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KONGSBERG , a See also: mining See also: town of See also: Norway in Buskerud amt (county), on the Laagen, 500 ft. above the See also: sea, and 61 m
.
W.S.W
.
893
of See also: Christiania by See also: rail
.
Pop
.
(1900), 5585
.
With the exception See also: great See also: Jan See also: Chodkiewicz, whom he accompanied on his See also: Muscovite See also: campaigns, and under the equally great See also: Stanislaus See also: Zolkiewski, whose daughter See also: Catherine he married
.
On the See also: death of his first wife he wedded, in 1619, Christina Lubomirska
.
In 1619 he took See also: part in the expedition against the See also: Turks which terminated so disastrously at Cecora, and after a valiant resistance was captured and sent to Constantinople, where he remained a close prisoner for three years
.
On his return he was appointed See also: commander of all the forces of the Republic, and at the See also: head of an army of 25,000 men routed 6o,000 Tatars at Martynow, following up this success with fresh victories, for which he received the thanks of the See also: diet and the See also: palatinate of Sandomeria from the See also: king
.
In 1625 he was appointed
See also: guardian of the See also: Ukraine against the Tatars, but in 1626 was transferred to Prussia to check the victorious advance of Gustavus See also: Adolphus
.
See also: Swedish historians have too often ignored the fact that See also: Koniecpolski's See also: superior See also: strategy neutralized all the efforts of the Swedish king, whom he defeated again and again, notably at Homerstein (See also: April 1627) and at Trzciand (April 1629)
.
But for the most part the fatal parsimony of his country compelled Koniecpolski to confine himself to the harassing guerrilla warfare in which he was an expert
.
In 1632 he was appointed to the long vacantSee also: post of See also: hetman wielki koronny, or commander in chief of Poland, and in that capacity routed the Tatars at Sasowy Rogi (April 1633) and at Paniawce (April and See also: October 1633), and the Turks, with terrific loss, at Abazd Basha
.
To keep the Cossacks of the Ukraine in See also: order he also built the fortress of Kudak
.
As one of the largest proprietors in the Ukraine he suffered severely from Cossack depredations and offered many concessions to them
.
Only after years of conflict, however, did he succeed in reducing these unruly desperadoes to something like obedience
.
In 1644 he once more routed the Tatars at Ockmatow, and again in 1646 at See also: Brody
.
This was his last exploit, for he died the same See also: year, to the great grief of See also: Wladislaus IV., who had already concerted with him the See also: plan for a See also: campaign on a See also: grand See also: scale against the Turks, and relied principally upon the Grand Hetman for its success
.
Though less famous than his contemporaries Zolkiehwski and Chodkiewicz, Koniecpolski was fully their equal as a general, and his inexorable severity made him an ideal See also: lord-marcher
.
See an unfinished biography in the Tyg
.
Illus. of Warsaw for 1863; Stanislaw Przylenski, Memorials of the Koniecpolskis (Pol.) (See also: Lemberg, 1842)
.
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