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Bujwid
Bujwid is a Polish-Lithuanian nobility family name belonging to the Ślepowron coat of arms. The archaic feminine form is Bujwidowa (literally meaning "Bujwid's"). In modern time it is a unisex surname. Bujwid is a Polish form of the Lithuanian two-syllable archaic (sur)name Buivydas or Buitvydas — from buitis, būtis ''being'', ''to be'' and (iš)vysti ''to see'', literally ''to be born''. Modern form is Buividas ( Andris Buividas). The Latvian form of the surname is Buivids. The Russified forms are Buivid or Buyvid. The surname may refer to: *Odo Bujwid (1857-1942), Polish bacteriologist *Kazimiera Bujwidowa (1867-1932), Polish feminist and suffragette * Ona Danutė Buivydaitė (born 1947), Lithuanian artist and designer. *Jānis Buivids (1864-1937), a general in the Latvian Army. *Vita Buivid (born 1962), Russian artist * Ray Buivid (1915-1972), American football player See also *Buivydžiai — a town in Vilnius district municipality * Buivydas — a lake in Švenčionys ...
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Kazimiera Bujwidowa
Kazimiera Bujwidowa, née Klimontowicz, (16 October 1867 – 8 October 1932) was a Polish feminist. Life Bujwidowa was born on 16 October 1867 in Warsaw, Congress Poland, the illegitimate child of Ludwika and Kazimierz Klimontowicz. Her father acknowledged her and supported her financially, but she was raised by her mother and then by her aunt, Karolina Petronella Klimontowicz, after her mother's death. She attended a private boarding school and qualified as a private tutor after graduation. Women were not allowed to attend the University of Warsaw at that time so Bujwidowa enrolled in a dressmaking course and attended courses at the underground Flying University in the late 1880s. She married the bacteriologist and social worker Odo Bujwid in 1886 and became her husband's assistant and laboratory technician. They had four daughters and two sons together. When Bujwid was appointed as a professor at Jagellonian University in 1893, they moved to Kraków in Austrian Poland and she ...
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