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Moved name of the birthplace entry here, because of ongoing vandalism by Emax
Place of birth: Konstadt,Upper Silesia (now Wolczyn, Poland).
also see: Discussion
Wolczyn
Kurfurst..., he was born in Wolczyn near
Brzesc Litewski...--
Emax 21:22, Jan 4, 2005 (UTC)
Emax, the only Wolczyn on internet is in Upper Silesia. If there is one near Brest, then please show a map here to identify it. Thank you.
I would like to point out that he wasn't Stanislaw "the second". He was Stanislaw Augustus, and this name was carefuly choosen because at this time Stanislaw Leszczynski was still alive and using both "the first" and "the second" would be equally disrespectful. So I've changed that :)
Well, it seems I can't. Whatever
Dulwich_Picture_Gallery
To his cultural excellence I suggest adding : and he funded a collection of paintings, that was dispossessed with him,
Dulwich_Picture_Gallery
Regnim
None. Moreover, such latinized -laus endings may create, for a native English-speaker, a comic effect (they are pronounced like "louse" — in Polish, wesz) that plays into the hands of those who would make light of or belittle Poles and things Polish.
logologist23:10, 25 November 2005 (UTC)reply
Oppose - Per Wikipedia naming conventions, the article should be moved back to the most commonly-used English name of Stanislaus.
Elonka00:22, 9 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Please provide proof that Stanislaus is the most common variant of his name used in English. Also, please see
Talk:Polish-Lithuanian_Commonwealth#Words_of_wisdom: (from Lukowski's book about late PLC 'Liberty's Folly'. Short version: As regards personal names, I have followed my instincts and in most cases, unless there is an extremely close English equivalent, I have kept to the Polish form. I refuse to render Stanisław as anything other then Stanisław.--
Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul PiotrusTalk01:17, 9 January 2006 (UTC)reply
If we were blessed with a classic Polish name abounding in a good sampling of ą, ę, ó, ł, ś, ź, ż, cz, rz, sz, and if non-Poles around us were continually misspelling and mispronouncing it, would we take a survey to see which misspelling is the most common, then bow to the
plurality and adopt that misspelling as our legitimate name?
logologist|
Talk02:13, 9 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I found the name to be "Stanislaus" in the Columbia Encyclopedia, at encyclopedia.com, at encyclopediaofukraine.com, in the Jewish Encyclopedia, reference.com, the Catholic Encyclopedia, the History Channel, infoplease.com, 1911encyclopedia.org, and the Middle East Open Encyclopedia. Using the Polish version of the name also violates the Wikipedia guidelne of not using diacriticals in article names (it makes linking much more difficult). Further, this article was named based on earlier discussions at Wikipedia, and you did not have consensus to change it.
Elonka07:08, 9 January 2006 (UTC)reply
I am not aware of any rule that diactrics should not be used in name, please point me in it's direction.
Reference.com and MEOE are Wiki forks using our outdated article, infoplease.com and encyclopedia.com seem to be columbia (only?) forks. What about modern Britannica? Your search is not inclusive enough, and you don't mention whether this name is used in context of Poniatowski and whether it is the only name used in those contexts (Britannica, for example, is known to use several names) - I'd recommend doing a comaprison via Google/Google Scholar/Google Print, as is our current standard.--
Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul PiotrusTalk13:55, 9 January 2006 (UTC)reply
Wait, shouldn't the title be "Stanislaw II August of Poland", in accordance to the naming policy of monarchs, i.e "-name- -number of -nation-"?
-Alex
12.220.157.9305:35, 30 January 2006 (UTC).reply
I deleted the following sentences because they are crappy English. The first sentence does not state how was he threatened. What? did some beggar shake his fist at the king? It tells the reader absolutely nothing. The second sentence does not describe how he was paralyzed or the effects of his paralyzation. Was he unable to make treaties, unable to lead his army, unable to walk without the aid of a cane?
"During the
Kościuszko Uprising in
1794 the King was threatened when Russian bribery of his contributors was revealed. He was paralyzed, as well, by radical insurgent movements."
If, after all your editing and adding facts, the reader has no idea what the writer meant, then the editing and additional facts are completely worthless.
Naerhu05:04, 22 August 2006 (UTC)reply
Catherine against him?
Why did catherine support the confederation? --
User:Euyyn
I would like to bring up the issue of some of the royal and ducal titles belong to King Stanisław August. The current succession box I made covers the major ones, and indicates that the titles "King of Poland" and "Grand Duke of Lithuania" went to Emperor
Aleksandr I. But what about the King Stanisław's lesser titles? Should they be mentioned as well? Of the King of Poland's titular domains, the Emperor of All Russias recieved several (most) and added them to the official style:
King of Poland (called Tsar of Poland in Russian)
Grand Duke of Lithuania
Duke of Samogitia
Grand Duke of Volhynia (from Duke of Volhynia)
Grand Duke of Podolia (from Duke of Podolia)
Prince of Livonia (from Duke of Inflanty/Livonia)
Grand Duke of Smoleńsk (from Duke of Smoleńsk)
Sovereign of Chernigov (from Duke of Czernihów)
Regarding this title "Duke of Kiev", I'm not really sure what that's all about; I'm not at all familiar with this title or a "Duchy of Kiev". I thought the Emperor of Russia always bore the title "Tsar of Kiev", I don't think this was an inherited title from the King of Poland on the part of the Emperor of Russia.
Anyway, since I guess all all of these titles were subsidiary titles attached to style of the King of Poland/Grand Duke of Lithuania which were the ones with "significant meaning" if you will. By this, they may not be worthy of being included in the succession box. But maybe it should be mentioned in a small section for those who were curious or wanted to trace where titles went.
Farkas János (
talk)
18:32, 4 April 2009 (UTC)reply
The article subject was categorized under "Rosicrucians". I see no reliable sources in this article that place him as a member of that organization. If he was - and I have no dog in this fight, I don't care if he was or not - perhaps a reliable source could be sussed out and the fact mentioned and sourced in the body of the article before he is added to the category again?
Clearly this doesn't rise to the level of a BLP issue, but I don't think it's best practice to categorize even dead people as members of societies of any kind unless evidence exists for membership. --
NellieBly (
talk)
18:56, 17 May 2011 (UTC)reply
"Ordynacja Ostrogska"?
According to the article:
He returned to the Commonwealth in 1754, this time not participating in the Sejm, as his parents wanted to keep him out of the political drama surrounding the "Ordynacja Ostrogska".
The last time I saw this article, it was a little more than a stub. It was quite a surprise to see it grow this much. Bravo to the editor!
Surtsicna (
talk)
09:38, 2 June 2012 (UTC)reply
I am not sure how it's done. It's been a long time since I worked to get an article to GA status (I believe the last one was about the Polish queen
Elizabeth of Bosnia) but I'd suggest nominating it as a GA immediately, since it is wonderfully sourced already.
Surtsicna (
talk)
15:26, 2 June 2012 (UTC)reply
A B-class review is a more informal process than a GA review. The way I do them, is I give an article a quick read and see if it is ready for a GAN, and point out anything that is not. Usually that involves failing article due to insufficient references or lack of completeness :) --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus|
talk to me01:49, 3 June 2012 (UTC)reply
I would propose, perhaps, moving the section about his titles downwards. It is a minor part of his biography and it probably shouldn't precede information about his life and reign.
Surtsicna (
talk)
15:32, 2 June 2012 (UTC)reply
In "Conflicting assessments", it says "he also ... attempted to cover insufficient tax returns." What does that mean? Were taxes too low to cover the country's expenses, and he tried to make up the difference from the royal treasury? Please try to clarify.
In the "Family" section, can we get dates of birth and death for Kazimierz Grabowski? Also, why is he missing from the table titled "Issue"?
Nice clarification, I used it in text. Regarding Kazimierz Grabowski, well, it is because I cannot find much sources. Pl wiki has an entry but on a wrong KG (
pl:Kazimierz Grabowski). He is named in PSB, but unlike his siblings, he does not seem have a dedicated article (the sentence in PSB's bio of Poniatowski is missing a referal which is present to denote individuals who have their own entries). In a little while, I may be able to see if his mother has an article in PSB, and see if it has any more information. KG is also missing from the online geneaology (
[1],
[2]) which is usually pretty reliable. I also corrected another error (Aleksandra was not his daughrter, Konstancja was - she is also missing from the online genealogy, sigh). PS. PSB notes Konstancja was married to Wincenty Dernałowicz, sw website has an entry on her but with different parents:
[3]. PSB is more reliable, usually, so... PPS. Just so we have more sources than just PSB, Zamoyski
mentions Kazimierz on p. 439 "The king's natural sons Michal and Kazimierz Grabowski had also come to Grodno...". More on Konstancja: pl wiki entry on
pl:Konstancja Dernałowicz notes that she is occasionally and erroneously seen as Konstancja Grabowska, daughter of Elżbieta and Stanisław, but the ref there is not reliable. Aargh. I am not sure how to deal with that. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus|
reply here18:00, 7 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Great job expanding this one! One query though: how could Poniatowski have died from a stroke in 1798 but left for Russia in 1799? Ruby2010/201314:41, 18 June 2012 (UTC)reply
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I came across this sentence in the article on
Catherine the Great (section Personal life, subsection Poniatowski) which says of Poniatowski
In 1757, Poniatowski served in the British Army during the Seven Years' War, thus severing close relationships with Catherine.
I have raised a citation need against it but I thought editors who have access to biographies I do not have might like to check this up. If it is supported, it would be interesting if further detail could be made as the sentence raises questions - was he a combatant volunteer in British uniform or a military observer, where did he serve, with which unit/formation?
Cloptonson (
talk)
10:37, 23 April 2022 (UTC)reply