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Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz

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Lieutenant
  
Ignacy Moscicki

Resigned
  
June 5, 1947

Name
  
Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz


Succeeded by
  
Preceded by
  
Julian Szymanski

Resting place
  
Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Prime Minister
  
Wladyslaw SikorskiStanislaw MikolajczykTomasz Arciszewski

Preceded by
  
Ignacy Moscicki (in country)

Succeeded by
  
August Zaleski (in exile)Boleslaw Bierut (in country)

Role
  
Died
  
June 6, 1947, Ruthin, United Kingdom

Political party
  
Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government

Presidential term
  
September 30, 1939 – June 5, 1947

Previous office
  
President of Poland (1939–1947)

PREZYDENT RP WŁADYSŁAW RACZKIEWICZ


Władysław Raczkiewicz ([vwadɨˈswaf rat͡ʂkʲɛˈvit͡ʂ]; 28 January 1885 – 6 June 1947) was a Polish politician, lawyer, diplomat and the first president of the Polish government in exile from 1939 until his death in 1947. Until 1945 he was the internationally recognized Polish head of state, and the Polish Government in Exile was recognized as the continuum to the Polish government of 1939.

Contents

Władysław Raczkiewicz FileWadysaw Raczkiewicz 1930jpg Wikimedia Commons

President Raczkiewicz in Angers - France 1939


Early life and studies

Władysław Raczkiewicz Wadysaw Raczkiewicz Zabrako mu iskry Historia polskieradiopl

Władysław Raczkiewicz was born in Kutaisi, the second-largest city in Georgia, at that time part of the Russian Empire to Polish parents Józef Raczkiewicz, a court judge, and Ludwika Łukaszewicz. He studied in Saint Petersburg where he joined the Polish Youth Organization. After graduating from the Faculty of Law at the University of Dorpat he was employed as a lawyer in Minsk. Upon the outbreak of World War I he served in the Russian Imperial Army, but after the Russian Revolution he joined the vanguard for Polish independence. Serving as the head of the Naczelny Polski Komitet Wojskowy, he helped to create the Polish I Corps in Russia. Later he served under future Marshal and chief-of-state Józef Piłsudski, who created the Polish Legions that ultimately aided Poland in re-establishing its independence.

Władysław Raczkiewicz Wadysaw Raczkiewicz

As a volunteer he fought in the Polish-Soviet War between 1919 and 1920. At first supporter of endecja faction, later joined the sanacja camp headed by Piłsudski and his closest supporters. Raczkiewicz served as the Voivode of the Nowogródek Voivodeship from 1921 to 1924; government delegate to Wilno Voivodeship (1924–1925) and later as its voivode (1926–1931). After the Brest elections he was appointed the Senate Marshal (1930–1935) and Voivode of Kraków Voivodeship in 1935, and Pomeranian Voivodeship from 1936 to 1939.

World War II

Władysław Raczkiewicz Wadysaw Raczkiewicz prezydent RP na uchodstwie w latach 1939

When Poland was invaded by the Wehrmacht in 1939, he escaped to Angers where the Polish government-in-exile was established. He lived in the nearby Château de Pignerolle from 2 December 1939 until moving on 10 June 1940 to London, where he joined General Władysław Sikorski and Stanisław Mikołajczyk in the relocated Polish government in exile. He was an opponent of the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement.

In February 1945, Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt held the Yalta Conference. The future of Poland was one of the main topics that was deliberated upon. Stalin claimed that only a strong, pro-Soviet government in Poland would be able to guarantee the security of the Soviet Union. As a result of the conference, the Allies agreed to withdraw their recognition of the Polish Government in Exile, after the formation of a new government on Polish territory.

Raczkiewicz died in exile in 1947, in the Welsh town of Ruthin. He is buried in the cemetery at Newark-on-Trent in England.

References

Władysław Raczkiewicz Wikipedia