Lech Szczucki (born 1933), is a Polish historian of philosophy and culture, particularly noted since the 1960s for his work on the Polish Brethren.
Polish language | Second Polish Republic | Polish Navy | Polish Academy of Sciences | Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth | Polish people | Polish resistance movement in World War II | Solidarity (Polish trade union) | Plymouth Brethren | Polish American | Polish United Workers' Party | Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth | Polish literature | Polish Legions | Polish Armed Forces | Polish Air Force | 2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash | Polish Military Organisation | Polish State Railways | Polish Socialist Party | Polish Academy of Learning | Unity of the Brethren | The Polish Review | Polish People's Party | Polish Legions in World War I | Polish government-in-exile | Polish Basketball League | Church of the United Brethren in Christ | War of the Polish Succession | United Brethren in Christ |
The town had a Calvinist prayer house, together with a school, which competed with the famous Racovian Academy (see also Polish Brethren).
Jonasz Szlichtyng (German: Jonas Schlichting) (Bukowiec, Lubusz Voivodeship 1592 - Sulechów 1661) was a Polish nobleman, theologian of the Socinian Polish Brethren and father of Krzysztof Szlichtyng.
Pierre Statorius (Tonneville, Seine-Maritime 1530 - Pińczów 1591) was a French grammarian and theologian, who settled among the Polish Brethren, becoming rector of a Calvinist Academy in Pińczów at the invitation of Francesco Lismanino.