Michael Johann von der Borch


Graf Michael Johann von der Borch-Lubeschitz und Borchhoff, Baron von Borchland was a Baltic German naturalist and writer.

Biography

Ancestry

Michael Johann von der Borch came from the Courlandish branch of the noble family. His parents were the Polish chancellor and Ludwika Anna . He was born in Varakļāni in present-day Latvia.

Career

Michael Johann von der Borch was educated and raised at the family estate by French teachers, as well as partly in Poland, to some extent at the Collegium Pium in Warsaw. He entered Polish military service in 1762 and obtained the rank of colonel in the hussars no later than 1776. According to some sources, he was wounded by during the kidnapping of Stanisław August Poniatowski in 1771 while trying to protect the king. Thanks to his loyalty and to his skill, he was promoted to Quartermaster general of Lithuania in 1781, became a member of the Ministry of War in 1786 and eventually promoted to Lieutenant General. In addition, he was made starost of Ludza in 1772 and from 1787 voivode of the Belz Voivodeship, where he promoted the spreading of the Polish language.
Between 1774 and 1778 he conducted an extensive Grand Tour through Germany, France, Switzerland and Italy. His tour included a visit to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta on Malta. He was inspired to visit Sicily and Malta by reading the then-popular book A Tour through Sicily and Malta by Patrick Brydone. On Sicily he dedicated himself to extensive studies of mineralogy between September 1776 and April 1777. He published the results of his studies in seven Italian scientific publications and later, in extended form, as books translated into French. In his Italian Journey, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe speaks favourably of von der Borch. His extensive natural history collections where still piously preserved in the castle of Varakļāni as late as 1868. In recognition of his work as a naturalist, the Brachiopod Bicarinatina borchi is named after von der Borch.
In 1783, he was elevated to the rank of Imperial Count by the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II.
In 1790 he traveled to England on a mission for the Polish king, whose complete trust von der Borch enjoyed. Following the Third Partition of Poland he retired from all official duties and settled on his estate in Varakļāni. Already in 1789 he had hired the Italian architect Vincenzo de Mazotti to rebuild Varakļāni Palace and redesign the garden of the estate, which had been in the family since 1483.
Among other decorations, Michael Johann von der Borch was awarded the Order of the Lion of Bavaria, the Order of Saint Stanislaus and the Order of the White Eagle. As a writer he concentrated on natural sciences, maintained international scientific contacts and was a member of several academies.

Family

In 1783 he married Countess Eleonore Christina von Browne of Camus in Riga, the daughter of the Russian governor general of Livonia George Browne. The couple had seven children.

Controversy

The biographical data presented above is based mainly on German-language sources, which to an essential part are based on the works of Karl Eduard von Napiersky. In the Polish literature, the political career of von der Borch – but not his scientific career – is portrayed differently. For example, his service in the Polish army is not well documented and his relationship to the king has been described as strenuous.

Works