King Jan III Sobieski in Wawel
DE EN PL
Museum of King Jan III’s Palace at Wilanów

Passage to knowledge

Museum of King Jan III’s Palace at Wilanów

King Jan III Sobieski in Wawel Jadwiga Prus Source: "Mówią wieki", no. 5, 1984
26_sztuka-taca500.jpg

King Jan III Sobieski was crowned in Wawel at the turn of January and February 1676. The coronation ceremony lasted a few days but the royal couple stayed in Cracow until after Easter. The monarch designated a fund of 100 thousand zlotys for renovating the castle which sustained serious damages during the Swedish invasion of Poland in 1655–1660. In 1682 he also appointed a committee responsible for putting in order the Crown Archive housed in Wawel. Nine years later, when Jan III Sobieski visited Cracow before his expedition to Vienna, he was handed by the chapter a Renaissance shield discovered in the cathedral attic. The shield featured a depiction of the victory achieved near Rome by Constantine the Great. Following the victorious Battle of Vienna, King Sobieski’s triumphal entry into the city through Saint Florian’s Gate took place on the Christmas Eve. Following the Te Deum hymn singing in the cathedral, the monarch placed the defeated Vizier’s huge banner at the grave of Saint Stanislaus. The king “visited” Wawel for the last time in 1734, when his and Queen Marie Casimire’s bodies were buried in the cathedral vault.

Although Sobieski was not a frequent visitor to Cracow, the city is filled with his memorabilia. Among the most significant there is a low relief made by Józef Hakowski, set in the cathedral wall, and a polychrome in the vault of the Holy Trinity chapel, painted by Włodzimierz Tetmajer in 1902–1904. On two-hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary and the tercentenary of the Battle of Vienna the city hosted grand exhibitions dedicated to the victorious king. Sobieski’s contemporaries also fully recognized and appreciated his military accomplishments. Pope Innocent XI established the 12th of September the feast of the Holy Name of Mary, while Johannes Hevelius named a newly discovered constellation “Sobieski’s Shield”. It is still visible in the western part of the sky on 12 September but disappears soon after.

We would like to inform that for the purpose of optimisation of content available on our website and its customisation according to your needs, we use information stored by means of cookies on the Users' end devices. You can control cookies by means of your Internet browser settings. Further use of our website without change of the browser settings means that you accept the use of cookies. For more information on cookies used by us and to feel comfortable about this subject, please familiarise yourselves with our Privacy Policy.

✓ I understand