'Presidential Palace' (also known as ''Pałac Prezydencki'', ''Pałac Koniecpolskich'', ''Lubomirskich'', ''Radziwiłłów'', or ''Pałac Namiestnikowski'') in
Warsaw,
Poland, is the elegant classicist latest version of a building that has stood on the
Krakowskie Przedmieście site since
1643. Over the years, it has been rebuilt and remodeled many times. For its first 175 years, the palace was the private property of several aristocratic families. In
1791 it hosted the authors and advocates of
Poland's
May 3rd Constitution,
Europe's first modern codified national
constitution, and the world's second after the
U.S. Constitution.
It was in
1818 that the palace began its ongoing career as a governmental structure, when it became the seat of the Viceroy of the
Polish (Congress) Kingdom under Russian occupation. Following Poland's resurrection after
World War I, in
1918, the building was taken over by the newly reconstituted Polish authorities and became the seat of the Council of Ministers. During
World War II, it served the country's
German occupiers as a ''Deutsches Haus'' and survived intact the
1944 Warsaw Uprising.
After the war, it resumed its function as seat of the Polish Council of Ministers. In July
1994 it replaced the much smaller and more difficult to protect
Belweder palace as the official residence of the
Polish President.
History

Koniecpolski Palace in
1656. It was burned down during the
Deluge.
Construction of the present-day Presidential Palace in Warsaw was begun in
1643 by Crown Field
Hetman Stanisław Koniecpolski, owner of the town of
Brody (80 km. east of
Lwów) and numerous
latifundia situated in
Poland's eastern borderlands (and this is why the first name of the palace was 'Pałac Koniecpolskich' - the
Koniecpolski's Palace). It was said that he owned so much landed property that he could cross the breadth of the Republic while spending every night in one of his own manors. The palace was not completed in the Hetman's lifetime, as he died unexpectedly in
1646 at his residence in Brody, a few weeks after taking a young wife.
The palace's architect was
Constantino Tencalla, architect to Poland's King
Władysław IV and designer of
King Zygmunt's Column, in front of the nearby Royal Castle, commemorating
Sigismund III of Poland. The palace was completed by Koniecpolski's son
Aleksander in the style of a
baroque residence, imitating those of northern
Italy and
Genoa. A view of the palace in a
Warsaw panorama of
1656[1] by
Erik Dahlberg confirms this.
The next owner of the palace was
Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski—Grand Crown
Hetman and Crown Chancellor, and later the leader of
a rebellion against the king—who bought the palace from
Aleksander Koniecpolski.
In
1674 the palace became, for the next 144 years, the property of the
Radziwiłł family.
It was bought from descendants of Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski —
Stanisław Herakliusz Lubomirski and
Hieronim Augustyn Lubomirski — by
Michał Kazimierz Radziwiłł of the Nieśwież-Ołyka line, whose wife
Katarzyna was a sister of King
Jan III Sobieski. After her death, her son
Karol Stanisław Radziwiłł I began renovation of the palace and tidied up its surroundings. He entrusted this task to the king's architect,
August Locci.
The next to last of the line of heirs in tail of
Nieśwież and
Ołyka was
Karol Stanisław "Panie Kochanku" Radziwiłł,
Voivod of
Wilno, son of
Michał Kazimierz "Rybeńko" Radziwiłł. He had inherited huge estates from his father and uncle which made him the wealthiest
magnate in Poland in the second half of the 18th century, and one of the richest men in
Europe. He leased out the palace to
Franciszek Ryx to house a theater which staged plays and threw masked balls. During the
Four-Year Sejm of
1788-
1792, he invited all the members of the four deliberating estates to dine there daily. Two meals were served every day: breakfast before the day's session, for 300 people, and dinner after the session. One of the most impressive feasts given by him was on St. Catherine's Day,
November 25,
1789, the 25th anniversary of
King Stanisław August's coronation, and commemorating the Union of
Lithuania with the
Polish Crown. Four thousand guests were invited, and the feast cost over 2 million
złotys.
On the night of
May 2 —
May 3,
1791, a conspiratorial group of members of the Four-Year Sejm who were bent on saving the Commonwealth met at the palace to strategize means to secure the adoption, next day, of the
May 3rd Constitution. This document was to be Europe's first modern codified national constitution and the world's second, after the U.S. Constitution that had gone into effect in
1789.
Karol Stanisław Radziwiłł II died a sick and blind man at age 57. His property was inherited by Dominik, son of his half-brother Hieronim. Dominik, who had been wounded at the Battle of
Hennau, died childless on
November 11,
1813. The line of the Nieśwież-Ołyka heirs in tail died out with him.
In
1818 the palace became the seat of the Viceroy of the
Polish (Congress) Kingdom (when it acquired the name 'Pałac Namiestnikowski' - the Palace of
Namestnik of Kingdom of Poland). The first Viceroy, from
1815, was
Józef Zajączek (
1752-
1820), former aide-de-champ to Hetman
Franciszek Ksawery Branicki, deputy to the Four-year Sejm, secretary of the Assembly of Friends of the Government Act (i.e., of the
May 3rd Constitution), a division commander during the Polish-Russian War of
1792, hero of the Battle of
Zieleńce, a Polish
Jacobin, a soldier in
Jan Henryk DÄ…browski's legions, a general of
Napoleon's. At the last he adopted a servile attitude toward
Aleksander I, King of Poland and Tsar of Russia, who created him a duke in
1818. ZajÄ…czek had lost a leg at the
Berezina River and was carried about in an armchair by his valets.
Beginning in
1818 the palace was rebuilt in classicist style by the architect
Chrystian Piotr Aigner (
1756-
1841). He extended the palace (its lower wings reached the line of buildings on
Krakowskie Przedmieście), placed a new grand staircase between the main body of the building and its northern wing, remodeled the palace facades, and redecorated the rooms on the first and second floors of the main body of the building. Because of its massive vaulting, the ground floor remained unchanged. Aigner had two associates:
Camillo Landini, who sculpted the four stone lions guarding the palace courtyard on the Krakowskie Przedmieście side, and
Mikołaj Monti, an Italian painter. The main body of the building was remodeled to the
Corinthian order and ornamented with
columns,
pilasters,
balustrade and stone
statues. Aigner is inseparably linked with the Viceroy's (Polish: "Namiestnikowski")—today's Presidential—Palace as the creator of its classicist exterior, which survives unchanged to this day.
Józef Zajączek of Wrzaca died at the palace in
1826 and was buried in
Opatówek.
The year
1852 brought disaster to the palace. A fire burned the main body of the building almost to the ground. Only charred walls remained. Reconstruction was entrusted to
Alfons Kropiwnicki (
1803-
1881).
In the rebuilt palace, gatherings of the Agricultural Society were held, and balls were organized when the tsars visited Poland. In
1870, a statue of
Ivan Paskevitch Erivanski was unveiled there. In
1879, in the palace's colonnade hall, the inhabitants of
Warsaw for the first time saw "The
Battle of Grunwald," a historical painting by
Jan Matejko. At the turn of the
20th century, the
Tarnowski Palace to the right (south) of the building was pulled down, and in
1899-
1901 the luxurious
Hotel Bristol was built in its place, designed by
Władysław Marconi. One of the shareholders in the consortium that built the hotel was the famous pianist and post-World War I Polish prime minister,
Ignacy Paderewski.
In
1918 the building was taken over by the newly reconstituted Polish authorities, and renovation of the palace was entrusted to
Marian Lalewicz. The building became the official seat of the Chairman of the Council of Ministers (the Prime Minister) and of the Council of Ministers itself. The side wings housed the chancellery offices of the Council of Ministers. As restored by Lalewicz, the building was greatly admired by Warsaw's inhabitants and visitors. Germany's
Herman Goering, when in February
1937 calling there on Prime Minister General
Felicjan Sławoj-Składkowski, took such a keen interest in the palace that he arrived late to his meeting with Polish Foreign Minister
Józef Beck.
In
1939 the palace suffered minimal damage. In
1941-
1942 it was radically reconstructed into a ''Deutsches Haus'' by the Polish architects
Janusz Nagorski and
Jan Lukasik. In the course of the work,
Rococo ornamentation in the rooms overlooking the garden was renovated with great care. A couple of ''en grisalle'' paintings were uncovered on the staircase, featuring eagle and weapon motifs. The
Germans wanted to remove the eagles as Polish national emblems, but allowed them to remain after it was explained that these were Napoleonic eagles, a favorite motif of the French Empire period. On the ground floor of the right wing, a restaurant was put in, with wooden beam ceiling and a spacious cloakroom. The palace survived the
Warsaw Uprising intact.
After Warsaw's liberation, the palace was thoroughly reconstructed by
Antoni Brusche and
Antoni Jawornicki. In
1965 Bertel Thorvaldsen's classicist equestrian statue of Prince
Józef Poniatowski, which previously had stood before the now destroyed Polish General Staff building (the "
Saxon Palace") on nearby
Piłsudski Square (once known as "
Saxon Square"), was relocated to the courtyard before the "Viceroy's Palace."
After World War II, the palace again served as the seat of the
Council of Ministers until the latter moved to its current seat in
Aleje Ujazdowskie.
Since July
1994, the palace has been the official seat of the
President of the Republic of Poland.
References
1. ''The Eagle and Three Crowns''
Gallery
External links
★
Presidential Palace - history
★
Virtual Tour