Greater Poland Uprising (1846)
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The 1846 Wielkopolska Uprising (Polish: powstanie wielkopolskie 1846 roku) was a planned military insurrection by Poles in the land of Greater Poland against the occupying Prussian forces, designed to be part of a general Polish uprising in all three partitions of Poland, against the Russians, Austrians and Prussians.
Because the other insurrections failed and the leaders of the Wielkopolska underground organization were arrested by Prussian authorities, no serious hostilities occurred that year except for minor fighting in Poznań and Górczyn.
[edit] Famous insurgents
- Władysław Niegolewski (1819-1885) was a Polish liberal politician and member of parliament, an insurgent in the 1846 Wielkopolska Uprising, the 1848 Wielkopolska Uprising and the 1863 Uprising, and a cofounder (1861) of the Central Economic Society (TCL) and (1880) of the People's Libraries Society (CTG).
- Edmund Taczanowski (1822-1879) was a Prussian-Polish general, noble and Lord of Choryn who led an 1843 revolt and participated in the 1846 Wielkopolska Uprising. He later served with Giuseppe Garibaldi in the Italian Risorgimento.
[edit] See also
Partitions: Bar Confederation - Kościuszko Uprising - Greater Poland Uprising (1794) - Greater Poland Uprising (1806) - November Uprising - Greater Poland Uprising (1846) - Kraków Uprising - Greater Poland Uprising (1848) - January Uprising
Second Republic: Greater Poland Uprising (1918–1919) - Silesian Uprisings
World War II: Warsaw Ghetto Uprising - Operation Tempest - Warsaw Uprising
People's Republic: Poznań 1956 protests