John III of Poland

   


Jan III Sobieski
Jan Sobieski
Reign From May 21, 1674
until June 17, 1696
Elected On May 21, 1674 in Poland
Coronation On February 2, 1676
in the Wawel Cathedral,
Kraków, Poland
Coat of Arms Janina
Predecessor Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki
Successor August II Mocny
Parents Jakub (James) Sobieski.
Zofia Teofillia Daniłowicz.
Consorts Marie Casimire Louise
Children with Marie Casimire Louise
Jakub Ludwik Sobieski
• Teresa Teofila Sobieska
• Berbelune Sobieska
• La Mannone Sobieska
• Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska
• Aleksander Benedykt Sobieski
• Konstanty Władysław Sobieski
• Jan Sobieski
Date of Birth August 17, 1629
Place of Birth Olesko, Poland, (now Ukraine).
Date of Death June 17, 1696
Place of Death Wilanów, near Warsaw, Poland
Place of Burial Wawel, Saint Leonard's Crypt,
Kraków, Poland
buried in 1734


John (Jan) III Sobieski (August 17, 1629 - June 17, 1696) was the king of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth from 1674 to 1696.

Royal titles

  • Official title was (in Latin): Joannes III, Dei Gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, Russie, Prussiae, Masoviae, Samogitiae, Livoniae, Smolenscie, Kijoviae, Volhyniae, Podlachiae, Severiae, Czernichoviaeque, etc.

Biography

He was born in 1629 at Olesko, Ukraine to Jakub (James) Sobieski (1580-1646), Governor of Ruthenian Voivodship and Castellan of Kraków, Zofia Teofillia (Daniłowicz).

In 1668 King Jan II Kazimierz appointed John Sobieski the Commander-in-Chief of the Polish army. After a distinguished military career, and following the death of King Jan II Kazimierz's successor, Michael Korybut Wisniowiecki, John Sobieski was elected by the szlachta as king of Poland on May 21 1674 and was crowned on February 2, 1676.

John Sobieski's military prowess, as exhibited in a war against the Ottoman Empire, contributed to his election as king of Poland. Later he allied with the Holy Roman Emperor. His greatest success came on September 12, 1683 as victor at the Battle of Vienna, with German and Polish troops, once more against the Turks under Kara Mustafa.

Sobieski at Vienna: a 19th century Polish painter Juliusz Kossak gives a heroic interpretation
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Sobieski at Vienna: a 19th century Polish painter Juliusz Kossak gives a heroic interpretation

According to Oscar Halecki, noted Polish historical writer, John III planned to occupy Prussia with Swedish cooperation and French support. This undertaking was doomed to failure, because of the war with Turkey, the skillful diplomacy of the Elector of Brandenburg, and the frequent shifts of alliances amongst the western powers.

Missing image
Sobieski_Sending_Message_of_Victory_to_the_Pope.jpg
"Sobieski Sending Message of Victory to the Pope, after the Battle of Vienna", oil on canvas by Jan Matejko, 1880, 58 x 100 cm, National Musemum in Kraków.

It is noteworthy that John III came belatedly to the battlefield, but rushed to Vienna in order to receive a hero's welcome, while the Elector of Saxony's German and Austrian troops were still busy on the battlefield tending to their dead and wounded. This may be why John Sobieski's hopes for imperial Habsburg marriages for his children were not fulfilled. His son James married Hedwig Elizabeth Amelia von Pfalz-Neuburg, and James' daughter Maria Clementina married the Duke of Cornwall, the Stuart pretender to the British throne.

In a strange twist of events a statue of John III Sobieski was brought to the city of Gdansk by people from his native land (from Lwów), when they were resettled there. Already John's family had been famous guests in the city. Now the statue overlooks the little park at the old Gdansk town hall, now a museum.

Sobieski after the battle of Vienna paited by Jan Matejko
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Sobieski after the battle of Vienna paited by Jan Matejko
Family tree
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Family tree

He married Marie Casimire Louise de la Grange d'Arquien (1641-1716), of Nevers, Burgundy, France. Their children were:

  1. James Louis Henry, (1667-1736) - Crown Prince
  2. Teresa Kunegunde, (1676-1730) - In 1695, the Princess married Maximilian II Emanuel, elector of Bavaria
  3. Aleksander Benedykt, (1677-1713)
  4. Konstanty Wladyslaw, (1680-1720)
  5. Jan, (1682-1685)

King John III Sobieski, the last great king of Poland, died in Wilanów, Poland on June 17, 1696. His wife, Marie Casimire, died in 1716 in Blois, France and her body was returned to Poland. They are interred together in Wawel Castle, Kraków, Poland.

King John III was succeeded by Augustus II, elector of Saxony who stayed in power primarily because of Russian support. On his death in 1733, a struggle for the crown of Poland ensued, referred to as the War of the Polish Succession.

American actress Leelee Sobieski claims to his descendant. This is certainly not where she obtained her surname: John III had no great-grandchildren that bore the name Sobieski or Sobieska.

Preceded by:
Michael Korybut Wisniowiecki
King of Poland Succeeded by:
August II



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