Konstanty Wasyl Ostrogski | |
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Portrait by Peeter Danckers de Rij
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Coat of arms | Ostrogski |
Spouse(s) | Zofia Tarnowska |
Issue | |
Noble family | Ostrogski |
Father | Konstanty Ostrogski |
Mother | Aleksandra Słucka |
Born |
Ostróg, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth |
2 February 1526
Died | 23 or 13 February 1608 Ostróg, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth |
(aged 82)
Konstanty Wasyl Ostrogski (2 February 1526 – 13 or 23 February 1608, also known as Kostiantyn Vasyl Ostrozky, Ukrainian: Костянтин-Василь Острозький, Belarusian: Канстантын Васiль Астрожскi, Lithuanian: Konstantinas Vasilijus Ostrogiškis) was an Orthodox magnate of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, a Ruthenian prince, starost of Volodymyr-Volynskyi, marshal of Volhynia and voivode of the Kiev Voivodeship. Ostrogski refused to help False Dmitriy I and supported Jan Zamoyski.
The date of birth of Konstanty Wasyl Ostrogski is disputed. According to some historians he was born around 1524/1525.
He was born probably in Turów.
In the 1570s he waged a war against another magnate, Stanisław Tarnowski, about disputed possession of estates in the area of Tarnów, in Lesser Poland.
Prince Ostrogski was of Eastern Orthodox faith and he was active in supporting the Orthodox Church (see Union of Brest). He was also a promoter of Eastern Christian culture in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Around 1576 he established the Ostroh Academy, a regarded humanist educational and scholarship institution, with the instruction in Greek, Latin and Old Church Slavonic languages. In 1581 the Academy produced and published the Ostrog Bible, the first complete printed edition of the Bible in Old Church Slavonic.