Ignacy Domeyko

IgnacyDomeyko or Domejko,pseudonym: Żegota (Spanish: Ignacio Domeyko) (July 31, 1802 – January 23, 1889, Santiago de Chile) was a Belarusian geologist, mineralogist and educator.

Domeyko was born at a manor house located within the then Russian partition of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, at Bear Cub Manor (Belarusian: Мядзьведка) near Nesvizh, Minsk Governorate,
Imperial Russia (now Karelichy district, Belarus). The Domeyko family held the Polish coat of arms Dangiel. His father, Hipolit Domeyko, who was president of the local land court, died when Ignacy was seven years old; his uncles then served as his guardians.

Domeyko enrolled at Vilnius University, then known as the Imperial University of Vilna, in 1816 as a student of mathematics and physics.
He studied under Jędrzej Śniadecki. Involved with the Philomaths,
a secret student organisation dedicated to Polish culture and the restoration of Poland's independence, he was a close friend of Adam Mickiewicz. In 1823–24, during the investigation and trials of the Philomaths, Domeyko and Mickiewicz spent months incarcerated at Vilnius' Uniate Basilian monastery.

After a youth passed in partitioned Poland, Domeyko participated in the November 1830 Uprising against the Russian Empire. Upon its suppression, he was forced into exile and spent part of his life in France (where he had gone with fellow Philomath, Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz). Journeying through Germany, he arrived in France, where he would earn an engineering degree at Paris School of Mining. He also studied at the Sorbonne and maintained his political engagements with Belarusians, Poles, and Lithuanians.

In 1838 Domeyko left for Chile. There he made substantial contributions to mineralogy and the technology of mining, studied several previously unknown minerals, advocated for the civil rights of the native tribal peoples, and was a meteorologist and ethnographer. He is also credited with
introducing the metric system to Latin America. He served as a professor at a mining college in Coquimbo (La Serena) and after 1847 at the University of Chile in Santiago, of which he was a rector for 16 years (1867–83).
A bronze bust of Domeyko stands in the Casa Central of Santiago's University of Chile. Domeyko gained Chilean citizenship in 1849, but declared at the time that "I may now never change my citizenship, but God grants me hope that wherever I may be – whether in the Cordilleras or in Paneriai (the Vilnius suburb) – I shall die a Lithuanian. "The term "Lithuanian" at that time, however, designated any inhabitant, whatever his ethnicity, of the territories of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

In 1884 Domeyko returned for an extended visit to Europe and remained there until 1889, visiting his birthplace and other places in the former Commonwealth, as well as Paris and Jerusalem. In 1887 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Jagiellonian University, in Krakow. In 1889, soon after returning to Santiago, Chile, Domeyko died.

Domeyko is seen as having had close ties to several countries and thus in 2002, when UNESCO organized a series of commemorations of the 200th anniversary of his birth, he was referred to as "a citizen of the world".

Plaque commemorating the "distinguished son of the Polish nation and eminent citizen of Chile" In his youth he was a subject of the Russian Empire. Domeyko, however, had been brought up in the culture of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, a multicultural state whose educated and dominant classes had spoken Polish as a lingua franca and that, shortly before Domeyko's birth, had been dismembered in the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. For this reason, and because Domeyko subsequently spent most of his life in Chile, he is considered
a person of national importance to Poles, Belarusians, Lithuanians and Chileans.

Text 2


Понравилась статья? Добавь ее в закладку (CTRL+D) и не забудь поделиться с друзьями:  



double arrow
Сейчас читают про: