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HUGO See also: Polish politician and writer, was See also: born in 1750 at Niecislawice in See also: Sandomir, and educated at Pinczow and See also: Cracow
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After taking orders he went (1770) to See also: Rome, where he obtained the degree of See also: doctor of See also: theology and See also: common See also: law, and devoted himself enthusiastically to the study of the See also: fine arts, especially of architecture and See also: painting
.
At Rome too he obtained a canonry attached to Cracow See also: cathedral, and on his return to Poland in 1755 threw himself See also: heart and soul into the question of educational reform
.
His efforts were impeded by the obstruction of the See also: clergy of Cracow, who regarded him as an adventurer; but he succeeded in reforming the university after his own mind, and was its rector for three years (1782–1785)
.
See also: Kollontaj next turned his See also: attention to politics
.
In 1786 he was appointed referendarius of Lithuania, and during the Four Years' See also: Diet (1788–1792) displayed an amazing and many-sided activity as one of the reformers of the constitution
.
He grouped around him all the leading writers, publicists and progressive See also: young men
of the See also: day; declaimed against prejudices; stimulated the timid; inspired the lukewarm with See also: enthusiasm; and never rested till the constitution of the 3rd of May 1791 had been carried through
.
In See also: June 1791 Kollontaj was appointed See also: vice-chancellor
.
On the See also: triumph of the reactionaries and the fall of the See also: national party, he secretly placed in the See also: king's hands his adhesion to the triumphant Confederation of Targowica, a false step, much blamed at the
See also: time, but due not to See also: personal ambition but to a See also: desire to save something from the See also: wreck of the constitution
.
He then emigrated to See also: Dresden
.
On the outbreak of Kosciuszko's insurrection he returned to Poland, and as member of the national See also: government and See also: minister of See also: finance took a leading See also: part in affairs
.
But his radicalism had now become of a disruptive quality, and he quarrelled with and even thwarted Kosciuszko because the dictator would not admit that the Polish republic could only be saved by the methods of Jacobinism
.
On the other See also: hand, the more conservative section of the Poles regarded Kollontaj as " a second Robespierre," and he is even suspected of complicity in the outrages of the 17th and 18th of June 1794, when the Warsaw See also: mob massacred the See also: political prisoners
.
On the collapse of the insurrection Kollontaj emigrated to See also: Austria, where from 1795 to 1802 he was detained as a prisoner
.
He was finally released through the See also: mediation of See also: Prince See also: Adam See also: Czartoryski, and returned to Poland utterly discredited
.
The See also: remainder of his See also: life was a ceaseless struggle against privation and See also: prejudice
.
He died at Warsaw on the 28th of See also: February 1812
.
Of his numerous See also: works the most notable are: Political Speeches as Vice-Chancellor (Pol.) (in 6 vols., Warsaw, 1791); On the Erection and Fall of the Constitution of May (Pol.) (See also: Leipzig, 1793; See also: Paris, 1868 ) ; See also: Correspondence with T
.
Czacki (Pol.) (Cracow, 1854) ; Letters 'written during Emigration, 1792–r g94 (Pol.) (See also: Posen, 1872)
.
See Ignacz Badeni, Necrology of Hugo Kollontaj (Pol.) (Cracow, 1819) ; Henryk Schmitt, Review of the Life and Works of Kollontaj (Pol.) (See also: Lemberg, 186o) ; Wojciek Grochowski, " Life of Kollontaj (Pol.) in Tygod Illus
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(Warsaw, 1861)
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