Władysław Zamoyski
Władysław Zamoyski | |
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Statue of Władysław Zamoyski in Zakopane | |
Coat of arms | Jelita |
Noble family | Zamoyski |
Father | Władysław S. Zamoyski |
Mother | Jadwiga Działyńska |
Born |
Paris, France | November 18, 1853
Died |
October 3, 1924 70) Kórnik, Poland | (aged
Count Władysław Zamoyski (1853–1924) was a Polish nobleman (szlachcic), owner of Kórnik, Głuchów, Janusz, Babin and Bargów (estates in the Grand Duchy of Poznań) as well as Zakopane and the Polish part of the Tatra Mountains.
Early life
He was born in Paris and studied in École Polytechnique. As a representative of the French government, he travelled to Australia and Oceania.
Activity in Poland
Zamoyski moved to Poland when he inherited Kórnik (with the castle, library and arboretum) and other properties from his uncle, Jan Kanty Działyński in 1881. In 1885, as a French citizen, he was expelled from Kórnik by Prussians and consequently moved to Zakopane. In 1889 he bought a large part of the Tatra Mountains. He traveled back to France and returned to Poland in 1920.
With his sister, Maria Zamoyska, he initiated many charitable and educational institutions. Both of them never married. In his testament, he granted all his properties to the Polish nation and initiated the creation of the Institute of Dendrology in Kórnik.
See also
Bibliography
- Stanisław Potocki, Władysław Zamoyski, in: Wielkopolski słownik biograficzny, Warszawa-Poznań 1981, PWN ISBN 83-01-02722-3
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