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  1. Maria Wirtemberska. Princess Maria Czartoryska (formerly Duchess Louis of Württemberg; 15 March 1768, Warsaw – 21 October 1854, Paris), was a Polish noble, member of the House of Württemberg, writer, musician and philanthropist. [1]

  2. Maria Wirtemberska, portret pędzla Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, 1793. Urodzona w związku małżeńskim Adama Kazimierza Czartoryskiego (generał ziem podolskich) i Izabeli z Flemmingów, jej prawdziwym ojcem był jednak (najprawdopodobniej) król Stanisław August Poniatowski, który był kochankiem Izabeli.

    • Polska arystokratka, powieściopisarka, poetka i filantropka.
  3. May 15, 2012 · Maria Wirtemberska (1768–1854) was a Polish noblewoman and philanthropist in addition to being a writer. Ursula Phillips is a writer on Polish literature, mainly in the field of women's writing, gender and feminism, and also a translator of literary and academic works, including The Palace by contemporary novelist Wieslaw Mysliwski, historian Antoni Maczak's Travel in Early Modern Europe ...

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  5. Jan 15, 2021 · Wirtemberska, Maria, księżna, 1768-1854. Publication date 2012 Publisher DeKalb, IL : NIU Press Collection printdisabled; internetarchivebooks Contributor Internet ...

  6. Sage House 512 East State Street Ithaca, NY 14850. 607 253 2338 Contact us

  7. Maria Wirtemberska, Malvina, or the Heart's Intuition. Translation, introduction, and notes by Ursula Phillips. London: Polish Cultural Foundation, 2001. Pp. xxxvi + 201. It is sometimes argued now that the history of Polish literature is already a known quantity, and that what is needed is an intensive investigation of individual writers.

  8. 42 Magdalena Ożarska Jan Kochanowski University, Kielce Austenian inspirations for Maria Wirtemberska’s “Original Romance”: Malvina, or the Heart’s Intuition (1816) It is a fact that Jane Austen’s novels were not rendered into Polish in the nineteenth century, the first translation being published as late as 1934 (Bystydzieńska 2007).