Antoni Stanisław Czetwertyński-Światopełk

Antoni Stanisław Światopełk-Czetwertyński (born in 1748, died on June 28, 1794) - Przemyśl castellan prince from 1790, in 1773 a deputy of the Braclaw deputy to the Partition Sejm 1773-1775, as a member of the delegation established to form and ratify treaties with partitioning powers after the First Partition Poland was a representative of the opposition. heir of the Russian embassy, ​​opponent of the Constitution of May 3, marshal of the Targowica confederation since March 1793, consulter of her Crown General Confederation [2], decorated with the Order of the White Eagle. In 1773 he collected 150 red zlotys from the joint coffers of three partitioning mansions.

A member of the confederation of Adam Poniński in 1773 [5]. A member of the confederation of Andrzej Mokronowski in 1776 and a member of parliament in 1776 from the Bracławskie voivodship [6].

He was a member of the confederation of the Four-Year Sejm [7]. He was listed on the list of deputies and senators of the Russian MP Yakov Bulgakov in 1792, which contained a list of people whom the Russians can count on when re-confederating and overthrowing the work on May 3. He was the captain of the Targowica formation of the National Cavalry Brigade of the Hussar Characters under the name of the Bracławskie Voivodeship. In 1792 he was delegated by the Targowica confederation to sit on the Treasury Committee of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

In 1785 he became a bachelor of the Order of Saint Stanislaus.

On June 28, 1794, during the Kościuszko Uprising, he was dragged out of prison and hanged as a traitor together with other people declared traitors, like bishop Ignacy Jakub Massalski.by the Warsaw crowd. His family was smuggled to St. Petersburg, where his daughter Marie became a mistress of Alexander I of Russia.