Karol Levittoux (1820 – 7 July 1841) was a Polish independence activist and a law student in Warsaw. Karol was the son of Piotr Levittoux-Desnouettes, a French sergeant who settled in Poland in 1813.[1]
Biography
Karol was born in 1820, likely in Kumelsk near Kolno.[2] A student and graduate of the Piarist high school in Łuków, and a student of pedagogical courses in Warsaw. In 1839, he founded the Patriotic Union in Łuków, whose activities focused on self-education and agitation, as part of the Association of the Polish People. He also initiated a similar union in Chełm. Those involved in the conspiracies were accused of aiming to incite an armed uprising, establish a republican government, and abolish serfdom while granting land to peasants. The conspiracy was uncovered due to testimony given by an elementary school teacher in Łuków, Jan Thierbach. After being arrested in 1841, Levittoux spent several months in the Warsaw Citadel. A brutal investigation, following a failed escape attempt, led him to commit suicide as he refused to betray his comrades. Levittoux set his mattress on fire and died in the flames.
An army of spies, under the command of the infamous Abramowicz, raided houses and estates, and upon finding a forbidden book or some other incriminating evidence, they imprisoned people and sent them to the Citadel. (...) This was the case in 1841, when the school youth association in Łuków was uncovered. Around 200 young men were brought in at that time. The youth stood firm, and nothing could be extracted from them. The leader of this association was Karol Levittoux, a young man of great fortitude and extraordinary ability. He received 2,000 lashes, 400 every two days, was starved, and deprived of sleep, but he endured it all and betrayed no one. Due to the marriage of Nicholas's successor, efforts were made to release the Łuków youth, but Levittoux was excluded from this clemency. Efforts were then made to help him escape, and a saw for cutting the bars was sent hidden in the spine of a book, along with a letter and a cipher. However, during a routine prisoner inspection, it was discovered by the gendarmes. New interrogations and new tortures followed. Levittoux, weakened in body and feeling his spirit falter, out of fear that he might betray someone, set fire to his bed and ended his life on it. This was in the last days of July 1841. From that time, they stopped providing light to the prisoners.[3]
...he knelt on a bed of hard planks wrapped in straw ropes – under those planks, he placed a candle. Slowly, the twisted straw ropes caught fire. It must have felt like an eternity as they smoldered before starting to deal death. Hours passed before the bed turned into a pile of coals rather than flames. He was found kneeling, his chest and face charred, half-collapsed and lifeless...
Norwid also refers to Levittoux's death in a passage from his 1866 drama Za kulisami.[5] These words inspired Jerzy Andrzejewski to title his novel Ashes and Diamonds, and the piece was performed as a song titled "For That Very Reason," sung by Stan Borys, among others.
He was also the subject of a contemporary poem by Jerzy Czech titled Karol Levittoux, performed by Przemysław Gintrowski to his own music composition (the song was part of the 1991 program "Kamienie”).[7]
In Łukow, the annual Karol Levittoux Volleyball Memorial is held, with the best amateur teams from all over Poland participating. On May 10, 2014, during the first day of the latest edition of the memorial, a commemorative plaque along with a stone was unveiled in the city park.