Emilia Plater

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Emilia Plater in a skirmish at Szawle, during the November Uprising of 1830-1831.  Painting by Wojciech Kossak, oil on canvas.
Emilia Plater in a skirmish at Szawle, during the November Uprising of 1830-1831. Painting by Wojciech Kossak, oil on canvas.

Countess Emilia Plater (1806 - 1831) was a revolutionary from the lands of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. She fought in the November Uprising and is considered a national hero of Belarus, Lithuania and Poland, former parts of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Emilia Plater was born November 13, 1806, in Vilna (Vilnius), to a notable aristocratic family of Franciszek Ksawery Plater and Anna née Mohl. Her parents divorced when she was nine years old and she was brought up by her distant relatives, the Plater-Żyberk family, in their family manor Liksana in Livonia. Well-educated, Plater was brought up in cult of Tadeusz Kościuszko and Adam Mickiewicz's poems. She was also a fan of Bobolina, a woman who became one of the icons of the Greek uprising against the Ottomans, and Joan of Arc. Such interests were accompanied by interest in horseriding and sharp-shooting, quite uncommon for early 19th century girls of aristocratic families.

In 1829, Emilia Plater began to take a grand tour throughout the historical Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, but had to return home due to the death of her mother. After the outbreak of the November Uprising against Imperial Russia, lands of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania were initially unaffected by the fighting and during the initial stages, there were still no anti-Tsarist units formed there. Emilia Plater decided to form one of the first such partisan Lithuanians units herself. She cut her hair, prepared a uniform for herself and organized and equipped a group of volunteers. The unit was composed of roughly 280 infantry, 60 cavalry and several hundred peasants armed with war scythes. From the area of Dyneburg (Daugavpils) she crossed the border to Samogitia, where in April of 1831 her unit seized the town of Zarasai. Her unit headed back for Dyneburg, but after a reconnaissance mission discovered that the city was defended by a strong garrison and was impregnable to attack by such a small force as her own unit.

After that she returned to Samogitia and headed for Poniewież (Panevėžys), where she joined her forces with the unit commanded by Karol Załuski. Shortly afterwards General Dezydery Chłapowski entered the area with major forces and took command over all units fighting in the former Grand Duchy. According to a popular legend, he advised Emilia Plater to stand down and return home. She allegedly replied that she had no intention of taking off her uniform until the fatherland was fully liberated.

Emilia Plater in a 1908 litograph published in a Dzieje Polski (History of Poland), based on a painting by Carl Mayer.
Emilia Plater in a 1908 litograph published in a Dzieje Polski (History of Poland), based on a painting by Carl Mayer.

Her choice was accepted and she was made the commanding officer of 1st company of the Polish 1st Lithuanian Infantry Regiment. She fought with distinction and was promoted to the rank of captain, the highest rank awarded to a woman at that time. After the Polish units were defeated by the Russians, Gen. Chłapowski decided to cross the border with Prussia and get interned there. Emilia Plater refused to follow the orders and decided to try to break through to Lithuania to continue her struggle instead. However, during the break through the forests, Emilia Plater became seriously ill and died December 23, 1831 in a manor of Abłamowicze family in Justianów. She was buried in the small village of Kopciowo (Kapčiamiestis) near Suwałki.

Statement, March 25, 1831, by Emilia Plater on joining the November Uprising, prompted by love of her country.
Statement, March 25, 1831, by Emilia Plater on joining the November Uprising, prompted by love of her country.

Her death was widely publicised shortly afterwards and Emilia Plater became one of the symbols of the uprising. The symbol of the fighting girl became quite widespread both in Poland, Lithuania and abroad. Adam Mickiewicz immortalized her in one of his poems, Śmierć pułkownika (Death of a Colonel), although the description of her death is a pure poetical fiction and was only loosely based on her real life. Other literary works based on her life were published, mostly abroad, both by Polish emigres and by foreigners. Among them were Georg Büchner, Konstanty Gaszyński, Antoni E. Odyniec and Władysław Buchner and Józef Straszewicz, who published three successive versions of her biography in French. She also became the theme of paintings by several artists of the epoch, among them Hyppolyte Bellange, Achille Deveria, Philipp Veit, Francois de Villain and Wojciech Kossak. In 1842 J. K. Salomoński published a short biography of Emilia Plater in New York, under the title of Emily Plater, The Polish Heroine; Life of the Countess Emily Plater. In 1959 she was made the name-sake of M/S Emilia Plater, a 10000 BRT ship built for the Polish Oceanic Lines. She has a street named after her in most major towns of Poland.

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