Background
Lehr-Spławiński was born in Krakow, the son of Edward Lehr, an engineer, and Maria née Spławińska.
Lehr-Spławiński was born in Krakow, the son of Edward Lehr, an engineer, and Maria née Spławińska.
He went to January III Sobieski high school and, in the years 1909–1915 studied linguistics, history of Polish literature as well as classical philology, at the Jagiellonian University in KrakóWest
He continued his studies in Vienna, and began his teaching career in Zakopane. In 1918, Lehr-Spławiński became the professor at Poznań University and since 1922, the University of Lwów (following Poland"s return to independence). He led the Departments of Slavonic Philology there.
From 1929 until his retirement in 1962, he was a professor of linguistics at Jagiellonian University, elected as its Rector for the first time just prior to the Nazi German invasion of Poland.
Among his students, from October 1938 was the 18-year-old Karol Wojtyła, future Pope John Paul World War II World World War II
On November 6, 1939 during the notorious Sonderaktion Krakau, Lehr-Spławiński was arrested and interned by the Gestapo on the order of Steamship-Obersturmbannführer Bruno Müller. Along with 184 professors and academics from three different universities in KrakóWest
lieutenant was part of a much broader assault on Polish cultural elite known as Intelligenzaktion devised by Hitler himself. The prisoners were transported first to jail at Montelupich street and – some three days later – to the detention center in Wrocław (German: Breslau), where they spent 18 days in prison facilities.
The Breslau Gestapo were unprepared for such a large transfer of prisoners and awaited permission to send them to the Buchenwald concentration camp.
As the camp was filled to capacity, on the evening of November 27, 1939 they were loaded on a train to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp located outside of Berlin. Lehr-Spławiński was among a group of Krakow academics released from custody in February 1940 as a result of an international protest involving prominent Italians including Benito Mussolini and the Vatican. During the remaining occupation of Poland he participated in clandestine teaching.
In 1945, after the liberation of Krakow, he again became the rector of Jagiellonian University and served until 1946.
He was head of Slavonic Institute of the Polish Academy of Sciences, and Doctor honoris causa at Charles University in Prague and the Sofia University. He died on February 17, 1965 in Krakow, and is buried at the historic Rakowicki Cemetery.
A street in Krakow is named after him.