Jan Ludwik Plater

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Jan Ludwik Plater (died 1736) was a voivode of Inflanty and a Polish writer.

He was born c. 1690 as a son of voivode of Inflany Jan Andrzej Plater and Ludwika Maria née Grothus.[1] In 1698 he was named cześnik of Inflanty, then on May 15, 1708, starosta of Dyneburg.[2] In 1710 Plater took part in General Council of Warsaw and supported Sandomierz Confederation, listing himself as a Augustus II the Strong supporter.[2] He was deputy for 1718 Sejm. On September 17, 1735, received the seat of voivode of Inflanty, after late Antoni Morsztyn.[2] Shortly after died in November 1736 and his funeral was at the monastery of the Congregation of the Mission in Vilnius.[2]

Jan Ludwik Plater enjoyed authority among the Livonian nobility. He was also considered a talented writer, although of his supposedly enormous output only "Prayers to the Holy Trinity" have survived.[2] Jan Ludwik Plater accumulated considerable wealth. In 1698, he founded a wooden church in the inherited Wielka Indryca (now Lielindrica [la]). He acquired or was bestowed with many estates, including Frejtagshof (Kombulmujża, now Kombuļi [la]), and Krāslava together with the town. The latter became the main seat of the family for the next two centuries.[2]

Around 1720 he married Rozalia Brzostowska. They had a number of children: Józefa, Konstancja, Ferdynand, Kazimierz, Ignacy, Joanna Magdalena, Maria Alojza, Magdalena, and Konstanty Ludwik, voivode of Mstislaw nad Marshal of the Lithuanian Tribunal.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Minakowski, Marek. "Jan Ludwik Plater z Broelu". wielcy.pl.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Link-Lenczowski, Andrzej. "Jan Ludwik Plater". www.ipsb.nina.gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-11-29.