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- Sobieski was elected king, and Maria Kazimiera supported him throughout the entire life. An example of her woman’s diplomacy was the decision to send an unofficial ambassador Małgorzata Kotowska (1646–1699) to the Austrian imperial court with a view to building an anti-Turkish coalition in 1680.
muzeumwarszawy.pl › en › obiektPortrait of Marie Casimire Sobieska (1641–1716), Queen of Poland
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Like Marie Louise Gonzaga, Marie Casimire was a strong supporter of an absolute monarchy, for which she was reviled by certain spheres of the Polish nobility. The nobility were scandalized at the queen's political meddling, believing that no foreign woman should interfere.
Sobieski was elected king, and Maria Kazimiera supported him throughout the entire life. An example of her woman’s diplomacy was the decision to send an unofficial ambassador Małgorzata Kotowska (1646–1699) to the Austrian imperial court with a view to building an anti-Turkish coalition in 1680.
Sep 26, 2018 · This paper is about the figure of the Polish Queen Maria Casimira Sobieska, widow of King Jan Sobieski, the winner of the battle of Vienna, 1683. After her husband’s death, in 1696, she moved to Rome, where she cleverly integrated into the political and cultural context.
- Giulia Vincenti
- giulia.vincenti@unicusano.it
- 2018
In 1659 Maria Kazimiera established closer contacts with Jan Sobieski; she was requested by the queen to win over her husband and Sobieski for plans of a vivente rege election. In 1661 Maria...
- Jan Tricius
At the beginning of May of that year, a special envoy to the King of France, bishop Toussaint Forbin Janson, arrived in Warsaw and met with the Sobieskis to confirm that he had been instructed to support Sobieski’s candidacy, after, however, first promoting Philip FRENCH ARISTOCRAT AND POLISH QUEEN 209 William, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken ...
- Jarosław Pietrzak
Marie Casimire Louise de La Grange d'Arquien, known also by the diminutive form "Marysieńka", was a French noblewoman who became the queen consort of Poland and grand duchess consort of Lithuania from 1674 to 1696 by her marriage to King and Grand Duke John III Sobieski of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. She had great influence upon the affairs of state with the approval of her spouse ...
Marysienka's divorce from Zamoyski. Early in 1665 Sobieski accepted the appointment to the office of grand marshal of Poland which made him the first minister of the realm. In April 1665 Zamoyski died, whereupon Sobieski declared himself willing to give full support to the queen's party, provided he was allowed to sue for the hand of Maria ...