Folia Historica Cracoviensia (Nov 2013)

The peasant slaughter of 1846 in the accounts of father Jan Popławski of Niegowić

  • Ewa Danowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15633/fhc.239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
pp. 223 – 246

Abstract

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The evaluation of the events of 1846 differed in the opinions of Austrian officialdom and patriotic Poland. According to the version as assessed by the former, the Galician massacre was a reflex on the part of the peasantry loyal to the Austrian monarchy and condemning the uprising against the emperor. From the Polish side, it was viewed as the result of conscious provocation, on the part a bureaucratic Austria, which fell on the fertile ground of the villein peasants’ malevolence toward the nobility and gentry. The slaughter put an end to the preparation for a national uprising. It spread through Western Galicia, primarily in the environs of Tarnów, Bochnia and Jasło. What has been dubbed ‘the bloody carnival’, which was launched around 19th February 1846, engulfed countless victims. The peasants fell on manor houses and presbyteries in search of insurgents and weapons, beating and murdering the country gentry and their clerks, demolishing buildings and robbing the manors and their farm outbuildings of furnishings and fittings. Accounts and memoirs of that period have survived, amongst them those of Father Jan Popławski (1800–1892), the then parish priest of Niegowić. He wrote them for his family in 1857. The original, held in the Academic Library of the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Polish Academy of Sciences in Krakow, was gifted by Seweryn Udziela in 1925. Father Popławski’s memoirs cover 22nd to 24th February 1846, encompassing only three days of the slaughter. For all that, they are valuable as a chronicler’s record of events in Niegowić and its closest environs. They also contain the personal feelings and commentaries of their author.

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