Jan Abramowicz (Lithuanian: Jonas Abramavičius; died 19 June 1602) was a nobleman in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and one of the leaders of Calvinism in the country. He also propelled the creation of the Radivilias epic by encouraging Jonas Radvanas to work on it.[1][2][3]

Jan Abramowicz
Starosta of Lida
Reign1579–1602
Starosta of Wenden
Reign1590–1602
Voivode of Minsk
Reign1593–1602
PredecessorJonas Pacas
SuccessorAndrius Zaviša
Voivode of Smolensk
Reign1596–1602
PredecessorFilon Kmita
SuccessorPetras Dorohostaiskis
BornGrand Duchy of Lithuania
Died19 June 1602 (1602-06-20)
SpousesJadwiga Żyromska
Anna Wołłowicz
IssueMikołaj Abramowicz, Catherine, Maryna
ReligionCalvinist

Biography

edit

Early life

edit

Little is known about his early life, besides that he was brought up to the court of Mikołaj "the Red" Radziwiłł, then the Grand Hetman of Lithuania. His ancestry is unknown, but he is associated with nobility and the influential magnate family of the Radziwiłłs, which could have helped him gain higher positions.

Ascension to leadership

edit

Mikołaj Radziwiłł was his patron. He participated with him alongside king Stephen Báthory in expeditions in Muscovite lands, and from 1579 he became the starosta of Lida. In 1581, Abramowicz had a dispute over episcopal jurisdiction with a representative bishop of the Radziwiłł family. In 1585, he supported the Livonian lands joining the Grand Duchy of Lithuania instead of them being a dominion of the Polish crown.[1]

In 1590, he became the starost of Wenden.[1] At this point, he was the starost of two different places in Livonia. In 1593, he became a senator of the Commonwealth. Around this time Abramowicz was involved in various religious dealings like disputes between the Jesuits and the Calvinists in Lithuania, becoming the leader of the latter. In the same year, he became the voivode of Minsk.

Later career and voivode

edit

In 1596, he became the voivode of Smolensk through the intercession of Krzysztof Radziwiłł, whom he thanked in a letter. In 1599 he was chosen as a commissioner by the Protestant-Orthodox Vilnius Confederation. On his estate, Abramowicz built a Calvinist church, hospital, and school. Abramvičius wrote several essays, with one of them concerning the Lithuanian economy: "The Lithuanian opinion about buying grain cheaply and selling grain expensively."[1]

Family

edit

He was at first married to Jadwiga Żyromska, with whom did not have any children. In 1588, he married an Orthodox woman Anna Wołłowicz, and had three children:

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e "Jonas Abramavičius". Visuotinė Lietuvių Enciklopedija.
  2. ^ Tyszkowski, Kazimierz (1935). Polish Biographical Dictionary. Polish Academy of Learning. p. 13.
  3. ^ Narbutas, Sigitas (2001). Abramavičius, Jonas. Lietuvių literatūros enciklopedija. Vilnius: Lietuvių literatūros ir tautosakos institutas. ISBN 9986-513-95-2.