Andrzej Stanisław Kostka Załuski (December 2, 1695 – December 16, 1758) was a priest (bishop) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
In his religious career he held the posts of abbot and later Bishop of Płock (from 1723), bishop of Łuck (1736), Bishop of Chełmno (1739) and Bishop of Cracow (1746). He was a supporter of the Jesuits in Poland.
A member of the Polish nobility (szlachta) of the Junosza coat of arms, he also held the position of the Great Crown Chancellor from 1735 to 1746. As a politician he was engaged in the movement that wanted to reform the failing political system of the Commonwealth.
He studied in Danzig and Rome.
Załuski was a corresponding member of Societas eruditorum incognitorum in terris Austriacis, the first learned society in Habsuburg Austria.
He is perhaps most famous as co-founder (together with his brother Józef Andrzej Załuski, bishop of Kiev) of Załuski Library, one of the largest 18th-century collections of books in the world.[1] He also sponsored the seminary in Pułtusk.
Preceded by Jan Szembek |
Grand Chancellor of the Crown 1735–1746 |
Succeeded by Jan Małachowski |
Catholic Church titles | ||
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Preceded by Ludwik Bartłomiej Załuski |
Bishop of Płock 1723–1736 |
Succeeded by Antoni Sebastian Dembowski |
Preceded by Unknown |
Bishop of Łuck 1736–1739 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Preceded by Adam Stanislaus Grabowski |
Bishop of Chełmno 1739–1746 |
Succeeded by Wojciech Stanisław Leski |
Preceded by Jan Aleksander Lipski |
Bishop of Kraków 1746–1758 |
Succeeded by Kajetan Sołtyk |
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