Michał Kleofas Ogiński
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Michał Kleofas Ogiński (Guzów, near Warsaw, October 7, 1765 - October 10, 1833, Florence, Italy) was a Belarusian and Polish statesman, insurrectionary and composer, best known for his polonaise, Pożegnanie Ojczyzny (Belarusian: Развiтаньне з Радзимай, Łacinka: Raźvitańnie z Radzimaj; English: Farewell to the Fatherland).
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[edit] Life
Ogiński was an ambassador, composer, Paymaster General of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. His father, Andrej, was governor of Trakai; his mother, Paulina, was a daughter of the magnate, Szembek. Ogiński was born in Guzów, near Warsaw. Taught at home, he excelled especially at music and foreign languages.
[edit] Chronology
- 1786 - Sejm deputy.
- 1788 - Commissioner of the Treasury of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
- 1789 - Sword-bearer of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
- 1789 - Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Netherlands.
- 1791 - Returned to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania to decide a point of his family lands since Russia had occupied some of them.
- 1793 - Deputy to the Harodnia Sejm.
- 1793-94 - Paymaster General of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
- 1794 - Took part in the Kościuszko Uprising.
When the Russians occupied Vilnius, he moved to Warsaw. The Russians outlawed him and seized all his lands. Thereafter he lived in exile successively in Vienna, Venice and Paris.
- 1802 - Thanks to the good offices of Duke Czartoryski, Ogiński was allowed to return to his country.
He swore allegiance to Tsar Alexander I of Russia and settled in Zalessie village, Aszmiany region, in present-day Belarus. At the new place of living Ogiński build a new palace, an English-style park, a greenhouse, a zoopark and collected a lot of books for his library.
- 1807 - Ogiński met Napoleon in Italy.
- 1810 - Ogiński moved to St. Petersburg, Russia. There he met the Russian Emperor, who gave Ogiński the rank of Senator and Privy Councilor. Also he was conferred decorations upon St Vladimir and Alexander Nevski.
- May, 1811 - Ogiński introduced to the Emperor Alexander I of Russia his project of restoring independence of Grand Duchy of Lithuania. But the Emperor refused.
- 1817 - Oginski moved to Vilnius and published 2 albums of his own compositions.
- 1823 - Ogiński moved to Florence, Italy where lived till the death.
[edit] Works
Being a well-known musician and a composer, Ogiński was fond of Italian and French Opera, played violin and clavichord.
He started composing marches and military songs in 1790's and become popular among rebels in 1794. Some historians consider Oginski composed music for the song Jeszcze Polska Nie Zginela (Poland has not yet perished), which became the Poland National Hymn later.
Living in Zalessie, present-day Belarus, Ogiński devoted himself to music composing. During that period he composed music for the polonaise Pozegnanie Ojczyzny / Raźvitańnie z Radzimaj (Farewell to the Homeland).
Also he composed a lot of piano pieces, polonaises, mazurkas, marches, romances and waltzes. Popular works and compositions:
- opera Zelis et Valcour ou Bonaparte au Caire
- treatise Letters about music (1828)
- Memoirs about Poland and Poland's 1788-1815 published in Paris
- Pożegnanie Ojczyzny (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- The polonaise by Ogiński
- Problems listening to the file? See media help.
[edit] External links
- Free scores by Michał Kleofas Ogiński in the Werner Icking Music Archive