Society and publisher of the two-volume Mickiewicz Poetry in 1828.
Shocking opinion, which gave, echoed, unfortunately, to our countrymen.
Animosity towards earlier beloved poet began to grow after Mickiewicz
started in the Towianski movement;
because the "Master" Andrzej Towianski also, and even more, was deemed to be an agent of
Russia. ... Rumors about Towianski appeared shortly after his arrival in Paris, behind him
... In fact, the way of the future "Master" Andzej Towianski was similar
to the way of the future 'Prophet' Adam Mickiewicz, and even a few times with him crossed.
A reconstruction of the biography. Towianski was born ... on 1 January 1799 in
Antoszwince (the name of the farm is also present in the plural), was given to
schools in Vilnius, ... made friend with Ferdinand Gutt, ... on this friendship has left
a shocking record Zbigniew Krasinski, dated 19 March (April), 1848 letter to
Delfina. Gutt's father was a pharmacist. It seems that demanded from him poison
to someone, apparently Wittgenstein that had married to Radziwill
(Stefania Radziwill Wittgenstein).
Old Gutt did not want to bring out the poison, it seems that it was Towianski who advised to bring out the poison... Old Gutt disappeared. I have not known what happened to him, and finally discovered that his body was carved on pieces, and thrown into the river. ... this terrible murder. ... The beginning of the mission of Towianski dated on May 11, 1828. It seems that was in Vilnius and in the neighborhood, but the result was rather unexpected. Edward Wolodko wrote about it in 1907, in the "Library of Warsaw", in the article 'Memories of Towianski' ...
Here are a result of denunciation of Towianski by another neighbor, and Towianski was arrested and subjected to a psychiatric examination. ... admits Wolodko - these studies, however, killed of Towianski movement in the eyes of the residents of Vilnius. ... "Master" Andrzej choose somewhere else.
In 1832 Towianski went to St. Petersburg, he met with the Illuminatis, a heirs of Grabianko,
but it does not seem that it is only now formed his doctrine.
He tried to convert, so the St. Petersburg police forced him to leave the Russian capital.
Yet in 1834 he went to Carlsbad, he was also in Dresden, where he met Odyniec,
which inquired about the exact details of Mickiewicz life. Thanks to Odyniec,
he met 'Dziady'...
Towianski also met and charmed General Skrzyneckiego ... In 1837, after his father's death,
he returned to the family farm ... For the second time, as we know, ...
on May 23, 1839 before leaving, he wrote "constitution" - a set of moral
rules for the peasants, he visited his mother, who settled in Vilnius ...
also visited the appropriate authorities.
On June 28, 1840 received a passport valid for one year.
After arriving at the West, Towianski tried to entrap Skrzyneckiego again - but this
time did not work out. There were a lot more serious charges - the destruction of
Mickiewicz. In March 1845 the Brussels-writing "White Eagle" published an
anonymous article titled 'The Intrigue of the St. Petersburg crowned'.
The content gives '...life and works of Adam Mickiewicz', which should rewrite the relevant passages: 'Anticipating that the cathedral of Slavic literatures at the College de France can be used to the detriment of Russia, St. Petersburg government decided to prevent this with the help of his agent, Towianski. The goal has been achieved...'.
The accusation of spying, Zygmunt Krasinski slipped in a letter to Trentowski on 10 III
1849: 'The Towianski movement and demagogy of our Paris...'. ...
To conclude this section, let us add that suspicion of Krasinski and other immigrants coincided with the French suspicions. As proof, we quote the letter of Duchatel, the Minister of the Interior, to the Minister of Enlightenment - Villemain ...'
...can assume that Towianski is actually Russian secret agent.
For several months ... they develop an animated action, some crisscross of France,
the others set their meeting in Switzerland or Belgium, try to establish contacts
with the former Imperial Army soldiers remaining in active service...'.
... it was introduced by Becu Joseph / Jozef Becu, brother of the doctor known for 'Dziady'.
Krasinski noted in a letter to Dolphina Potocka on 26 November 1841:
Towianski actually knew the doctor Becu
... Zygmunt Krasinski on June 15, 1851 sent a letter to Count Zamoyski, in which he
wrote of the ... rumors about "Master" like the Russian spy...".
Aniela Owsiany, Boryslawska b. 1745/1750, was the sister to
Feliks Owsiany, junior, b. ca 1745.
Jan Owsiany born ca 1807, was the son of JAKUB OWSIANY, b. ca 1780.
Jan was the railway clerk in 1841-1846, an official of School
Directorate in 1846.
Feliks Owsiany junior, b. 1745, probably was the father to Jakub Owsiany,
b. 1780 of Wilno, aft. 1831 he was living in Koscian county.
PNIEWY -
is a village 12 km north-west to GROJEC, south to Warsaw.
JURKI - 3 km east to Pniewy, and north-west to GROJEC. South to Warsaw. But we know on
Chobienice and Grojec close to Chobienice, in the western Great Poland, too
[Grojec Wielki 3 km west to Chobienice].
Compare on
Stanislaw Erazm SOKOLOWSKI (1806-1869), the owner of Kepka Szlachecka [8 km east to CHOCEN]
and Zegocin [Zegocin north to PLESZEW !, and near CZERMIN],
and his wife Franciszka Lutostanski (1807 - 1884).
And about WLADYSLAW Sokolowski, b. 1836,
was living close to Grojec, and he was the member of the Agricultural Society of the Kingdom
of Poland in 1861 - with Wolowski, Szymanowski and Leopold Kronenberg.
Wladyslaw Sokolowski lived in Biejkowska Wola by the PILICA river, south to GROJEC.
In 1880 - Wladyslaw Sokolowski was the owner of Bedziechow, from hands of KIEDRZYNSKI.
His parents:
Walenty Sokolowski b. ca 1799 in Juchnowiec Koscielny, 21 km south of Bialystok;
studied in Warsaw, died in 1851 - Warsaw, married in WARSAW in 1830 to
Eufrozyna Katarzyna Cissowska b. ca 1811 - Radomin, east of GOLUB DOBRZYN, d. 1851.
Walenty Sokolowski born in 1799 probably
was the son of KAZIMIERZ SOKOLOWSKI b. ca 1750 +
Magdalena Mieroslawska b. 1769, d. 1829,
the daughter of Antoni Mieroslawski b. ca 1740, d. 1797, the official in Inowroclaw,
and in Kruszwica, judge in Inowroclaw, the Royal Court official
+
1st wife Marianna Radonska b. ca 1745, d. 1775,
+ he married bef. 1779 2nd to Ksawera Franciszka Uminska.
Jan Boryslawski married in 1766, Warsaw, to Aniela Owsiana. Jan had the daughter
Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska / Marianna Gasiorowska (Boryslawska) / Marianna Boryslawska,
b. ca 1767, m. twice, 2nd to Leon Gasiorowski, the Royal Court official in 1765,
with the daughter
Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840 married Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846.
Jan Boryslawski b. 1740, m. Aniela OWSIANY, b. ca 1745/1750; Aniela Owsiany,
Boryslawska b. 1745/1750, was the sister to Feliks Owsiany, junior, b. ca 1745.
Above mentioned Jan Boryslawski was the owner of Jurki / Wola Przeczlawska.
In 1784 Jurki was bought by Jan Boryslawski - Sreniawa, a chamberlain of the Polish court
in 1780. Jan married on September 21, 1766, at the Church of the Holy Cross in Warsaw
to Aniela Owsiany, the daughter of Feliks Owsiany, the Wilkomierz commander.
Jan Boryslawski quickly sold his possessions to Pruszak (in 1788).
At the beginning of the 19th century, the property belonged to Tomasz Tadeusz Pruszak,
the son of Jozef PRUSZAK and Elzbieta Piaskowski Pruszak.
Mentioned Jan Boryslawski, the PRZEMYSL official, married Owsiana / Owsiany.
Jan Boryslawski had the granddaughter Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840
[Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska / Marianna Gasiorowska,
born in 1785 or in 1793], married Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846.
Named Jan Boryslawski b. 1740, died 1796 [or in 1809] in Mamoty in the CZERMIN parish,
close to PLESZEW and near to Broniszewice [see Stadnicki, Wezyk, Erasmus Mycielski,
Bardzki, Kiedrzynski]. His wife Aniela Owsiany, Boryslawska b. 1745/1750.
Jan Boryslawski gone to the Council of the Podole province like the envoy of
Duke Adam Czartoryski [after 1780]. Jan after the partitions of Poland
was living in the Czermin parish, in Mamoty - 2 km to CZERMIN;
and 10 km north-west to PLESZEW.
Jan's father - Stefan Boryslawski b. ca 1715, married to Zofia Tustanowska b. ca 1720.
Stefan had 2 sons:
1. Jan Boryslawski, ca 1740 - 1796 / 1809.
Jan had a son Antoni Boryslawski, 1769-1847, the Royal court official.
2.
Jerzy Boryslawski, supporter
of the Stanislaw August Poniatowski, the King, in 1764,
with the Ruthenian province. The member of the Great Parliament.
Zofia Tustanowska married bef. 1740. Stefan Boryslawski
b. ca 1700/1715. They were living in Tustanowice.
Boryslawski - Kiedrzynski branch:
A.
BORYSLAWSKI Tadeusz, b. ca 1760 [or after 1760/1780 ?], married Magdalena Kiedrzynska
[the 2nd] b. ca 1774 [?] / 1780 / ca 1795,
with
Antoni Onufry Boryslawski, b. ca 1819 / bef. 1815, a clerk in Kalisz,
m. 1845 in Kalisz, to Franciszka Katarzyna Niezychowska, b. 1819 in Smaszkow.
Compare:
Stanislaw Sulimierski, the owner of Nowiny / Nowina close to Lask, Dobra and Widawa,
married to Rozalia Wezyk, 2nd time to Anna Paprocka, with:
Faustyna Sulimierska, b. 1801, m. in 1824 in Cieszecin, to Jozef Bernard Wysocki b. 1792;
Cieszecin is located ca 8 km north to Wieruszow;
Jozef Bernard was the son of Wojciech WYSOCKI and Magdalena Kiedrzynski [the 1st],
b. ca 1774.
B.
Michal Bajkowski, the owner of Czepy [CZEPOW - 12 km north to UNIEJOW,
north-east to TUREK], an official in Kalisz [south-west to TUREK], married in 1785,
to Franciszka Kiedrzynska, the daughter of Jakub Kiedrzynski, the official in Kalisz
[born in WILCZKOW], and Brygida Bardzki [see Walknowski - Mielzynski branch],
with children:
1.
Jozefa Bajkowska, b. ca 1786, d. 1826, m. Stanislaw Uminski d. ca 1811,
of Bronow [close to PLESZEW !], the 2nd she was married in 1812, Leon Witalis Chmielewski,
1786-1840,
the son of Antoni CHMIELEWSKI and Eleonora Boryslawski, b. ca 1750, the owner of
Zimotki [east to TUREK; close to Przykona and north to DOBRA !].
Stanislaw's Uminski the 1st wife was TEKLA b. 1775.
Zimotki is a village in the Przykona area, within the Turek County.
2.
Roch Jozef Ludwik Bajkowski, b. 1790, the owner of Fulki and Kalow,
m. Jozefata Kossobudzka, born in Fulki in 1791.
Czepy / CZEPOW: 12 km north to UNIEJOW.
Above Stanislaw Uminski d. ca 1811, of Bronow, 7 km north-east to BIEGANIN
of Kiedrzynski and north to Gorzenko [we know Bronow 2nd east to UNIEJOW,
and south-east to named above CZEPOW] -
Stanislaw Uminski b. 1760, d. 1811, m. + 1st Tekla b. 1775;
his sisters:
Kazimiera Uminska d. 1786;
Ksawera Franciszka Uminska + Antoni Mieroslawski,
and his brothers:
Jozef Uminski d. 1805, of LUCK;
Antoni Uminski d. 1813 + Marianna Byszewski;
Konstanty Uminski.
Mentioned Antoni Uminski d. 1813 + Marianna Byszewski had daughters:
Marianna Uminska b. 1799, d. bef. 1832 + Brodzki of Fundowo ? close to WARTA;
and Jozefa
and also Tekla Uminska Kalinowski of KALISZ.
Mentioned Stanislaw Uminski was the son of
Kazimierz Uminski b. ca 1730, of Ruszki;
in 1746 bought Wysocin Wiekszy and Wysocinek; official in Brzesc KUJAWSKI;
m. Teresa Besiekierski d. 1798;
and grandson of
Laurenty (Wawrzyniec) Uminski, b. ca 1700, who was the owner
in the Kujawy: Ruszki, Krotoszyn, Pocierzyn, Wysocie / Wysocin.
Pocierzyn 8 km west to BEDKOWO; west to BRZEZIE and west to Wloclawek;
bef 1750 the estate also included Krotoszyn and Ruszki in the Koscielna Wies parish;
the owners:
ca 1750 - Kazimierz Uminski and Teresa Uminska.
His descendant - Onufry Uminski, grandfather of Wladyslaw Uminski (1865-1954), writer.
Jan Boryslawski married in 1766, Warsaw, to Aniela Owsiana.
Jan had the daughter Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska / Marianna Gasiorowska (Boryslawska) /
Marianna Boryslawska, b. ca 1767, m. twice, 1st or maybe the 2nd to
Leon Gasiorowski, the Royal Court official in 1765,
with the daughter Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840 married
Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846.
And Jozef January Bninski [1787-1846] married Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska /
Marianna Gasiorowska [born in 1785 or in 1793] (MARIA GASIOROWSKA),
the granddaughter of
Jan Boryslawski b. 1740,
died 1796 in Mamoty in the CZERMIN parish, close to PLESZEW and near to
Broniszewice
[see Stadnicki, Wezyk, Erasmus Mycielski, Bardzki, Kiedrzynski],
and of [marriage in Warsaw in 1766] Aniela OWSIANY, b. ca 1745/1750;
Aniela Owsiany, Boryslawska b. 1745/1750, was the sister to Feliks Owsiany,
junior, b. ca 1745.
Jan Boryslawski gone to the Council of the Podole province like
the envoy of Duke Adam Czartoryski.
After the partitions of Poland he was living in the Czermin parish;
in 1796 in
(Mamoty - 2 km to CZERMIN;
and 10 km north-west to PLESZEW;
10 north-east to Orpiszewek of the Kiedrzynskis;
8 km south-west to BRONISZEWICE;
12 km west to GRODZISKO - see the Kiedrzynskis)
Mamoty named Jan Boryslawski died - he was the manager of an estate.
Jan Boryslawski married in 1766, Warsaw,
to Owsiana.
Jan had 2 children:
1.
Marianna Boryslawska b. ca 1767, m. twice, 2nd to
Leon Gasiorowski, the Royal Court official in 1765,
with the daughter Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840 married
Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846,
with the son Konstanty Bninski, 1811-1889.
2.
unknown Boryslawski, 1769-1847, the Royal Court official.
Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska / Marianna Gasiorowska (nee Boryslawska), b. ca 1767,
was the daughter of Jan Boryslawski and Aniela OWSIANY;
wife of Leon Gasiorowski
and mother of
Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840 married
Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846,
with children:
1. Constantin Bninski / Konstanty Bninski, b. 1811,
2.
Jan Piotr Karol Bninski b. 1818 m. Marya Mielzynska,
3.
Ignacy Jozef Bninski b. 1820, m. Emilia Franciszka Boleslawa Regina Lacka,
4.
Anna Bninska b. 1828 m. Alfred Cielecki 1821-1892, son of Stanislaw Cielecki 1789-1855
and the grandson of ANDRZEJ CIELECKI born ca 1740.
Remember on
a son and daughters of Kazimierz Uminski b. ca 1730:
1. Stanislaw Uminski, 1760 - 1811, served at the Royal Court + m. 1st Tekla b. 1775;
m. 2nd to a granddaughter of Jakub Kiedrzynski - the great-granddaughter of
Andrzej Kiedrzynski of WILCZKOW, b. ca 1715/1720.
Brief explanation -
Michal Bajkowski the owner of Czepy, official in Kalisz, married in 1785, to
Franciszka Kiedrzynska, daughter of Jakub Kiedrzynski official in Kalisz,
and Brygida Bardzki,
with the daughter Jozefa Bajkowska Uminska, b. ca 1786, d. 1826,
m. Stanislaw Uminski, born 1760, d. ca 1811, of Bronow, 2nd she was married in 1812.
And we know on Leon Witalis Chmielewski, 1786-1840, the son of
Antoni Chmielewski and Eleonora Boryslawski b. ca 1755, the owner of Zimotki.
2. Kazimiera Uminska died in 1786;
3.
Ksawera Franciszka Uminska + Antoni Mieroslawski; that is Ksawera Uminska b. ca 1750
- ca 1800 + Antoni Mieroslawski ca 1740 - ca 1810 [see the dictator of the
January Uprising in 1863].
In 1782 in Skiereszewo
- 5 km west to GNIEZNO;
Franciszek Petrykowski had a daughter with godmother -
Marja Boryslawska b. ca 1757/1760.
In 1787 in Drachowo,
14 km south to GNIEZNO;
at half way from NIECHANOWO to Malczewo;
8 km north to MIERZEWO;
9 km north-east to JARZABKOWO;
Stanislaw Trzcinski had a son with godparents:
above Franciszek Potrykowski / Petrykowski, junior, of
Drachowka, and Boryslawska [above MARJA].
TERESA Psarska (ca 1690 - aft. 1720),
the daughter of Aleksander PSARSKI and Marianna Zaborska;
Teresa married Lukasz Boryslawski (ca 1690 - aft. 1720).
Jan had the daughter Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska / Marianna Gasiorowska (Boryslawska) /
Marianna Boryslawska, b. ca 1767, m. twice, 1st or maybe the 2nd to
Leon Gasiorowski, the Royal Court official in 1765,
with the daughter
Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840 married
Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846.
Maria Gasiorowska Bninska had children:
1. Constantin / Konstanty Bninski, b. 1811,
2. Jan Piotr Karol Bninski, b. 1818 m. above mentioned Marya Mielzynska
[Jan Piotr BNINSKI married Maria MIELZYNSKA, born 1821 in Kobnitz / CHOBIENICE,
close to Babimost - she died in Warsaw in 1878],
3. Ignacy Jozef Bninski b. 1820, m. Emilia Franciszka Boleslawa Regina Lacka,
4. Anna Bninska b. 1828 m. Alfred Cielecki 1821-1892, son of Stanislaw Cielecki 1789-1855
and the grandson of ANDRZEJ CIELECKI born ca 1740 [more below !].
Jan Boryslawski married in 1766, Warsaw, to Aniela Owsiana.
Jan had the daughter Maryanna Gabryela Gasiorowska / Marianna Gasiorowska (Boryslawska) /
Marianna Boryslawska, b. ca 1767, m. twice, 1st or maybe the 2nd to
Leon Gasiorowski, the Royal Court official in 1765,
with the daughter Maria Gasiorowska, 1793-1840 married
Jozef January Bninski, 1787-1846.
Aniela Boryslawska b. 1745/1750 - 1794, was the daughter of FELIKS OWSIANY, senior, b. ca 1700/1702, the WILKOMIERZ official.
Aniela Owsiany, Boryslawska b. 1745/1750, was the sister to Feliks Owsiany, junior, b. ca 1745. Marianna WAWRZYNIAK ie. Marianna Owsianna / Marianna Owsiany b. 1785, married in 1808, was the daughter of Feliks Owsiany, JUNIOR, b. ca 1745, and Marianna was the granddaughter of Feliks Owsiany SENIOR, b. ca 1700/1702.
Aniela Boryslawska was the aunt to Marianna Wawrzyniak. Feliks Owsiany, senior, b. ca 1702, d. ca 1752. Feliks senior had 2 children: Feliks Owsiany junior b. ca 1745, and mentioned Aniela Boryslawska, b. 1745/1750.
Above Feliks Owsiany, b. ca 1702, d. ca 1752, the Wilkomierz official,
married Barbara.
He came from Adam Owsiany, the LIDA official, in 1631, 1635, 1641.
Adam's relative -
Samuel Owsiany, d. after 1621,
the son of Jan Boguszewicz Owsiany, the secretary of the King.
And Krzysztof Owsiany, the Lida official.
See:
Taboryszki by the Meraczanka river,
was the Owsiany estate in the 16th century.
Owsiany Jan, the OLYKA official.
Liutgarda Avsianaite (Owsiana).
Owsiany, Aleksander, Jozef, in 1895, Kukiszki.
Owsiany Stanislaw b. 01.05.1888 in Zok.
Owsiany in Milaniszki, close to Orany.
In 1740/1741, Aleksy Owsiany, a monk in LIDA.
Mentioned Marianna Owsianna / Marianna Owsiany b.
1785, married in 1808, in Koscian, to Andrzej Wawrzyniak b. 1782,
with a daughter
Barbara Wawrzyniak b. 1815,
married in 1841, in Koscian, to Stanislaw Kasztelan, b. 1816, d. 1884,
with a daughter
Katarzyna Kasztelan b. 1851.
Katarzyna born in Lagiewniki - 7 km east to Konojad.
Konojad - 19 km north to WILKOWO POLSKIE of SZOLDRSKI and
Zamoyska-Kiedrzynska; north to KRZAN.
Katarzyna married in 1884 in Konojad [here also the
OWSIANYs], to Juliusz Schubert, born 1859 in
Koscian, the son of
Ferdinand Schubert b. 1835, and of Elisabeth Franke.
Katarzyna had the son Walenty Schubert b. 1885, married
in 1910 in Lubin, to Jadwiga Rachmajda, 1879-1952.
The SCHUBERT came from KOSCIAN, from August Schubert + Elisabeth Scholz.
See -
Meyza vel Mocek b. 1793,
the daughter of Pawel MEYZA and Dorota Owsiana vel Smoczyk;
Meyza married to Szymon Owsiany in 1811.
In 1781, suffragan of Poznan, Wladyslaw Walknowski managed Wielichowo
because the Bishops of Poznan were the owners of Wielichowo;
Gradowice- 6 km north-west to Wielichowo; Trzcinica - 6 km north-east to Wielichowo;
Debsko - 5 km west to Wielichowo; MOKRZEC; LUBNICA - 4 km east to
Gradowice; Wielichow - 2 km east to Wielichowo.
Wielichowo and Wielichow ca 1840 belonged to Mikolaj Mielzynski.
Mikolaj Mielzynski / Mikolaj Gorgoni Mielzynski, Count, 1780-1842,
born in Rabin, east of KOSCIAN; died in Karczew, close to Otwock.
His parents:
Count Maksymilian Antoni Jan Mielzynski, 1738-1799 + Konstancja Hutten-Czapska,
1749-1813
[Maksymilian Antoni had a sister - Krystyna Mielzynska, b. 1736, m.
Jozef Wojciech Sczaniecki.
And next sister Zofia Mielzynska, 1741-1771, m. Franciszek Stanislaw Kostka
Hutten-Czapski
{the son of Ignacy Hutten-Czapski, 1700-1746 + Teofila Konopacka, 1680-1733}
1725-1802,
with two sons:
Ignacy Hutten-Czapski b. 1770 and Franciszek Hutten-Czapski, b. ca 1770].
The grandparents:
a. Andrzej Mielzynski, the Kcynia official, 1698-1771 +
Anna Petronela Bninska, 1720-1771;
b. Jakub Hutten-Czapski, b. ca 1700 + Rozalia Ewa Hutten-Czapska, 1715-1769.
The great-grandparents:
1. Piotr Hutten-Czapski, the Pomorze official, b. ca 1680/1685 - the father of named JAKUB.
Piotr Aleksander Czapski (1680/1685 - 1736/1737), the Pomorze official,
was the father to Jan Ansgary and to Tomasz Czapski, the KNYSZYN official;
and to EWA ROZALIA.
Jakub was the son of Piotr's second wife Konstancja.
2. Krzysztof Mielzynski, 1670-1721, the son of Maciej Mielzynski and Teresa Baranowska
[the net to Walknowski - Bardzki - Kiedrzynski of Orpiszewek - Arnold of Raszkow].
Krzysztof was the father of named Andrzej Mielzynski, the Kcynia official.
RABIN lies 12 kilometres north of Krzywin, 19 km east of Koscian.
Above Piotr Aleksander Hutten-Czapski, b. 1685, d. 1737, the GDANSK governor,
was the son of
Franciszek Miroslaw Hutten-Czapski + Zofia Hutten-Czapska.
PIOTR was the brother of Jan Chryzostom Hutten-Czapski;
and Franciszek Tomasz Hutten-Czapski.
his father -
Jozef Napoleon Kazimierz Hutten-Czapski, b. 1797 - d. 1852 in Smogulec +
Eleonora Mielzynska;
his grandfather
Jozef Grzegorz Longin Hutten-Czapski, 1760 - 1810
(Jozef Grzegorz Longin Czapski was brother of
Mikolaj Adrian Joachim Hutten-Czapski, Count, 1753 - 1833,
who was father of
Franciszek Ignacy Dionizy Hutten-Czapski, 1797 - 1862,
and
Antonina Skorzewski
[Antonina Skorzewski / Css Antonina Barbara Skorzewska, nee Hutten-Czapska, 1802 - 1872
in Kretkow, was the wife of Antoni Beniamin Bartlomiej Skorzewski, b. 1803 in Nekla.
Above Antoni Beniamin Bartlomiej Skorzewski was the son of
Jozef SKORZEWSKI and Helena Lipska.
Jozef Skorzewski / Jozef Ignacy Skorzewski leased RASZKOW from the Kiedrzynskis.
Mentioned Jozef Ignacy Skorzewski, b. 1757 in Komorze, 4 km west to Nowe Miasto by Warta.
Son of Michal Skorzewski, 1707 - ca 1789 and Ludwika Czapska-Hutten.
Michal Skorzewski was the son of Count, General-major
Andrzej Tomasz Skorzewski and Dorota CHOINSKA, b. ca 1670];
and grandfather of
Matylda Fabianna Jadwiga Osiecimska;
Kazimierz Antoni Fabian Hutten-Czapski,
and Stanislaw Hutten-Czapski 1837 - 1884 in Paris);
and his great-grandfather
General Antoni Michal Hutten-Czapski, (ca 1725) 1725-1792
[the brother to Franciszek Stanislaw Kostka Czapski Hutten born 1725],
great-great-grandfather
Ignacy Hutten-Czapski, 1699 - 1745.
Franciszek Stanislaw Kostka Czapski Hutten born 1725 (ca 1725)
(son of above mentioned Ignacy Hutten-Czapski, b. ca 1699 / 1700,
who was brother of
Franciszek Hutten-Czapski [m. Katarzyna Skorzewska],
Jozef Piotr Hutten-Czapski,
and Teresa Pawlowska),
d. 1802 in Warsaw;
his children:
a.
Maria Hutten-Czapska, b. 1760, m. Gen.-Major Mikolaj Adrian Joachim Hutten-Czapski
of Bukowiec, in 1804 Count,
with children:
1.
Franciszek Ignacy Dionizy Hutten-Czapski, b. 1797;
2.
mentioned above Antonina Skorzewski;
b.
Anna Hutten-Czapski, b. ca 1765, ca 1787/1790, m. to Jozef Oskierka
[Anna Hutten-CZAPSKI b. ca 1765, the granddaughter of Augustyn Dzialynski, 1715 - 1759.
Augustyn Dzialynski, the Wschowa official in 1742-1743, the governor of Kalisz in 1750-1758; Augustyn Dzialynski in 1730 - the owner of PAKOSC; Kornik, Koscielec, Dzialyn,
Konarzew, Sokolow and Zakrzew.
Augustyn married Anna Radomnicka of Inowroclaw, with 4 daughters and 2 sons:
Ignacy Dzialynski
and
Ksawery Dzialynski; both of the sons owned Koscielec near to PAKOSC.
Anna Czapski married Jozef Oskierka, the son of
Antoni Oskierka b. ca 1740, and Teresa Eperyaszy.
Antoni Oskierka was the son of Ludwik Gerwazy Oskierka, 1710 - 1770 and Teresa Tyzenhauz.
And the grandson of Antoni Oskierka, SENIOR, 1670-1734 {see line to
Miezonka of the Konstantynowiczs from hands of Radziwill in
1842 until 1918 - my family} and Zofia
Stadnicka-Kolenda];
c.
Ignacy, born 1770,
d. Franciszek Hutten-Czapski, b. ca 1770;
e.
Karol Hutten-Czapski, b. in Minsk [Belarus] in 1777 - d. 1836, m.
Fabianna Obuchowicz [he was leaseholder of Miezonka in 1832]
(his son - Emeryk Hutten-Czapski, b. 1828);
f.
Stanislaw Hutten-Czapski, 1779-1844, m. Zofia Obuchowicz, Colonel under Napoleon.
Bogdan Franciszek Serwacy Hutten-Czapski / Bogdan Francis Servatius Hutten-Czapski,
b. 1851, d. 1937,
in 1890 negotiated with Pope Leo XIII end of the Kulturkampf in Germany;
he was friend with the Cardinals of the Vatican;
persuaded the German general staff to support the Bolsheviks (1916 - 1917)
and in the independent Poland (since 1918) was the president of the Polish Association
of the Knights of Malta.
His father
Jozef Napoleon Kazimierz Hutten-Czapski, 1797 - 1852 /
Joseph Napoleon Hutten-Czapski:
in November Uprising of 1831,
on December 14, 1831 on the English ship sailed to (January 1832) Ireland,
to Dublin; the Masonic lodges friends obtained for him a French passport in the name of
Joseph Chapman at the beginning of 1833;
1833 - 1837 Czapski traveled from Paris to Switzerland, where he and others young
revolutionaries founded 'Young Europe' on April 15, 1834, including the Young Italy,
Young Germany and Young Poland.
Also he traveled to Italy, Algeria, Spain and London; acc. to H. Koziel, in
1841 he went on a false passport as an Irishman O'Brien to Germany to Munich,
Augsburg and Frankfurt.
The republican conspirator, a close collaborator of Giuseppe Mazzini.
Aleksander Dominik Mielzynski, b. 1813 in Baszkow, the Krotoszyn County, died in 1885
in Turin, Italy;
was the son of Mikolaj Gorgoni Mielzynski and Brygida Szczaniecka;
husband of Katarzyna Potulicka of Wiecbork; father of Wladyslaw Mielzynski.
Above Mikolaj Gorgoni Mielzynski, b. 1780, d. 1842 in Karczew, the Otwock County, son of
Maksymilian Antoni Jan Mielzynski {born in 1738 in Laszczyn, the Rawicz County,
died 1799 near Pawlowice}, and Konstancja
[Konstancja Mielzynska nee Hutten-Czapska, b. 1749, d. 1813, was the daughter of
Jakub Hutten-Czapski of Brest region in BELARUS - the son of Piotr Hutten-Czapski
+ Rozalia Ewa Hutten-Czapska the daughter of Piotr Aleksander Hutten- Czapski];
Mikolaj Gorgoni Mielzynski was brother of Stanislaw Kostka Mielzynski and Jozefa Kozminska.
Baszkow - 4 km north to the Prussian border, 1684 bought by Rafal Leszczynski;
in 1696 belonged to his son Stanislaw then King of Poland, with villages:
Dlugoleka, Rogozewo, Bestwin, Rebiechow, Sielec, Ruda, Borownica, to 1736;
next to son of August II - duke Aleksander Sulkowski in 1741, but since 1762 to his son
August Sulkowski, who sold Baszkow to Maksymilian Mielzynski in 1791 (the
Mielzynskis to 1826);
next owners - Aleksander Mielzynski and Mikolaj Mielzynski in 1828 / 1829.
In 1779 Baszkow was hired by Antoni Madalinski, General in 1794;
in 1799, Maksymilian Mielzynski died, who was the father of Stanislaw;
Stanislaw Mielzynski taken Pawlowice, Poniec, Laszczyn and Golancz.
Mikolaj Mielzynski - Zytowiecko, Leka Mala, Karczewo, Baszkow.
Katarzyna taken Rabin.
In 1800 Stanislaw Mielzynski m. Prowidencja Honorata Zaremba, the
daughter of Elzbieta Radolinska. In 1848 and 1863 in Baszkow was centre of insurrections.
Heinrich XIII von Reuss ca 1860 bought (?) Baszkow.
In 1813 here was born Aleksander Dominik Mielzynski; his son Wladyslaw Mielzynski b. 1848
in Wroclaw; his son was Wlodzimierz Mielzynski b. 1877 in Roskosz, the Lublin Voivodeship.
Unknown Miss Brebor born in 1796,
the daughter of Carol Brebor (Breborowicz) and Jadwiga Grygiel.
She was married to Jan Nepomucen Dudek in 1819.
Unknown Miss Brembor (Brebor) b. 1799, the daughter of Carolus
BREBOR and Hedwigis Grygiel. She was married to Jan Nepomucen (Joannes) Dudek in 1819.
Marianna Brebor b. in February 1796, the daughter of
Carol Brebor (Breborowicz), born in November 1766 in Wielichowo,
married in November 1789, in Wielichowo, to Jadwiga Grygiel, born 1767 in Gradowice,
6 km north to Wielichowo. She d. in 1828 in Gradowice, north-west to
Wielichowo.
The wedding in November 1819, in Wielichowo, of Jan Nepomucen Dudek, born
in 1789 in Lubnica, 3 km east to Gradowice, north to Wielichowo;
he d. 1867 in Lubnica close to Wielichowo.
His parents:
Jan Dudek, 1748 - 1818, m. Urzulla Hanza (Hauza), 1758-1818.
Szimon Piechota, 1843-1879, married to Wiktoria Grygiel, 1848-1923.
We back to MACIEJ Mielzynski, 1733 - 1793, the owner of CHOBIENICE,
and daughters of Maciej Mielzynski (1636 or born 1638-1697) and TERESA:
1. Zofia Anna m. Adam Kozminski, official in Kalisz;
2.
Ludwika MIELZYNSKA, 1st married Rafal Tworzyjanski, official in Wschowa,
2nd to Adam Poninski [ILLUMINATI family];
3. Franciszka Mielzynska, m. Andrzej Zakrzewski / Andrzej Wyssogota - Zakrzewski.
Maciej Mielzynski (1636 or born 1638-1697) m. Katarzyna MYCIELSKA GORZYCKA MIELZYNSKA.
MACIEJ MIELZYNSKI m. 3rd in Pawlowice in 1684 to Katarzyna Mycielska, the
daughter of Krzysztof MYCIELSKI and Teresa Grodziecka;
KATARZYNA was the widow after Adam Gorzycki.
They had children:
1.
Elzbieta Mielzynska, m. Franciszek Wessel, official in Zakroczym;
2.
Urszula MIELZYNSKA + Antoni Walknowski
ie.
Urszula Wierusz-Walknowska MIELZYNSKA, died in 1743;
URSZULA Walknowska Mielzynska was the half-sister of ANNA GORZYCKA.
Urszula was the mother of Owidiusz Wierusz-Walknowski - the husband of BRYGIDA BARDZKA
[BRYGIDA BARDZKA was the daughter of Wojciech Marek Bardzki d. 1770]
and Brygida married second to Jakub KIEDRZYNSKI junior.
Jakub Kiedrzynski from Kalisz, born in WILCZKOW, was the son of Andrzej Kiedrzynski
born ca 1715/1720; Jakub was the owner of Orpiszewek [Jakub 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.
Brygida Bardzka married 1st to Owidiusz Wierusz Walknowski, before 1761,
the 2nd to Jakub Kiedrzynski junior, in 1767.
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 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
[with the 2nd wife - Elzbieta Baranowska],
in 1693 official in KCYNIA; 1717 governor of Przemet.
Krzysztof Ignacy Mielzynski born before 1670 in Dabrowa (Kaisersfelde), close to Mogilno -
west to RADZIEJOW. He was the son of
Maciej Mielzynski, born in 1636 in Niegolewo west to Poznan, close to Opalenica;
d. 1697 in Goscieszyn near Wolsztyn (Wollstein).
Married in 1667 to Elzbieta Baranowska - she died in 1682.
Krzysztof MIELZYNSKI married in 1682 to Anna Goszycka / Anna Gorzycka - she died in 1733,
the daughter of
Andrzej Goszycki / Andrzej GORZYCKI and KATARZYNA MYCIELSKA, d. 1712.
MACIEJ MIELZYNSKI m. 3rd in Pawlowice in 1684 to Katarzyna Mycielska Gorzycka,
the 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 in
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.
In 1698, Dluzyna belonged to the Wloszakowice estate, and was owned by
Stanislaw Leszczynski, after wedding with Katarzyna Opalinska.
In 1738, Dluzyna and Wloszakowice took Aleksander Jozefa Sulkowski.
In 1762, Dluzyna was owned by Franciszek Sulkowski / Franciszek de Paula Sulkowski,
1733 - 1812, Duke in 1752, General lejtenant in 1762,
IV Herzog von Bielitz, the superior of Commandery of Saint John the Baptist,
the Knights of Malta from 1776.
Bukowiec Gorny
- in 1782, Franciszek de Paula Sulkowski sold the estate and moved home to Cracow.
Before him in 1737, Karol Opalinski, was the landlord of Bukowiec;
in 1825, Dukes Anhalt-Dessau the owners of Wloszakowice, founded new church.
Anhalt-Dessau in Wloszakowice
- before them was here: Stanislaw Leszczynski + Katarzyna Opalinska;
then to Duke Aleksander Jozef Sulkowski; next Duke Anhalt-Dessau.
In 1807, Anhalt-Dessau was 'Herzogtum'; 1847, Duke Henryk Anhalt-Kothen died,
and Anhalt-Dessau took his assets:
Leopold III, 1807-1817, and Leopold IV, 1817-1863, ie. Leopold IV, Duke of Anhalt.
Leopold IV Frederick, Duke of Anhalt (1794 - 1871) was a German prince of the House of
Ascania. 1817 until 1853 he was ruler of the duchy of Anhalt-Dessau.
1853 until 1863 he was the ruler of the joined duchy of Anhalt-Dessau-Kothen.
Leopold IV was born in Dessau in 1794, and he was the son of
Frederick, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau + Amalie of Hesse-Homburg, the daughter of
Frederick V, Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg.
Princess Christiane Amalie of Hesse-Homburg, b. 1774,
was the daughter of Frederick V, Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg +
Princess Caroline of Hesse-Darmstadt, the daughter of Louis IX,
Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt.
Above Louis IX of Hesse-Darmstadt, b. 1719, was the Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt,
and he was a son of Louis VIII, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt.
Louis IX was a member of 'La Franc-Maconnerie Templiere et Occultiste'.
His youngest son
Christian of Hessen-Darmstadt, b. 1763, in Bouxwiller,
was a Dutch general. He was also a keen Freemason, the Grandmaster.
His sibilings:
1. Landgravine Caroline of Hesse-Darmstadt, 1746 - 1821;
2. Frederika Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt, 1751 - 1805 in BERLIN:
marriage in 1769 in Charlottenburg, to Frederick William II of Prussia, b. in 1744
in Berlin.
Frederick's parents:
Prince Augustus William, of Prussia, 1722 - 1758
[parents:
Frederick William I, of Prussia, 1688 - 1740 + Sophia Dorothea, of England
and Hannover, 1687 - 1757]
and
Duchess Louise Amalie of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, 1722 - 1780
[parents:
Ferdinand Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg, 1680 - 1735 +
Antoinette Amalie of Brunswick-Luneburg, 1696 - 1762].
Louise's brother was Ferdinand of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, 1721 - 1792.
Ferdinand, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg (born in 1721, Wolfenbuttel - d. 1792, Vechelde),
was a Prussian field marshal (1758-1766).
Ferdinand, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg was appointed to command the Hanoverian Army of
Observation -
"... Ferdinand accepted this appointment on the condition that he would have direct
access to George II ruler of Hanover and Britain".
"... 1757 to 1762 he led an Anglo-German army in Western Germany which successfully
repelled French attempts to occupy Hanover [by Wikipedia]."
Ferdinand, Prince of Brunswick-Luneburg also was a freemason, initiated in 1740
into the Lodge of The Three Globes in Berlin, and received the degree of Master Mason
in 1743 at Breslau.
He was in the closest touch with Frederick the Great
[like Marianna Skorzewska nee Ciecierska], who supervised the instruction of the guard
battalion. Ferdinand was one of the most intimate friends of the king.
In 1759, "... Ferdinand retreated in the face of a French advance, but managed to
check them with a decisive victory at the Battle of Minden. This ended the immediate
French threat to Hanover, as the French army was in no condition to continue its advance".
Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick, 1721 - 1792; Scottish Rite; he is the same Duke of Brunswick
who was mentioned in Robison's secret Illuminati membership list;
the patron of the Asiatic Brethern, an Illuminati offshoot.
The Sabbatian Vienna Lodge of the Asiatic Brethren was founded by Jacob Frank's cousin,
Moses Dobrushka, alias Von Schoenfeld.
Hans Heinrich von Ecker und Eckhoffen (1750 - 1790), a Bavarian Officer, established
two of the various so-called 'fringe-masonic' ... Orders (or Systems) which
flourished in the second half of the 18th century. The first, called the Ordo Rotae et
Aureae Crucis (The Order of the Wheel and of the Golden Cross) was
founded in 1776.
By Faivre, Antoine, 'Asiatic Brethren', in: "Dictionary of Gnosis ...".
"... Amongst the order's heads it were Franz Thomas von Schonfeld as well as Ephraim
Hirschfeld who allowed for this new and unprecedented influx of specifically Kabbalistic,
Sabbatean and partly Frankist bodies of thought"
- copyright in 2018 by Frater Acher.
WLOSZAKOWICE:
1738, to the Sulkowskis: Aleksander Jozef Sulkowski in 1749-1751;
in 1785, Dukes Anhalt-Koethen later as Anhalt-Dessau, until 1919.
Dluzyn / Dluzyna:
in 1826, in Machcin, Walerjan Bielinski died; the owner of Dluzyna and
Boszkow; b. 1762; the son of Stanislaw BIELINSKI, the owner of
Widzim, 4 kilometres south of Wolsztyn [4 km north to WRONIAWY]
and of Marjanna Rogalinska.
WRONIAWY:
In 1848, Chobienice, was the center of Uprising with Jozef Mielzynski
(son of Maciej Mielzynski), Ignacy Bobrowski, Jan Adamczak, Ignacy Szumski
[of SZUMSK - see the Konstantynowiczs and the Bouvie / Bouvier],
and
landlord of Wroniawa / WRONIAWY - Stanislaw Plater.
Ca 1900 acted here Maciej Mielzynski [junior] of Chobienice.
The palace in Wroniawy was built in 1820; Wroniawy belonged to Adam Gajewski of Wolsztyn,
who given Wroniawy to his daughter Antonina, married Count Plater;
in 1885 or 1895
Count Plater sold Wroniawy to hands of Baron Goldschmidt - Rotschild;
name Goldschmidt - Rotschild Maksymilian from Franfurt / Maximilian von
Goldschmidt-Rothschild (1843 - 1940) was a German banker and art collector.
The son of Benedict Hayum Salomon Goldschmidt, he was the co-inheritor of the
Goldschmidt family bank along with his brother Adolphe Goldschmidt [copyright by Wikipedia].
He married Minna Karoline Freiin von Rothschild, the daughter of
Wilhelm Carl von Rothschild. He was the richest person in the German Empire.
After the death of his father-in-law, the last male of the Frankfurt Rothschilds,
Maximilian Goldschmidt and his wife adopted Rothschild's name.
Emperor William I gave him the title of Baron de Goldschmidt-Rothschild.
His son was Albert Maximilian von Goldschmidt-Rothschild,
b. 1879 in Frankfurt am Main, d. 1941 in Lausanne, the Vaud County [see Duflon,
Anna Konstantynowicz nee ARMAND, Lenin...], Switzerland.
Above Minna Caroline "Minka" von Goldschmidt-Rothschild (von Rothschild) b. 1857,
the daughter of Wilhelm Carl von Rothschild and Hannah Mathilde nee Rothschild,
b. 1832, who was the daughter of Anselm Salomon von Rothschild b. 1803
[ANSELM - son of Salomon Mayer von Rothschild b. 1774
{Salomon Mayer - was the son of Mayer Amschel Rothschild / Mosche Meir, b. 1743 or 1744
in Frankfurt am Main, d. 1812 in Frankfurt am Main;
Mayer Amschel Bauer, an Ashkenazi Jew, the son of Moses Amschel Bauer,
a proprietor of a counting house.
In 1770, "Mayer Amschel Rothschild draws up plans for the creation of the
Illuminati and entrusts ... Adam Weishaupt, ... with its organization and development...".
Mayer Amschel Rothschild marries Gutle Schnaper.
In 1773, was born Amschel Mayer Rothschild, the first of
Mayer Amschel Rothschild's sons.
"...He like all his brothers who follow him, will enter the family business
at the age of 12".
In 1774, Salomon Mayer Rothschild born.
In 1776, "Adam Weishaupt officially completes his organisation of the
Illuminati on May 1 of this year. The purpose of the Illuminati is to ...
fight amongst themselves; destroy national governments; destroy religious institutions...
Weishaupt soon infiltrates the Continental Order of Freemasons with this Illuminati
doctrine and establishes lodges of the Grand Orient to be their secret headquarters..."},
and Caroline STERN],
and Charlotte Nathan nee Rothschild b. 1807.
Krzysztof Ignacy Mielzynski born before 1670 in Dabrowa (Kaisersfelde), close to Mogilno -
west to RADZIEJOW.
He was the son of
Maciej Mielzynski, born in 1636 in Niegolewo west to Poznan, close to Opalenica;
d. 1697 in Goscieszyn near Wolsztyn (Wollstein).
Maciej was 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 / Andrzej GORZYCKI and KATARZYNA MYCIELSKA, d. 1712.
MACIEJ MIELZYNSKI m. 3rd in Pawlowice in 1684 to Katarzyna Mycielska Gorzycka,
the daughter of Krzysztof MYCIELSKI and Teresa Grodziecka;
KATARZYNA was the widow after Adam Gorzycki or Andrzej Gorzycki.
Krzysztof Mielzynski 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
[WRONIAWY - 20 km south-west to WIELICHOWO];
north-west to PRZEMET; 19 km north-west to WILKOWO POLSKIE of
Kiedrzyski-Zamoyski family.
The GAJEWSKI family:
Rafal Tadeusz Gajewski (1714, Czacz - 1776, Borzeciczki or Srem, buried in Wolsztyn),
an
owner of Wolsztyn, Komorowo, Barzyn, Tloki, Stwolno, Susnia, Wielawies and Unislaw,
Borzeciczki, Mycielinek, Debowiec, Bulakowo, Kaczagorka in 1749, also of named Wroniawy,
Solec, Oledry Soleckie in 1768, Galaski in 1750, Podborowo and Zawady in 1753,
the owner of Nialki, Karpisko, Rognowo;
MP in 1746, an officer in Wschowa, 1759-64 [see Kiedrzynski],
m. 1st in 1747 to Jozefina Mielzynska (b. ca 1731 - 1752/53);
2nd to Katarzyna Tworzyjanska;
the father of Bonawentura Gajewski;
the grandfather of Leokadia Engestrom.
Then WRONIAWY belonged to Adam Norbert Gajewski (ca 1765 - 1824), owner of Wolsztyn,
Barzyn, Tloki, Komorowo, Wroniawy, Prochy;
m. in 1790 in Gogolew to Eleonora Garczynska (1764, Jadlec - 1838, Poznan).
Wroniawy next to Antonina Gajewska (1791, Poznan - 1866, Wolsztyn) owner of Wroniawy and
Prochy;
m. in 1821 in Wolsztyn to Count Stanislaw Plater Senior.
Stanislaw Plater Senior, b. 1784 in Dowgieliszki / Dawgieliszki, d. 1851 in Wroniawy or
Wolsztyn / Wollstein, Provinz of Posen,