Father Teodor Szydlowski | Noble family Szydlowski family Name Elzbieta Szydlowska | |
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Spouse(s) Jan Jerzy GrabowskiStanislaw August Poniatowski Died 1 June 1810Warsaw, Poland |
W. Lutosławski "Pióreczko" w wykonaniu chóru Belcanto przy OSM w Szczecinie.
Elżbieta Szydłowska, married surname Grabowska, (b. 1748 – d. 1 June 1810) was a member of the Polish gentry, a mistress and possibly the morganatic wife of the last King of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski.
Contents
- W Lutosawski Pireczko w wykonaniu chru Belcanto przy OSM w Szczecinie
- Limanowa Blisko 50 sympatykw na spotkaniu ze Stanisawem Gawowskim i Elbiet Szydowsk
- Biography
- Issue
- References
Limanowa. Blisko 50 sympatyków na spotkaniu ze Stanisławem Gawłowskim i Elżbietą Szydłowską
Biography

Elżbieta Szydłowska was a daughter of Teodor Szydłowski, voivode of Płock, a Polish nobleman, and his wife, Teresa Witkowska. In 1768 she married a Polish noble, General Jan Jerzy Grabowski (died 1789). Some of the children of this marriage are thought to have actually been children of the last Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth king, Stanisław August Poniatowski.
In 1789, she became a widow and possibly entered into a secret, morganatic marriage with the King, remaining known at court as his maîtresse-en-titre. However, Wirydianna Fiszerowa, a contemporary who knew her, reported that tales of this marriage only circulated after Poniatowski's death, and were spread about by Elżbieta herself, but were not generally believed. She was thought to have exercised some influence on the king during his reign perceived as negative, which made her unpopular.
In 1795, King Stanisław abdicated following the Third Partition of Poland, and lived in Grodno under Russian watch until, in 1796, Paul I of Russia invited him to Saint Petersburg. Elżbieta, with her two sons, Stanisław and Michał, took the king to Saint Petersburg to care for him there, and she lived with him until his sudden death in 1798. Afterwards, she returned to Warsaw, then under Prussian rule following the Partitions, where she became a patroness of the Tableau vivant there. She died in Warsaw on 1 June 1810, survived by four of her children.
She had three sons and two daughters with the king, and their second son, Michał Grabowski, distinguished himself in combat, eventually becoming a general in the army of the Duchy of Warsaw.
Issue
Her children were: