Józef Pawlikowski

Jozef Pawlikowski (* 1767 in Piotrków, † 1828 in Warsaw) was a Polish Jacobin journalist.

Pawlikowski studied law at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow and settled as a lawyer in Warsaw. He participated actively in the Kościuszko Uprising and fled to its collapse, first to Belgium, then to Paris, where he worked as a secretary for Tadeusz Kościuszko. On August 22, 1795 he signed the Memorandum of Deputacja Polska, an exile organization of the Polish independence movement. Only after the Congress of Vienna Pawlikowski returned to Warsaw. In 1821 he joined the Unabhängigkeitsorganistion Narodowe Towarzystwo Patriotyczne. He was arrested in 1826 and died in early 1828 in a Warsaw prison.

In addition to memoirs O poddanych polskich (1788 ) and Myśli polityczne dla Polski ( 1790) wrote Pawlikowski political polemic Polacy wybić się na moga niepodległość? ( Can the Poles fight for their independence? ), The anonymously published in Paris in 1800 and initially Kościuszko or the General Karol Kniaziewicz was attributed. Due to a denunciation of this first edition of the Scriptures in France was confiscated, but it was during the November Uprising and after that re-issued several times and evolved into a kind of catechism of Polish patriotism.

Swell

  • Wirtualna Biblioteka Literatury Polskiej - Jozef Pawlikowski
  • Author
  • Political literature
  • Literature ( Polish)
  • Person in the Kościuszko Uprising ( Poland)
  • Pole
  • Born in 1767
  • Died in 1828
  • Man
454315
de