Anna Leszczyńska (1660–1727) Explained

Anna Leszczyńska
née Jabłonowska
Spouse:Rafał Leszczyński
Issue:Stanisław Leszczyński
Noble Family:Jabłonowski
Father:Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski
Mother:Marianna Kazanowska
Birth Date:1660
Birth Place:Kraków, Poland
Death Date:29 August
Death Place:Chambord, Loir-et-Cher, France

Anna Leszczyńska née Jabłonowska (1660 - 1727) was a Polish noblewoman, born into the House of Jablonowski and the mother of King of Poland Stanislaus I Leszczyński.[1]

Life

She was the daughter of Hetman Prince Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski and Marianna Kazanowska. In 1676, she married the Grand Treasurer Rafał Leszczyński, son of Deputy Chancellor Bogusław Leszczyński.

Her son Stanisław Leszczyński became King of Poland with Swedish support in 1704 and reigned until 1709. During his first reign her brother Jan served as Crown Chancellor.

Anna Leszczyńska reportedly lived with her son and his family in his exile after the deposition of 1709, when he moved from Poland to Sweden, in 1714 to Zweibrücken in Germany, and finally, in 1718, to France. Her relationship with Stanislaw was reportedly not happy at this point, as she felt disappointment over the loss of his royal position and exile and blamed this on the actions of Stanislaw, in which she was joined by her daughter-in-law Catherine Opalińska.[2]

Through her son she was the grandmother of Maria Leszczyńska, who became queen of France by marriage to Louis XV in 1725, and therefore the great-great-grandmother of Louis XVI, Louis XVIII, and Charles X.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Norrhem. Svante. Kvinnor vid maktens sida : 1632–1772. 2007. Nordic Academic Press. Lund. Swedish.
  2. Latour, Louis Therese, Princesses Ladies And Salonnieres of The Reign of Louis XV, 1927
  3. Zieliński. Ryszard. Polka na francuskim tronie.. Czytelnik. 1978.