The noble Polish family Odrowaz. Die adlige polnische Familie Odrowaz. - Werner Zurek - E-Book

The noble Polish family Odrowaz. Die adlige polnische Familie Odrowaz. E-Book

Werner Zurek

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Beschreibung

This is a hodgepodge of a disordered, systematically arranged collection of the Polish nobility. On these pages you will find out everything about: descent, aristocracy, aristocratic literature, aristocratic name endings, aristocratic association, genealogy, bibliography, books, family research, research, genealogy, history, heraldry, heraldry, herb, herbarity, indigenous, information, literature, names, nobility files, Nobility, personal history, Poland, Schlachta, Szlachta, coat of arms, coat of arms research, coat of arms literature, nobility, coat of arms, knight, Poland, szlachta, herb, Herbarz. Sammelsurium, veltemere, systematice ordinaretur collectio super principes Poloniae, Gathering, veltimere, systemati cordinaretur collectio super principes Poloniae, Rassemblement, veltimere, ordinaretur systématique super collection Poloniae, Translations in: English, German, French. Das ist ein Sammelsurium einer ungeordneten, systematisch angelegten Sammlung des polnischen Adels. Auf diesen Seiten erfahren Sie alles über: Abstammung, Adel, Adelsliteratur, Adelsnamensendungen, Adelsverband, Ahnenforschung, Bibliographie, Bücher, Familienforschung, Forschungen, Genealogie, Geschichte, Heraldik, Heraldisch, herb, Herbarz, Indigenat, Informationen, Literatur, Namen, Nobilitierungsakten, Nobility, Personengeschichte, Polen, Schlachta, Szlachta, Wappen, Wappenforschung, Wappenliteratur, Adel, Wappen, Ritter, Polen, szlachta, herb, Herbarz. Sammelsurium, veltemere, systematice ordinaretur collectio super principes Poloniae, Gathering, veltimere, systemati cordinaretur collectio super principes Poloniae, Rassemblement, veltimere, ordinaretur systématique super collection Poloniae, Translations in: English, German, French. Il s'agit d'un méli-mélo d'une collection désordonnée et systématiquement organisée de la noblesse polonaise. Sur ces pages, vous trouverez tout sur: descendance, aristocratie, littérature aristocratique, terminaisons de noms aristocratiques, association aristocratique, généalogie, bibliographie, livres, recherche familiale, recherche, généalogie, histoire, héraldique, héraldique, herbe, herbalisme, indigène, information , littérature, noms, dossiers de noblesse Noblesse, histoire personnelle, Pologne, Schlachta, Szlachta, blason, recherche sur les armoiries, blason de la littérature, noblesse, blason, chevalier, Pologne, szlachta, herbe, Herbarz. Sammelsurium, veltemere, systematice ordinaretur collectio super principes Poloniae, Gathering, velti

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The noble Polish family Odrowaz. Die adlige polnische Familie Odrowaz.

The noble Polish family Odrowaz.Impressum

The noble Polish family Odrowaz.

Die adlige polnische Familie Odrowaz.

Odrowaz. In a red field a silver, featherless arrow, the shaft of which splits at the bottom into two ends, which are bent downwards in a heart-shaped manner, the tips of which, however, do not touch, but are bent a little outwards; Helmet - jewelry: a peacock's tail, covered with the turned-left crest image. An on: On the origin of the emblem is said - moving from Moravia had shot in a foreign land with its inhabitants vied with the bow and also struggled, but was always been happy and had gained through this its aptitudes the favor of the local princes. One of the entourage ofThe same was jealous about this and wanted to bet the stranger about nosing in front of his prince. The ancestor, who regarded this as a disgrace, took hold of the opponent's mustache and tore it out with his upper lip, which he stuck on the arrow and showed to the prince. This was the knight in memory of his be - assigned superiority as coat of arms: the objectives set by the mustache and arrow called this crest Odrzywas (mustache - tear-out), which later was Odrowaz. In the coat of arms, the two bent shaft ends should mean the mustache. The afterthis knight is said to have appeared in the Great Moravian Empire under Ratislaw as early as 847, they came to Poland around 1080, and to Bohemia in 1158. In Poland, the first seat of the family was probably in the Sendomierz Voivodeship. This coat of arms is used by:

Abratowicz, Aramowicz, Augustynowicz, Baranowski, Bebnowski, Bialaczewicz, Bialaczowski, Bilicz, Blezowski, Blaszkowicz, Bohurynski, Brachowski, Buchta, Burkacki, Bylina, Cedrowski, Chlewicki, Durziewoicz, Egrziatzowski, Creptowoicz, Debinski, Chwalkinsowski, Creptowoicz, Chlewicki Galka, Giwanowski, Gliszczynski, Godowski, Gorski, Gostynski, Gostwicki, lwanowski, Jachnowski, Jaczynic, Jaczynski, Jelenski, Kamienski, Kapuscinski, Kapusta, Karsnicki, Kietlinski, Konecki, Kotulinsyski, Konecki, Kotulinsys, Krawarski, Kotulinski Lasota, Lewiecki, Litawor, Luskina, Maluja, Maniewski, Mieszkowski, Miklasz, Milzecki, Minkiewicz, Minowski, Mironiski, Mleczko, Mniewski, Nieswienski, Obulecz, Odrowaz, Olsztyinski, Osszeki, Pawzekloszowsia, Pawlowiczowski, Pawlowiczowski, Pawzekowski, Pawlowiczowski Polecki, Potempski, Potrykowski, Pruszkowski, Przedwojewski, Przedworski, Ptaszynski, Rembieszycki, Rozdrazewski, Siedlecki, SiedInicki, Skorzewski, Strasz, Straszewicz, Strusz, Szczekocki, Sy pniewski, Szydlowiecki, Tworkowski, Wadolowski, Waligórski, Wanikowski, Werda, Wilkonski, Wizgerd, Wolski, Wolynski, Wysocki, Zaba, Zaranowski, Zarszynski.

Something is changing run the Coat of Jelenski: the stem of the 'arrow has a left cross bar, helmet decorations: the peacock - tail without Wappenbild, also well below the arrow still a right gestümmeltes Cross - the Luskina and Zaranowski: the arrow is once thwarted, helmet decorations : three ostrich feathers, - the zaba: the arrow is crossed twice, helmet decoration three ostrich feathers.

Odrowąż (noble coat of arms) 

Odrowąż ( Odrowąs  , Odrowąsch   , Odrzywąs   ) - Polish noble coat of arms , mentioned in the oldest surviving Polish coat of arms , badge seu clenodia Regis et Regni Poloniae , written by the historian Jan Długosz in the years 1464-1480   .           

Odrowąż is one of 47 coats of arms adopted by the Lithuanian boyars under the Horodel Union in 1413 . A representative of the Odrowąż family , Jan von Szczekociny , adopted the boyar Wyszegerd  . Over time and the development of the aristocratic structure, the Odrowąż family divided into many families. The most famous families from later periods that use the Odrowąż coat of arms include: the descendants of the boyar Chreptowicz  who was adopted in Horodło and the descendants of the Odrowąż - Pieniążek family  .   

Odrowąż was also used by Jacek Odrowąż  . 

Jan Długosz  burned the coat of arms as follows   :   

Odrowąsch in campo rubeo sagittam albam a parte media arcuatam retortam, in finibus concurvatam, postponed.

Jan Długosz, Insignia seu clenodia Regis et Regni Poloniae

Kasper Niesiecki describes the coat of arms with reference to the historical works of Bartosz Paprocki and Szymon Okolski  :     

There should be a white arrow in the red field , the ends of which are bent on both sides. In the piece of jewelry there is a peacock tail and in it the coat of arms turned to one side.     

Kasper Niesiecki, Herbarz Polski, T. VII

The modern description is as follows  :  

On the sign in red rogacina rozłuczona.    

In the piece of jewelry there are seven peacock tails with the emblem on the left side of the twisted coat of arms.    

Heraldic red labras , lined with silver.   

Antoni Małecki , based on the work by Bartosz Paprocki entitled Zrcadlo slavného Markrabství moravského from 1593 claims that the coat of arms identical to the Polish Odrowąż was the coat of arms of the Lords of Dubravice (part) . The Embassy of Długosz on the coat of arms: "ex Moravia ducens generic" means that it only to the Odrowąż coat of arms and not to the entire family Odrowąż should be applied . This coat of arms comes from Moravia , as stated by the historian František Palacký , who believes that it was founded in the Czech Beneš family as early as the 13th century . The Czech coat of arms should have and its Czech name, which Palacký gives as "Odřiwans" . This name has nothing to with Benes, the patriarch of the family Beneš , or Dubravica (part) to do . It's stuffy. It is not known exactly when this coat of arms was called Odrowąż. The Beneszowiec family split into several branches and settled in Bohemia, Silesia and Moravia. This would mean that the Polish Odrowąże were a branch of Beneszowców who came to Poland and in the provinces Sandomierz and Krakow settled and their coat of arms had been brought from their homeland   .      

Prof. Małecki argues against this theory, adding doubts that he cannot reconcile with the previous arguments: the presence of the Odrowąż family in Poland, like that of the Benesz family in the Czech Republic. In addition, the fact is that the name of the Odrowąż coat of arms, including the family's proclamation, was undoubtedly named after a Polish settlement in the Sandomierz Voivodeship rather than a Moravian settlement and that the Odrowąż emblem, although identical in the sign of the Benešovites , also appeared in the second half of the 13th. In the homeland of Beneszowców, she engraved on the respective seals probably as long as the coat of arms e.g. Persztynów (1220), but due to a lack of knowledge of sfragistyki Czech, the following positive evidence cannot be cited  .           

Franciszek Piekosiński raises all these doubts by stating that if Odrowąż used the surname "Odrowąż" in Chechnya both in Poland (and, as you know, the proclamations were unknown in the Czech Republic), it also established the antiquity of this family is in Poland until the end of the 11th   .   

The last one spoke on this subject, Władysław Semkowicz , then he paid attention to the banner of a certain Jan Jenczykowicz, a Moravian prince, who was to carry it under the coat of arms of the Czech Odrowąż at the Battle of Grunwald . He called this family Benešowie, which, apart from an identical coat of arms, most likely had no relationship with the Polish Odrowąż. However, the above-mentioned author changed this assumption in the work presented at the meeting of the professional academy on July 10, 1911 with the title: "Methodological and critical remarks on the emergence and resettlement of the Polish knights of the Middle Ages". Commenting that the Czech- Moravian families belong and ... Odrowąże. The author connects the latter with the Moravian gentlemen Benešovce, who, in addition to the identical coat of arms, also find the appropriate names for Odrowąż: Dobiesz and Miłosław. Their original seat was in Opawskie Silesia on the Upper Oder (although it was probably a proclamation), from where they came to Poland via Silesia   .                  

On the basis of the research of the Odrowąż and Beneszowców families, Antoni Rybarski found, when comparing their nests and territories, that it is possible to draw fairly reliable conclusions about the origins of these families. Their nests are completely separate, the Beneszowców - Czechs, Odrowąż - notoriously Silesian. A branch of the Beneszowie family emigrated very early from its original nest and settled in Opawskie in 1062 , establishing settlements called Beneszowa everywhere. The Benešovite estates in this region grew very quickly and strongly - but they never bordered on the Odrowąż family's estates. This completely rules out the assumption that the Beneš people are descended from Odrąwąży. He also pointed to the opposite alternative way: that based Opawskie Beneša office after Odrowąż am Or this new city saw as much as her family nest that she later named after Malopolska transferred (see: Odrowąż ) as something that for it is most characteristic. Aside from the artificiality of such an assumption, two arguments contradict him. Firstly, it is an established fact that when the Benešovites settle in new areas, they establish settlements called Benešovs among them, which cannot be found either on the Odrowąż or Konecko rivers. Second, the chronology of the settlement of both families. Dersław, son of Benes, appears in Opawskie in 1062. It is the first Beneszowiec that is not far (approx. 62 kilometers) from Odrowąż (Silesia). So if Odrowąż descended from the Benesz family, they would have to settle in Odrowąż after 1062. Meanwhile it can be said with certainty that then in Małopolska there are already settled family members who came from Odrowąż Śląski and considered this place as their family nest, as they transferred this name to Lesser Poland. This clearly proves that this family had always been in Odrowąż (on the Oder) before 1062 and therefore certainly did not come from the Beneš people   .                           

The Beneszowcy appeared in the Opava region at a time when it undoubtedly belonged to Moravia , not Silesia