Krystyna Drohojowska
Krystyna Drohojowska is a fictional character in the novel Fire in the Steppe by Henryk Sienkiewicz. She is a beautiful orphan who marries Hassling-Ketling of Elgin.
In Jerzy Hoffman's 1969 film adaptation, Krzysia is portrayed by Barbara Brylska.
Story
Krystyna is an orphan in the care of stolnik Makowiecki. In 1668 she arrives in Warsaw and meets Michał Wołodyjowski. He falls in love with her and proposes. Krystyna accepts his proposal, even though her feelings for him are platonic. Soon she meets Hassling-Ketling of Elgin, Wołodyjowski's friend. Krystyna and Ketling quickly fall in love, but since she is already engaged, they can't be together. Krzysia decides then to enter a convent, but Wołodyjowski gives up Krystyna to his friend, wanting them both to be happy.After they marry, Krystyna and Ketling live in Courland. Krystyna gives birth to a son, and later becomes pregnant again, though book does not reveal what comes of her second pregnancy. In 1672 Ketling goes to Kamianets-Podilskyi which was to be attacked by Turks. Krzysia accompanies him. After the city surrenders, Ketling refuses to surrender and commits suicide, together with his friend Wołodyjowski, by blowing themselves up in a gunpowder depot.