Jan Dzyalynsky ( John Dzyalynsky , Polish. Jan Działyński , September 28, 1829 - March 30, 1880) - Count from the Polish family Dzyalynsky .
| Jan Dzyalynsky | |
|---|---|
| Jan Działyński | |
Portrait of 1864 by L. Kaplinsky | |
| Date of Birth | September 28, 1829 |
| Place of Birth | Kurnik |
| Date of death | March 30, 1880 (50 years old) |
| Place of death | Kurnik |
| A country | |
| Occupation | |
| Father | Tit Dzyalynsky |
| Mother | |
| Spouse | |
| Autograph | |
Born in the family of Titus Dzyalynsky and Celestine Zamoyskaya, daughter of Stanislav Zamoysky . [one]
He received a law degree in Berlin.
In 1857 he married Elizabeth of Czartoryski , daughter of Adam Czartoryski .
As the head of the aristocratic party in Prussian Poland, he took a very active part in the Polish uprising of 1863 from February to April 1863, collecting funds to support the rebellion among Polish aristocrats living in Prussia. In April 1863, the Prussian authorities issued a warrant for his arrest, as a result of which Dzyalynsky crossed the border with the Kingdom of Poland and joined the rebel detachment under the command of Colonel later Brigadier General Edmund Tachanovsky . Participated in the battle of Pyzdry . After the first defeat of Tachanovsky’s detachment in the battle of Ignatsevo, he fled first to Prussia and through it to France.
Accused of high treason by the Prussian government, he was sentenced to death in absentia in 1864.
Voluntarily submitted to court, in 1869 he was sentenced to three years in prison, but pardoned by the king and received back his sequestered possessions.
Sources
- Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron . - S.-Pb .: Brockhaus-Efron. 1890-1907.