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After participating in the ], an insurrection that sought to revive the Poland-Lithuania Commonwealth, in 1831 Domeyko chose to ] to ] rather than face ]n reprisals. After participating in the ], an insurrection that sought to revive the Poland-Lithuania Commonwealth, in 1831 Domeyko chose to ] to ] rather than face ]n reprisals.


In 1838 he left for ]. After becoming a citizen of Chile in 1849, Domeyko stated ''"I may never change my citizenship now, however god gives a hope for me, that anywhere - even it will be ], or ] - i will die as Lithuanian"''.<ref name=UNESCO/> Domeyko lived in Chile until ], ], when he returned for an extended visit to ]. In 1838 he left for ]. After becoming a citizen of Chile in 1849, he lived there till ], ], when he returned for an extended visit to ].


He stayed four years in Poland, receiving an honorary doctorate from the ] in ] and touring Europe, then returned to Chile. He stayed four years in Poland, receiving an honorary doctorate from the ] in ] and touring Europe, then returned to Chile.
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Revision as of 20:39, 24 July 2008

Ignacy Domeyko.

Ignacy Domeyko (in Template:Lang-be; in Polish, also spelled Domejko; in Lithuanian, Ignotas Domeika; July 31, 1802January 23, 1889, Santiago de Chile) was a famous 19th-century Lithuanian geologist and mineralogist from present-day Belarus in the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Life

Domeyko was born at Niedźwiadka (in Template:Lang-be — Miadzviedka) Manor (Bear Cub Manor), near Nyasvizh, Navahradak district, Minsk Governorate, Imperial Russia (now Karelichy district, Belarus). In his time, he was subject of the Russian Tsar. Domeyko had, however, been brought up in the culture of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, a multicultural entity that had been destroyed shortly before his birth, in the Third Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1795). For this reason, and because he subsequently spent most of his life in Chile, he is considered a person of national importance to four countries: Belarus, Chile, Lithuania and Poland.

Domeyko studied at Imperial University of Vilna (Vilnius University, Lithuania) under Jędrzej Śniadecki, and at Paris' École des Mines. Involved on the Philomathes, a secret student organization dedicated to studying Polish culture and restoring Polish independence, he was a close friend of Adam Mickiewicz, the greatest Polish Romantic poet and Alexander Pushkin's rival as the greatest poet of East-central and Eastern Europe.

After participating in the November 1830 Uprising, an insurrection that sought to revive the Poland-Lithuania Commonwealth, in 1831 Domeyko chose to emigrate to France rather than face Russian reprisals.

In 1838 he left for Chile. After becoming a citizen of Chile in 1849, he lived there till May 22, 1884, when he returned for an extended visit to Europe.

He stayed four years in Poland, receiving an honorary doctorate from the Jagiellonian University in Kraków and touring Europe, then returned to Chile.

Domeyko was a professor at a mining college in Coquimbo (La Serena) and later at the University of Chile (Universidad de Chile), of which he was rector for 16 years (1867-83).

Building at Krakowskie Przedmieście 64, Warsaw, bearing a 1992 plaque commemmorating Ignacy Domeyko.
Plaque in Spanish and Polish, honoring Ignacy Domeyko (Ignacio Domeyko), "distinguished son of the Polish nation and eminent citizen of Chile."
File:Ignacy Domeyko plaque in Vilnius.jpg
200th-birthday (2002) plaque in entry gate to Vilnius' Uniate Basilian monastery, celebrating the Lithuanian, Ignotas Domeika, and Chilean, Ignacio Domeyko.

Domeyko 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.

Named for him are the mineral Domeykit, the shellfish Nautilus domeykus, the ammonite Amonites domeykanus, asteroid 2784 Domeyko, the Cordillera Domeyko mountain range in the Andes, and the Chilean town of Domeyko.

On the 200th anniversary of Domeyko’s birth, UNESCO declared 2002 to be "Ignacy Domeyko Year." Several commemorative events were held in Chile under the auspices of Polish President Aleksander Kwaśniewski and Chilean President Ricardo Lagos.

Descendants of Domeyko's remain prominent in diverse fields of Chilean life and culture.

Notes

  1. UNESCO. Ignotas Domeika 200. Retrieved on 2008-07-24


References

  • Ignacy Domeyko (1962). Moje podróże: pamiętniki wygnańca (My Travels: Memoirs of an Exile). Wrocław: Ossolineum. Polish language
  • Zbigniew Wójcik (1995). Ignacy Domeyko: Litwa, Francja, Chile (Ignacy Domeyko: Lithuania, France, Chile). Wrocław, Polskie Towarzystwo Ludoznawcze. ISBN 83-904914-2-7. Polish language
  • Małgorzata Kośka (1998). Ignacy Domeyko. Warsaw, "DiG". ISBN 83-7181-062-8. Polish language
  • Jadwiga Garbowska, Krzysztof Jakubowski (1995). Ignacy Domeyko: (1802-1889). Warsaw-Lida, Towarzystwo Kultury Polskiej Ziemi Lidzkiej. ISBN 83-901353-6-1. Polish language
  • Zdzisław Jan Ryn (1994). Ignacio Domeyko - ciudadano de dos patrias (Ignacy Domeyko - citizen of two fatherlands). Antofagasta, Universidad Catolica del Norte. Portuguese language
  • Zdzisław Jan Ryn (2002). Ignacy Domeyko - obywatel świata (Ignacy Domeyko - citizen of the world). Kraków, Jagiellonian University Press. ISBN 83-233-1552-3. review, Polish language
  • Paz Domeyko Lea-Plaza. Ignacio Domeyko. La Vida de un Emigrante. Santiago, Chile.2002. Random House Mondadori (Editorial Sudamericana)ISBN 9562621618 Spanish language
  • Paz Domeyko. A Life in Exile. Ignacy Domeyko 1802-1889. Sydney, Australia 2005. ISBN 0646447289 }.9. English language. Available from author. See website Paz Domeyko, www.pazdomeyko.com

See also

External links

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