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Maciejowski
Maciejowski (feminine:Maciejowska) is a Polish surname derived from any of geographical locations derived from the given name Macjej (Maciejów, Maciejówka, etc.). It may refer to: * Bernard Maciejowski, 17th-century Bishop of Krakow and Primate of Poland. * (1835-1901) a Polish writer. * Jan Maciejowski, a British electrical engineer. * (born 1974, Babice), a Polish painter. * Samuel Maciejowski, 16th-century Bishop of Krakow. * Wacław (Aleksander) Maciejowski (1793–1883), Polish historian. * Michał Maciejowski, Polish fighter ace. * Zofia Czeska (Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska) See also * Maciejowski Bible * Ruda Maciejowska, a village in the administrative district *Maciejewski (surname) Maciejewski (feminine Maciejewska, plural Maciejewscy) is a Polish surname derived from various locations with names derived from the given name Maciej: Maciejów, Maciejewice, Maciejowice, Maciejowa etc.
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Bernard Maciejowski
Cardinal Bernard Maciejowski, Ciołek coat of arms (1548 – 19 January 1608 in Kraków), Polish nobleman, starosta, royal standard bearer, statesman and Catholic Church leader; Lutsk bishop, Archbishop of Kraków, Archbishop of Gniezno and Primate of Poland (between 1606 and 1608). Biography Maciejowski was a scion ( descendant) of powerful family, being a son of Bernard Maciejowski, starosta of ''Trembowla'' (now Terebovlia), castelan of Lublin and Radom, and his wife Elżbieta Kamieniecka, Piława coat of arms. His uncle, Samuel Maciejowski, was the archbishop of Kraków. He studied at the Jesuit College in Vienna. Since 1570 he became ''vexillifer regni'' (royal standard-bearer) of king Sigismund II Augustus. He participated as a soldier during 1579–1581 in the Livonian campaign of Stephen Báthory during the Stephen Bathory's reign over the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Under the influence of the Polish influential Jesuit Piotr Skarga Maciejowski decided to study theo ...
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Maciejowska
Maciejowski (feminine:Maciejowska) is a Polish surname derived from any of geographical locations derived from the given name Macjej (Maciejów, Maciejówka, etc.). It may refer to: * Bernard Maciejowski, 17th-century Bishop of Krakow and Primate of Poland. * (1835-1901) a Polish writer. * Jan Maciejowski, a British electrical engineer. * (born 1974, Babice), a Polish painter. * Samuel Maciejowski, 16th-century Bishop of Krakow. * Wacław (Aleksander) Maciejowski (1793–1883), Polish historian. * Michał Maciejowski, Polish fighter ace. * Zofia Czeska (Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska) See also * Maciejowski Bible The Morgan Bible (mostly Morgan Library & Museum, New York, Ms M. 638), also called the Morgan Picture Bible, Crusader Bible, Shah Abbas Bible or Maciejowski Bible, is a unique medieval illuminated manuscript. It is a picture book Bible consist ... * Ruda Maciejowska, a village in the administrative district * Maciejewski (surname) References {{DEFAULTSORT:Ma ...
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Michał Maciejowski
Michał Mirosław Karol Maciejowski DFM Lt. pilot. F / L. P-191229.10.1913 according to J. Cynk Polskie Siły Powietrzne w wojnie was a Polish fighter ace of the Polish Air Force in World War II. Early life Maciejowski (Michael Manson) was born on October 29, 1913, in Gródek Jagielloński. In Rzeszów, he completed the 6-year Jan Sobieski gymnasium. He completed a 2-year Trade School course in Lviv. Military service He was appointed to perform military service in the 40th Infantry Regiment. In 1935, he volunteered to become a pilot to the 6th Pułk Lotniczy in Lviv. From 1936-39 he served in the 6th Aviation Regiment, where he trained as a corpsman. On September 9, together with the staff of the Regiment, he moved to Łuck and Kleań, and on September 12 to Kuty. On September 17, he crossed the border of Romania. He was interned there, but escaped and boarded a ship bound for Syria. At the beginning of 1940, he swam to Marseilles. He arrived in Great Britain in February. ...
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Jan Maciejowski
Jan M. Maciejowski FIEEE is a British electrical engineer. He is Professor Emeritus of Control Engineering at the University of Cambridge. He is notable for his contributions to system identification and control. Career Maciejowski studied at the University of Sussex (BSc 1971) and the University of Cambridge (PhD 1978). As an academic, he joined the University of Cambridge where he became Professor of Control Engineering and a fellow of Pembroke College. From 2009 to 2014, Maciejowski was head of the Information Engineering Division within the University of Cambridge's Department of Engineering. From 2008 to 2018, he was President of Pembroke College. Maciejowski's research has dealt with various aspects of control engineering, notably fault-tolerant control, autonomous systems, model predictive control and system identification. When awarding him a fellowship, the IEEE cited Maciejowski's "contributions to system identification and control". He has played an active rol ...
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Wacław Maciejowski
Wacław Aleksander Maciejowski (10 September 1792 – 10 February 1883) was a Polish historian. Maciejowski was born in Cierlicko near Cieszyn. He studied in Warsaw, Berlin, and Göttingen, and became professor of law at the University of Warsaw in 1819. He wrote three major works: a history of Slavic legislation (1832–38, 4 vols.; 2nd ed. 1856–65, 6 vols.), a history of Polish literature since the 16th century (1851–62, 3 vols.) and a history of the peasants of Poland (1874); the latter was the first monograph to be written on the Polish peasantry. He followed the historical Romanticism of Joachim Lelewel, and had a Pan-Slavic Pan-Slavism, a movement which crystallized in the mid-19th century, is the political ideology concerned with the advancement of integrity and unity for the Slavic people. Its main impact occurred in the Balkans, where non-Slavic empires had rule ... outlook. References External links * * 1792 births 1883 deaths People from Karviná ...
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Morgan Bible
The Morgan Bible (mostly Morgan Library & Museum, New York, Ms M. 638), also called the Morgan Picture Bible, Crusader Bible, Shah Abbas Bible or Maciejowski Bible, is a unique medieval illuminated manuscript. It is a picture book Bible consisting of 46 surviving folios. The book consists of miniature paintings of events from the Hebrew Bible, set in the scenery and costumes of thirteenth-century France, and depicted from a Christian perspective. It is not a complete Bible, as it consists largely of illustrations of stories of kings, especially King David. The illustrations are now surrounded by text in three scripts and five languages: Latin, Persian, Arabic, Judeo-Persian, and Hebrew. The level of detail in the images and the remarkable state of preservation of the work make it particularly valuable to scholars. Forty-three folios are in the Morgan Library & Museum in New York City, with two folios in the Bibliothèque nationale de France (MS nouv. acq. lat. 2294). A single folio ...
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Samuel Maciejowski
Samuel Maciejowski (15 January 1499 – 26 October 1550) was a 16th-century Roman Catholic Bishop of Chełm, Płock and Kraków, in Poland. Early life He was born 15 January 1499 and ordained a priest in 1530. He began his career in 1518 as a notary public of King Sigismund I the Old. In 1522, he went to study philosophy and rhetoric in Padua and then continued his studies in Bologna. After being ordained in 1530, became canon of Kraków. Episcopal career He was first made Bishop of Chełm, and was then Appointed Bishop of Płock, Poland on 22 August 1541 followed by being made Bishop of Kraków, on 19 Jun 1546. He was also Secretary of the Crown.Urzędnicy centralni i nadworni Polski XIV-XVIII wieku, Kórnik 1992, p.145. As Bishop of Kraków, he was concerned with the level of education of the clergy, was a supporter of a soft approach with dissenters. In 1546, he ordered an inspection visit of the diocese, which in concept at least, was to limit the influence of the Reformat ...
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Maciejewski (surname)
Maciejewski (feminine Maciejewska, plural Maciejewscy) is a Polish surname derived from various locations with names derived from the given name Maciej: Maciejów, Maciejewice, Maciejowice, Maciejowa etc. "Maciejewski Name Meaning"
citing the ''Dictionary of American Family Names'', 2013, Oxford University Press It may refer to: * Adam Maciejewski (born 1967), Polish economist * A. F. Maciejewski (1893–1949), American politician *
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Maciejewski
Maciejewski (feminine Maciejewska, plural Maciejewscy) is a Polish surname derived from various locations with names derived from the given name Maciej: Maciejów, Maciejewice, Maciejowice, Maciejowa etc. "Maciejewski Name Meaning"
citing the ''Dictionary of American Family Names'', 2013, Oxford University Press It may refer to: * Adam Maciejewski (born 1967), Polish economist * A. F. Maciejewski (1893–1949), American politician *
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Maciej
Maciej (Polish pronunciation: ) is a Polish given name, the etymological equivalent of Matthias. Its diminutive forms are Maciek, Maciuś. Namedays according to Polish calendar: 30 January, 24 February, 14 May Maciej may refer to: Arts and entertainment * Maciej Cieślak (born 1969), Polish guitarist and songwriter * Maciej Dunal (1953–2014), Polish actor and singer * Maciej Fortuna (born 1982), Polish jazz trumpeter, composer and musical educator * Maciej Golubiewski (born 1976), Consul General at the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in New York City * Maciej Jachowski (born 1977), Polish actor * Maciej Kozłowski (1957–2010), Polish actor * Maciej Łukaszczyk (1934–2014), Polish pianist * Maciej Maleńczuk (born 1961), Polish singer, guitarist and poet * Maciej Małecki (born 1940), Polish composer and pianist * Maciej Musiał (born 1995), Polish actor * Maciej Silski (born 1976), Polish singer * Maciej Stuhr (born 1975), Polish actor, comedian and impres ...
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Ruda Maciejowska
Ruda Maciejowska is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Opole Lubelskie, within Opole Lubelskie County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately east of Opole Lubelskie Opole Lubelskie is a town in eastern Poland. As of 2004, it had 8,879 inhabitants. The town is situated in Lublin Voivodeship, some 10 kilometers east of the Vistula River, and is the capital of Opole Lubelskie County. It was founded in the 14th ... and west of the regional capital Lublin. References Ruda Maciejowska {{OpoleLubelskie-geo-stub ...
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Zofia Czeska
Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska (1584 – 1 April 1650) was a Polish professed religious and the founder of the Sisters of the Presentation. Czeska was married before a brief period of time before following her call into the religious life. Her beatification was celebrated on 9 June 2013. Life Zofia Czeska-Maciejowska was born in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1584 as one of nine children to Mateusz Maciejowska and Katarzyna Lubowiecka; one sister younger than her was Anna. Czeska married in 1600 to Jan Czeska and was widowed in 1626 childless at which point her religious calling flourished. Czeska organised a school for girls in Kraków from 1621 until 1627 (at 18 Szpitalna Street) and then decided to found a women's religious institute that she titled the Sisters of the Presentation which she set up on 31 May 1627. Thus the institution that she had introduced was dedicated to the care and the education of poor and orphaned girls which she threw herself into with much apost ...
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