Aleksander Michał Paweł Sapieha ( Lithuanian: Aleksandras Mykolas Sapiega) of Lis coat of arms (1730 [1] in Wysokie – 1793 in Warsaw [2]) was a noble of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Son of Kazimierz Leon Sapieha and Karolina Teresa Radziwiłł, he married Magdalena Agnieszka Sapieżyna in 1757. [3] A protegee of Józef Stanisław Sapieha, he became the Voivode of Polotsk in 1753, [4] Field Lithuanian Hetman from 1762, [5] Grand Lithuanian Chancellor from 1775, [6] marshal of Lithuanian Tribunal in 1789.
He tried to remain neutral in politics but leaned towards the pro-Russian faction; he neither opposed nor support the Confederation of Bar, [7] a member of the Great Sejm he did not openly criticize or support May Constitution of Poland; however, given his subsequent positioning as marshal of the Targowica Confederation, appointed by Russian Empress Catherine the Great, he had an implied opposition to it.
Aleksander Michał Paweł Sapieha ( Lithuanian: Aleksandras Mykolas Sapiega) of Lis coat of arms (1730 [1] in Wysokie – 1793 in Warsaw [2]) was a noble of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Son of Kazimierz Leon Sapieha and Karolina Teresa Radziwiłł, he married Magdalena Agnieszka Sapieżyna in 1757. [3] A protegee of Józef Stanisław Sapieha, he became the Voivode of Polotsk in 1753, [4] Field Lithuanian Hetman from 1762, [5] Grand Lithuanian Chancellor from 1775, [6] marshal of Lithuanian Tribunal in 1789.
He tried to remain neutral in politics but leaned towards the pro-Russian faction; he neither opposed nor support the Confederation of Bar, [7] a member of the Great Sejm he did not openly criticize or support May Constitution of Poland; however, given his subsequent positioning as marshal of the Targowica Confederation, appointed by Russian Empress Catherine the Great, he had an implied opposition to it.