, founder of the
Order of the Knights of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr on 7 May 1765.
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Stanisław August Poniatowski, King of Poland, established the
Order of the Knights of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr on 8 May 1765 The knights were required to pay for donations to poor people and to adhere to various rules of
chivalry. Due to the rising influence of the
Russian Empire on
Central European affairs, the rules of awarding of the order were broken. After the
Partitions of Poland, the order was resurrected in the
Duchy of Warsaw, bestowing upon its recipients the title of hereditary
nobility and requiring donations to a
Warsaw hospital. Since 1815 in the
Polish (Congress) Kingdom, the order, originally in a single class, was retained and divided into four classes.
Russian Empire Following the 1830
November Uprising, an extraordinary meeting of the
Sejm of Congress Poland deposed Emperor
Nicholas I of Russia from the throne of Poland on 25 January 1831, while he was also
Grand Master of the Order of Saint Stanislaus. After the collapse of the uprising in October 1831, the
Imperial House of Romanov established the
Royal and Imperial Order of Saint Stanislaus, incorporating it into the
honours system of the
Russian Empire in 1832, where it remained officially until the
Russian Revolution 1917. The order was abolished with the fall of the Romanovs in 1917 but, unlike other Polish orders awarded by the Tsars, the Order of Saint Stanislaus was not revived by the newly independent
Second Polish Republic (possibly because in its Russian form it was often awarded by the imperial government to those Poles who co-operated with Russian rule making the order a symbol of subservience to an occupying power). Instead, the newly founded
Order of Polonia Restituta was created as an attributed Polish successor to the order. ==Insignia==