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South Bend Area Genealogical Society
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"Serving South Bend, Mishawaka and Surrounding Areas"
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P.O. Box 11
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Notre Dame, IN 46556
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Boleslaw William PIESZAK
[N6267]
20 NOV 1886 - ____
- BIRTH: 20 NOV 1886, Pyzdry, PL
Father: Wawrzyniec PIESZAK
Mother: Antonia POPIELARSKI
Family 1
: Marianne BRONARCZYK
- MARRIAGE: 7 JUL 1914, St Casimir, South Bend, IN
INDEX
[N6267]
Pyzdry is a town in Wrzesnia County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland, with 3,163 inhabitants (2004).
History.....In 1390 the treaty of Pyzdry was signed there. In 1815 the town was the westernmost point of the Russian Empire. There was a narrow-gauge railway in Pyzdry.
The Treaty of Pyzdry (Peisern) was signed on 2 November 1390 between Jogaila, king of Poland and Wartislaw VII of Pomerania-Stolp.[1] The treaty, signed in Pyzdry, contained an oath of vassalage of Wartislaw to Jogaila, the obligation to support the latter in the Polish-Teutonic War, and mutual trade alleviations for Pomeranian and Polish merchants. Wartislaw VII, who with his brothers was allied with the Teutonic Order before,]received the Polish castellany of Naklo (Nakel) and probably some adjacent areas as a fief.
Interpretation of the treaty
Since the treaty does not specify the oath of vassalage of Wartislaw VII to Jagiello,[6] different interpretations of the treaty are offered by historians:
G©ørski (1947), Labuda (1948), Bardach (1960), Fenrych (1961) and Czaplinski (1970) said the oath was for all territory held by Wartislaw VII, including Pomerania-Stolp;
Mitkowski (1946), Zientara (1969) and Jasienica (1978) said the oath was for the territory Waritislaw received as fiefs from Jagiello (especially Naklo/Nakel Mielcarz (1976) said the oath was binding only Wartislaw himself, as a person, to Jogaila;
Gumowski (1951) said the document shows Wartislaw giving a general solemn promise of service.
In recent historiography, Kosman (1995) interprets the treaty in a way that Pomerania-Stolp became a Polish fief, while Dziegielewski (1995),Czacharowski (2001) and Buchholz (1999) say the treaty was an alliance and the oath refers to Naklo being held as a Polish fief. Piskorski (1999) says that after the Duchy of Pomerania retained the Imperial immediacy it had gained in 1348 throughout the 14th and 15th centuries. With respect to the discourse in Polish historiography, Branig and Buchholz (1997) say that however the treaty is interpreted, it did not have any significance for the future.
Aftermath
During the Polish-Teutonic wars, the Pomeranian dukes changed sides between Poland and the knights very frequently.Wartislaw's brothers Barnim V and Bogislaw VIII took on a friendly attitude towards the Teutonic Order, and Naklo returned to the Polish Crown after Wartislaw's death.[15] Wartislaw went on a pilgrimage in 1392/1393, and died either in 1394 or 1395
[N21735]
Name: Beleslaw Or Boleslaw Pieszak
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 07 Jul 1914
Event Place: , St Joseph, Indiana
Alternate Event Place:
Registration Place: , St. Joseph, Indiana, United States
Marriage License Date: Jul 1914
Residence Place:
Gender: Male
Age (Estimated):
Number of Previous Marriages:
Race (Original):
Birth Date:
Birthplace:
Father's Name:
Mother's Name:
Spouse's Name: Maryanna Bronarczyk
Spouse's Residence Place:
Spouse's Gender: Female
Citing this Record
"Indiana, Marriages, 1811-1959," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KZCG-GV4 : accessed 27 Jun 2013), Beleslaw Or Boleslaw Pieszak and Maryanna Bronarczyk, 1914.
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