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| Benyowsky's mansion in Vrbove |
After he was taken captive, he managed to escape from Siberia and started a discovery trip heading to California through the Northern Pacific (years before Capt. Cook and LaPerouse). He navigated through the Aleutian Islands, but had to change course to Japan, Formosa, and Macao. When he arrived in France in 1772, he was empowered by King Louis XV to establish trading posts on Madagascar. Besides building the posts and exploring the interior of the fourth largest island in the world, Benyowsky also unified its tribes. Local kings elected him as their "Ampansacabe" (Emperor).
Back in France in 1776, Benyowsky was promoted to General in the french army and was awarded the Order of Saint Louis. Later he was pardoned by Roman Empress and Queen of Hungary Maria Theresa and the title Count was bestowed upon him. Benyowsky prepared a project to develop trade and an imperial fleet in the Mediterranean. He was then empowered by Emperor Joseph II to set up a colony on Madagascar.
While in Paris he became a close friend of Benjamin Franklin, and the two were often joined by Casimir Pulaski. Pulaski then proposed to the Continental Congress to take over Madagascar. In 1779, Benyowsky arrived in Philadelphia to offer his services to the American Revolution. With the help of the Continental Congress, he joined Pulaski at the Battle of Savannah, arriving in time to witness his friends tragic end.
In 1782, Benyowsky returned to America with a proposal to recruit an American Legion in Europe to aid the Revolution. The project was favorably evaluated by the Secretary of War, Benjamin Lincoln, and Benyowsky met George Washington at Newburgh to explain the proposal. A change in British attitudes prevented the project from being fulfilled. Benyowsky's brother Francis, aide-de-camp to Major John Polerecky, collected the weapons surrendered by the British at Yorktown.
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| Benyowsky sends an early version of his memoirs to Franklin, December 24, 1781 |
Thanks to the help of Benjamin Franklin, Benyowsky's family was able to return to the Slovak town of Beckovska Vieska. Benyowsky's descendants have kept the spirit of cosmopolitanism alive, and can be found all across Europe and the U.S.
Besides being the author of a bestseller translated into many languages, Benyowsky became a rich source of inspiration for writers, poets, composers, and painters. The play Count Benyowsky by the German playwright August Friedrich von Kotzebue had its American premiere together with the premiere of the future national anthem, the Star Spangled Banner, in Baltimore on October 19, 1814.
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| Testimony of birth date by Rev. Paval Macunda as September 20, 1741 |



