Helena Radziwiłłowa
Helena Radziwiłłowa (1753–1821) was a Polish aristocrat.[1] She was, for a period, a lady-in-waiting to Catherine the Great. She married the Polish magnate and politician Michał Hieronim Radziwiłł in 1771. She was widely known for her love affairs and was the lover of Stanisław August Poniatowski as well as of Otto Magnus von Stackelberg, who benefitted the career of her spouse. BiographyHelena was born the daughter of Anthony Tadeusz Prezezdecki (1718–1772) and his wife, Princess Catherine Oginska (b. 1725).[2] After the death of her mother, she was raised by her aunt Princess Aleksandra Czartoryska (1730–1798), the wife of Prince Michał Kazimierz Ogiński.[3] She received an education and was fluent in French, English, German, and Italian.[3] She married Prince Michał Hieronim Radziwiłł (1744–1831) on 26 April 1771. Following the wedding she and her husband lived in Czernawczycy, then Nieborów Palace,[4] and in the Radziwill Palace in Warsaw.[3] At the coronation of Paul I, she was made a lady of state and awarded with the Order of Saint Catherine of the lesser cross. Following fashion and an example from her rival Izabela Czartoryska, who managed an estate at Puławy, Helena founded her own park not far from Neborov. With the help of architects, she designed the romantic parked which she naimed 'Arcadia" Helena would devote 40 years of her life to this park which would become her pride and joy.[3][5] The park was designed in the English style, its pavillions were decorated with works of art inspired by Ancient Greece and Rome. In July of 1795, Helena Radziwiłł hosted Zofia Potocka, who was inspired to build her own, the famous Sofiyivka Park. In the later years of her life, Princess Radziwiłł had lost her former cheerfulness. Having met her in 1818, Princess Varvara Turkestanova wrote of her:[6]
She died in Warsaw in 1821.[3] IssueFrom her marriage with Michał Hieronim Radziwiłł, they had eight children:[7]
References
|