Józef Łukaszewicz
Józef Łukaszewicz (December 13, 1863 — October 19, 1928) was a Polish[1] physicist, geologist and mineralogist, as well as a 19th-century revolutionary. During his life he took part in a failed attempt to assassinate tsar Alexander III of Russia,[2][3] served a lifetime sentence in Shlisselburg prison, was a professor at numerous universities, headed the Petersburg Institute of Geography and a chair in the Stefan Batory University of Wilno.
Life
Józef Łukaszewicz was born December 13, 1863 in his family's manor of Bikiškė (Polish: Bykówka) near Vilnius (currently in the Elderate of Medininkai, at the border with Belarus). After graduating from the local gymnasium he joined the Mathematic Division of the University of St. Petersburg. There he became friends with Aleksandr Ulyanov and Petr Shevyrev, two young revolutionaries that were preparing an assassination attempt on the life of Alexander III of Russia. Łukaszewicz became one of the members of the Terrorist Faction of Narodnaya Volya and invited to the circle one of his friends, Bronisław Piłsudski, also a student at the local university. Interestingly, Ulyanov's brother, later to be known as Lenin, became the first leader of the Soviet Union, while Bronisław's brother Józef Piłsudski would later become the leader of Poland.
Assassination plans
As a skilled chemist, Łukaszewicz was chosen as the person to build three bombs that were to kill the tsar. To make it easier to hide the bomb, he concealed it in a copy of Grunberg's Medical Dictionary. The inside was filled with shrapnel and dynamite, while the fuse was made of a tube filled with mercury fulminate. Two additional bombs were prepared in case the main did not detonate as planned. To make the explosion more lethal, Łukaszewicz decided to fill all three bombs with capsules filled with strychnine.
However, before the attempt was ready, on March 1, 1887 all the revolutionaries were arrested by the police. After a short trial, on May 8 Ulyanov and his comrades Pakhomiy Andreyushkin, Vasili Generalov, Vasili Osipanov and Petr Shevyrev were sentenced to death and hanged at Shlisselburg. Most of the Polish accomplices (including Lukaszewicz, but also the future marshal of Poland Józef Piłsudski and Tytus Paszkowski) were also sentenced to death, but their sentence was later exchanged to that of katorga, or forced resettlement to a prison camp. According to trial records, Łukasiewicz appealed for the tsar's mercy.[4]
Life in prison
Łukaszewicz was sent to the Peter and Paul Fortress and then, on May 17, 1887, to the Shlisselburg Fortress. There he started working on his first geological maps and studies on mineralogy. According to his long-time friend Vera Figner, for his first sketches Łukaszewicz used the soot of his lamp and a blue paint from the walls of his cell. With time he became a member of an informal circle of natural scientists serving their sentences in the fortress and exchanging knowledge. Finally in early 20th century Łukaszewicz was allowed to receive books and newspapers from the outside, which allowed him to continue his studies.
Life after the Revolution of 1905
The Revolution of 1905 and the thaw that ensued resulted in Łukaszewicz's release from the prison and return home. In 1906 he was allowed to return to St. Petersburg and in 1907, at the age of 44, he graduated from the St. Petersburg University. By that time he already started writing his opus magnum, a 3-volume monograph on dynamic geology and geophysics. The work, published five years later, brought him limited fame and fortune and was awarded by the Russian Geographic Society and the Russian Academy of Sciences. In the following years he travelled to Italy, Egypt, Turkey and Greece. He also continued his work as a professor at various universities in the Russian Empire.
During World War I, in 1916, Łukaszewicz became the dean of the Faculty of Geomorphology at the Higher Course of Geography, later to be transformed into the Petersburg Institute of Geography. Following the February Revolution he also joined the Petrograd Soviet and became one of its deputies. Because of that in 1918 he was elected the first rector of the newly created Geographic Institute. However, he was disappointed with the course of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and in 1919 he returned to Lithuania. Initially serving as a supervisor of colleges at the General Commissariat of the Eastern Lands (an agenda of the Ober-Ost), he settled in Vilna and on January 1, 1920 he became a deputy professor in the Chair of Geology of the Stefan Batory University. On July 1 of that year he was promoted to the rank of professor and became the head of the Chair of Physical Geology, a post he held until his death. He died October 19, 1928, and was buried in the Rasos Cemetery in Vilnius. The largest collection of his memorabilia is preserved in the Polish Secondary School of Medininkai.
Works
Łukaszewicz authored a large number of works on geology, most of them published in Russian language. He also authored memoirs on the assassination attempt he took part in, first published in a white émigré journal Byloye and then in a book form in 1920.
Trivia
- Ignacy Łukasiewicz, the inventor of the kerosene lamp, was a distant relative of Józef Łukaszewicz.
Notes and references
- In-line:
- ↑ Iłowiecki, Maciej (1981). Dzieje nauki polskiej. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Interpress. p. 216. ISBN 83-223-1876-6.
- ↑ Józef Łukaszewicz; Stefan Bergman (1981). Pierwszy marca 1887 r. Wspomnienia (in Polish). Warsaw: PIW. p. 188. ISBN 83-06-00514-7.
- ↑ Alwida A. Bajor (April 2004). "Terrorysta, carobójca, uczony, "czarownik"...". Magazyn Wileński (in Polish) (4): 30–31. ISSN 0236-4719.
- ↑ ""Dear Father": B. Piłsudski’s Letters from the Petro-Pavlovsky Fortress" (PDF). First published by A. F. Majewicz & T. Wicherkiewicz, eds., Bronisław Piłsudski and Futabatei Shimei – An Excellent Charter in the History of Polish-Japanese Relations (Materials of the Third International Conference on Bronisław Piłsudski and His Scholarly Heritage: Kraków Zakopane 29/8 – 7 /9 1999; Linguistic and Oriental Studies from Poznań, Monograph Supplement 7), pp. 21-34, Poznań: Wydawnictwo Naukowe UAM, 2001. November 29, 2003. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
- General:
- Polskie Towarzystwo Geologiczne (corporate author) (1981). Rocznik Polskiego Towarzystwa Geologicznego (in Polish). Warsaw: Polskie Towarzystwo Geologiczne. pp. 1–32.
- Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of History of Science, Education and Technology (corporate author) (1970). Bogdan Suchodolski, ed. Historia nauki polskiej (in Polish) 4. Wrocław: Ossolineum. pp. 697–700. ISBN 83-04-02287-7.
- Zygmunt Łukawski (1978). Ludność polska w Rosji, 1863-1914 (in Polish). Wrocław: Ossolineum. p. 195. ISBN.
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