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Guardians: Marcin Szczypiorski, Bober Team Non Profit Sp. z o. o.



Brigadier General of the Polish Army, head of the Military Cabinet of the President of the Republic of Poland, co-founder of Polish equestrian sports, participant of the 1912 Olympic Games in the Russian national team.

He was born on October 4, 1886 in Zhytomyr, Volyn Governorate. Father Antoni. Mother Helena née Hulanicka. A graduate of the Nikolaev Cavalry School in St. Petersburg and the Military Academy in Warsaw. Brigadier General of the Polish Army

He was a great rider, soldier and great patriot. Poland did not exist on the map of Europe in the year he was born. He wanted to be a soldier, but he could only become one in the ranks of the Russian army, just like thousands of Poles in the Russian Empire. He began his education as a Cadet Corps midshipman at the Naval School, and eventually graduated from the Cavalry School. In 1912 he was a lieutenant, and from February 23, 1916, a captain.

He had been riding horses since he was a child, which influenced his choice of military specialty.

His greatest successes were both in the saddle, on horseback, and in creating conditions conducive to the development of Polish horse riding. This became possible only after the end of World War I. He fought there from August 12, 1914. He found himself in Poland in 1908 with the Ukrainian Hussar Regiment, which was stationed in Sierpc. There in the second lieutenant's quarters Sergiusz Zahorski the military police found a pro-independence blotter and accused him of helping an unknown fighter whom he hid in the attic. He avoided a court-martial, but in 1909 he was transferred to a reserve regiment in Novgorod. He used this time to improve his horse riding, which took him to the Olympic Games in Stockholm.

(...)

On May 19, 1919, he was sent to America to collect horses. A short period of relative peace in the Eastern Borderlands of the Republic of Poland, colonel Sergiusz Zahorski also uses for sports. In April 1919, he was a member of the authorities of the Preparatory Committee for the Olympic Games, which were to be held in Antwerp from August 14 to September 12, 1920. And they did, but without Polish riders. Poland was fighting for its life against Russia.

On April 1, 1920, the Olympic Equestrian Group was established under the direction of lieutenant colonel Sergiusz Zahorski, deputy commander of the 1st Krechowiecki Uhlan Regiment. The management includes Major Karol Rómmel and Lieutenant Tadeusz Daszewski. Selected horses and riders were transported from Grudziądz to Warsaw. The riders were: lieutenant colonel Sergiusz Zahorski, Captain Stefan Dembiński, Captain Marek Mysłakowski, Lieutenant Bolesław Peretiatkowicz, Józef Trenkwald, Ignacy Sołtan, Trzasko-Jarzyński, Leśniewski, Adam Królikiewicz, Przewłocki, Adam Sokołowski, Ludwik Szwejcer, second lieutenants: Aleksander Bieliński, Stanisław Bukraba, Ryszard Bojankiewicz.

(...)

Commander of the 1st Uhlan Regiment until the end of the war in 1920. From 1922 to 1923, deputy commander of the 16th Uhlan Regiment. In recognition of his achievements and knowledge, he goes to a training course at the Military Academy. Hard work in the army allows him to ride horses every day. In terms of riding technique, he was a supporter, together with Major Karol Rómmel, of natural cavalry fought by Polish officers serving in the former Austrian army, trained at the Militär Reit Lehrer Institut in Vienna.

(...)

Colonel Sergiusz Zahorski, as an Olympian in 1912 in Stockholm (together with Karol Rómmel), in the colors of Russia. He dreamed of becoming a Polish Olympian. It is to his credit that two Olympic groups were created preparing for the Games in Paris in 1924. One was in Grudziądz at the Central Cavalry School, and the other in Warsaw near Łazienki, based on the 1st Light Cavalry Regiment. In Warsaw, Colonel Zahorski rode mainly on Zorza.

(...)

In 1926, colonel Sergiusz Zahorski accomplished a great feat - he led to the creation of the Temporary Committee for International Horse Competitions, which were organized until 1939 in Warsaw, in Łazienki, under the name of the Society of International and National Horse Competitions in Poland. Thanks was launched in the same year Sergiusz Zahorski preparatory work for the construction of a beautiful equestrian stadium in Łazienki. After the winter break, the work gained momentum and on May 27, 1927, the horses could start racing. Colonel Sergiusz Zahorski was from June 20, 1926 to September 21, 1928, the head of the Military Cabinet of the President of the Republic of Poland, Professor Ignacy Mościcki. Thanks to this position, he was able to provide invaluable service to Polish horse riding.

(...)

Source: "Zahorski Sergiusz" (2012) - Witold Duński

Author of the entry: Witold Danish | Updated: 2025/07/01


Sergiusz Zahorski died on June 4, 1962 at the age of 76. He was buried in Brompton Cemetery in London


1st Regiment of Light Cavalry of Józef Piłsudski

(mp. Warsaw, amaranth border).

The regiment referred to the tradition of the 1st Light Horse Regiment of the Polish Guard of Emperor Napoleon I and the 1st Uhlan Regiment of the Polish Legions "Belina". It was recreated in November 1918 by officers of the former 1st Light Horse Regiment of the Polish Legions, headed by Capt. Gustaw Orlicz-Dreszer. From 1921, the regiment was stationed in Warsaw near Belweder. It was said to be one of the elite cavalry regiments of the interwar period. It was popularly called the "National Guard", although it never officially received this name.

Rejoice, brave cavalryman,
You have protection at Belweder.

The cavalrymen shake their heads,
They want to be the National Guard.

They shake their asses, they shake their heads,
They want to be the National Guard.

They want to have guardsman manners.
Be Be ery, cavalry.

Always proud of his boss,
This is Piłsudski's cavalryman.

The cavalryman takes the upper hand,
Under the patronage of the Belweder Palace.

In the Belweder Palace, in the quarters
Sleep, brother cavalryman.

And remember, cavalryman,
That you are on guard at Belweder.

From the parade and the celebration,
For the protection of the President.

They are sitting like this in Warsaw
With a glass and a coffee.

The whole bunch are suckers
In the First Cavalry Regiment.

More gentlemen than suckers,
This is the first cavalry.

Some gentlemen and painters,
This is the first horse regiment.

From aides and doctors
Warsaw has a regiment of brats.

Source: Żurawiejki (1995) – Stanisław Radomyski



Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the links below to access related materials in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (will open in a new tab):

"Hippodrome in Łazienki Królewskie" (2023) - Kamil Potrzuski

"Zahorski Sergiusz" (2012) - Witold Duński

"Cavalry Alma Mater in Grudziądz 1920-1939" (2008) – Lesław Kukawski, Juliusz S. Tym, Teodor Wójcik

"History of horse riding, part VII” (1990) – Witold Domański

"Establishment of the first major equestrian associations and the construction of a stadium in Łazienki" (1981) - Witold Pruski

"50th anniversary of the opening of the equestrian stadium in Łazienki" (1977) - Witold Pruski

"To Mr. Captain Stanisław Olszowski, the Organizing Committee of the International Horse Riding Competitions" (1927)

"Impressions from Pignerolo and Tor di Quinto" (1922) - Sergiusz Zahorski

Photos from the collection of the Museum of Sport and Tourism - Warsaw



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Tadeusz Rozwadowski

Polish soldier, Feldmarschalleutnant of the Imperial and Royal Army, Lieutenant General of the Polish Army, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army during the Battle of Warsaw in 1920, General Inspector of Cavalry and General Inspector of the Cavalry of the Polish Army in the years 1921–1926, in May 1926 commander of the legal government forces repelling Józef Piłsudski's putsch, military designer and inventor.

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Leon Con

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Joseph Trenkwald

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Brig. Gen. Polish army. Heroic defender of Lviv. Commander of the 26th Greater Poland Lancers Regiment and the Greater Poland Cavalry Brigade in the September 1939 campaign.

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Seweryn Kulesza

Major of the Polish Army cavalry, Olympic silver medalist in equestrian (Berlin 1936). Polish Champion in eventing in 1936 and 1937, and in dressage in 1937.

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Zdzislaw Dziadulski

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Zdzislaw Kawecki

Silver medalist from the Olympic Games in Berlin (horse 'Bambino'). Knight of the Cross of Valour, Silver Cross of Merit. 7th Regiment of Mounted Riflemen Wlkp.

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Casimir Szosland

Maj. Sergeant of the Polish Army, the leading Polish equestrian in the years 1923-1935, two-time Olympian (1924 and 1928 - silver).

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Charles Rommel

Soldier, trainer, artist in painting, drawing and horse riding. Three-time Olympian (1912 - Stockholm, 1924 - Paris, 1928 - Amsterdam). He was active in KJK in Łódź (1937) and JLKS Sopot (after the war).

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Gallery:




Honorary Patron: Polish Horse Breeders Association

Its purpose is to represent the interests and protect the rights of horse breeders, supervise and control the organizational and substantive matters of the Associations and Sections, and improve horse breeding and breeding, maintain stud books and registers, enter horses into these books and registers, etc.

Patron:

Support the PLPJ project, become a Patron of the Legend of the 'Jeździec i Hodowca' magazine



A pre-war weekly magazine addressed to breeders, athletes, racing and horse enthusiasts. Poles for whom the history of our country is inextricably linked with horse breeding and equestrian sports.

Below we present the introduction to the first issue of the weekly Jeździec i Hodowca from January 1, 1922:

"By starting this publication, we do so in the belief that Polish sport and breeding have already entered the stage of creation, which requires a comprehensive exchange of ideas, critical illumination, and the establishment of the direction and goal of work, and this mediation must be fulfilled by a special body, the creation of which we are starting with the with all your energy. Although the Polish press, perfectly understanding the role of horse sport, has never spared space for all the symptoms of his life, it is our duty today to recognize the burden of the hospitable press, which faces the entire immeasurable area of ​​state life.

Our publishing house is a timid, modest and tentative realization of ambitious dreams: by elevating horse sport to the dignity of a life phenomenon that plays an important role in it, and by dispelling the perfunctory, here and there still lingering opinions about the role - "fun" - of sport, to get closer to to Western beliefs in this direction, which placed sport among the most vital educational moments. These most correct beliefs are spread in Western societies through special bodies that enjoy great publishing power. They fulfill their informative, educational and propagating role in an unparalleled way, based on the experienced maturity of the belief that in the life of every nation, sport of any kind is not only a co-creative moment, not only a practical school of character, not only a high-ranking virtue, but that it is at the same time, one of the components of powerful social forces.

This is not the place to argue for the important role of sport; fortunately, the belief in this importance is becoming more and more widespread and the understanding of the historical role of the Olympic field and stadium arena is becoming more and more profound. The Olympic victor's wreath is one of the most noble and radiant symbols of human glory. The long educational work of special magazines among Western societies has had its effect; Our publishing house, dreaming of such great results, will try to do the same with noble persistence, according to its strength and resources. Often, enthusiasm and energy will have to replace resources, which will not obscure the clarity of our intentions. We are all in a period of hectic construction and foundation laying. And we are laying foundations on which a building may one day be built. We sow the first seed in the field we love with all our hearts. Maybe one day it will produce a rich harvest.

Our modest intentions to serve in every possible way in the field to which this magazine will be devoted, still have in mind a living, contemporary and brilliant example: here is our previous work in the field of sports and breeding, scattered by the war, almost killed, trampled to the ground by the war storm. — she came back to life. Not by a miracle - but by an effort of will. A handful of people who understood that what they do, they do not for public fun, but for the benefit of the Homeland, convinced of the social value of their work, unearthed this work from the ruins, brought it to light and illuminated it. Thanks to this tireless effort, the Polish State is assured of one department of the national economy, standing on the European high: the horse breeding department.

We will devote our writing to the life of this noblest creature, this most faithful companion in Poland's war and misfortune, to his works and triumphs; a soldier's comrade from Sammossiery, Krechowiec, a participant of the heroic August days, is worthy of more than just a few praises and rhymes. He deserves a painstaking and urgent chronicle, like a patient farm register, which will be a collective document of experiences to be used by everyone who understands the role of the horse in the national farm. Breeding a Polish horse is one of the national commandments. The splendor of its history and, more importantly, the splendor of its future, will be the primary concern of all the words that will appear on these pages."

Author of the entry: Editors of the Rider and Breeder magazine | Updated: 2025/07/02
All issues of Jeździeca and Hodowca have been digitized in cooperation with the Polish Horse Breeders Association, Bober Team Non Profit, the Silesian Digital Library and the Cieszyn Library. Currently, the entire series is also being developed by Polish Digital Equestrian Library.



Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the tab of your choice and then the link that interests you to open related materials
in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (www.pcbj.pl):



Related Legends:

Leon Con

Horse riding trainer, co-founder of the Polish Equestrian Association and its general secretary. Knight of the Cross of Valor and the Silver Cross of Merit.

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Tadeusz Dachowski

The best Polish rider before WWI. Between 1894 and 1914 he won over 300 awards. In 1912-13 he competed in Wielka Pardubice (2x second place - Zeppelin).

Read more…

Joseph Trenkwald

Soldier, rider, bronze medalist of the Olympic Games Amsterdam 1928, team eventing, Knight of the Virtuti Militari, Emperor Charles Cross, Cross of Valor.

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Leon Burniewicz

1939nd Vice-Champion of Poland in the Comprehensive Riding Horse Competition. Soldier, Trainer. Activist of the Polish Equestrian Association. Awarded the Medal for the War of XNUMX. Major of the Polish Army.

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Jerzy Grabowski

Rider, breeder, director of the Stallion Stud in Kwidzyn, trainer of the Polish team in eventing at the Olympic Games in Munich 1972.

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Jan Grabowski

Hipologist and scientist. Author of many works related to horse breeding and equestrian sport, e.g. acclaimed album "Hipology for All".  

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Stanislaw Schuch

Polish hipologist, great exterierist and organizer of horse races. Co-founder of horse breeding in Poland after World War I and II. With W. Pruski and J. Grabowski, he wrote the second volume of the textbook entitled "Horse breeding".

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Michal Toczek

Soldier, major, artilleryman. Rider and trainer. He was awarded, among others, 3 times with the Cross of Valour. PN Winner, New York 1926, Nice 1926 Hamlet 2.20. (And them.),

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Casimir Gzowski

Rtm. 15th Poznan Lancers Regiment. Silver medalist of the Olympic Games in Amsterdam 1928. in the show jumping competition, on the horse Mylord.

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Waclaw Rzewuski

Romantic, horse breeder, Crown Field Hetman. A descendant of the oldest and most powerful families of the Commonwealth. "Goldbeard Emir".

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Roman Abraham

Brig. Gen. Polish army. Heroic defender of Lviv. Commander of the 26th Greater Poland Lancers Regiment and the Greater Poland Cavalry Brigade in the September 1939 campaign.

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Seweryn Kulesza

Major of the Polish Army cavalry, Olympic silver medalist in equestrian (Berlin 1936). Polish Champion in eventing in 1936 and 1937, and in dressage in 1937.

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Janusz Komorowski

Major of the Polish Army, sports equestrian, Olympian from Berlin, medalist of the Polish Championships in eventing. After the war, a horse riding coach in England and Argentina.

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Zdzislaw Dziadulski

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Zdzislaw Kawecki

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Paul Popiel

Polish hipologist, writer, landowner. At the age of 60, he became famous as a "traveler on horseback through Poland", which he described in his reports.

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Zygmunt Plater-Zyberk

Architect. A graduate of the Faculty of Architecture at the Warsaw University of Technology (1927). Author of, among others, the Służewiec Horse Racing Track.

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Witold of Prussia

Full professor of agricultural sciences at the Polish Academy of Sciences, recognized hippologist and Polish chronicler of horse breeding.

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Stefan Adam Zamoyski

Landowner, soldier, cavalryman, adjutant of General Sikorski. He contributed to the repatriation of about 1500 horses plundered by the Germans.

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John Ritz

On December 18.12.1817, 154, he marched XNUMX horses from Moscow to Janów Podlaski. The first organizer of SK in Janów Podlaski.

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Casimir Szosland

Maj. Sergeant of the Polish Army, the leading Polish equestrian in the years 1923-1935, two-time Olympian (1924 and 1928 - silver).

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Charles Rommel

Soldier, trainer, artist in painting, drawing and horse riding. Three-time Olympian (1912 - Stockholm, 1924 - Paris, 1928 - Amsterdam). He was active in KJK in Łódź (1937) and JLKS Sopot (after the war).

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Henryk Wozniakowski

Thoroughbred horse breeder in Stud Widzów. The best horses bred by him are the stallion Casanova, the mare Bastylia and the stallion Bałtyk. Painter.

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Cavalryman, breeder, traveler. One of the visionaries of Arabian horse racing and breeding in Poland. He died forgotten in poverty.

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Gallery:




Honorary Patron: Kraków Association for Residents

Association Krakow for Residents has been operating since 2014 and focuses on protecting the rights and quality of life of Krakow's residents.

Patron:

Support the PLPJ project, become a Patron of the Legend of Antoni Chłapowski

Guardians: Leszek Nagorny; Grzegorz Gajewski; Jakub Czekaj



Colonel of the Polish Army cavalry. Knight of the Order of Virtuti Militari. Commander of the first unit of the legion cavalry, the legendary "Belina's Seven". Local government official of the Second Polish Republic, in the years 1931-1933 President of Kraków, in the years 1933-1937 Voivode of Lviv; colonel of the Polish Army cavalry, Knight of the Order of Virtuti Militari.

He became the hero of a song that every child knew. His character was present on the pages of poetry and prose. It was a symbol that grew out of Poles' longing for a Polish soldier. The swashbuckling cavalryman was better suited to this role than anyone else.

He is an uhlan, cavalry captain, then colonel "Belina", i.e. Władysław Zygmunt Prażmowski, a shooter and legionnaire, and with time also a politician and social activist. But above all, uhlan. The war name permanently replaced the proper personal details not only for the period of six years of frontline service, but also in further private and public life. His soldiers proudly called themselves "beliniaks".

But Belina is not only a bronze hero, a symbol, an icon… He is a man whose fate, both in his private life and in his military and public service, did not always consist of victories alone. It also includes mistakes made and, as a result, failures on the battlefield, a rather abruptly interrupted military career and unfulfilled ambitions, a feeling of envy in the face of the beautiful careers of some of his subordinates, as well as health problems and family dramas. We must also remember this, because it is an inseparable part of this man's biography. (…)

Source: “Władysław Belina-Prażmowski” (2020) – Tomasz Gąsowski

Author of the entry: Tomasz Gąsowski, Heroes of Independence | Updated: 2025/07/01


Władysław Belina-Prażmowski he died on October 13, 1938 of a heart attack in Venice, where he was undergoing health treatment. He was buried on October 20, 1938 at the Rakowicki Cemetery in Kraków, in section LXIX.

The funeral ceremonies in Krakow became a great patriotic manifestation, comparable in size to those after the death of Marshal Piłsudski.


1st Regiment of Light Cavalry of Józef Piłsudski

(mp. Warsaw, amaranth border).

The regiment referred to the tradition of the 1st Light Horse Regiment of the Polish Guard of Emperor Napoleon I and the 1st Uhlan Regiment of the Polish Legions "Belina". It was recreated in November 1918 by officers of the former 1st Light Horse Regiment of the Polish Legions, headed by Capt. Gustaw Orlicz-Dreszer. From 1921, the regiment was stationed in Warsaw near Belweder. It was said to be one of the elite cavalry regiments of the interwar period. It was popularly called the "National Guard", although it never officially received this name.

Rejoice, brave cavalryman,
You have protection at Belweder.

The cavalrymen shake their heads,
They want to be the National Guard.

They shake their asses, they shake their heads,
They want to be the National Guard.

They want to have guardsman manners.
Be Be ery, cavalry.

Always proud of his boss,
This is Piłsudski's cavalryman.

The cavalryman takes the upper hand,
Under the patronage of the Belweder Palace.

In the Belweder Palace, in the quarters
Sleep, brother cavalryman.

And remember, cavalryman,
That you are on guard at Belweder.

From the parade and the celebration,
For the protection of the President.

They are sitting like this in Warsaw
With a glass and a coffee.

The whole bunch are suckers
In the First Cavalry Regiment.

More gentlemen than suckers,
This is the first cavalry.

Some gentlemen and painters,
This is the first horse regiment.

From aides and doctors
Warsaw has a regiment of brats.

Source: Żurawiejki (1995) – Stanisław Radomyski



Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the tab of your choice and then the link that interests you to open related materials
in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (www.pcbj.pl):

Below we provide links to other interesting sources that they don't lead to our Library and we have no influence on the content displayed there.

Together with the hyperlink we include the visible address of the article and the date when the link was last checked by us. Links open in a new window by default.



Related Legends:

Leon Con

Horse riding trainer, co-founder of the Polish Equestrian Association and its general secretary. Knight of the Cross of Valor and the Silver Cross of Merit.

Read more…

Battle of Somosierra, 1808

An eight- to ten-minute charge of Polish light cavalry (third squadron of the 1st Cavalry Regiment of the Imperial Guard) on the Samosierra Pass in Spain at an altitude of 1444 meters above sea level

Read more…

Cavalry Training Center

The cavalry training center of the Polish Army of the Second Republic of Poland in 1928-1939 in the Grudziądz garrison. It was the largest military training unit of this type in Europe. 

Read more…

Boleslaw Wieniawa-Dlugoszowski

First Lancer of the Second Polish Republic. Doctor, poet, polyglot, cavalryman, adjutant of Józef Piłsudski. General HR. Polish Ambassador in Rome. He died tragically in New York. His ashes were buried at the Rakowiecki Cemetery in Krakow.

Read more…

Roman Abraham

Brig. Gen. Polish army. Heroic defender of Lviv. Commander of the 26th Greater Poland Lancers Regiment and the Greater Poland Cavalry Brigade in the September 1939 campaign.

Read more…



Gallery:

The photos come from the collections of the NAC and the CDCN Foundation.




Honorary Patron:

Support the PLPJ project, become an Honorary Patron of the Legend of Stanisław Czerniawski

Patron:

Support the PLPJ project, become a Patron of the Legend of Stanisław Czerniawski



Captain of the cavalry of the Polish Army, Olympian (reserve - show jumping, Berlin 1936), Knight of the Order of Virtuti Militari. He died in defense of Poland on September 10, 1939 near Chruślin.

He was born on September 15, 1905 in Chisinau, Moldova. He died on September 10, 1939 near Piotrowice nad Bzura, and was buried in the military cemetery in Bielawy. Father Adolf. Mother Jadwiga née Żubrawska. A graduate of the Cadet Corps number one in Lviv. From March 17, 1933, Marshal Józef Piłsudski took over the leadership of the school, which from that day was called: Corps of Cadets No. 1 of Marshal Józef Piłsudski. Stanisław Czerniawski graduated from the school in 1925. A graduate of the Cavalry Officer School in Grudziądz.

He fought for free Poland from the age of fourteen. When he died fighting for independent Poland, he was thirty-three years old. This battle is described by Brigadier General, commander of the Wielkopolska Cavalry Brigade, doctor of law Roman Abraham, Chevalier of the Order of Virtuti Militari, Chevalier of four Crosses of Valour, in his book Memories of war from Warta and Bzura, in which there is a motto:

To those who died for glory, for posterity to remember.

“The fight in Walewice is over, so we leave the town and head to the nearby burning Bielawy. I am carrying out the necessary reorganization of the brigade's units for further action in the southern direction, where I intend to create conditions for an attack on Głowno.

For this purpose, the 17th Cavalry Regiment, which initially assembled in Walewice, is to move to Piotrowice... The core of the defense of Piotrowice are the squadrons of the 17th Cavalry Regiment.

On the eastern edge of the village there is a dug-in 3rd squadron of Captain Czerniawski... The enemy, who has motorized troops... tries to attack everywhere...

A particularly fierce battle takes place for the village of Piotrowice on the section of the 17th Uhlan Regiment... The enemy, reinforced with strong artillery, attacks the 17th Uhlan Regiment. Piotrowice is defended by: the squadron of Lieutenant Loss and the 4th squadron of Captain Juściński. After the advancing German infantry, the 1st battery of Captain Nagórski fires salvos. At the moment of the encirclement, Colonel Kowalczewski directs the 3rd squadron of Captain Czerniawski to counterattack. This brave officer holds off flanking for a while, but eventually succumbs to superior strength and fire. The following were killed in a fierce battle: the squadron commander, captain Czerniawski, the commander of the 2nd platoon, second lieutenant Michał Godlewski, uhlans Antoni Kozłowski, Jan Woźniak and Herman Weissmilch. They were buried at the cemetery in Bielawy.


(...)

Source: "Stanisław Czerniawski" (2012) - Witold Danish

Author of the entry: Witold Danish | Updated: 2025/07/01


Stanislaw Czerniawski died on the night of September 10/11 during the fighting in the area of ​​Chruślin, during the defensive war of 1939. He was posthumously awarded the Silver Cross of the Military Order of Virtuti Militari and the Cross of Valor for the second time. He was buried together with his lancers at the Bielawy Cemetery.



Publications in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library:

Click on the tab of your choice and then the link that interests you to open related materials
in the Polish Digital Equestrian Library (www.pcbj.pl):

“Traditions of horse sports in Poland until 1939” (2022) – Renata Urban

"Polish Olympic Riders of the Interwar Period, Part I" (2018) - Hanna Łysakowska

“Polish Olympic Riders of the Interwar Period, Part II” (2019) – Hanna Łysakowska

“Polish Olympic Riders of the Interwar Period, Part III” (2019) – Hanna Łysakowska

"Stanisław Czerniawski" (2012) - Renata Urban

"Stanisław Czerniawski" (2012) - Witold Danish

"Cavalry Alma Mater in Grudziądz 1920-1939" (2008) – Lesław Kukawski, Juliusz S. Tym, Teodor Wójcik

"Poles in the Nations Cup, 1923-1982" (1982) - Witold Domański

“Berlin Olympics 1936” (1982) – Witold Pruski

"History of equestrian competitions in Poland" (1982) - Witold Pruski

“Cavalry in the September Campaign 1939” (1969) – Roman Abraham

"Polish Driving Book"ej" (1938) - Collective work



Related Legends:

Tadeusz Rozwadowski

Polish soldier, Feldmarschalleutnant of the Imperial and Royal Army, Lieutenant General of the Polish Army, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army during the Battle of Warsaw in 1920, General Inspector of Cavalry and General Inspector of the Cavalry of the Polish Army in the years 1921–1926, in May 1926 commander of the legal government forces repelling Józef Piłsudski's putsch, military designer and inventor.

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Leon Con

Horse riding trainer, co-founder of the Polish Equestrian Association and its general secretary. Knight of the Cross of Valor and the Silver Cross of Merit.

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Cavalry Training Center

The cavalry training center of the Polish Army of the Second Republic of Poland in 1928-1939 in the Grudziądz garrison. It was the largest military training unit of this type in Europe. 

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Tadeusz Sokolowski

Soldier, sportsman, 3x MP medalist, 2nd vice-champion of the Army (1935), Olympian of the Olympic Games Berlin 1936 (Running II), 1937-39 head of the equestrian section of WKS Legia, Cichociemni tortured by the Gestapo in Minsk.

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Roman Abraham

Brig. Gen. Polish army. Heroic defender of Lviv. Commander of the 26th Greater Poland Lancers Regiment and the Greater Poland Cavalry Brigade in the September 1939 campaign.

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Janusz Komorowski

Major of the Polish Army, sports equestrian, Olympian from Berlin, medalist of the Polish Championships in eventing. After the war, a horse riding coach in England and Argentina.

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Casimir Szosland

Maj. Sergeant of the Polish Army, the leading Polish equestrian in the years 1923-1935, two-time Olympian (1924 and 1928 - silver).

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