Content deleted Content added
removed Category:1750 births; added Category:1750s births using HotCat |
|||
(22 intermediate revisions by 13 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|Polish noblewoman and socialite}}
{{one source|date=May 2018}}
'''Urszula Zamoyska''' (1750-1808), was a Polish noblewoman, niece of king [[Stanisław August Poniatowski]]. She is known for her public role during the reign of her uncle, when she played the ceremonial role of the hostess of his court. ▼
{{Infobox nobility|name=Ursula Mniszek|image=Levitsky mniszek.jpg|caption=Portrait by [[Dmitry Levitzky]]|CoA=|tenure=|predecessor=|successor=|birth_date=c. 1750|death_date=1808|noble family=[[Zamoyski family|Zamoyski]]|spouse=[[Wincenty Potocki]]<br>[[Michał Jerzy Mniszech]]|issue=Karol Filip Wandalin Mniszech<br>Pauline Constance, Gräfin Mniszechówna|father=[[Jan Jakub Zamoyski]]|mother=[[Ludwika Maria Poniatowska]]}}
▲'''Urszula Zamoyska''' (c. 1750-1808), was a Polish noblewoman and socialite, niece of king [[Stanisław August Poniatowski]]. She is known for her public role during the reign of her uncle, when she played the ceremonial role of the hostess of his court.
==Life==
She was the daughter of [[Ludwika Maria Poniatowska]] and [[Jan Jakub Zamoyski]]. Her parents separated shortly after her birth. In 1763, her maternal uncle, Stanisław August Poniatowski, was elected king of Poland. In 1773, she married [[Wincenty Potocki|Count Wincenty Potocki]] (d. 1825). Her marriage was discontinued by a divorce in 1777. According to the diary of the king, the fault was with her spouse. Her divorce was subject to a poem by [[Ignacy Potocki]]. [[
===Hostess of the Royal Court===
She played a significant role during the last two decades of her uncle's reign. As the king was unmarried and there was no queen, his favorite niece Urszula Zamoyska often played a ceremonial role by his side, and accompanied him in public. The king reportedly had the palace in Dęblin remade for her.
In October 1781, the meeting between the king and the heir to the Russian throne, [[Paul I of Russia|Grand Duke Paul]], took place in her palace in Wiśniowiec in Wołyń in her presence, during which she was given a portrait encrusted with diamonds by the [[Maria Feodorovna (Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg)|Grand Duchess Maria]]; she herself visited [[Saint Petersburg]] a few months later. Described as a haughty beauty, she played the role of hostess at the royal court of king Stanisław and was a leading figure in the aristocratic high society life of Warsaw.<ref>Biogram został opublikowany w 1976 r. w XXI tomie Polskiego Słownika Biograficznego</ref> She formed a theatrical society which staged plays at court consisting of amateur actors from the nobility.
She had a good relationship
In the spring of 1791, she and her mother visited Paris during a difficult period in Poland, which attracted bad publicity. During the crisis of 1793, she and her spouse left for Grodno. Reportedly the Russian ambassador
===Later life===
On 7 January 1795, she and her family joined king Stanisław in [[Grodno]], and remained by his side during the [[Third
After the abdication on 25 November 1795, the confiscation of the Mniszch property and her palace in
After the death of her uncle the former king in 1798, Urszula Zamoyska returned to Poland and settled with her spouse in Wiśniowiec.
==Legacy==
She was subject of many Latin poems by nuncio AM Durini, and the "Czestochowa Song" by [[Celestyna Czaplica]].
She described the 1787 journey to Kaniów to her mother, and her letter was published in French by [[Andrzej Edward Koźmian]] (it was also published in Russian by P. Saweljew in 1843).
==References==
Line 28 ⟶ 32:
* Biogram został opublikowany w 1976 r. w XXI tomie Polskiego Słownika Biograficznego
{{authority control}}
[[Category:18th-century Polish people]]▼
[[Category:18th-century Polish women]]▼
{{DEFAULTSORT:Zamoyska, Urszula}}
[[Category:1750 deaths]]▼
[[Category:
[[Category:1750s births]]
[[Category:Poniatowski family]]
[[Category:Women letter writers]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of Saint Catherine]]
|