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Count Andrzej Artur Zamoyski (2 April 1800 – 29 October 1874) was a Polish nobleman, landowner and political and economic activist.[1]
Andrzej Artur Zamoyski | |
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Coat of arms | Jelita |
Born | 2 April 1800 Vienna |
Died | 29 October 1874 Kraków | (aged 74)
Family | Zamoyski |
Wife | Róża Potocka |
Issue | Zofia Zamoyska,Władysław Zamoyski (1827–1873), Jerzy Zamoyski, Cecylia Zamoyska, Jan Michał Zamoyski, Stanisław Antoni Zamoyski, Róza Zamoyska, Andrzej Antoni Zamoyski, Zdzisław Zamoyski (1842–1925) |
Father | Stanisław Kostka Zamoyski |
Mother | Zofia Czartoryska |
Zamoyski organized meetings of landowners (Klemensowczycy) at his Klemensów estate in the Polish Congress Poland. In 1842 he became co-publisher of the Rocznik Gospodarstwa Krajowego (Polish Farming Annual). In 1848 he founded the Steam Navigation Company and thereafter monopolized transport on the Vistula River. He also initiated the building of steamships and barges. He was the founder and chairman of an Agricultural Society.
Zamoyski was an opponent of Aleksander Wielopolski and a principal figure in the Biali (Whites) political faction. Exiled in September 1863, he settled in France, becoming part of the Polish Great Emigration. In 1872 he was inducted into the Polish Academy of Learning.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Zamoyski Andrzej Artur". Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). 27 April 2016.