Włodzimierz Dzieduszycki

Count Włodzimierz Ksawery Tadeusz Dzieduszycki (22 June 1825 – 18 September 1899) was a Polish noble, landowner, naturalist, political activist, collector and patron of arts of Ruthenian heritage. Włodzimierz became the first Ordynat of the Poturzyca estate. He was owner of the Poturzyca, Zarzecze, Kramarzowka, Markpol, Lachowice, Dobraczyn, Medowa, Jaryszow, Konarzewo, Gluszyn, Wiry and Szczytnik estates and a founder of the Natural History Museum in Lviv. He was one of the first Polish magnates to replace serfdom on his estates.

Włodzimierz Dzieduszycki
Portrait by Henryk Rodakowski (1880)
Coat of arms
Born(1825-08-22)22 August 1825
Yaryshiv, Podolia Governorate
Died18 September 1899(1899-09-18) (aged 74)
Poturzyca, Partitioned Poland
Noble familyHouse of Dzieduszycki
Spouse(s)Countess Alfonsyna Miączyńska
Issue
Klementyna Dzieduszycka
Anna Dzieduszycka
Maria Dzieduszycka
Jadwiga Dzieduszycka
FatherCount Józef Kalasanty Dzieduszycki
MotherCountess Paulina Działyńska

Biography

He was the son of Józef Kalasanty (1776-1847) and Paulina Anna and was educated in Poland and from 1840 in Göttingen and Paris. In 1846 Wlodzimierz returned to Poland.[1]

During the Spring of Nations in 1848, he became a member of the "Council of the Nation of Lwow" (Centralna Rada Narodowa Lwowska) and pro-Polish organisation Ruski (Ruskyi) Sobor[2][3] (opposite to the Holovna Ruska Rada).

He was also a member of the "Economic Society of Galicia". In 1855 Dzieduszycki became a cofounder of the Dubliany Ploughing School (today Agricultural Academy).[4] He supported publishing houses, spent money for scientific works and school books. Dzieduszycki was a great enthusiast of the Hutsul Arts[4] and financed translation in Polish language the work of Volodymyr Shukhevych "Hutsulshchyna".[4] In 1863 he partly financed and participated in the civil organisation of the January Uprising.

In 1881 Wlodzimierz became a member of the Polish Academy of Skills. Dzieduszycki collected specimens of fauna and flora from his childhood and held them in his palace in Poturzyce, 80 km north of Lvov. His collection grew with additions of fossils and minerals from Professor Ludwik Zejszner and plants from Jan Łobarzewski. He moved a part of this colelction to Lvov to a building in Fredro Street in 1854 and then to Kurkowa Street (now Lysenka Street) in 1857. As the collections grew he bought a building in 1868 on Teatralna Street where the museum still stands. It was open to the public in 1870. The museum is now called the State Museum of Natural History of the NASU. The Museum includes a rich natural collection, mainly ornithology, ethnography and numismatic objects and a large collection of books.[5]

He was also co-founder of the Museum of Industry of Arts (Muzeum Przemyslu Artystycznego) in 1874 in Lwów and founder the "Hunting Society of Lesser Poland" in 1885.

Wlodzimierz became a member the Sejm in 1865, 1874 and from 1895 until 1899; he served as Sejm Marshal from 7 March until 26 April 1876. He was also a member of the Herrenhaus from 1874.

He was author of several scientific works (nature and ethnography), and from 1894 Doctor Honoris Causa of the Lwów University.

Family

Włodzimierz married Alfonsyna Miączyńska on 19 September 1853 in Lwów and had four children:

References

  1. http://genealogia.grocholski.pl/gd/osoba.php?id=003232
  2. David Althonen. "Natione Polonus and the Naród Szlachecki. Two Myths of National Identity and Noble Solidarity". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. Vol. 52, Nr 4, J.G. Herder-Institut. 2003. p. 505.
  3. Peter Brock. "Ivan Vahylevych 1811-1866 and the Ukrainian National Identity". Nationbuilding and the Politics of Nationalism: Essays on Austrian Galicia. Harvard University Press. 1982. pp. 138, 139.
  4. Chornovol, I. Włodzimierz Dzieduszycki. Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine. 2004
  5. Chornobay, Yuriy M.; Drygant, Daniel M. (2009). "The Starunia collections in the Natural History Museum of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine in Lviv" (PDF). Geoturystyka. 3 (18): 45–50.

Bibliography

  • Gabriel Brzęk – Muzeum im. Dzieduszyckich we Lwowie i jego Twórca
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