Английская Википедия:Edward Jełowicki
Шаблон:Infobox military person
Edward Bożeniec Jełowicki born 1803 in Hubnik now in Western Ukraine, died 10 November 1848 in Vienna, was a Polish landowner, decorated Colonel in the Polish army, insurgent, officer in the Foreign Legion and commander of the Vienna artillery. He was an engineer and inventor.[1]
Biography
Family
Descended from Ruthenian aristocracy, his family had been integrated into the Polish Szlachta and converted from Orthodoxy to Roman Catholicism during the Republic of Two Nations. Edward was the eldest son of Wacław Jełowicki and his wife Franciszka née Izdebska. He had two younger brothers, the publisher, writer and priest, Aleksander and Eustachy and a sister, Hortensja, who married Piotr Sobański.
Career
An alumnus of the Vienna Theresian Military Academy, he was elected Marshal of the Haisyn district. He took a leading part in the November Uprising in Ukraine, with his father and two brothers, until its undoing in 1831 when with his younger brother, Aleksander, he evaded capture by escaping into Austria-Hungary. After much travel across Europe and Algeria, he pursued further studies at the postgraduate École d’état-major in Paris and the Ecole Centrale Paris. In 1836 during a quiet spell in London, he designed and took out two British Patents on his Steam turbine, one being in England.[2] The other patent was granted in Edinburgh for "certain improvements to his steam engine", on 16 July 1836.[3]
Back in Paris he frequented Adam Mickiewicz, whose Paris publisher was Edward's brother, Aleksander Jełowicki. Like his brother, he was also a friend of Frederic Chopin.
Caught up in the Spring of Nations that swept over Europe in 1848, he was executed in Vienna on the order of Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz. He left a widow and two children.
Distinctions
See also
References
Further reading
- Joseph Straszewicz (1839). Les Polonais et les Polonaises de la révolution du 29 novembre 1830 - biographie, Paris: chez l'Editeur, rue des Colombiers, 12, pp.1-10. (in French).
- Polytechnisches Journal. 63. Band, Jahrgang 1837, N.F. 13. Band, Hefte 1-6 komplett. (= 18. Jahrgang, 1.-6. Heft ). Eine Zeitschrift zur Verbreitung gemeinnüziger Kenntnisse im Gebiete der Naturwissenschaft, der Chemie, der Pharmacie, der Mechanik, der Manufakturen, Fabriken, Künste, Gewerbe, der Handlung, der Haus- und Landwirthschaft etc. Herausgegeben von Johann Gottfried und Emil Maximilian Dingler.
Polytechnisches Journal. Hrsg. v. Johann Gottfried Dingler, Emil Maximilian Dingler und Julius Hermann Schultes: Published by Stuttgart in der J. G. Cotta'schen Buchhandlung (1837)., 1837 (in German)
External links
- The Gocla collection Museum of Warsaw has a bronze medallion of Edward Jełowicki
- British Museum information entry
- - Genealogy of Edward Jełowicki in Polish
- ↑ German, F. (1964) "Polski Słownik Biograficzny" Polish Biographical Dictionary vol. XI. Wrocław. pp. 162–163
- ↑ The London Journal of Arts and Sciences, and Repertory of Patent Inventions, Volume 8. 1836
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- Английская Википедия
- Страницы с неработающими файловыми ссылками
- 1803 births
- 1848 deaths
- Dukes of Poland
- Polish nobility
- Ruthenian nobility
- Members of Polish government (November Uprising)
- Activists of the Great Emigration
- Polish Army officers
- École Centrale Paris alumni
- Polish exiles
- Polish inventors
- Mechanical engineers
- Polish Roman Catholics
- Recipients of the Virtuti Militari
- People executed by Austria-Hungary
- Executed Polish people
- 19th-century executions by Austria
- Polish recipients of the Legion of Honour
- Страницы, где используется шаблон "Навигационная таблица/Телепорт"
- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
- Статья из Википедии
- Статья из Английской Википедии