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Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski

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Noble family
  
Name
  
Waclaw Rzewuski

Died
  
May 14, 1831

Role
  
Poet

Coat of arms
  
Krzywda coat of arms

Waclaw Seweryn Rzewuski httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Consorts
  
Rozalia Aleksandra Lubomirska h. Szreniawa

Mother
  
Konstancja Malgorzata Lubomirska

Parents
  
Seweryn Rzewuski, Konstancja Malgorzata Lubomirska

Grandparents
  
Elzbieta Czartoryska, Waclaw Rzewuski, Stanislaw Lubomirski (1722–1782), Anna Lubomirska (died 1763)

Great-grandparents
  
August Aleksander Czartoryski, Maria Zofia Czartoryska, Jozef Lubomirski, Stanislaw Mateusz Rzewuski

Similar People
  
Seweryn Rzewuski, Waclaw Rzewuski, Elzbieta Czartoryska

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski i jego konie arabskie


Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski (15 December 1784 – 14 May 1831) was a Polish explorer, poet, orientalist and horse expert.

Contents

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski Wacaw Seweryn RZEWUSKI Aktualnoci Biblioteka Narodowa

Early life

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski Wacaw Seweryn RZEWUSKI Aktualnoci Biblioteka Narodowa

Wacław Rzewuski was born 15 December 1784 in Lwów. He was the son of field Hetman Seweryn Rzewuski whose family held enormous estates in Ukraine, and Constance Margaret Lubomirskiej of the influential Lubomirski family. His parents moved the family to Vienna after the Third Partition of Poland and he was educated at the elite Theresianum. In 1806 he married Alexandra, another descendant of the Lubomirski family.

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He served in the Austrian army, fighting at Aspern-Essling in 1809, as a second lieutenant in the regiment of Hussars and was dismissed in 1811. During his time in Vienna, his relative, the famous traveler and adventurer, Jan Potocki, stirred his interest in travel to the lands of the Middle East and he took up the study of Turkish and Arabic. Together with the pioneering Austrian orientalist, Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall, he founded one of the first professional journals of Middle East and Islamic Studies, Mines de l'Orient (Fundgruben des Orientes) (Fontes rerum orientalium)(Sources for Oriental Studies) which was published in six folio volumes from 1809 to 1819.

Travels and publishing

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski Wikiwand

He eventually became a member of the scientific society in Göttingen, the Munich Academy of Sciences and a member of the Warsaw Society of Friends of Learning.

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski Wacaw Seweryn RZEWUSKI Aktualnoci Biblioteka Narodowa

In the years 1818-1820 he travelled the Middle East, visiting Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine, after which he settled in Podolia. During his year of travel he was admitted to 13 tribes and is reputed to have received the title of Emir, Taj al-Fahr ("Crown of glory") and Abd al-Niszan ("servant of the sign"). His Arabic name is a direct translation of his name in its old Slavonic meaning, Viacheslav, or "Crown of Glory," later, Wacław.

His publications included the plan of the mosque in Mecca, maps of Persia and the Arabian Peninsula and he recorded the music of the Bedouin.

He published Sur les chevaux orientaux et provenants des races orientales which contains more than 400 full-color drawings, recording culture and customs of Saudi Arabian Desert.

He returned to Poland settling in his native Podolia with a rich collection of Oriental manuscripts, books, costumes, weapons, and pipes. He also began researching Ukrainian folk customs at this time.

Later years

From 1825 he belonged to the Patriotic Society and was arrested in 1826 and held for two years. He was later involved in the November Uprising of 1830 Commanding a Division in the battle of Daszowem. He was killed in mysterious circumstances on 14 May 1831.

References

Wacław Seweryn Rzewuski Wikipedia