Stanisław Lubieniecki (German: Stanislaus de Lubienietz, also Lubiniezky or Lubyenyetsky) (August 23, 1623 in Raków – May 18, 1675 in Hamburg) was a Polish Socinian theologist, historian, astronomer, and writer. He is the eponym of the lunarcraterLubiniezky.
Family
He was born into an aristocratic family closely linked with Socinianism:
Father: Krzysztof Lubieniecki (1598–1648) Arian minister
His Socinian hometown Raków, Sandomierz Voivodeship of Lesser Poland, was founded about a hundred years earlier and had about 15,000 inhabitants. A decree by the Polish Sejm of 1639 forbade religions other than Catholicism (Counter-Reformation). The inhabitants of his hometown were expelled and their homes destroyed and by 1700 only 700 people remained.
Stanislaus then went to study in France and the Netherlands, he came to live in Hamburg where he met considerable resistance from the Lutheran clergy. Lubieniecki and his two daughters Catherine Salomea and Griselda Constance, died of mercury poisoning, probably as the result of a mistake by a domestic servant. His wife survived.[1][2][3]
Works
Historia Reformationis Polonicae : in qua tum reformatorum tum antitrinitariorum origo & progressus in Polonia & finitimis provinciis narrantur. 1685. published posthumously by Benedykt Wiszowaty
Theatrum cometicum, duabus partibus constans. 1668. Is an illustrated anthology of 415 comets from the biblical epoch of the deluge up until 1665.
References
^Lubieniecki, Stanisław (1995). Williams, George H. (ed.). History of the Polish Reformation : and nine related documents. Harvard theological studies. Vol. 37. Minneapolis: Fortress Press.
^Jørgensen, Kai E. Jordt (1968). Stanisław Lubieniecki (in Danish). Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. pp. 112 ff. OCLC771320294.