Zofia Lubomirska (1718–27October 1790) was an independently wealthy Polishnoblewoman and landowner, known for her political involvement and philanthropy.[1]
Enlightenment activist
She was born in the Sandomierz Voivodeship the daughter of Aleksander Krasiński (1690–1730) and his wife, Salomea Trzcińska. She married firstly Jan Tarło (d. 1750), who left her the town of Opole Lubelskie in his will. In 1754, she married the magnate, Antoni Lubomirski, with whom she was actively involved in state affairs. She reportedly persuaded Lubomirski to end his alliance with Austria and instead become a French agent by accepting an alliance with France. Both her first spouse and her brother, Stanisław, were pro-French.
She produced two political commentaries about Polish politics in 1770, in which she argued for the reform of the rights of the nobility as well as to reform the civil and judicial court systems. She spent most of her life on her domains in Opole, Przeworsk and Dobromił, where she reformed farming and stock management. She set up a vast Textile mill with the help of foreign expertise. After the fall of the Radom Confederation, she lived in her palace in Przeworsk with Franciszka Krasińska, whom she eventually reunited with her husband, Charles in Opole in 1775. They managed to have one surviving daughter, Maria Christina whose descendants became members of the Italian Monarchy. In 1781, she hosted Grand Duke Paul of Russia in disguise, as Monsieur du Nord, in Opole, then king Stanisław August Poniatowski in 1787.
Administrator and entrepreneur
Church of Our Lady of the Snows flanked by the Sisters of Charity convent founded by Antoni and Zofia Lubomirski in Przeworsk
Zofia refurbished the buildings, especially the palaces on her estates, with the help of leading architects and designers. In the town of Przeworsk aside from the textile factory she set up a silk production making the famous ornate bands favoured by many Polish noblemen, Pas kontuszowy. She was known as a patron of the arts, especially of literary authors. After the death of her first husband, Jan, she founded a new hospital in Opole. With her second husband, Antoni, she founded a church and convent for the congregation of the Sisters of Charity in Przeworsk.[3]
↑ Maria Bogucka (2017). Women in Early Modern Polish Society, Against the European Background. Routledge. p.157. ISBN9781351871990. [accessed = 2018.11.23]
↑ Siostry Miłosierdzia, "Sisters of Charity" (2016). Historia domu w Przeworsku, history (in Polish) of the Przeworsk convent, with portraits of the two founders http://www.krakow.szarytki.pl/?p=1132Archived 2018-11-22 at the Wayback Machine, [retrieved 2018-11-21]