Eustachy Stanisław Sanguszko
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eustachy Stanisław Sanguszko | ||
|
||
Noble Family | Sanguszko | |
Coat of Arms | ||
Parents | Wladyslaw Hieronim Sanguszko Izabella Maria Lubomirska |
|
Consorts | Konstancja Maria Zamoyska | |
Children | with Konstancja Maria Zamoyska Roman Wladyslaw Sanguszko |
|
Date of Birth | July 13, 1842 | |
Place of Birth | Tarnow | |
Date of Death | April 2, 1903 | |
Place of Death | Bozen Gries, Austria |
Prince Eustachy Stanisław Sanguszko (August 28, 1842 – April 2, 1903) was a Polish noble (szlachcic), conservative politician.
Eustachy educated in Poland and Paris in 1859-1860. He studied law on the Jagiellonian University from 1862 to 1864. He sympathized with the insurgents of the January Uprising of 1863-1864 and took part in meetings with Marian Langiewicz in Goszcz. In April 1863 he traveled with a secret correspondence for the "Hotel Lambert" to Paris, and stay there until the end of the Uprising. From 1873 until 1901 member and from October 14, 1890 to February 9, 1895 Marshal of the National Sejm in Galicia. He was member of the Herrenhaus and member of the Austrian Council of the State from October 27, 1879. Successor of Kazimierz Feliks Badeni in the office of governor of Galicia from 1895 until 1898.
[edit] Awards
- Grand Cordon of the Leopold Order, awarded in 1894 (Wielka Wstega Orderu Leopolda)
- Order of the Golden Fleece, awarded in 1898
|