Jan Prosper Witkiewicz

Jan Prosper Witkiewicz
Born(1808-06-24)24 June 1808
Died8 May 1839(1839-05-08) (aged 30)
Occupation(s)Orientalist, explorer and diplomat

Jan Prosper Witkiewicz (Lithuanian: Jonas Prosperas Vitkevičius; Russian: Ян Вѝкторович Виткѐвич) (June 24, 1808–May 8, 1839) was a Lithuanian[1][2] orientalist, explorer and diplomat in Russian service.[3] He was a Russian agent in Kabul just before the First Anglo-Afghan War.

Surviving family accounts (supported by Polish literature) suggest that, most probably, he was a double agent who tried to provoke a major conflict between British and Russian Empire in Central Asia to weaken the latter decisively and thus give his native Lithuania a chance to regain sovereignty.[4] He was also the paternal uncle of Stanisław Witkiewicz.

Early life

He was born into an old and distinguished Samogitian noble[5] family in the Lithuanian village of Pašiaušė, at the time occupied by the Russian Empire. His father, Wiktoryn Witkiewicz, was the vice-marshal of the Šiauliai County appointed by Napoleon during the French invasion of Russia,[5][6] and his mother was Justyna Aniela née Mikucka.

Imprisonment and exile

In 1817, Jan began studying at Kražiai College. While still at the College, he had helped found a secret society called the Black Brothers, an underground revolutionary-national resistance movement. Students initiated the movement to fight the Russian occupation of the former Lithuanian state. These young students distributed banned books, supported anti-Russian sentiments and wrote independence-oriented manifestos.

However, in 1823, the Black Brothers movement was exposed after they began posting revolutionary slogans and verses on prominent public buildings, and started sending anti-Tsarist letters, poems and patriotic appeals to the principal and students of the Vilnius University. In early 1824, Witkiewicz, together with five other youngsters, was arrested, brought to the prison of the former Basilian Monastery in Vilnius and interrogated. In an attempt to prevent any potential uprisings among other students, three of them were sentenced to death by the Russian authorities, and the remaining three were to be flogged and then exiled to Southern Urals.[7]

In a fortunate course of events and thanks to the involvement of the Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, the de facto viceroy of the Congress Poland, the death sentences were changed with life imprisonment with hard labour in the Babruysk fortress.[7] Deprived of his nobility and forbidden all further contact with his family for ten years, Witkiewicz was later taken to serve as a common soldier at the Orsk fortress by the Ural River overlooking the Kazakh steppe.[7]

The poet Adam Mickiewicz retells in his poem Dziady how the Black Brothers from Kražiai were the first among the Lithuanian youth to be prosecuted in the Russian Empire. In the poem, there is also a scene where Mickiewicz describes how the young adolescents, handcuffed and chained, were bid farewell at the Gate of Dawn in Vilnius.

Later life

An extremely capable, brave and charismatic man, Witkiewicz was fluent in English, French, German, Polish and Russian.[citation needed] According to Aušrinė Slavinskienė, Vitkevich knew 19 languages from both Europe and Asia.[5] In exile, he learned Persian, Pashto, Kazakh and several Turkic languages.[2] Reconciled to Russian rule, Witkiewicz entered Russian service. Until the late 19th century, Russian nationalism was not defined in lingual or ethnic terms, but in terms of loyalty to the House of Romanov, so insofar as Witkiewicz was loyal to it, he was considered a "Russian". In 1829, he became an interpreter for Alexander von Humboldt.[8] At Humboldt's suggestion he was promoted to sergeant. In 1832 he was promoted to ensign and was on the Orenburg border commission. He was sent deep into the Kazakh Steppe where he engaged in diplomacy and intelligence, collected geographic and ethnographic information and had several run-ins with bandits. General Vasily Perovsky, the Orenburg commander, said that he knew more about the region than any other officer, past or present.

In November 1835, he joined a caravan at Orsk and in January 1836 reached Bukhara where he collected political intelligence and discussed trade and diplomacy with the Emir's officials. The visit's purpose was to find out if the Emir of Bukhara would remain neutral if Russia attacked the Khanate of Khiva,[2] which they did in 1839. At Bukhara, he met Hussein Ali, a man who had been sent by Dost Mohammad Khan of Kabul to visit the tsar. He accompanied Hussein Ali to Orenburg and Saint Petersburg which they reached in July 1836. He served as an interpreter in Afghan-Russian discussions, which went on until May 1837.

In 1837, on instructions of Count Karl Nesselrode, the Russian Foreign Minister, he was sent on a return diplomatic mission to Kabul. Reaching Tehran from Tbilisi, he met the Russian minister in Tehran, Count Ivan Simonich. Continuing east with a Cossack escort, he accidentally encountered Lieutenant Henry Rawlinson.[2] Speaking in Turcoman, he claimed to be carrying gifts from the Tsar Nicholas I to the Shah Mohammad Qajar who at this time was marching east to capture Herat. Rawlinson reached the Shah's camp that night. The Shah told him that the story was nonsense and that he had personally given Witkiewicz permission to cross his territory to Kabul. A bit later, Witkiewicz appeared in camp. Now speaking perfect French, he apologized to Rawlinson for his necessary carefulness in the dangerous country.[2] Rawlinson reported his meeting to McNeill at Tehran on November 1, and the news soon reached Calcutta and London. Since the British already knew that Simonich, and possibly the Tsar, had encouraged the Persian attack on Herat, their determination to do something about Afghanistan increased.

Witkiewicz reached Kabul on Christmas Eve 1837 and had Christmas dinner with the British representative Sir Alexander Burnes, the American adventurer Josiah Harlan, and the Emir of Afghanistan, Dost Mohammad Khan.[2] Burnes described Witkiewicz:

He was a gentlemanly and agreeable man, of about thirty years of age, spoke French, Turkish and Persian fluently, and wore the uniform of an officer of the Cossacks.[9]

At first, Dost Mohammad favoured the British since they were nearby, but on receiving Lord Auckland's ultimatum he turned to Witkiewicz. In Kabul, Witkiewicz presented himself as a messenger from Emperor Nicholas I. Still, Dost Mohammad noted that the letter that Witkewicz had brought with him purportedly from Nicholas himself had no signature.[2] Witkewicz's letter had as its seal the Russian imperial double-headed eagle, which Burnes made a copy of.[2] Burnes showed his copy to Charles Masson, who recalled:

Captain Burnes pointed out to me the large exterior seal on the envelope. I sent for a loaf of Russian sugar from the bazaar, at the bottom of which we found precisely the same seal.[2]

Meanwhile, in London, Palmerston called in the Russian ambassador Count Carlo Andrea Pozzo di Borgo and complained about Russian activities in Afghanistan. Seeing that the British were in an aggressive mood, the Russians recalled both Simonich and Witkiewicz while making some pretence that both had exceeded their instructions. For the rest, see First Anglo-Afghan War.

Witkiewicz reached Saint Petersburg on May 1, 1839. What went on between him and minister Nesselrode is disputed:

According to one account, Nesselrode refused to see him, saying he

knew of no Captain Vikevitch, except an adventurer of that name who, it was reported, had been lately engaged in some unauthorised intrigues in Caubul [Kabul].[10]

A week after reaching St. Petersburg, he was found shot dead in his hotel room. A pistol was by his side and a pile of burnt papers in the room. Witkiewicz had committed suicide as Nesselrode had disallowed him, claiming his visit to Kabul was not on his orders. With his dream of a diplomatic career in ruins, Witkiewicz had decided to take his own life.[10]

Imperial Russian accounts disagree, stating that he was honoured and was even granted an audience with the Tsar the next day. They hint at a British-backed assassination to prevent Witkeiwicz from sharing the valuable intelligence that he had collected on Afghanistan and that the assassins probably burned his papers.[11]

There is also an explanation that he committed suicide after a visit from an old Polish friend the same day, in which he was severely criticized for having been a traitor of the ideals of his youth (independence from Russia) and for his service in the ranks of his country's Russian enemy.[11]

Family

Witkiewicz was the uncle of the renowned Polish painter, architect, writer and art theoretician Stanisław Witkiewicz, who in turn was the father of Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz.

Cultural references

Jan Witkiewicz and his life inspired Russian writers; Yulian Semyonov based his book The Diplomatic Agent (Diplomaticheskiy agent; 1958) on Witkiewicz's life story. Incidentally, this work is regarded as the first noticeable book by Semyonov. Mikhail Gus made Witkiewicz the main character of his book Duel' w Kabulie (A Duel in Kabul). Witkiewicz is the main character of Valentin Pikul's historical miniature Opasnaja doroga w Kabul (A dangerous Way to Kabul). He is also mentioned in Tadeusz Miciński's Nietota, one of the earliest examples of literary concepts giving gradual rise to magic realism.

Witkiewicz is the prototype of the main hero in the feature film Sluzhba otiechestvu (Service to the Homeland; 1981) by Uzbek film director Latif Fayziyev [ru]). The adventures of Russian officer Aleksey Nalymov are inspired by Witkiewicz's fate.

Jan Witkiewicz inspired the Lithuanian author Regimantas Dima to write his book Vilniaus Plovas (Vilniaus Pilaf, 2015).

References

Citations
  1. ^ Ludwig W. Adamec, ed. (2012). Historical Dictionary of Afghanistan. The Scarecrow Press. p. 441. ISBN 978-0521815291. A Russian agent, or adventurer, of Lithuanian descent, Vitkevich came to Kabul in December 1837 for the purpose of establishing commercial relations with Afghanistan.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Brysac, Shareen Blair; Meyer, Karl Ernest (1999). The Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia. Washington: Counterpoint. pp. 84–85. For his part, Vitkevich had reason for retinence. His life history was Dostoyevskian. A Lithuanian by birth, he belonged as a student to the ...
  3. ^ Dominic Lieven, ed. (2006). The Cambridge History of Russia: Volume 2, Imperial Russia, 1689-1917. Cambridge University Press. p. 175. ISBN 0521815290.
  4. ^ "NaszaGazeta".
  5. ^ a b c "Stanislovas Vitkevičius - kelių kultūrų menininkas". Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  6. ^ Dariusz Nawrot, Litwa i Napoleon w 1812 Roku, Katowice, 2008, pp. 243
  7. ^ a b c William Dalrymple, Return of a King: The Battle for Afghanistan, United Kingdom: Bloomsbury Publishing, p.82
  8. ^ Ingle, H N (1976). Nesselrode and the Russian Rapprochement. University of California Press. p. 79. ISBN 0520027957.
  9. ^ Macintyre, Ben The Man Who Would Be King, New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2002 page 205
  10. ^ a b Macintyre, Ben The Man Who Would Be King, New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2002 page 257.
  11. ^ a b Dalrymple, William Return of a King: The Battle for Afghanistan
Sources
  • Peter Hopkirk, The Great Game, 1990, Chapters 13 and 14.
  • Corresponding article in the Russian Wikipedia.
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