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Professor Lech Leciejewicz, a scholar of the Polish and European Middle Ages and one of the most outstanding Polish archaeologists, died suddenly on 23 March 2011. Lech Leciejewicz was born on 26 January 1931 in Poznań. In 1949-1953 he studied prehistory and history at the Poznań university. From his youth he remained deeply interested in the history of the Early Middle Ages and he followed these scholarly interests throughout his life, carrying out research not only in Poland, but also abroad, in France, Spain and Italy. He published extensively, including several books among the near to 500 publications. Personally he considered as his greatest achievement a book on the origins of medieval European civilization. From 1954 until his retirement Lech Leciejewicz was associated with the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology (formerly Institute of the History of Material Culture) of the Polish Academy of Sciences, where he served in different administrative and managerial positions, including twice president of the Scientific Board. He was a member of many national and international scientific bodies, societies and committees, editorial boards, and a laureate of numerous awards and distinctions, as well as being a person decorated with medals. Professor Lech Leciejewicz helped to shape modern archaeology in Poland through his own discoveries, publications, grassroots work and strong influence on his students. In Polish postwar archaeology he was truly outstanding, his scholarly status supported by his oeuvre, a professed care for the common good and the impact his work has had on the development of Early Medieval archaeology in Poland.
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Father Stanisław Kozierowki (1874–1949) – a Forerunner of the Onomastic Research on Western SlavsFather Stanisław Kozierowski was one of the outstanding Polish researchers of Slavic onomastics in the first half of the twentieth century. He published numerous works on, often already forgotten, names of villages, lakes, rivers and marshes, particularly in the region of Greater Poland and the area historically inhabited by Slavic peoples, stretching as far as the river Elbe. His studies were part of the research stream described as “Western thought” (myśl zachodnia, followed at the University of Poznań after the First World War), a dispute with German scholars pursued with the aim of proving Poland’s right to the territories on the Baltic Sea which had been historically populated by West Slavic tribes. After the Second World War, Kozierowski contributed to setting Polish names of villages and railways stations in the so-called Recovered Territories. Ksiądz Stanisław Kozierowski (1874–1949) – prekursor badań onomastycznych Zachodniej SłowiańszczyznyKsiądz Stanisław Kozierowski był jednym z wybitnych polskich badaczy onomastyki słowiańskiej pierwszej połowy XX wieku. Opublikował liczne prace, w których przypomniał dawne, często już zapomniane nazwy miejscowości, jezior, rzek i bagien, zwłaszcza z terenu Wielkopolski oraz terenów zamieszkałych niegdyś przez ludność słowiańską do rzeki Łaby. Jego badania naukowe były częścią prowadzonych na Uniwersytecie Poznańskim w okresie międzywojennym badań określanych jako „myśl zachodnia”. Stanowiły one polemikę z badaczami niemieckimi i miały wykazać prawa Polski do ziem leżących nad Bałtykiem, zamieszkałych niegdyś przez plemiona zachodniosłowiańskie. Po II wojnie światowej ksiądz Stanisław Kozierowski przyczynił się do ustalenia polskich nazw miejscowości i stacji kolejowych na tzw. Ziemiach Odzyskanych.
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