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EN
Among Polish Church historians of the past century Fr. Józef Nowacki (1893-1964) holds an eminent position. His opus vitae is a monumental monograph The History of the Archdiocese of Poznań. Another major work in his prolific output is a study titled On the Dignity and Primatial Prerogatives of the Archbishop of Gniezno, which was originally published in Latin in 1937 (the Polish translation appeared only in 2008). The latter monograph became the basis of his habilitation in 1938 at the Faculty of Theology at the Jan Kazimierz University in Lvov. Previously, however, Nowacki considered habilitation at the Faculty of Theology at Jagiellonian University. He was encouraged in this resolve by Fr. Tadeusz Glemma, who like himself came from the diocese of Chełmno (Culm) and attended the same classic high school there. The article provides an account of those endeavors in the light of the correspondence that passed between Nowacki and Glemma. This is a detail which has so far been unknown to historians.
EN
In the Old Polish period many members of the chapter of the archcathedral in Gniezno became at various stages of their church career members of the episcopate. They are, among others, described on the pages of a fundamental compendium titled Prałaci i kanonicy katedry metropolitalnej gnieźnieńskiej (The Prelates and Canons of the Gniezno Metropolitan Cathedral) written by Jan Korytkowski (1824-1888), himself a clergyman (he died as a bishop-nominee). He pays much attention to such questions as where, when and through whose ministry a particular representative of the episcopate received his episcopal consecration. The author of the article analyzes the provided data and adds numerous supplementary  comments.
EN
Glendalough („glen of two lakes”), an Irish bishopric since the beginning of the 7th century, united with the archdiocese of Dublin at the beginning of the 13th century, since 1969 included among titular sees. In the years 1973-1981 it was the titular see of bishop Marian Przykucki, the suffragan bishop of Poznań and later the bishop of the Chełmno (1981-1992) and the Szczecin- -Kamień (1992-1999) dioceses.
PL
Glendalough („glen of two lakes”), an Irish bishopric since the beginning of the 7th century, united with the archdiocese of Dublin at the beginning of the 13th century, since 1969 included among titular sees. In the years 1973-1981 it was the titular see of bishop Marian Przykucki, the suffragan bishop of Pozna? and later the bishop of the Che?mno (1981-1992) and the Szczecin- -Kamie? (1992-1999) dioceses.
EN
Until 1798 Warsaw remained in the diocese of Poznań despite taking over from Cracow numerous functions of a capital city in the 17th and 18th centuries (nominally it never became the capital of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth). During this time two seminaries ran by the Missionaries of St. Vincent de Paul functioned in Warsaw: Seminarium Internum and Seminarium Externum. They were founded in 1675-1676 and educated – especially the latter one – a large group of clergy who later held prominent positions in the structures of the Catholic Church on Polish-Lithuanian-Ruthenian soil. Among the seminary’s graduates were 66 future bishops (only eight of them underwent formation in Seminarium Internum), who were to minister as ordinaries or suffragans in a majority of dioceses then existing within the borders of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (and also on the territory of historical Greater Poland).  Both of the above mentioned theological institutes located in Warsaw continued to function for some decades after the collapse of the pre-partition Polish-Lithuanian state (by then already within the Warsaw diocese and from 1818 in the Warsaw archdiocese). Their existence came to an end in 1864 as a result of repressions by Russian administration after the collapse of the January Uprising. In this second period of the seminaries’ operation the number of alumni who later filled episcopal offices was markedly lower, the last one being the future Gniezno-Poznań metropolitan and cardinal, Mieczysław Ledóchowski, whose name stands out illustriously in the history of the Church in Greater Poland. 
PL
Until 1798 Warsaw remained in the diocese of Poznań despite taking over from Cracow numerous functions of a capital city in the 17th and 18th centuries (nominally it never became the capital of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth). During this time two seminaries ran by the Missionaries of St. Vincent de Paul functioned in Warsaw: Seminarium Internum and Seminarium Externum. They were founded in 1675-1676 and educated – especially the latter one – a large group of clergy who later held prominent positions in the structures of the Catholic Church on Polish-Lithuanian-Ruthenian soil. Among the seminary’s graduates were 66 future bishops (only eight of them underwent formation in Seminarium Internum), who were to minister as ordinaries or suffragans in a majority of dioceses then existing within the borders of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (and also on the territory of historical Greater Poland).                 Both of the above mentioned theological institutes located in Warsaw continued to function for some decades after the collapse of the pre-partition Polish-Lithuanian state (by then already within the Warsaw diocese and from 1818 in the Warsaw archdiocese). Their existence came to an end in 1864 as a result of repressions by Russian administration after the collapse of the January Uprising. In this second period of the seminaries’ operation the number of alumni who later filled episcopal offices was markedly lower, the last one being the future Gniezno-Poznań metropolitan and cardinal, Mieczysław Ledóchowski, whose name stands out illustriously in the history of the Church in Greater Poland. 
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tom 81
199-223
DE
Die Bücher der Pontifikaltätigkeiten (sog. Libri ordinatonrm) der Bischöfe aus altpolnischer Zeit enthalten vor allem Angaben über die von ihnen gespen-deten Weihen von Welt- und Ordensgeistlichen - zusammen mit Verzeichnissen ihrer Namen, manchmal auch über Bischofsweihen sowie Benediktien von Äbten und Oberinnen, sowie über die Weihen von Orten und Kultgegenständen. Unter solchen Angaben finden sich aber auch einzelne Informationen über die Spendung von Taufen, Trauungen oder auch Begräbnisse durch Bischöfe, die manchmal eine Präzisierung von Fakten aus den Biographien vieler bekannter Persönlichkeiten aus der Zeit der Adelsrepublik Beider Nationen vor den Polnischen Teilungen ermöglichen. Gerade unter diesen Gesichtspunkten wurde die Sammlung der im Archiv der Krakauer Metropolitankurie aufbewahrten insgesamt neun Bücher der Pon-tifikaltätigkeiten der Krakauer Ordinarien- und Suffraganbischöfe aus dem 17 .und I 8.Jahrhundert ( das älteste stammt aus dem Jahre 1646) durchgesehen (Signaturen LOrd 4-10 und 12-13). Ihnen entstammen auch einzelne Angaben zu historischen Ereignissen wie z.B. die sog. Entsetzung von Wien oder die Selig-sprechung von Wincenty Kadlubek. Alle diese Angaben werden jetzt im vollem Wortlaut veröffentlicht, chronologisch angeordnet und die ihn ihnen erwähnten Persönlichkeiten und geographischen Namen dann auch in den Anmerkungen) erklärt. Die Edition umfaßt nicht das Buch der Pontifikaltätigkeiten von Kardinal Jan Aleksander Lipski, der von 1732 bis 1746 Krakauer Bischof war - dieses wird in den Sammlungen des Archivs des Metropolitankapitcls auf der Wawelburg in Krakau aufbewahrt.
EN
Old press is a priceless source of information of various quality about a broad spectrum of realities of the life of past generations. This concerns also the religious life, including events in the biographies of members of the Church elites whose most prominent group was the episcopate. This is why facts connected with the curricula vitarum of particular bishops were often described in the Polish periodical press. The ordination of a bishop was a very important event, when a new member of the episcopate became a rightful successor of the Apostles. As such ceremonies were at the same time spectacular, had a rich liturgical arrangement and gathered many distinguished participants, they were an attractive topic for press coverage whose levels of accuracy, though, remained varied. It is not he purpose of the author of this paper to display the aforementioned multifacetedness of the press coverage of the ordinations of the bishops, but to provide a sui generis set of basic information about those events. In order to make the most of such testimonies by drawing from the variety of information contained in them further conclusions that may be interesting to particular researchers, one must first know where (if at all) adequate coverage is present in the press contemporary with these events. The current state of knowledge in Poland in this respect is definitely unsatisfactory. This publication is a step in the direction of positive change. It contains information about the ordination of altogether 215 members of the Catholic episcopate of three rites (Latin, Greek-Uniate and Armenian) in the territory of Poland between 1726 and 1900, in the form of quasi-registers. Arranged in alphabetical order (by the surnames of the ordinated), they contain the date and the place of each event, the names of the consecrator and the co-consecrators and, above all, a bibliographical record that directs the inquirer to a particular article. Provided with adequate indications, subsequent researchers will be able to start analyzing problems interesting to them and connected with this subject, already without spending time and effort in searching for adequate testimonies in the periodical press.
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tom 85
379-387
EN
Review Dmytro Blazejowskyj, Historical Šematism of the Eparchy of Peremyšl including the Apostolic Administration of Lemkivšcyna (1828-1939), L’viv 1995, ss. 1008; Dmytro Blazejowskyj, Historical Šematism of the Eparchy of Stanislaviv from Its Establishment until the Outbreak of World War II (1885-1938), L’viv 2002, ss. 450; Dmytro Blazejowskyj, Historical Šematism of the Archeparchy of L’viv (1832-1944), vol. I – Administration and Parishes, Kyiv 2004, ss. 1004; vol. II – Clergy and Religious Congregations, Kyiv 2004, ss. 570.
PL
Recenzja: Dmytro Blazejowskyj, Historical Šematism of the Eparchy of Peremyšl including the Apostolic Administration of Lemkivšcyna (1828-1939), L’viv 1995, ss. 1008; Dmytro Blazejowskyj, Historical Šematism of the Eparchy of Stanislaviv from Its Establishment until the Outbreak of World War II (1885-1938), L’viv 2002, ss. 450; Dmytro Blazejowskyj, Historical Šematism of the Archeparchy of L’viv (1832-1944), vol. I – Administration and Parishes, Kyiv 2004, ss. 1004; vol. II – Clergy and Religious Congregations, Kyiv 2004, ss. 570.
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