Joseph Mateusz Birnbaum
Jozef Mateusz (Joel Moses) Birnbaum (born 1798 in Warsaw, died 15 August 1831) is a merchant and spy, a son of a Warsaw sausageman.
He stayed with his relatives in Galicia and Russia with his uncle in the Kherson Guberah. Upon his return to Warsaw, he founded the wines on the New World. He dealt with police-spy work. He followed. Russian deserters and used to track the embezzlement of tobacco and tobacco. It was adopted by Mateusz Lubowidzki to the city police. He was reassured by General Alexander Roznetsky, who sent him to secret espionage missions abroad. It was recommended that he penetrate to student organizations and gain trust among students of Poles. Following the national embezzlement, he abused many of the abuse, terrorizing Jewish merchants. On his own, he investigated, bullied the arrested. Already in service in 1824 changed his confession and received baptism. In that year, given to the court. His 105 volumes of records were drawn up by his mighty patrons. During the November Uprising, August 15, 1831, a revolted mob pulled him out of jail and hanged on a lighthouse. Comments Bibliography
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