Born in 1700; died in 1773. This great reformer of Polishschools was aPiarist who, during a visit toRome after hisordination, received there the firstidea of his life's mission. Returning toPoland throughFrance andGermany (whose systems ofeducation he studied on his way), and at first unsuccessful in his plans, he set to compiling the "Volumina Legum", the first volume appearing in 1732. About the end of Augustus II's reign, and during the interregnum which followed, he wrote much in favour of Stanislaus Leszczynski, and, subsequently travelling in theNetherlands and inFrance, stayed for a time at the exiled king's court. Here he became convinced that reform in politics must be preceded by reform ineducation, and, returning home in 1738, he attempted to change the subject-matter and methods ofeducation inPoland. Good school-books and teachers werenecessary; the latter he tried to train himself as "Magister novitiorum" at Rzeszow college, and then sent them either to be tutors of young noblemen or to study abroad at his own cost. In 1740 he opened acollegium nobilium atWarsaw, a most important experiment. In the first year he had but one pupil, in the second there were more than ten, while in the third he had not room for all who came. The teachers he had instructed now began to help him in writing school-books, etc. In 1754 he built acollege and obtained fromBenedict XIV a change in the rule of the order: henceforth everyPiarist was to be a teacher. There were soon as manyschools asPiaristconvents, andeducation was no longer a privilege of the nobility alone. The classics, history and geography, naturalscience,philosophy, Roman and Polish law, were taught, together with the modern languages; and for the first time the Polish tongue was taught as a separate subject. Mental, rather than purely mnemonic, work was encouraged; moraleducation was insisted upon; emulation succeeded to fear; self-sacrifice,honour, patriotism were inculcated as theduties of a citizen. Konarski had found theatricals in use; he maintained the custom, thinking these performances might become very instructive, hadRacine andCorneille performed, and himself wrote a tragedy, "Epaminondas". He also introduced discussions and debatingsocieties for advanced pupils. Together with this, he laboured to reform style inPoland, wrote "De emendandis eloquenti vitiis", and attacked the bad taste prevalent at the time. ThePiaristschools succeeded so well that all others wereobliged to follow his reform. Konarski was subjected toenvious attacks, and thePapal nuncio, Durini, suspected hisorthodoxy. He cleared himself by his book, "De religione honestorum hominum".
Having effected a complete reformation ineducation, he returned to politics. From 1760 to 1763 appeared his "Effective Way of Deliberating", whichproved that the right of one member to veto the proceedings of the whole Diet had never been a law, but anevil custom, and showed from the procedure of other parliaments that a working majority was sufficient. The impression made by this work was immense, and even the most bigoted partisans of the veto were convinced. Thenceforward this custom was doomed-in itself a great step forward and a preliminary to the constitution of the Third of May. But the book contains many other valuableideas. His style is clear, calm, eloquent, rarely passionate. He did much for thePiarist publications (v.g. the "Diplomatic Codex"), and the "Volumina Legum" is his work. A great admirer of French civilization and taste which, however, were not without danger in their tendencies, as was subsequently seen he was also the last Latin writer inPoland; his "Opera Lyrica" (1767) are perfect in style and diction. King Stanislaus Augustus caused a medal to be struck in hishonour, with the well-merited inscription, "Sapere auso".
APA citation.Tarnowski, S.(1910).Stanislaus Konarski. InThe Catholic Encyclopedia.New York: Robert Appleton Company.http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08687b.htm
MLA citation.Tarnowski, Stanislaus."Stanislaus Konarski."The Catholic Encyclopedia.Vol. 8.New York: Robert Appleton Company,1910.<http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08687b.htm>.
Transcription.This article was transcribed for New Advent by Czeglédi Erzsébet.
Ecclesiastical approbation.Nihil Obstat. October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor.Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.
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