She wrote the trilogy Krauzowie i inni (1930) ("The Family Krauz and others") which depicted the saga of a Galician family in the aftermath of the January Uprising.
It is of interest to note that it persisted in Samogitia and Podlaskie, where the Greek-Catholic population, outraged and persecuted for their religious convictions, clung longest to the revolutionary banner.
•
The Reds criticized the Polish National Government for being reactionary in its policy to provide incentive to Polish peasants to fight in the uprising.
The Siemaszko family had lived in Volhynia since January Uprising of 1863, after which Wladyslaw's grandfather bought some land from the Ukrainians in the area of Wlodzimierz Wolynski.
He was convicted in 1864 of espionage by an underground court in the January Uprising.
Warsaw Uprising | November Uprising | January Uprising | United Kingdom general election, January 1910 | Slovak National Uprising | Kościuszko Uprising | Tron: Uprising | TRON: Uprising | Slovak Uprising | Khmelnytsky Uprising | Warsaw Ghetto Uprising | Soweto uprising | Solar eclipse of January 22, 1898 | Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising | Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising | First Serbian Uprising | Autumn Harvest Uprising | Allegheny Uprising | Wuchang Uprising | Uprising Records | Uprising of 1953 in East Germany | Soweto Uprising | Serbian Uprising | Second Serbian Uprising | Polish National Government (November Uprising) | Night of January 16th | June Uprising | January Suchodolski | January Jones | January February |
Dionizy Feliks Czachowski (born April 6, 1810 in Niedabyl, died November 6, 1863 in Jawor Solecki) was a Polish general and commander of the Sandomierz Voivodeship during the January Uprising in Congress Poland.
At first he steered the country towards an alliance with Napoleon III, but, rebuffed by the latter's support of the January Uprising, joined his archrival Otto von Bismarck in setting up the League of the Three Emperors.
Mikhail Muravyov was the son of General Count Nicholas Muravyov (governor of Grodno), and grandson of Count Mikhail Nikolayevich Muravyov-Vilensky, who became notorious for his drastic measures in stamping out the Polish insurrection of 1863 in the Lithuanian provinces.
Nad Niemnem is set in and around the Polish county of Grodno after the 1863 January Uprising.
After the January Uprising of 1863, the Russian Empire moved much of the collection to Moscow; the remaining collections were re-organized and were incorporated into the Vilnius Public Libray.
The idea of Polish–Lithuanian–Ruthenian Commonwealth returned during the January Uprising, when in 1861, a patriotic demonstration took place at Horodło.
Born on February 1 to Polish family, 1859 in Livonia, (Russian Empire), his family soon moved to the provinces surrounding the Black Sea, possibly as part of the repercussions facing Poles in the aftermath of the failed January Uprising.
Count Mikhail Muravyov-Vilensky (1796-1866), known for his suppression of the Polish-Lithuanian January Uprising of 1863
In Paris, he met Napoleon III to inform him about the French officers, participants of the January Uprising, whom he had met in Siberia.