Jerzy Ossoliński

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Prince Jerzy Ossoliński h. Topór (15 December 1595 – 9 August 1650) was a Polish nobleman (szlachcic), Crown Court Treasurer from 1632, governor (voivode) of Sandomierz from 1636, Reichsfürst (Imperial Prince) since 1634, Crown Deputy Chancellor from 1639, Great Crown Chancellor from 1643, sheriff (starost) of Bydgoszcz (1633), Lubomel (1639), Puck and Bolim (1647), magnate, politician, statesman and diplomat. Famous for being extensively educated, he was a skillful politician and a persuasive public speaker.<ref>pl:Jerzy Ossoliński</ref>

He is the founder of the Baroque church in Klimontów.

Biography

File:Bellotto Entry of Jerzy Ossoliński into Rome in 1633.png
Entry of Jerzy Ossoliński into Rome in 1633 by Bernardo Bellotto. National Museum in Wrocław.

He was sent with diplomatic missions to the Pope in Rome in 1633. He negotiated with the Duchy of Prussia in 1635 and led another diplomatic mission to Emperor Ferdinand II and his parliament in Regensburg (Polish: Ratyzbona) in 1636. As a leader of the pro-Habsburg faction at the royal court, he found an ally in the first wife of Władysław IV Waza, Cecilia Renata of Austria, daughter of Ferdinand II. In 1639 and 1641 he once again negotiated with envoys from the Duchy of Prussia. A Catholic, he opposed Protestants and advocated limiting their rights and privileges. In his pro-Habsburg and anti-Protestant stance he was allied with Chancellor Albrycht Stanisław Radziwiłł and Queen Cecilia Renata.

File:Jerzy Ossoliński.PNG
Bust of Jerzy Ossoliński at the Warsaw Royal Castle

In 1643 he was appointed Chancellor of the Crown.<ref name="Jedruch113"/> A close royal adviser, he often supported king Władysław IV Waza from the House of Vasa, arguing for increasing monarch power,<ref name="Jedruch113"/> although he was known for limiting and withdrawing his support if he knew it was impossible to win. Nonetheless, he was among the few who supported Władysław's plans in the late 1640s to wage an offensive war on the Ottoman Empire. He had few friends among the lesser szlachta, whom he mostly disliked and treated the Sejm and regional sejmiks as a 'necessary evil', although he rarely broke any laws.

From 1644 he switched his alignment from pro-Habsburg to pro-French and supported the second marriage of King Władysław with Ludwika Maria Gonzaga. During his life he became the enemy of Adam Kazanowski and Jeremi Wiśniowiecki, whose power diminished with the marriage between Władysław and Cecylia in 1637. Rival of bishop and chancellor Piotr Gembicki, whom he eventually forced to retire from politics in 1642, receiving his position of Great Crown Chancellor.

He was not the wealthiest of magnates, his possessions were very small compared to those of Radziwiłłs or Wiśniowieckis, but almost none of them were mortgaged or loaned. In 1635 he funded the expansion of his family castle in Ossolin. Between 1639 and 1642 he funded the palace in the capital city of Warsaw.

After the death of Władysław IV in 1648 he supported the election of his half brother John Casimir and was instrumental in his election.<ref name="Jedruch113"/>

Ossoliński also was in favour of treaties with the Cossacks, he took part in the negotiations and was an important contributor to the Treaty of Zborów in 1649.<ref name="Jedruch113"/>

He was a well regarded speaker and orator (he served twice as the Speaker of the Sejm in 1631 and 1635).<ref name="Jedruch113"/>

He was also an author of:

  • Orationess... (1647)
  • Mercurius Sarmatiae (1716)
  • Pamiętnik (The Diary or Memoires) 1595–1621 (1952)<ref name="Jedruch113"/>

He also wrote the diaries of the embassy to Germany (1877) and to Rome (1883).<ref name="Jedruch113"/>

Brother of Krzysztof Ossoliński (1587–1645), voivode of Sandomierz (1638), and Maksymilian Ossoliński (1588–1665), chorąży sandomierski (1624), Deputy Court Treasurer.

File:Ossolinski Kazanowski Palace.jpg
Ossoliński Palace (left) and Kazanowski Palace (right) in Warsaw. They were both plundered and burned down by Swedes and Germans of Brandenburg in 1650s.

Marriage and issue

Jerzy married Izabella Daniłłowicz h. Sas in 1620 in Lwów and had four children:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Bibliography

References

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Template:Sejm Marshals of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Template:Grand Chancellors of the Crown Template:Deputy Chancellors of the Crown Template:Crown Court Treasurer Template:Authority control