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词条 Józef Bem
释义

  1. Early life

  2. November Uprising

  3. First exile

  4. 1848 hero

  5. Second exile and death

  6. Character and legacy

  7. Works

  8. Honors

  9. Gallery

      Budapest, Hungary    Romania    Poland  

  10. In popular culture

  11. References

  12. External links

{{Multiple issues|{{Expand Polish|date=March 2016}}{{MOS|date=March 2016}}{{More citations needed|date=May 2012}}
}}{{Infobox military person
| name = Józef Zachariasz Bem
{{lang|hu|Bem József}}
| image = Józef Bem 111.JPG
| caption =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1794|03|14}}
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1850|12|10|1794|03|14}}
| birth_place = Tarnów, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria (now Poland)
| death_place = Aleppo, Ottoman Empire (now Syria)
| placeofburial = Tarnów (since 1929)
| placeofburial_label =
| placeofburial_coordinates =
| nickname =
| allegiance = Polish insurgents
Revolutionary Hungarian Army
Ottoman Army
| branch =
| serviceyears =
| rank = General
| servicenumber =
| unit = Artillery
| commands =
| battles = Battle of Iganie (1831)
Battle of Ostrołęka (1831)
Battle of Temesvár (1849)
Battle of Segesvár (1849)
| battles_label = Battles
| awards =
| relations =
| laterwork =
}}

Józef Zachariasz Bem ({{lang-hu|Bem József}}, {{lang-tr| Murat Pasha}}; March 14, 1794, Tarnów – December 10, 1850, Aleppo) was a Polish engineer and general, an Ottoman pasha and a national hero of Poland and Hungary, and a figure intertwined with other European patriotic movements. Like Tadeusz Kościuszko (who fought in the American War of Independence) and Jan Henryk Dąbrowski (who fought alongside Napoleon Bonaparte in Italy and in the French Invasion of Russia), Bem fought outside Poland's borders anywhere his leadership and military skills were needed.

Early life

Bem was born in Tarnów in Galicia, the area of Poland that had become part of the Habsburg Monarchy through the First Partition in 1772. After the creation of the tiny Duchy of Warsaw from the territories captured by Napoleon, he moved with his parents to Kraków, where after finishing military school (where he distinguished himself in mathematics) and joined the ducal forces as a fifteen-year-old cadet. Bem joined a Polish artillery regiment as a sub-lieutenant and then lieutenant in the French service, took part in the French invasion of Russia (1812), and subsequently distinguished himself in the defence of Danzig ({{lang-pl|Gdańsk}}) (January{{spaced ndash}}November 1813), winning the Knight's Cross of the Legion d'honneur.

After the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the Duchy of Warsaw was transformed into the constitutional Kingdom of Poland, a dependent territory of the Russian Empire, and Bem became a teacher at a military college. There he carried out research on a newly designed rocket-like missile, publishing his research with extensive illustrations.

Bem became involved in a political conspiracy to restore Poland to full independence, but, when his membership in a secret patriotic organisation was discovered, he was demoted and sentenced (in 1822) to one year in prison. Although the sentence was suspended, Bem resigned his commission and moved to Galicia. In Galicia he researched steam engines and their application, and again published his results. Bem lived in Lvov ({{lang-uk|Львів}}, {{lang-pl|Lwów}}) and Brody until 1830, where he planned to write a treatise on the steam engine.

November Uprising

When the November Uprising, a struggle for Polish independence, broke out on November 29, 1830, against the Russian Empire, Bem immediately joined the Polish insurgents. He arrived in Warsaw, was given a major's commission and the command of the 4th Light Cavalry Battalion, which he led during the Battles of Iganie and Ostrołęka. During the Battle of Ostrołęka, Bem's forces bravely charged the Russian opponents. Although the Polish army suffered a serious defeat with a loss of 6,000 men, Bem's actions prevented the destruction of the entire army. For his valour on the battlefield, Bem was awarded the Virtuti Militari Golden Cross and promoted to the rank of Brigadier General. He was steadfastly against capitulation until the very end of the Uprising, during the desperate defence of Warsaw against Prince Paskievich (September 27, 1831). Nonetheless, the Polish army was eventually compelled to lay down arms on October 5, 1831, and crossed the Russian–Prussian partitional border under the command of General Maciej Rybiński in the Great Emigration.

First exile

Bem then escaped to Paris, where he supported himself by teaching mathematics. In France, he published his next work, on the National Uprising in Poland, in which he not only gave an appraisal of the 1831 insurrection, but also tried to present a programme for the continuation of the struggle for the country's freedom.

In 1833 he went to Portugal to assist the liberal Dom Pedro against the reactionary Dom Miguel, but abandoned the idea when it was found that a Polish legion could not be formed there. When in Portugal, he was the target of an assassination attempt, carried out by Russian agents.

1848 hero

{{see also|Hungarian Revolution of 1848}}

A wider field for his activity presented itself in 1848 (along with the Austrian Revolution). First he attempted to hold Vienna against the imperial troops of Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz, and, after the capitulation, hastened to Pressburg ({{lang-hu|Pozsony}}, today Bratislava, Slovakia) to offer his services to Lajos Kossuth, first defending himself, in a long speech, from the accusations of "treachery to the Polish cause" and "aristocratic tendencies" ˙— which the more fanatical section of the Polish émigré Radicals repeatedly brought against him. He was entrusted with the defence of Transylvania at the end of 1848, and in 1849, as General of the Székely troops, he performed miracles with his little army, notably at the bridge of Piski on February 9, where, after fighting all day, he drove back an immense force of pursuers.

After relieving Transylvania he was sent to drive the Austrian General Anton Freiherr von Puchner out of the Banat region. Bem defeated him at Orşova on May 16, but the Russian invasion forced him to retreat to Transylvania. From July 12 to 22 he was fighting continually, but finally, on July 31, his army was annihilated by overwhelming numbers in the Battle of Segesvár (near Segesvár, now Sighişoara, Romania), Bem escaping only after feigning death. Yet he fought a fresh action at Nagycsür (now {{lang-ro|Sura Mare, Romania}}) on August 6, and contrived to bring his fragmented army to the Battle of Temesvár (near Temesvár, now Timişoara, Romania), to aid the hard-pressed General Henryk Dembiński. Bem was in command and was seriously wounded in the last pitched battle of the war, fought there on August 9.

Second exile and death

On the collapse of the rebellion he fled to the Ottoman Empire, where he adopted Islam,[1] and served as Governor of Aleppo under the name of Murad Paşa/Pasha.

Character and legacy

Bem was a man respected for his courage and heroic temper, both of which were in contrast with his small stature. His influence is said to have been magnetic: although none of his Székely subordinates understood the language he spoke, most revered him. As a soldier Bem was remarkable for his excellent handling of artillery and the rapidity of his marches. In Hungarian, he is often referred to affectionately as "Bem apó", which roughly translates into "Grandpa Bem" or "Old man Bem".

A statue to his honour has been erected at Marosvásárhely (now Târgu-Mureş, Romania) but he lives still more enduringly in the verses[2] of the Hungarian national poet Sándor Petőfi, who fell in the fatal action of July 31, 1849 at the Battle of Segesvár. His remains were brought back to Poland in 1929 and laid to rest in a mausoleum in Strzelecki Park in the city of Tarnów.

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 began on October 23 with a protest at the foot of the Bem Statue in Budapest.

Works

Józef Bem published also in French, Polish and German languages books about the history of Poland, technology and military aspects:

  • Józef Bem – "La Pologne dans ses anciennes limites et l'empire des Russies" 1836
  • Józef Bem - "Notes sur les fusées incendiaires"
  • Józef Bem – "Erfahrungen über die Congrevischen Raketen" (Uwagi o rakietach zapalających, Practical Kowledge of Incendiary Rockets) 1820
  • Józef Bem – "O machinach parowych" (About Steam Engines)
  • Józef Bem – "Węgrzy i Polacy w dzisiejszym stanie Europy" (Hungarians and Poles in Contemporary Europe)
  • Józef Bem – "O powstaniu narodowym" (About National Uprisng)

Honors

  • Three commemorative postage stamps were issued on 10 December 1950 by Hungary on account of his death centenary.[3]
  • A souvenir sheet was issued on 10 December 1950 by Hungary on Stamp Day.[4]
  • On 15 March 1952 his stamp appears in Heroes of the 1848 Revolution series.[5]
  • Poland issued a commemorative postage stamp on 15 July 1948 in Revolution Centenaries series.[6]
  • Poland issued postage stamp on 10 December 1950 on his death centenary.[7]

Gallery

Budapest, Hungary

Romania

Poland

In popular culture

The great Polish poet Cyprian Norwid, a descendant of Jan III Sobieski, dedicated to Józef Bem the poem Bema pamięci żałobny rapsod (Funeral Rhapsody in Memory of Bem), which was subsequently used by other artists including Zbigniew Herbert and Czesław Niemen.

Since 1969 Czesław Niemen's Bema pamięci żałobny rapsod (Mourner's Rhapsody in Memory of Bem) became cult status in Central Europe and also beyond the Iron Curtain.[8]

In 1974 an English version was re-recorded with the help of Michał Urbaniak, John Abercrombie, Jan Hammer, Rick Laird and Don Grolnick, which was published worldwide by CBS Records International.[9]

In 1977 the Bema pamięci żałobny rapsod (Mourner's Rhapsody in Memory of Bem) intro from the 1970 initial issue was bootlegged by the West German rock band Jane as intro and reprise intro for the second side of their elegic Krautrock album Between Heaven and Hell[10] also immediately achieving golden record status.

Józef Bem's descendants are present mainly among artists and in music related business in Poland and in exile and include the jazz singer Ewa Bem[11][12][13] and her brothers Aleksander Bem and the jazz guitarist Jarosław Bem.[14]

References

1. ^The Islamic World and the West, Christoph Marcinkowski, pg. 99
2. ^Sándor Petőfi: The Transylvanian Army (Az erdélyi hadsereg) (in Hungarian)
3. ^colnect.com/en/stamps/list/country/6955-Hungary/year/1950/page/5,6. Catalog codes: Mi:HU 1142-44, Sn:HU 914-16, Yt:HU 979-81.
4. ^colnect.com/en/stamps/stamp/179093-József_Bem_1794-1850_battle_of_Piski-Stamp_Day-Hungary. Catalog codes: Michel HU BL19, Stamp Number HU C80, Yvert et Tellier HU BF24.
5. ^colnect.com/en/stamps/stamp/178820-József_Bem_1794-1850_battle_of_Piski-Freedom_fighters_of_1848-Hungary. Catalog codes: Michel HU 1226, Stamp Number HU 992, Yvert et Tellier HU 1036A.
6. ^colnect.com/en/stamps/stamp/137466-Generals_HDembinski_and_JBem-Revolution_Centenaries-Poland. Catalog codes: Michel PL 498, Stamp Number PL 430, Yvert et Tellier PL 510, Stanley Gibbons PL 611, AFA number PL 494, Polish Stamps Catalog (Fischer) PL 451.
7. ^colnect.com/en/stamps/stamp/138403-Josef_Bem_and_battle_scene-Death_cent_Of_Gen_JBem-Poland. Catalog codes: Michel PL 670, Stamp Number PL 489, Yvert et Tellier PL 598, AFA number PL 562, Polish Stamps Catalog (Fischer) PL 532.
8. ^[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFNxAfy6dbY, Czesław Niemen - Bema pamięci rapsod żałobny (original video clip)]
9. ^[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rb_gvgiiy1Y, NIEMEN - Mourner's Rhapsody (1974, CBS)]
10. ^[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4l0QrsEYNvM, Jane - Between Heaven and Hell 2/2 (pirated copy)]
11. ^[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rpyzlyGTg4, Ewa Bem & Czesław Niemen - Jednego serca (2000)]
12. ^[https://www.discogs.com/artist/489695-Ewa-Bem, Ewa Bem (discography at Discogs)]
13. ^Ewa Bem (homepage - in progress)
14. ^[https://www.discogs.com/artist/1219177-Jaros%C5%82aw-Bem, Jarosław Bem (discography at Discogs)]
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Bem, Josef}}
  • {{EB1911|wstitle=Bem, Josef}} In turn, it gives the following references:
    • Johann Czetz, Memoiren über Bems Feldzug (Hamburg, 1850)
    • Kálmán Deresnyi, General Bem's Winter Campaign in Transylvania, 1848–1849 (Hung.), (Budapest, 1896).

External links

  • Sydney Morning Herald
{{Hungarian Revolution of 1848}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Bem, Jozef}}

18 : 1794 births|1850 deaths|People from Tarnów|Hungarian Revolution of 1848|Pashas|Polish Muslims|Military personnel of the Ottoman Empire|People of the Revolutions of 1848|Polish engineers|Polish generals|Polish military writers|Polish nobility|Gold Crosses of the Virtuti Militari|Converts to Islam from Christianity|Generals of the November Uprising|Hungarian people of Polish descent|Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur|Polish generals in other armies

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