Jan August Hiż

Jan August Hiż (25 November 1743 – 22 December 1816) was a Polish military officer, major general of the Poland's Crown Army.

Jan August Hiż
Coat of armsJeż
Born(1743-11-25)November 25, 1743
Warszawa
DiedDecember 22, 1816(1816-12-22) (aged 73)
FamilyHiż
ConsortFranciszka de Gerault
Issue
Elżbieta,
Aleksander,
Jan,
Karol,
Józef
FatherJan Wilhelm Hiż
MotherKatarzyna de Mathy

Biography

He came from a family of professional military of probably French origin.

His grandfather Wilhelm, married to Franciszka de Loupi, was captain of the Crown Guard. His father Jan Wilhelm, married to Katarzyna de Mathy, was a colonel of the Crown Guard. In 1764, Jan Wilhelm Hiż, as one of five members of the Hiż family, received nobility with the coat of arms of Jeż.[1]

Jan August Hiż was married to Franciszka de Gerault and had five children: Elżbieta (who married Jan Fechner), Aleksander (tenant of Głębokie estate in the Radom poviat), Jan (military officer), Karol (military officer) and Józef (military officer and topographer).[2]

The grave of Jan August Hiż at the Powązki Cemetery in Warsaw.

The general was buried in the catacombs of the Powązki Cemetery in Warsaw.[3] The inscription on the tombstone says: D.O.M. Dear corpse of Jan August Hiż, major-general of the formerly Polish Kingdom, aged 73 days 26, on December 22, 1816. Sadly, five children laid the stone in it.

The descendants of Jan August Hiż held high positions throughout 19th and 20th centuries. Jan August's great-grandson was poet and journalist Tadeusz Hiż.

gollark: Is that a problem?>
gollark: When I added vast swarms of tit-for-tat ones they did best. Interesting.
gollark: This is weird.
gollark: It did best when I made the payoffs a bit positive.
gollark: * grudger

References

  1. Niesiecki, Kasper (1839–1845). "Hiż herbu Jeż". Herbarz Polski (in Polish). XI. Lipsk: J.N. Bobrowicz. pp. 171–173.
  2. Uruski, Seweryn (1908). "Hiż h. Jeż". Herbarz szlachty polskiej. V. Warszawa. pp. 150–151.
  3. Szenic, Stanisław (1979). Cmentarz Powązkowski 1790–1850. Warszawa.
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