Connections of Antoni Patek with the Resurrectionists Cover Image

Connections of Antoni Patek with the Resurrectionists
Connections of Antoni Patek with the Resurrectionists

Author(s): Beniamin Czapla
Subject(s): History, Social Sciences, Sociology, Modern Age, 19th Century, Migration Studies
Published by: Akademia Zamojska
Keywords: Antoni Patek; Patek Philippe & Cie; watchmaking; Resurrectionists; the Res-urrectionist Congregation; Hieronim Kajsiewicz

Summary/Abstract: Antoni Patek was born in 1812 in the region of Lublin. Being a soldier, he took part in the November Uprising. Following its fall, he went into exile. In 1835, after long travels, Patek eventually settled in Switzerland (Versoix, near Geneva). There he became acquainted with another emigrant of the November Uprising, the watch-maker Franciszek Czapek. In 1839 Patek and Czapek established a watch manufactory, Patek, Czapek et Cie. The company focused primarily on supplying Polish customers. Therefore, watches signed with the names of Patek and Czapek were decorated with images of Polish kings and princes, portraits of national heroes, and religious motifs. In 1845, Patek terminated his collaboration with Czapek. However, soon after, he part-nered with two new associates, Adrien Philippe – a watchmaker and one of the inven-tors of the keyless winding mechanism – and a compatriot with considerable fi nancial resources, Wincenty Gostkowski. Over time, the customer circle of Patek’s manufacture expanded. Besides Poles engaged in patriotic activities, watches were also purchased by politicians, heads of state, stage stars of the era and businessmen. One of the watches produced by the Patek manufacture is now in the collection of the Congregation of the Resurrection’s Museum. According to the materials preserved to this day, this watch belonged to Father Piotr Semenenko. Patek became acquainted with the Resur-rectionists in the 1830s, thanks to Walery Wielogłowski, secretary and one of the closest companions of the congregation’s founder, Father Bogdan Jański. In 1839, Wielogłowski went to Geneva to persuade his cousin Ludwik Popiel to provide fi nancial support for Father Janski’s enterprise, which was falling into increasing fi nancial diffi culties. There he met Patek who, as a devout Catholic, quickly fell for the evangelization of his new friend. Antoni Patek immediately became a faithful benefactor and friend of the found-ing fathers of the congregation. Confi rmation of their friendship is provided by the col-lection of correspondence they have preserved to this day. These letters are, on the one hand, an interesting testimony to Antoni Patek’s faith. On the other, they confi rm once again the commitment they made to helping compatriots in need. The case of a certain Kazimierz Kisielewski can serve as an example.

  • Issue Year: 8/2023
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 63-72
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English
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