Stanisław Stadnicki
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Stanisław Stadnicki (c. 1551 in
Nowy Żmigród Nowy Żmigród, until 1946 Żmigród ( yi, זשמיגראד / Zhmigrod, german: Schmiedeburg), is a village and rural municipality ('' gmina'') in Jasło County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland, WNW of Dukla and south of Jasło. History ...
or
Dubiecko Dubiecko (; yi, דיבעצק, Dubetzk; uk, Дубецько, Dubetsʹko) is a town in Przemyśl County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in southeastern Poland. It is the seat of the '' gmina'' (administrative district) called Gmina Dubiecko. It lies ...
– 1610 in Tarnawiec), a Polish nobleman, Lord Starosta of Żygwulsko (Sigulda), a known
troublemaker Troublemaker, The Troublemaker, Trouble Maker, or Trouble Makers may refer to: Film * Troublemaker Studios, a Texan film production company founded by Robert Rodriguez and Elizabeth Avellan * ''Trouble Makers'' (1917 film), a lost silent film dr ...
, called 'the Devil of Łańcut' (Polish: ''diabeł łańcucki'') for his violent behaviour. Lord of the castle in
Łańcut Łańcut (, approximately "wine-suit"; yi, לאַנצוט, Lantzut; uk, Ла́ньцут, Lánʹtsut; german: Landshut) is a town in south-eastern Poland, with 18,004 inhabitants, as of 2 June 2009. Situated in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship (si ...
. Enemy of
Jan Zamoyski Jan Sariusz Zamoyski ( la, Ioannes Zamoyski de Zamoscie; 19 March 1542 – 3 June 1605) was a Polish nobleman, magnate, and the 1st '' ordynat'' of Zamość. He served as the Royal Secretary from 1565, Deputy Chancellor from 1576, Grand Cha ...
, Grand Chancellor of the Crown in 1606 he became one of the leaders of the rokosz of Zebrzydowski. From his Łańcut castle he organised many assaults (zajazdy) at the estates of Łukasz Opaliński and Anna Ostrogska. Married to Anna Stadnicka, father of Zygmunt Stadnicki, Władysław Stadnicki, Stanisław Stadnicki (junior) and Felicjana Stadnicka. After his death, his family carried his tradition of trouble-making, with his wife earning the nickname of ''the Łańcut devil-woman'' and his sons, ''the Łancut devil-children''. He was killed on 20 August 1610, when he was confronted with an overwhelming force loyal to Łukasz Opaliński, and didn't manage to evade pursuit to return to his own men.


Biography

He was the son of Stanisław Mateusz and Barbara née Zborowski, a Calvinist . His brother was Marcin Stadnicki h. Szreniawa (c. 1552-1628) Castellan Sanok, steward court Maryna Mniszech Czarina. He was married to Anna Ziemięcka (from Ziemięcice near Gliwice), he had three sons with her: Władysław (killed in Krzemienica in 1610), Zygmunt and Stanisław, and one daughter - Felicjana. The Stadnicki family was Evangelical-Reformed (Calvinist) and held a church in Łańcut. He is remembered as an adventurer and a famous brawler, called the "Devil of Łańcut". He earned this notoriety as a captain while taking part in
Stefan Batory Stefan may refer to: * Stefan (given name) * Stefan (surname) * Ștefan, a Romanian given name and a surname * Štefan, a Slavic given name and surname * Stefan (footballer) (born 1988), Brazilian footballer * Stefan Heym, pseudonym of German writ ...
’s expedition to Gdańsk and Moscow. Offended that his exploits were underestimated, he left for Hungary, where he fought against the Ottoman Turksin the army of Emperor Rudolf II. Later he supported Archduke Maximilian in his efforts to obtain the Polish crown and for some time stayed in Silesia where he met his future wife Anna Ziemięcka while staying with her father. He took part on the Austrian side in the siege of the Olsztyn castle near Częstochowa. In 1586, he took over the city of Łańcut for debts from Anna Sienińska . During the election of 1587 he voted from the Krakow Province for Maksymilian Habsburg. As a Protestant, and deputy to the Crown Tribunal in Lublin he was chosen as administrator by the Protestant-Orthodox confederation of Vilnius in 1599.He was an opponent of Jan Zamoyski. In 1600, he was a member of the Sejm, and in 1606-1607 one of the leaders of the Zebrzydowski rebellion (he took part as one of the commanders in the battle of Guzów , which took place on July 5, 1607). Later, however, he unexpectedly changed sides and escaped with his army. In 1603 Stadnicki attacked Konstanty Korniakt from Białobok to whom he owed a large fortune. He invaded the villages of Krzemienica, Czarna and Albigowa, which were pledged, plundered the peasants and burned the farms. During the invasion of Sośnica, Stadnicki plundered all the goods gathered there and captured Korniakt, whom he transported to Łańcut , keeping him in castle dungeons for half a year, until he and his mother and brother signed a settlement waiving their claim to damages from his invasion of Sośnica. During the court trial in Przeworsk, Stadnicki tried to kill two of Korniakt's legal advisors: Adam Żydowski and Andrzej Świdnicki, who escaped from the city. He waged a private war against the starosta of Leżajsk, Łukasz Opaliński. Opaliński captured his residence in Łańcut together with the city in 1608. Stadnicki, however, in retaliation took Opaliński's residence together with the city of Leżajsk. Eventually near Tarnawiec, where 6,000 people were gathered, on August 14, 1610, he lost to Opaliński. He died in retreat after the battle, and with him about half a thousand of his soldiers. He had hid in the forest but when he carelessly leaned out from behind logs of wood he was noticed by the Cossacks. Stadnicki was finished by Tatar Persa. After his death, 10 wounds from punches and sword thrusts were calculated on his body. Opaliński regretted that Stadnicki was not taken alive, but he rewarded Persa, who received ennoblement and surname Macedonian at the next parliament.


Stadnicki in Art

Stanisław Stadnicki is one of the characters on the painting by Jan Matejko: ''
Kazanie Skargi ''The Sermon of Piotr Skarga'' or ''Skarga's Sermon'' ( pl, Kazanie Skargi) is a large oil painting by Jan Matejko, finished in 1864, now in the National Museum, Warsaw in Poland. It depicts a sermon on political matters by the Jesuit priest P ...
'' (The Sermon of
Piotr Skarga Piotr Skarga (less often Piotr Powęski; 2 February 1536 – 27 September 1612) was a Polish Jesuit, preacher, hagiographer, polemicist, and leading figure of the Counter-Reformation in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Due to his oratoric ...
). He is the hero of the novel ''Diabeł Łańcucki'' (2007) by Jacek Komuda , ''Under the Devil's Hoof'' (1983) by Kazimierz Korkozowicz , as well as the drama "Dragon's Nest" by Adolf Nowaczyński and the ''Zygwul Starost of'' Adam Krechowiecki . He is also the hero of one of the novellas ( ''With the Devil case'' ) in the ''cases of old man Wolski,'' Józef Hen , filmed in the episode of the ''Knights and Robbers'' series . It is mentioned in the novels of the ''Manuscript of Mrs. Fabulicka'' (1958) Hanna Januszewska and ''Golden Freedom'' (1928) by Zofia Kossak-Szczucka . Anti-hero in novels of writers such as Alexander Fredro , Władysław Syrokomla and Władysław Bełza . One of the antagonists of the hero of the Kacper Ryx series , whose author is Mariusz Wollny .


References

*
Jacek Komuda Jacek Lech Komuda (born 23 June 1972) is a Polish writer and historian. He specialized in the period of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and History of Poland (1569–1795), and is the author of several novels and short stories of fantasy/his ...
, ''Warchoły i pijanice'', Fabryka Słów, 2004, 1550s births 1610 deaths People from Podkarpackie Voivodeship 16th-century Polish nobility Polish rebels Polish people of the Livonian campaign of Stephen Báthory Austrian military personnel 17th-century Polish nobility {{Poland-noble-stub