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  1. Jerzy Marcin Lubomirski (24 October 1738, Kraków – 27 June 1811 in Przecław) – Bar Confederate, general officer of Polish Crown Army (1773), art patron, and diarist (his Diaries were published in 1867).

  2. Jerzy Marcin Lubomirski herbu Szreniawa bez Krzyża (ur. 24 października 1738 w Krakowie, zm. 14 października 1800 w Trzęsówce) – generał lejtnant wojsk koronnych w 1773 roku, konfederat barski, szef 11.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LubomirskiLubomirski - Wikipedia

    • Origin and The Coat of Arms
    • Foundations of Economic Power
    • Residences
    • Division
    • First Citizens of Poland
    • Royal Blood
    • Military Exploits
    • Lubomirski Family in The History of Warsaw
    • Philanthropists and Patrons
    • Under Partition

    The Lubomirski family have been actors in the history of Poland since the 10th century. There are two theories regarding the family's origin. One, by Adam Boniecki, a Polish heraldist, assumes that there were two branches of the family. One settled at the Szreniawa River in Proszowice County while the other established itself in Szczyrzyc County. T...

    Piotr (d. 1480), the heir of Lubomierz, the territorial designation that is the basis of the family name, is regarded as the progenitor of the Lubomirski family. The economic foundation of the family rested on the exploitation of salt mines in Kraków province, the mineshafts being leased from rulers of Poland. The Lubomirski family also established...

    The first mentions of the home in Lubomierz were recorded in 1398. The number of family estates, starting with Gdów and Szczyrzyca which the family also possessed in the 13th century, increased significantly. In the 17th and 18th centuries they were located in Lubomierz, Nowy Wiśnicz, Bochnia, Wieliczka, Łańcut, Baranów Sandomierski, Puławy, Rzeszó...

    The family, originally small in number, grew considerably, which led to divisions of material wealth but enhanced political influence, due to having the support of more people in the Sejms, in the Senate, or at the royal court. Members of the family were able to count on the support of their relatives in political or court activities. The family sp...

    The members of the family served the state as marshals, starosts, governors, and hetmans. Four of the princes Lubomirski held the office of Grand Marshal of the Crown: Jerzy Sebastian, Józef Karol, Stanisław Herakliusz and Stanisław. They were active in the politics, chairing the Sejms, forming a private army, representing the king at the courts Eu...

    In 1647, Stanisław Lubomirski received the hereditary title of Prince of the Holy Roman Empire from Emperor Ferdinand III. The Lubomirski family itself was a candidate for Poland's crown. Grand Hetman of the Crown Prince Hieronim Augustyn was the most serious candidate for the Polish crown after the death of John III Sobieski. Prince Teodor Konstan...

    Prince Stanisław Lubomirski was famous for commanding at the Battle of Chocim in 1621, fought against Turkish-Tatar forces. Stanisław initially took part in the battle at the head of a private regiment, but when hetman Karol Chodkiewicz died, and hetman Koniecpolskiwas taken captive, Stanisław took command and ended the multi-day battle quickly, wi...

    To build his numerous residences, Prince Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski (1642 – 1702) hired Tylman of Gameren, later court architect to King Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki. Stanisław Lubomirski owned residences in Puławy, Czerniaków, (where he founded a monastery and church of the Bernardines), and in Ujazdów (now part of Warsaw), where, at the end o...

    The Lubomirski family, like other affluent aristocratic families, engaged in artistic, cultural, and scientific patronage. At Wiśnicz, Wilanów, the Royal Baths, Łańcut, or Mokotów, they supported private theatre groups, financed artists, funded religious buildings, and maintained their residences. The reconstruction of Wiśnicz castle was planned by...

    After 1795, the princes Lubomirski engaged in clandestine and insurgent activities against the occupying Russians; and, in consequence, they lost estates. Prince Jerzy Roman Lubomirski (1799 – 1865), the owner of Rozwadów, participated in the battles of the November and January uprisings and organized hospitals for the wounded on his estates. After...

  4. Jerzy Marcin Lubomirski (24 de octubre de 1738, Cracovia - 27 de junio de 1811 en Przecław) - Bar Confederate, oficial general del Ejército de la Corona de Polonia (1773), mecenas de arte y cronista (sus Diarios se publicaron en 1867).

  5. In Poland: Political stagnation. … in 1665–66 led by Marshal Jerzy Lubomirski. Two years later the frustrated John Casimir abdicated and settled in France, having prophetically warned the Sejm that Poland would fall victim to its rapacious neighbours unless it reformed its ways.

  6. janlubomirski.pl › ang › history-of-the-lubomirski-family-2HISTORY OF THE LUBOMIRSKI FAMILY

    The Lubomirski family became one of the most powerful aristocratic families of the Republic of Poland at the turn of the 16th and 17th centuries. Influence of the family was mainly concentrated in the provinces of Kraków, Sandomierz, Stanisławów, and Ruthenia, to cover the whole area of the Commonwealth of the Two Nations later[2].

  7. 13 de ene. de 2012 · Jerzy Marcin Lubomirski (1738 – 1811) PSB, v. 18, p. 37 The Prince transformed a part of his militia into an army unit, which he gave to the Republic of Poland