IZABELA THE VALIANT: The Story of an Indomitable Polish Princess

EARLY PRAISE FOR IZABELA THE VALIANT:

'Reading Adam Zamoyski’s authoritative and scintillating life of his great-great-great-great-grandmother, you enter the richly colourful…world of Poland in the 18th and 19th centuries… Zamoyski tells the story of a zestful, visionary, patriotic wife and mother whose chief mission was to supervise the enlightened, liberal education of her children and, by setting that example, show Polish society how to regenerate the nation…[a] highly evocative and warm-hearted portrait'

The Times

'A brilliant portrait of an extraordinary woman and a history of a wider Europe from Russia and Poland to France and Britain, gripping and fun, a delight from the very first page, filled with enlightened culture, eccentric idiosyncratic characters, wild love-affairs, imperial politics and the charm of 18thC Europe, written beautifully and laced with delicious details of art, sex, power, debauchery and luxury. Izabela Czartoryska was one of the great women of 18th century, magnate, collector, mother, lover and European potentate and luminary. Highly recommended!'

Simon Sebag-Montefiore

'A fascinating, often moving, family history, which also illuminates the culture, tragedy and heroism of 19th-century Poland'

David Reynolds, author of Mirrors of Greatness

Adam Zamoyski’s Izabela the Valiant reads like the tale of an even-more-improbable-than-usual opera, full of czars, revolutions, affairs, Napoleonic upheavals, witty salon repartee and profoundly emotional moments of love and loss. The heroine was the author’s ancestor, though he is far too objective a historian to let that affect the tale. 

Andrew Roberts, The Spectator

Zamoyski’s narrative dazzles with Izabela’s escapades and encounters with great contemporaries ….an erudite yet effervescent biography.

Daniel Johnson, Engelsberg Ideas

 

Trawling through a vast family archive and arcane sources in half a dozen languages, Adam Zamoyski has revealed the dramatic life of his great-great-great grandmother, an uneducated, vulnerable girl cast into a man’s world.

Her aristocratic position enmeshed her in high politics and close encounters with Frederick the Great, Benjamin Franklin, Rousseau, Joseph II, Marie-Antoinette and Tsar Alexander I, and earned her the enmity of Catherine the Great. She lived through revolution and no less than five wars, in which her cherished homes were devastated, her possessions looted and her children scattered. Caught up in tempestuous love affairs which led her to nervous breakdown and the brink of suicide, exploited by her lovers, she remained undaunted and liberated herself through education. And, unusually for her time, she became a caring mother devoted to her children.

She learned much by travelling extensively around Europe at a time of political and ideological change, and her observations, particularly on Georgian Britain, are remarkable. She gradually won the admiration of learned men and intellectual honours. She pioneered schooling for children of the poor and developed her own educational methods. Fascinated by the power of objects to kindle memories and arouse emotions, she was an avid collector of anything with a sensuous association and built two unique museums to act as teaching aids.

This is a story of triumph over adversity and betrayal. It was not achieved by her looks: ‘I have never been beautiful, but I have sometimes been pretty,’ she wrote. It was achieved by force of character and resilience.

Extracts from reviews of IZABELA THE VALIANT

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