Michniewicz onufry (1 risultati)

Da: Douglas Stewart Fine Books, Armadale, AustraliaDouglas Stewart Fine Books
Contatta il venditoreVenditore con 4 stelleCondizione: Usato
EUR 506,55
EUR 31,78 spedizioneSpedito da Australia a U.S.A.Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello[Portsmouth, 11 March 1835]. Single sheet, 230 x 200 mm, mounted on the recto of a nineteenth-century album leaf, along with the envelope in which it was originally contained; manuscript in ink, with a five-line declaration written in French at the head: 'Nous [les] sous signés cértifi[ons par la] présente que [Sls?] Roch Rupnie…wski et Sévérin [D]ziewicki sont des Polonais et qu'ils restent actuéllement à Portsmouth ; en foi de quoi nous méttons nos signatures. - fait à Portsmouth, le 11 de Mars 1835'; below, in two columns, are the signatures of fourteen Polish political exiles: [Onufry] Michniewicz; [Ignacy] Wellmann; [Apoloniusz] Buchowski; [Wiktor] Ambrozewicz; [?] Paworsky; [Jan] Swidzinsky; [Franciszek] Linkowski; [Franciszek] Gasiewski; [Karol] Siemianowice; [Adam] Bacynski; [Marcin] Soroczynski; [Wojciek] Pietkowski; [Franciszek] Teklinski; [Josef] Milaskiewicz; the sheet has old fold lines, scattered foxing and light staining, with a small section of loss at the top edge (probably from where a seal was broken) resulting in a short lacuna in the first line of the French-language inscription; the accompanying envelope is inscribed 'Certificate of Polish refugees in Portsmouth (England). Dated 11th March 1835. / J. M. Cook, St. Kilda'. Provenance: J. M. Cook, St. Kilda, Melbourne, Australia; autograph album compiled by Jane Emma Murphy (Balcombe) (1854-1924), of"The Briars", Mornington (and later, St. Kilda, Melbourne), Victoria, Australia; thence by descent through the àBeckett family, Melbourne. This unique and unusual document was prepared by a group of Polish exiles domiciled in Portsmouth, all of whom were ex-soldiers who had arrived at Portsmouth as refugees from Gdansk on the German battleship Marianne in February 1834. It would seem the document was created to act as a quasi-legal testimonial or some form of identity card for two of their Polish compatriots recently arrived in England, Roch Rupniewski (1802, Poland - 1876, Liverpool) - poet, soldier and engineer - and Severin Dziewicki (1812, Poland - 1862, Leominster). Both men were revolutionaries who had participated in the November Uprising against the Russian Empire in 1830-31. Rupniewski, Dziewicki and the soldiers from the Marianne were all ultimately granted sanctuary in Britain. The Polish Memorial in Kingston Cemetery, Portsmouth, which was erected in 2004, records the names of all 212 Polish soldiers who arrived on the Marianne. (The names of thirteen of the signatories to the present documentappear on this memorial). The English text on the Polish Memorial reads: 'Lest we forget the kindness shown and the helpgiven by the people of Britain's premier navalport, Portsmouth, to 212 Polish soldiers, membersof the first Polish community in Britain, whoarrived in Portsmouth in February 1834, afterhaving taken part in the November uprisingagainst Tzarist Russian oppression, which tookplace in Warsaw in 1830 - 1831.The majority of those soldiers were laid to restin this very place in a common grave.At a time when merchants of human rights joined forcesin order to destroy liberty - the people of Portsmouthrallied to the aid of those who fought for that liberty.'.