Michał Józef Römer
Michał Józef Römer (also spelled Romer or Roemer; September 2, 1778 – January 14, 1853) was a politician, writer, Freemason, and notable member of the Polish–Lithuanian gentry.
Römer was born in the Lithuanian city of Vilna, where he spent most of his life. He owned manors in Kriaunos, Antanašė, Bagdoniškis, Daugirdiškiai, Granapolis, Dembinė.[1] During the French invasion of Russia, he served as the mayor of Vilna from July to September 1812.[2] Between 1817 and 1820 he served as a Marshal of the Szlachta for Vilna Governorate. He also served as a head of the regional branch of the National Patriotic Society and the Towarzystwo Szubrawców literary society (along with Michał Baliński, Leon Borowski, Ignacy Chodźko, Antoni Gorecki, Kazimierz Kontrym, Józef Sękowski, Jędrzej Śniadecki and Tomasz Zan). He was master of Masonic Lodge Diligent Lithuanian (Uolusis lietuvis) and chairman of the Great Lodge Perfect Unity (Tobuloji vienybė).[1]
He was an early advocate for the abolition of serfdom and raised the question in public. For this and his other activities, In 1826 he was imprisoned in Warsaw and Peter and Paul Fortress. Later he was exiled to Voronezh.[3] After the return in 1832, he retired from public life.
References
- 1 2 Tarandaitė, Dalia (2006-05-19). "Dailininkų dinastijos pradininkas". Literatūra ir menas (in Lithuanian) (3096). ISSN 0233-3260.
- ↑ Racevičienė, Aušra; Steponaitis, Valdas. "The Commission of the Provisional Government of Lithuania". Lithuania and the French-Russian War of 1812. National Museum of Lithuania. Retrieved 2015-09-29.
- ↑ Kvietkauskas, Mindaugas. "Riomeris" (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2015-09-29.
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