Gabriel_Narutowicz Gabriel_Narutowicz

Gabriel Narutowicz - Definition and Overview

Gabriel Narutowicz
Gabriel Narutowicz
Term of Office from December 9, 1922,
until December 16, 1922
Profession Engineer, university professor
Political Party nonpartisan
First Lady
Date of Birth March 17, 1865
Place of Birth Telsze ( in today's Lithuania)
Date of Death December 16, 1922
Place of Death Warsaw, Poland


Gabriel Narutowicz, b. March 17, 1865, in Telšiai (Polish: Telsze), Samogitia; d. December 16, 1922, in Warsaw: first president of Poland.

Narutowicz had from 1908 been a professor at the Zurich Polytechnic and had directed the construction of many hydroelectric plants in western Europe. After Poland regained independence in 1918, he became involved in national politics and served as minister of public works, 1920-1921, and as minister of foreign affairs in 1922.

President Gabriel Narutowicz with Marshal Józef Piłsudski (left), Warsaw, 1922.

On December 9, 1922, he was elected by the Polish parliament (convened as the National Assembly of Poland) to be the first president of Poland, and was sworn in on December 11. His election, by left, center, peasant and minorities deputies, roused the ire of the right, particularly the National Democrats, who emphasized that the MPs supporting Narutowicz had included Jews, and hence called the newly-elected head of state the "president of the Jews."

On December 16, 1922, five days after his inauguration, while attending the opening of an art exhibition at Warsaw's Zachęta gallery, Narutowicz was shot to death by a National Democrat sympathizer, painter, art professor and critic, Eligiusz Niewiadomski.

See also


edit  (http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Template:Presidents_of_Poland) Presidents of Poland Coat of Arms of Poland
Republic of Poland (1918 - 1939) Józef Piłsudski | Gabriel Narutowicz | Maciej Rataj | Stanisław Wojciechowski | Ignacy Mościcki
Government in Exile (1939 - 1990) Bolesław Wieniawa-Długoszowski | Władysław Raczkiewicz | August Zaleski | Rada Trzech - collective head of state | Stanisław Ostrowski | Edward Raczyński | Kazimierz Sabbat | Ryszard Kaczorowski
People's Republic of Poland (1944 - 1989) Bolesław Bierut | since 1947 replaced by Polish Council of State
Republic of Poland (since 1989) Wojciech Jaruzelski | Lech Wałęsa | Aleksander Kwaśniewski



edit  (http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Template:Ministers_of_Foreign_Affairs_of_Poland) Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Poland Coat of Arms of Poland
2nd Republic of Poland (1918 - 1939) Leon Wasilewski | Ignacy Jan Paderewski | Władysław Wróblewski | Stanisław Patek | Eustachy Sapieha | Jan Dąbski | Konstanty Skirmunt | Gabriel Narutowicz | Aleksander Skrzyński | Marian Seyda | Roman Dmowski | Karol Bertoni | Maurycy Zamoyski | Aleksander Skrzyński | Kajetan Dzierżykraj-Morawski | August Zaleski | Józef Beck
Government in Exile (1939 - 1990) August Zaleski | Edward Raczyński | Tadeusz Romer | Adam Tarnowski
People's Republic of Poland (1944 - 1989) Edward Osóbka-Morawski | Wincenty Rzymowski | Zygmunt Modzelewski | Stanisław Skrzeszewski | Adam Rapacki | Stefan Jędrychowski | Stefan Olszowski | Emil Wojtaszek | Józef Czyrek | Stefan Olszowski | Marian Orzechowski | Tadeusz Olechowski
3nd Republic of Poland (since 1989) Krzysztof Skubiszewski | Andrzej Olechowski | Władysław Bartoszewski | Dariusz Rosati | Bronisław Geremek | Władysław Bartoszewski | Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz | Adam Daniel Rotfeld


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