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Eustachy Sapieha
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Eustachy Kajetan Sapieha (2 August 1881 – 20 February 1963) was a , of the family, politician, Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs, and deputy to the Polish parliament ().


Politics
In 1900–04, he studied forestry in and afterwards earned a degree as an engineer. He was a conservative activist from , and worked with the German installed Regency Council and Józef Piłsudski during the First World War. In 1917 he unsuccessfully negotiated with the Polish National Committee. Afterwards, disappointed with Piłsudski's leftist policies, he was an organizer of the failed 1919 coup d'état; despite that, he subsequently worked with Piłsudski and supported him. During the Polish-Soviet War, he served in the cavalry.


Diplomatic career
On 16 June 1919, Sapieha was delegated as the ambassador of Poland to the . On 4 June 1920 he and Erazm Piltz, representing the Polish government, signed the Treaty of Trianon in Paris.

In 1920, he was chosen by Prime Minister Władysław Grabski to be Minister of Foreign Affairs. Although he successfully negotiated several agreements with Western powers, he was faced with the delicate situation over the plebiscites in . On 24 March 1921 the British EmbassyMr Max Muller at wrote to Earl Curzon in London to say that he had just called upon Prince Sapieha whom he found "very depressed at the result of voting in Upper Silesia, which has on the whole turned out far worse than the Polish Government had anticipated...He agreed with me that the victory reports in the newspapers were foolish and any public rejoicing regrettable."Medlicott, Prof.W.N., Dakin, Douglas, M.A., Lambert, M.E., M.A., editors, Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919-1939, First series, vol. xvi, HMSO, London, 1968, p.2. His negotiations over federation with also failed and, faced with criticism from the National Democrats, he resigned his post later in the year.


Parliament and WWII
In 1928–29 he was a Sejm deputy from the Nonpartisan Bloc for Cooperation with the Government. After the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 he was arrested by the Soviets and imprisoned in the . After the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement, he joined . In 1941 he travelled to Kenya. He did not return to post-war communist Poland, and remained in .

In 1956 he was awarded the Order of the White Eagle by the Polish government in exile.

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