Samuel Zborowski

Samuel Zborowski

Infobox Person
name = Samuel Zborowski


caption =
birth_date = unknown
birth_place =
death_date = May 26, 1584
death_place = Kraków
other_names =
known_for =
occupation =
nationality =
children =
parents = Marcin Zborowski
relatives = Piotr Zborowski (brother);
Krzysztof Zborowski (brother);
Jan Zborowski (brother);
Andrzej Zborowski (brother)

Samuel Zborowski (?–1584) was a Polish military commander and a notable member of the "szlachta" (Polish landed gentry). He is best remembered for having been executed by supporters of the Polish king; an event which caused much uproar among the contemporary Polish nobility.

Biography

Son of Marcin Zborowski and brother to Andrzej, Jan, Krzysztof and Piotr, Samuel was an heir of a significant fortune within Poland. His family was notable for its wealth and influence at the royal court of Poland, his father was a castellan of Kraków and his brother Jan was a personal secretary of the king Sigismund II of Poland and one of the most influential people of the epoch.

Samuel Zborowski rose to the power of a Royal "rotmistrz" at the court of Sigismund II. The title, quite prestigious at the time, was seen as a base for further titles and powers. After Sigismund's death and the election of Henry III de Valois as the next King of Poland, a tournament was held at the Wawel Castle in honour of the new monarch on February 23, 1573. Zborowski had the honour of throwing his gauntlet as the first knight, yet his proposal of a fight was not responded by any respectable nobleman. Instead, the goblet was raised by certain Karwat, one of non-noble soldiers of the castellan of Wojnice Jan Tęczyński. After Karwat defeated Zborowski's servant in a duel, Zborowski felt this as a serious offence and attacked Tęczyński himself, in the presence of a new monarch. Castellan of Przemyśl Andrzej Wapowski tried to calm down the fighters, but was hit with Zborowski's mace and was badly hurt. Wapowski refused to rest and instead started a campaign against Zborowski; his wound got infected and he died a week later. Although a murder committed during a Sejm (Polish parliament) or in presence of a monarch was punishable by death, the new king did not want to start conflicts with the mighty family of Zborowski and sentenced him to banishment, without infamy. Samuel Zborowski fled Poland even before the verdict was presented and joined the court of Stefan Batory, then the Prince of Transylvania. After several months Henry III fled Poland and three years afterwards Batory was elected his successor. Zborowski returned to Poland, expecting that his brothers, some of the most notable supporters of Batory's candidacy, would raise to even greater fame and wealth after the new monarch arrives. However, most of the important offices were taken by the supporters of Jan Zamoyski and the Zborowski brothers gradually lost importance. This made them enemies of the new king and two of them, namely Andrzej and Krzysztof started to plot with the courts of Moscow and Vienna against the life of the monarch. Samuel tried to rehabilitate himself by raising a Cossack regiment and taking part in the war against Muscovy and the Velikiye Luki (Wielkie Łuki) Campaign of 1580, where he proven to be a courageous warrior. However, the sentence was not changed and the Zborowskis received no reward or recognition for their efforts. Samuel then moved to Dzikie Pola region where he was a celebrity among the Cossacks; together they carried several raids against the Ottoman Empire, angering king Batory, who wanted to pursue a policy of appeasement with Ottomans.

In 1584 Jan Zamoyski managed to intercept several letters of the Zborowski brothers (Krzysztof and Samuel), in which they described their preparations for the assassination of the king. Today it is impossible to know whether those letters were real or convenient forgeries, nonetheless, Batory told Zamoyski that Zborowski should be executed, however as he had no power to issue such an order, Zamoyski would act on the basis of the 1573 banition sentence. In May of 1584 Zborowski entered the area of Lesser Poland (Małopolska), which was then under jurisdiction of Jan Zamoyski. He was arrested in Piekary and executed on May 26, 1584 at the Wawel hill by beheading.

Despite the fact that the execution was fully lawful, it was seen by many of the szlachta, most notably by the Protestants, as an act of vengeance or abuse or monarch power, a warning to the dangers of absolutism. Zborowski would be remembered by many as a martyr.

His brothers moved to avenge him and tried to gain support from other nobles. At the November 1585 local sejmik, Krzysztof Zborowski and his men filled the church where the meeting was to take place (and where Zamoyski was to appear) and disrupted the proceedings with brandished weapons, openly calling for the other nobles to hand over Zamoyski. The proceedings were moved to the graveyard, where Zborowski proceeded to "filibuster" by ringing the church bell. Two different marshals were elected at the meeting, one by Zborowski's supporters and one by the opposition, and resolutions were only slowly passed, one of which asked the national Sejm to consider the legality of Zamoyski executing Samuel Zborowski.

At the "Sejm" of January of 1585 two of Zborowski's brothers were tried for their plans and Krzysztof was banished. During the proceedings, evidence against Krzysztof Zborowski amounted, including a letter in which he discussed killing the king. Bathory summoned Krzysztof to appear, but he did not. The second Zborowski was convicted of treason and sentenced to death. This finally broke the power of the once mighty family.

References

* cite book
last = Komuda
first = Jacek
authorlink = Jacek Komuda
title = Warchoły i pijanice
year = 2004
publisher = Fabryka Słów
location = Lublin
isbn = 83-89011-40-9

* cite web
title = Zborowski Samuel
work = Internetowa encyklopedia PWN
url = http://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo.php?id=4000819
language = Polish
publisher = Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN
accessdate = 2008-01-18

* cite web
title = Zborowski Samuel
work = WIEM Encyklopedia
url = http://portalwiedzy.onet.pl/72228,,,,zborowski_samuel,haslo.html
language = Polish
accessdate = 2008-01-18


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