Maria Dobrowolska
Maria Dobrowolska née Mrazkówna was a Polish geographer and professor who set up and taught at a secret school in her home during World War II during the German occupation of Poland.
Biography
She was born Maria Mrazkówna in 1895 in Ropica Ruska and attended high school in Kraków. In the years 1915–1919 she studied geography at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. During World War I, she was an activist of the Women's League of Galicia and Silesia. In 1921, she defended her doctoral thesis, supervised by Ludomir Sawicki. A long-time teacher in Krakow secondary schools. During German occupation of Poland during World War II, she participated in secret teaching, managing teaching center No. 6 in Kraków-Dębniki, with a school located in the apartment she shared with her husband Kazimierz Dobrowolski, a cultural historian and sociologist, who was one of 183 Krakow scientists arrested on 6 November 1939. He was held in Germany for several months at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.With the end of the War, Maria helped Rodion Mochnacki and Jan Flis organize a master's studies program in geography. From 1949 on, she worked at the Higher Pedagogical School in Krakow. She was the first head of the Department of Geography at the Academy of Fine Arts, and from 1951, was head of the Department of Social and Economic Geography. Their work which formed the basis for geography-related departments established in 1952, and became the foundation of the Institute of Geography of the Pedagogical University of Krakow, established in 1971.
Dobrowolska wrote works on settlement geography, regionalization and methodology and authored the work: Dynamics of the cultural landscape. In 1967 she retired.
She died in 1984 was buried beside her husband at the Salwatorski Cemetery.