Franciszek Bujak
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Franciszek Bujak | |
|---|---|
Franciszek Bujak at the Jagiellonian University | |
| Born | 16 August 1875 Maszkienice near Brzesko, Poland |
| Died | 21 March 1953 (aged 77) Kraków, Poland |
| Occupations | Academic, Historian |
| Years active | 1909–1952 |
| Employer | Jagiellonian University |
| Known for | Research in economic, political, and social history of Poland |
| Notable work | Badania Dziejów Społecznych i Gospodarczych |
| Political party | Polish People's Party "Piast" (PSL), Stronnictwo Ludowe |
Franciszek Bujak (16 August 1875, in Maszkienice near Brzesko - 21 March 1953, in Kraków) was a Polish academic and historian of economic, political and social history of Poland.
Bujak served as professor of the Jagiellonian University twice, from 1909 til 1918 before the re-emergence of Second Polish Republic, and after World War II from 1946 til 1952.
In the interwar Poland, Bujak was a professor of the Warsaw University from 1919 til 1921, and the John Casimir University in Lwów from 1921 until the outbreak of Operation Barbarossa in 1941.
Bujak was a member of the Polish Academy of Sciences since 1952, and president of the Polish Historical Society twice from 1932 til 1933 and from 1936 til 1937.
Party-political activity
Bujak was active politically in the Polish People's Party "Piast" (PSL) and the Stronnictwo Ludowe.