Stefan Czarniecki

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Stefan Czarniecki
Image:Stefan Czarniecki.jpg
Noble Family Czarniecki
Coat of Arms

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Łodzia

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Date of Birth 1599
Place of Birth Czarnce, Poland
Date of Death July 18, 1665
Place of Death Sokółka, Poland

Stefan Czarniecki, Stephen Czarniecki (1599-July 18 1665) Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth general and nobleman (szlachcic). Field Crown Hetman. He was an outstanding military commander who gained fame of a national hero. His prominent status in Polish history is acknowledged by a mention of his name in the Polish national anthem.

Born in family estate of Czarnce in southern Poland. He learnt the art of war under Stanislaw Koniecpolski in the campaigns against Gustavus Adolphus (1626-1629) (part of the Polish-Swedish War), and under Ladislaus IV in the Smolensk War against Muscovy in 1633-1634. On the May 16 1648 he was one of the many noble Polish prisoners who fell into the hands of Bohdan Chmielnicki at the battle of Yellow Waters and was sent in chains to the Crimea, whence he was ransomed in 1649. He took an active part in all the subsequent wars with the Cossacks and received more disfiguring wounds than any other commander.

When Charles X of Sweden invaded Poland in 1655, Czarniecki distinguished himself by his heroic defence of Kraków, which he only surrendered under the most honorable conditions. His energy and ability as a leader of guerrilla hampered Charles X at every step, and though frequently worsted he from time to time inflicted serious defeats upon the Swedes, notably at Jaroslaw and at Kozienice in 1656. Under his direction the popular rising against the invader ultimately proved triumphant. It was he who brought King John Casimir back from exile and enabled him to regain his lost kingdom. It was against his advice that the great battle of Warsaw was fought, and his subsequent strategy neutralized the ill effects of that national disaster. Image:Stefan Czarniecki2.jpg

On the retirement of the Swedes from Kraków and Warsaw, and the conclusion of the treaty of Copenhagen with the Danes, he commanded the army corps sent to drive the troops of Charles X out of Jutland and greatly contributed to the ultimate success of the Allies. On the conclusion of the Peace of Oliva, which adjusted the long outstanding differences between Poland and Sweden, Czarniecki was transferred to the eastern frontier where the war with Russia was still raging. In the campaign of 1660 he won the victories of Połonka and Lachowicza and penetrated to the heart of the enemy's country.

The diet (Sejm) of 1661 publicly thanked him for his services; the king heaped honours and riches upon him, and in 1665 he was appointed Field Crown Hetman of Poland, but died a few days after receiving this supreme distinction.

Czarniecki is rightly regarded as one of the most famous of heroic Poland's great captains, and to him belongs the chief merit of extricating her from the difficulties which threatened to overwhelm her during the disastrous reign of John Casimir. Czarniecki raised partisan-warfare to the dignity of a science, and by his ubiquity and tenacity demoralized and exhausted the regular armies to which he was generally opposed.

He is interred in the tomb chapel of the church founded by him in Czarnce.

Image:Czarniecki pod Koldynga.jpg

References

pl:Stefan Czarniecki sv:Stefan Czarniecki uk:Чарнецький Стефан