Aleksander Kakowski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Styles of
Aleksander Cardinal Kakowski
Reference style His Eminence
Spoken style Your Eminence
Informal style Cardinal
See Warsaw
Cardinal Kakowski (centre) with the two other members of the Regency Council
Cardinal Kakowski (centre) with the two other members of the Regency Council

Cardinal Aleksander Kakowski (18621938) was a Polish politician and Catholic priest, member of the Regency Council, the archbishop of Warsaw, and the last titular primate of the Kingdom of Poland before Poland regained its independence in 1918.

Aleksander Kakowski was born February 5, 1862, in Dębiny near Przasnysz. He was ordained a priest on May 30, 1886, in Warsaw, by Wincenty Cardinal Chościak-Popiel. The following year he became one of the professors at the Warsaw Theological Seminary. In 1910 he became the rector of the Theological Academy of St. Petersburg and on July 22, 1913, he was ordained a bishop by Stanisław Zdzitowiecki. On September 14, 1913, he became the archbishop of Warsaw in St. John's Cathedral, thus becoming the titular primate of the Kingdom of Poland.

After the outbreak of the Great War he remained in Warsaw and in 1917 Kakowski was appointed to be a member of the Regency Council, a semi-independent and temporary highest authority of the Kingdom of Poland, recreated by the Central Powers as part of their Mitteleuropa plan. Kakowski was one of three members of that body, which served as a provisional head of state (hence the word "regency" in its name).

On November 28, 1919, he was the main consecrator of Achille Ratti, a papal nuncio to Poland who later became Pope Pius XI. On December 15 of the same year, Kakowski himself was made a cardinal. During his service as the Archbishop of Warsaw, Kakowski promoted the creation of a strong Catholic press. He was one of the authors of the success of Rycerz Niepokalanej, which was one of the most popular newspapers in pre-war Poland. He was also the main creator of the theological faculty at the Warsaw University and of the Catholic Action movement. For his role in liberating Poland from foreign occupation, in 1925 Kakowski was awarded the Order of the White Eagle, the highest Polish decoration (and in July of 1938 he even briefly appeared as the head of that order's chapter). In 1930 he also became a "bailiff of honour and devotion" of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. Although after the war the title of Primate of Poland was reintroduced by August Cardinal Hlond, who used it himself, Kakowski continued to style himself a Cardinal of the Kingdom of Poland until his death on December 30, 1938.

Preceded by
Jan Paweł Woronicz
Primate of the Kingdom of Poland
1916 – 1938
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
Wincenty Chościak-Popiel
Archbishop of Warsaw
1913 – 1938
Succeeded by
August Hlond