Stanisław Plater

Stanisław Plater
Born(1784-05-10)10 May 1784
Died8 May 1851(1851-05-08) (aged 66)
Parents
  • Kazimierz Konstanty Plater (father)
  • Izabela née Borch (mother)
Scientific career
FieldsHistorian, Geographer, Statistician, Encyclopedist

Stanisław Plater (Lithuanian: Stanislovas Pliateris; 10 May 1784 – 8 May 1851) was a Polish–Lithuanian historian, geographer, statistician and encyclopedist. He is considered an early pioneer of Polish statistical and geographic scholarship.[1][2][3]

Biography

Stanisław Plater was born on 10 May 1784 in Senasis Daugėliškis, then within the Vilnius Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[1] He was a member of the noble Plater family (of the Plater coat of arms).[2] His father, Kazimierz Konstanty Plater, served as the last Lithuanian Vice-Chancellor, and his mother, Izabela née Borch, was a writer and editor of the children’s magazine Przyjaciel Dzieci (1789–1792) in Warsaw, considered the first of its kind in Poland.[1]

He studied at the Vilnius Main School, one of the leading academic centers of the late Commonwealth period.[4]

Between 1806 and 1815, Plater served as an officer in the army of the Duchy of Warsaw, participating in Napoleon’s Russian campaign, and rose to the rank of lieutenant.[1] After the fall of the Duchy, he briefly served as a captain in the army of Congress Poland in 1815 before leaving military service.[1]

He then settled in Greater Poland, where he married Antonina Gajewska (1790–1866) and lived in Wroniawy, her family estate brought as a dowry.[1] Later, he resided in Poznań and spent time in Paris, maintaining connections with Polish émigré intellectuals.[3]

Plater authored works on geography, military history, and statistics in both Polish and French. His most notable publication was the Atlas statystyczny Królestwa Polskiego i krajów ościennych (Statistical Atlas of Poland and Neighboring Countries, 1827), one of the first statistical atlases in Central Europe.[5] He also authored the two-volume Mała Encyklopedia Polska ("Little Polish Encyclopedia").[5]

For his military service, Plater received the Virtuti Militari (Military Order of the Duchy of Warsaw) and later the Order of the Red Eagle of the Kingdom of Prussia.[2]

Plater died on 8 May 1851 in Wolsztyn, Province of Posen (Kingdom of Prussia), and was buried in the local parish church.[6]

Legacy

Plater’s publications contributed to the development of Polish geography and statistics in the early 19th century.[5][1] His Atlas statystyczny and Mała Encyklopedia Polska were among the first systematic efforts to organize and present knowledge about Poland and surrounding regions.[5][1] Later Polish scholars, including Zygmunt Gloger and Bolesław Olszewicz, cited his work as foundational for national cartography and encyclopedic science.[5][1] His combination of historical and statistical approaches anticipated methods used by later 19th-century Polish geographers.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Olszewicz, Bolesław (1999). Materiały do słownika kartografów i geodetów polskich: archiwalia z dawnej Pracowni Historii Geografii i Kartografii Bolesława Olszewicza (in Polish). Warsaw: Retro-Art. p. 163. ISBN 978-83-908973-8-7.
  2. ^ a b c Borkowski, Jerzy Sewer Dunin (1908). Almanach Błękitny: genealogia żyjących rodów polskich (in Polish). Warsaw: Gebethner i Wolff. p. 701. Retrieved 21 September 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Plater, Stanislaus". Meyers Konversations-Lexikon (in German). Vol. 13 (4th ed.). Leipzig and Vienna: Bibliographisches Institut. 1885. p. 118.
  4. ^ Kamińska, Janina. Universitas Vilnensis 1793–1803. Od Szkoły Głównej Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego do Imperatorskiego Uniwersytetu Wileńskiego (in Polish). University of Warsaw. p. 404. ISBN 978-83-235-3289-7.
  5. ^ a b c d e Gloger, Zygmunt (1901). "Encyklopedie polskie" in Encyklopedia staropolska ilustrowana (in Polish). Warsaw: Druk P. Laskauera i W. Babickiego. pp. 130–135.
  6. ^ "Platerowie dla kościoła w Kębłowie" (in Polish). Retrieved 22 September 2023.