Józef Wybicki
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Józef Rufin Wybicki (Script error: No such module "IPA".; 29 September 1747 – 10 March 1822) was a Polish nobleman, jurist, poet, political and military activist of Kashubian descent.[1] He is best remembered as the author of "Script error: No such module "Lang"." (Template:Langx), which was adopted as the Polish national anthem in 1927.
Life
Wybicki was born in Będomin, in the region of Pomerania in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[2] His family was Pomeranian nobility.[3]
He finished a Jesuit school, and in his youth was a junior court official.[3] In 1767, he worked at the Crown Tribunal in Bydgoszcz.[4] Wybicki was elected a deputy to the Repnin Sejm, the session of Polish parliament in 1767, on the eve of the First Partition of Poland.[2] Subsequently, he joined the insurgency known as the Confederation of Bar (1768–1772), aimed at opposing the Russian influence and king Stanisław August Poniatowski.[2][3] He was one of the advisors (konsyliarz) of the Confederacy, acting as a diplomat.[5] After the failure of the uprising, he spent some time in the Netherlands, studying law at Leiden University.[3]
Returning to Poland, in the 1770s and 1780s he was associated with the Commission of National Education.[2] He supported King Stanisław August Poniatowski and his proposed reforms.[2][3] He helped draft the liberal Zamoyski Codex of laws of the late 1770s.[6] He was a Patriotic Party activist during the Great Sejm (1788–92) – though he was not one of its first deputies, during much of that time staying at his estate, writing and staging operas.[2][3] He did, however, participate in the Great Sejm's deliberations, beginning in 1791.[6] In 1792, in the aftermath of the Polish–Russian War of 1792, like many of Poniatowski's supporters, he joined the Targowica Confederation.[7]
He participated in the Kościuszko Uprising (1794)[2] and was a member of the Military Section of the Provisional Council of the Duchy of Masovia.[8] During the uprising, he co-organized the Polish administration in the liberated city of Bydgoszcz.[4] After the failure of this insurrection he moved to France.[3]
He was a close friend of both Tadeusz Kościuszko and Jan Henryk Dąbrowski.[9] With Dąbrowski he organized the Polish Legions in Italy, serving under Napoleon Bonaparte.[2] In 1797, while in Reggio Emilia, Italy, he wrote Script error: No such module "Lang". (Dąbrowski's Mazurek).[2] In 1806 he helped Dąbrowski organize the Greater Poland Uprising.[3]
After the creation of the Duchy of Warsaw in 1807, he held a number of positions in its Department of Justice, and continued working for it after the Duchy's transformation into Congress Poland.[3] In 1817 he became president of the Supreme Court of Congress Poland.[10]
He died on 10 March 1822 in Manieczki, then part of the Grand Duchy of Posen in the Prussian Partition of Poland.[2]
Works
Wybicki was a writer, journalist and a poet.[2] He wrote political-themed poems, plays and political treaties advocating reforms in Poland in the 1770s and 1780s.[2][3] His works of that time analyzed the Polish political system, the concepts of liberty, and advocated for more rights for the peasantry.[11] He would also publish more political brochures in the 1800s, advocating for liberal reforms in the Duchy of Warsaw.[3]
Script error: No such module "Lang". (Dąbrowski's Mazurka) remains Wybicki's most famous creation.[3] It has been regarded as an unofficial national anthem since the November Uprising of 1831.[2] In 1927 the Mazurka was officially adopted as the Polish national anthem by the Polish parliament (Sejm).[3][12]
See also
References
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External links
- Biography at univ.gda.pl
- Memoirs of Józef Wybicki
- Free scores by Józef Wybicki at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
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- 1747 births
- 1822 deaths
- People from Kościerzyna County
- 18th-century Polish–Lithuanian lawyers
- Age of Enlightenment
- National anthem writers
- Kościuszko insurgents
- Senators of Congress Poland
- Senators of the Duchy of Warsaw
- Members of the Sejm of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- Targowica confederates
- Bar confederates
- Polish legionnaires (Napoleonic period)
- Polish male poets
- Recipients of the Order of the White Eagle (Poland)
- Burials at the Church of St. Adalbert, Poznań
- Polish Enlightenment
- 19th-century Polish lawyers
- Polish recipients of the Legion of Honour
- Leiden University alumni