Online Encyclopedia

MARYAN LANGIEWICZ (1827–1887)

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 174 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARYAN

LANGIEWICZ (1827–1887)  ,
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Polish patriot, was born at Krotoszyn, in the province of Posen, on the 5th of August 1827, his
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father being the
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local doctor . Langiewicz was educated at Posen, Breslau and Prague, and was compelled to
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earn his daily
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bread by giving lectures . He subsequently entered the Prussian
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Landwehr and served for a
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year in the royal guard . In 186o he migrated to Paris and was for a time professor in the high school founded there by Mieroslawski . The same year he took
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part in Garibaldi's Neapolitan
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campaign, and was then a professor in the military school at Cuneo till the establishment was closed . In 1862 he entered into communication with the central Polish committee at Warsaw, and on the outbreak of the insurrection of the 22nd of
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January 1863, took the command of the armed bands . He defeated the Russians at Wachock and Slupia (
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February), capturing l000 muskets and 8 cannon . This victory drew hundreds of young recruits to his standard, till at last he had 12,000 men at his disposal . On the 23rd of February he again defeated the Russians, at Malogoszcza, and captured 500 muskets and 2 cannon . On the loth of March he proclaimed himself dictator and attempted to form a
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regular government; but either he had insufficient organizing talent, or had not time enough to carry out his plans, and after a fresh series of engagements his army was almost annihilated at Zagosc (18th of March), whereupon he took
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refuge in
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Austrian territory and was interned at
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Tarnow . He was subsequently transferred to the fortress of Josephstadt, from which he was released in 1865 . He then lived at Solothurn as a citizen of the Swiss Republic, and subsequently entered the
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Turkish service as Langie Bey .

He died at

Constantinople on the 11th of May 1887 . See Boleslaw Limanowski, The
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National Insurrection of 1863–64 (Pol.) (Lemberg, 1900) ; Paolo Mazzoleni, I Bergamaschi in Polonia nel 1863 (Bergamo, 1893) ; W . H. l3avink, De Poolsche opstand 1863, &c . (
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Haarlem, 1864) .

End of Article: MARYAN LANGIEWICZ (1827–1887)
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