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Władysław Wróblewski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Polish szlachcic, politician, scientist, diplomat and lawyer
Władysław Wróblewski
5thPrime Minister of the Regency Kingdom of Poland
In office
4 November 1918 – 11 November 1918
MonarchRada Regencyjna(Regency Council)
Preceded byJózef Świeżyński
Succeeded byIgnacy Daszyński(As Prime Minister of theSecond Polish Republic)
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
13 December 1919 – 16 December 1919
Prime MinisterLeopold Skulski
Preceded byIgnacy Jan Paderewski
Succeeded byStanisław Patek
In office
4 November 1918 – 14 November 1918
Prime MinisterHimself
Ignacy Daszyński
Preceded byStanisław Głąbiński
Succeeded byLeon Wasilewski
Personal details
Born21 March 1875
Died19 August 1951 (aged 76)

Władysław Wróblewski (Polish pronunciation:[vwaˈdɨswafvruˈblɛfskʲi]; 21 March 1875,Kraków – 19 August 1951,Łódź[1]) was a Polishszlachcic, politician, scientist, diplomat and lawyer. He is notable as the last provisional prime minister of the German-controlledpuppet state ofRegency Kingdom before Poland regained their independence in 1918.

Biography

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Władysław was the son of Wincenty Wróblewski and Waleria (née Bossowska) and brother of lawyer, Stanisław Wróblewski. He was from noble family ofLubicz coat of arms.[2]

Wróblewski was a notable lawyer anddocent of administration and administrative law at theJagiellonian University inKraków. On November 4, 1918, after the withdrawal ofJózef Świeżyński's provisional government, Wróblewski was chosen by theRegency Council to act as the head of a new temporary provisional government.[3] As the situation in Poland was changing rapidly, Wróblewski chose not to appoint his own ministers and instead continued the job of his predecessor, with the same set of ministers. The last meeting of his government took place on November 11 of that year, when all powers were ceded toJózef Piłsudski, who got back from prison in Magdeburg Fortress earlier that day.

On November 18, all ministries were taken by the new government ofJędrzej Moraczewski and the Regency Kingdom ceased to exist, giving way to the reborn Republic of Poland. Afterwards he remained an active member of the Polish administration, initially as an undersecretary of state at the Council of Ministers and later as a diplomat. Among other posts, he was the Polish ambassador inLondon and later inWashington. Between 1929 and 1936, he headed theBank Polski, the central bank of Poland.[4]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^"Władysław Wróblewski (1875 - 1951) - Genealogy". 28 April 2022.
  2. ^Marek Jerzy Minakowski."Władysław Wróblewski h. Lubicz".www.sejm-wielki.pl/.
  3. ^[1][permanent dead link]
  4. ^"Władysław Wróblewski (polityk) - Szkolnictwo.pl".

External links

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Media related toWładysław Wróblewski at Wikimedia Commons

Political offices
Preceded byPrime Minister of Kingdom of Poland
1918
Succeeded by
Duchy of Warsaw
(1807–1813)
Kingdom of Poland (1917–1918)
Republic of Poland
(1918–1939)
Polish government-in-exile
(1939–1990)
Polish People's Republic
(1944–1989)
Republic of Poland
(1990–present)
*Acting; see also:Chancellor of Poland
Republic of Poland
Polish government-in-exile
People's Republic of Poland
Republic of Poland
International
National
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