Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki
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Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki (1640–February 19, 1694) of the Sas coat of arms was a member of Polish szlachta of Ukrainian origin and of Orthodox faith, merchant, spy, diplomat and soldier, and considered a hero by the peope of Vienna for his actions at the 1683 Battle of Vienna. According to a popular legend, he opened the first café in the city, using coffee beans left by the retreating Ottoman Turks.
His name often rendered in German as Georg Franz Kolschitzky. In Ukrainian Yuriy-Frants Kulchytsky.
[edit] Biography
Kulczycki was born in 1640 in Kulczyce near Sambor (Kulchytsi, near Sambir, Ukraine). As a young man, he learned Turkish language and culture, and started to work as a translator for the Belgrade branch of the Austrian Oriental Company (Orientalische Handelskompagnie). At that post, he gathered enough wealth to open up his own trading company in Vienna.
During the Battle of Vienna in 1683, he volunteered to leave the besieged and starving city and contact Duke Charles of Lorraine. Together with his trusty servant, Jerzy Michajlović, he left the city in Turkish attire and crossed enemy lines singing Ottoman songs. After contacting the duke, the pair managed to return to the city and reach it with a promise of imminent relief. Because of that information, the city council decided not to surrender to the Turkish forces of Kara Mustafa Pasha and continue the fight instead.
After the arrival of Christian forces led by the Polish king Jan III Sobieski, on September 12, the siege was broken. Kulczycki was considered a hero by the grateful townspeople of Vienna. The city council awarded him with a considerable sum of money while the burghers gave him a house in the borough of Leopoldstadt. King Jan III Sobieski himself presented Kulczycki with large amounts of coffee found in the captured camp of Kara Mustafa's army.
Kulczycki opened a coffee house in Vienna at Schlossergassl near the cathedral. It was named the Hof zur Blauen Flasche (‘House under the Blue Bottle’). Kulczycki's abilities helped popularize coffee in Austria and with time his café became one of the most popular places in town. Kulczycki always served the mortar-ground coffee wearing a Turkish attire, which added to the place's popularity. Another of his innovations was to serve coffee with milk, a manner that was unknown to the Turks.
Cafés were not unknown in Europe in 1683 (several coffeehouse were in operation in Paris, London, Oxford, and Boston), so it is possible that Kulczycki's may not have been the first. But he remains a popular folk hero and the patron of all Viennese café owners even though his café closed soon after his death on February 20, 1694. Until recently, every year in October a special Kolschitzky feast was organized by the café owners of Vienna, who decorated their shop windows with Kulczycki's portrait, as noted by Zygmunt Gloger. Kulczycki is memorialized with a statue on Vienna's Kolschitzky street. Sculpture of Kulczycki at the corner of a street named after him
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Abrahamowicz, Zygmunt, “Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki”, in Polski Słownik Biograficzny, vol XVI (1970), pp 128-129.
- Ellis, Markman (2004), The Coffee House: a cultural history, Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
- Harasimowicz, Cezary (2007), Victoria (novel), Warsaw. ISBN 978-83-925589-0-3.