The Czartoryski era in Puławy ended in 1831. Prince Adam Jerzy Czartoryski, owner of Puławy since 1812, was sentenced in absentia to beheading by the tsar for his participation in the November Uprising, and all of his estates in the Russian partition were confiscated. Part of the palace and its surroundings were taken to Russia, part was sold at auction, e.g. the Meissonier wainscoting from the Golden Hall. It was possible to save the collections from the Temple of the Sibyl and the Gothic House, as well as the library (about 60 thousand volumes), which were taken in stages to Paris (they later returned to Krakow, where the Czartoryski Museum was established on their basis in 1876). Zofia Zamoyska, née Czartoryska, took some of the sculptures (including "Tancred and Clorinda", a sarcophagus, lions, an obelisk dedicated to Prince Józef Poniatowski) to Podzamcze near Maciejowice, from where they were returned to Puławy in 1947. Many elements of small park architecture disappeared after 1840.