Franciszek Młokosiewicz (May 5, 1769, Koźminek – March 23, 1845, Warsaw) was a Polish officer who served during the Napoleonic Wars and the November Uprising.
As the Polish Land Forces were lacking experienced field officers, Młokosiewicz (then 61 and in bad health) was accepted and promoted to the military rank of Colonel.
Despite his tactical successes in the borough of Wola, which pushed back the initial assault, Młokosiewicz's force was defeated the following day, and Warsaw fell to the Imperial Russian Army.
[6] Three years before his death, Młokosiewicz published his own account of the Battle of Fuengirola and his part in the Peninsular War.
[9] Their daughter, Helena Mikorska, who married Count Roman Mikorski and died in 1901,[10] is best known as the person to whom Frédéric Chopin donated his Mazurka in G major.