Skarga ubogiego szlachcica na niesprawiedliwość świata tego - źródło do historii mentalności czasów saskich
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Autor:
Popiołek, Bożena
Źródło: Annales Academiae Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 57, Studia Historica 7 (2008), s. [33]-47
Język: pl
Data: 2008
Metadata
Pokaż pełny rekordOpis:
Dokument cyfrowy wytworzony, opracowany, opublikowany oraz finansowany w ramach programu "Społeczna Odpowiedzialność Nauki" - modułu "Wsparcie dla bibliotek naukowych" przez Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego w projekcie nr rej. SONB/SP/465103/2020 pt. "Organizacja kolekcji czasopism naukowych w Repozytorium UP wraz z wykonaniem rekordów analitycznych".Streszczenie
The article is devoted to a 18th-century confession-complaint, which was written down by Franciszek Husarzewski, a
poor nobleman from Podlasie, a lieutenant of infantry of king August II. It is difficult to establish why in 1753
Franciszek, on four little pages, described the unhappy turns of his life; was it for the record for his
descendants, or was complaining about his fate to a higher authority. He enumerates the events of his life in a few
points, starting with the marriage with Marianna Szczygielska, as badly-off as himself, and taking over of a small
and, as it turned out, ruined manor Szczygły, his wife’s dowry. Not much is known about Franciszek. He was probably
bom at the tum of the 1680s and 1690s, in the family of a minor nobleman from Podlasie. In his youth Franciszek was
a soldier, a lieutenant of the royal infantry, but most of his life he was trying his luck at the courts of more
wealthy noblemen. On the 28th of February, 1713 Franciszek married young Marianna Szczygielska, daughter of
Konstancja Szczygielska and Tomasz Szczygielski; her mother was a daughter of a court official of Podlasie.
Marianna and Franciszek led a life full of hardship, worries, and conflicts with the neighbours, in the times of
the Northern War.
The analyzed text displays not only the tragic figure of Franciszek Husarzewski, struggling with poverty and
dishonest neighbours all of his life, but also the sad reality of the Saxon rule in Poland. Poverty of minor
noblemen, especially in such regions as Podlasie, who owned small manors, usually indebted and ruined by the war,
forced them to try other ways of making a living; it was usually military or court service, in the armies of
aristocrats or as officials in gentry’s estates.