Hetman Stefan Czarniecki |
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Coat of arms | Clan Łodzia |
Spouse(s) | Zofia Kobierzycka |
Issue
Aleksandra Katarzyna (married Jan Klemens Branicki),
Konstancja Joanna (married Wacław Leszczyński (1605–1666) |
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Noble family | House of Czarniecki |
Father | Krzysztof Czarniecki |
Mother | Krystyna Rzeszowska |
Born | 1599 Czarnca, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth |
Died | 16 February 1665 Sokołówka, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth |
(aged 65–66)
Stefan Czarniecki [ˈstɛfan t͡ʂarˈɲɛt͡skʲi] of the Łodzia coat of arms (1599 – 16 February 1665) was a Polish nobleman, general and military commander. In his career, he rose from a petty nobleman to a magnate holding one of the highest offices in the Commonwealth, something that was unprecedented in the Commonwealth history. On 22 July 1664 he received the office of the voivode of Kiev and on 2 January 1665, a few weeks before his death, he was given the office of Field Hetman (one of top military commanders) of the Crown of the Polish Kingdom. He is remembered as an accomplished military commander, and regarded as a Polish national hero. His status in Polish history is acknowledged by a mention of his name in the Polish national anthem.
Czarniecki made significant contributions fighting the Khmelnytsky Uprising, during the Russo-Polish War, and the Polish–Swedish war (The Deluge). His use of guerrilla warfare against Swedes is credited as one of the main reason for the eventual Polish victory in this war.
Stefan Czarniecki was born in 1599 in the family estate of Czarnca by Włoszczowa in southern Poland in a szlachta (nobility) Czarniecki family. The date of his birth is only an assumption, as no documents exist to prove it without a doubt; most historians, as noted by historians Leszek Podhorodecki and Adam Kersten, accept the 1599 date, although historian Zdzisław Spieralski argued for 1604. His father, Krzysztof Czarniecki, was a soldier who participated in several wars in the late 16th and early 17th century, and eventually became a courtier to Polish queen Constance of Austria. Whereas historian Mirosław Nagielski notes that the Czarniecki family was not well off, which limited some of Stefan's life chances, Podhorecki points out that they owned several villages and even a small town, and the family wealth was "not small". However, Stefan had ten siblings (he himself was the sixth out of nine brothers), and divided into that many parts, the family resources would be stretched rather thin. However, involvement with the queen's court allowed Krzysztof to boost his son's careers with the court influence, where they were often able to serve as young courtiers themselves.