Everything about Marcin Kromer totally explained
Marcin Kromer (
German:
Martin Cromer, ;
1512-
23 March 1589) was a
Prince-Bishop of Warmia (Ermland),
cartographer,
diplomat and
historian in
Poland and later in the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. He was personal secretary to two
Kings of Poland,
Sigismund I the Old and
Sigismund II Augustus.
Life
Kromer was born in 1512 into a prominent
burgher family in
Biecz, in
Lesser Poland. He completed his basic education in a local church-run school. In 1528 he transferred to
Kraków, where in 1530 he graduated as a
bachelor at the
Cracow Academy. In 1533-37 he worked at the Royal Chancellery in Kraków. Thereafter he went to
Italy, where he studied
law for two years. Returning to Poland in 1540, he became secretary to
Archbishop Peter Gamrat. As the latter's personal advisor, he was also his envoy and representative to
Rome, where he spent two years until 1544. He then became a
canon in Kraków.
In 1545, upon the death of his mentor, Kromer accepted the latter's post as personal secretary to Poland's King Sigismund I the Old. He was also an associate of
Samuel Maciejowski, who later became Chancellor of the Crown. A specialist on
Royal Prussia and
Warmia, in 1551 Kromer became head of the Warmian
canonry. However, his church career didn't proceed as planned, since he was seen as one of the best Polish diplomats of the age and was frequently required by the court to leave his post to serve as envoy on various diplomatic missions. In 1552, for his services to the King, he was
ennobled and granted a
coat of arms.
From 1558 to 1564 Kromer served as Polish envoy to
Emperor Ferdinand I, who in recognition of Kromer's services added his own family coat-of-arms to Kromer's. The latter's tasks included advocacy of King Sigismund's claims to the inheritance of the late Queen-Consort
Bona Sforza, which was also claimed by the King of Spain, who, however, based his claims on a forged
testament.
In 1564 Kromer was recalled to Poland, where he was promoted within the church hierarchy and took the post of
coadjutor (
de facto bishop) of the
Bishopric of Warmia, to succeed on the demise of Prince-Bishop
Stanislaus Hosius. After nine years at that post, Kromer was officially promoted to
Prince-Bishop. He spent the rest of his days in Warmia, keeping diaries and writing several books on the history of Poland. He died on 23 March 1589 in
Heilsberg (Lidzbark Warmiński).
In his works, Kromer advocated the reform of Poland's scientific and cultural life. One of his notable demands was providing the Cracow Academy with new privileges to restore its position as one of the renowned universities in
Central Europe. He also promoted the active defence of the
Roman Catholic Church against the growing
Reformation.
Martin Kromer and
Stanislaus Hosius (Stanisław Hozjusz) were the two bishops most instrumental in causing Royal Prussia's diocese of Warmia to return to or remain Catholic during a time of major conversions to Protestantism, especially in the neighboring
Duchy of Prussia which almost surrounded the Prince-Bishopric of Warmia, and had converted to Lutheranism as the first state to do so.
Kromer and Hosius left many
German-language records of their speeches and sermons in their episcopacies in Ermland (Warmia).
Bibliography
- Martini Cromeri de origine et rebus gestis Polonorum libri XXX (External Link
) of 1555 (About origins and history of Poles in thirty tomes) in Latin, (Polish translation O sprawach, dziejach i wszystkich innych potocznościach koronnych polskich in 1611)
- Polonia sive de situ, populis, moribus, magistratibus et Republica regni Polonici libri duo published in Cologne in 1577 (Poland, about location, culture and offices) in Latin, (Polish translation Polska, czyli o położeniu, obyczajach, urzędach Rzeczypospolitej Królestwa Polskiego in 1853)
- Rozmowa dworzanina z mnichem of 1551-1554 (in Polish: "Discourse between a courtier and a monk")
- Historyja prawdziwa o przygodzie żałosnej książęcia finlandzkiego Jana i królewny polskiej Katarzyny from 1570, "true history of sad adventure of Finnish prince John and Polish princess Catherine", a prose telling of love between John III of Sweden and Catherine Jagellonica, parents to Sigismund III Vasa
- F. Hipler, Die deutschen Predigten und Katechesen der ermländischen Bischöfe Hosius und Cromer, Cologne, 1885
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