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

The noble Polish Mirski family. Die adlige polnische Familie Mirski. 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: Polish, 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: Polish, 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,

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2021

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

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The noble Polish Mirski family.

Die adlige polnische Familie Mirski.

Mirski, Poraj coat of arms Poraj. Some of them are named after their coat of arms. Mikołaj Poraj, canon of Cracow in 1401 in Nakiel. in Miechow. fol. 370. Jakub Poraj, the pastor of Trzemeszyn in 1386, about whom he writes. Dama in Vitis Archiepisc. Gnesnensium fol. 207. that the first pastor of the Trzemeszyn parish received a stable and the right to sit as a canon in the Gniezno chapter. Mikołaj Poraj, the Starost of Halych, who attacked with Piotr Odrowąż under the name of Krasne, so heavily called Wołochów, in 1450 that even they beheaded the enemy for a long time and both died there, causing Biel to die. fol. 390. Then it seems to me that Mikołaj Rohatyn was taken in 1431 by the Aleksander Hospodar Wołoski. Biel. fol. 379. Some say that he wrote from Lubien and therefore belongs to Wilczków Rożyców, as well as Dersław Wilczek von Lubien, Chamberlain von Lwowski, who, like other Wilkies from this house, is mentioned in the letter W. Balbinus lib. 3. Epito. Rer. Bohem. Home page. 18 namenia, 1e some in Bohemia, Rożyców, from 1338. In their coat of arms used an armed horseman, and this is a reminder that for the French they demonstrated their bravery against the English, but I understand they did it then too Don't remove the rose from your crest, just add a tab.

Bialynia coat of arms. A white horseshoe, with the horns turned up, a cross in the middle, in the same shape as in the coat of arms of Jastrzębiec, but there is a crossbow bolt above the cross, or the others want an arrow to be used in the blue field . Five ostrich feathers over the helmet and crown, others only three. Bielski fol. 223. Paproc. Foil slot. 1093.0 Coat of Arms 343. [p. 129] Okolski vol. 1. fol. 43. Potoc. early guns. MRS. P. Ruth. SJ Lib. Jewel. Everyone agrees that this coat of arms was acquired in Poland in 1332 under Władysław Łokietek: when this gentleman selected the German knights with the army and his camp was almost in contact with the enemy, the knight of the house of Jastrzębczyk had such a neat shape of bolt, that is, he hollowed out the arrows that the spice fire had hidden in them. Then the dark night served as a trick, and so a hidden fire broke out under his cover, the guard who had gone to the Germanic tents. The stuck arrows that hit with the right thing soon devoured all with a flame, where they so terrified the enemy that when our people attacked them, some of them broke, others were killed by fire, the sword and the die Poland won. As a reward for such a happy industry, I added a bolt to the above-mentioned knight of the local knight of Jastrzębiec, and this expedition ended in the village of Bialynia, and for this reason the coat of arms got its name, Bialynia was named after him. But Paprocki, who is the first author of the story and who others consistently followed, in his other book, which he called Stromat, The Beginnings of Białynia to the Times of Bolesław. Boleslaw attracts; It adds that there are many houses in Mazovia that seal themselves with this gem but they don't count. It seems to me                        

Mirski, - Rzepecki, - Wilczek, - Zabłocki.

Jastrzębiec coat of arms . On the shield in the blue field a golden horseshoe, the tips of which are turned straight up, in the middle a cross, on the helmet over the crowned buzzard, with slightly raised wings, in the right shield fully pointed, with bells and claws, in the right Claw holds the horseshoe with a cross like on a shield. That's how Paproc describes him. about the coat of arms. f. 115. Approx.volume . 1. fol. 315. Potocki The collection of fol. 117. Bielski fol. 83. It was comforting. in M5.           

This jewel (says Paproc.) It is for this reason that it is named Jastrzębiec, that his pagan ancestors only carried Jastrz thebie in their coat of arms: later in the time of Bolesław Chrobry, the king, around the roar of 999. When the mountain two Miles away from Bożęcin, who is now called the Sister of the Cross, the pagans took their enemies and then, like in the fortress on which the insured stood, they reproached our army and said: One of you, who would like it to lead a duel for your Christ. Hearing this, a knight, a Jastrzębiec, touched by the enthusiasm of faith and the glory of God, was moved and invented horseshoes for horse's hooves, with which, having shoed his horse, he happily broke through the bald mountain and there a duel with the pagan pagan led before him, seized him and brought him to the others: Polish cavalry to soldiers, after they surrendered in this way, when they had shod their horses and crossed the slippery mountain and covered them with ice, they carried them down the enemy and conquered: as a reward for his industry, he took from the same king a variation of his coat of arms, that a horseshoe was placed with a cross on his shield, and a hawk was carried on his helmet. It's paproc. and all the others who wrote about this coat of arms. However, I cannot certify to these authors that Jastrzębczyk, the first here in Poland, only invented the horseshoe and the art of forging in 999 [p. 463] horses; for it is evident from antiquity that Poppaea (whose death for Nero from Tacitus on. 16 Ulyss. Aldr. de quadrup. lib. 1. is described) ordered her horse to be forged with silver shoes, and others used iron shoes before her and jam vol. 2. fol. 55. Balbina, the Czech historian, mentioned that there was a house in Bohemia as early as the year 278 of the Lord who was sealed with three horseshoes and, as he says, also visited these countries with the Czech Republic. And here in Poland the treacherous Leszek, who stood up against the crown hanging on a column on the prądnick sweat studded with sharp spikes, gave his horse a horse, Cromer. lib. 2. The foreign author Szentivani in Curios understands it for this reason too. One could certainly say that until then our people did not use horseshoes (which Cromer clearly says about the times of Leszek in the second) and that Jastrzębczyk took up this excuse again on the occasion of the bride. Only Paprocki, who was the first of the authors in the Nest of Virtues, marked the beginning of the Jastrzębiec coat of arms, which up until that time was mentioned in the time of Bolesław the Brave: in a later published book he gave the title Stromat. far different; that the righteous first author of the coat of arms of Belina, he left three sons who were reconciled, the eldest of them used three horseshoes in the coat of arms, as we see in the coat of arms of Belina, the other two, with the same shape as in the coat of arms from the coat of arms of Łzawa: the third of the horseshoe as in the coat of arms of Jastrzębiec: but the first and second guesses are not supported by any author. It is better to say that this coat of arms came to Poland together with Lech; and just in time, when one of the heads of this house was baptized, he added a cross to him. that this coat of arms came to Poland with Lech; and just in time, when one of the heads of this house was baptized, he added a cross to him. that this coat of arms came to Poland with Lech; and just in time, when one of the heads of this house was baptized, he added a cross to him.                        

Regarding the antiquity of this house and the heyday in the days of pagan monarchs in Poland, all authors agree, and some add that one of the Jastrzębiec men was found among the twelve voivods who once ruled this country twice. Fern. in electricity. claims that one of this family who is abroad adopted the Christian religion there and that it was accepted by the Polish prince Mieczysław. You know, and with it the antiquity of the Jastrzębians, that when the Jastrzębczyk family is born you will no longer find a family coat of arms: Paprocki says about the coat of arms that for several hundred years they only named themselves after Archbishop Jastrzębczyk Wojciech Gnieźnieński, when the first of the house started to write with Rytwian, others too, where they came from, hence their name. Knowing that from this coat of arms many other [p. 464] had its origin in Dąbrowa, Zagłoba, Pobóg and others. This coat of arms is otherwise called Boleszczyce. In Silesia and Mazovia Lazanki: elsewhere Jastrzębczyk was called as they are called Jastrzębia, that is, Kaniów Kudbrzowie. In the Paprocki period, the Jastrzębiec Castle was in the inheritance of the Zborowski family, which Piotr Zborowski from Rytwiany, voivode and general of Kraków, devastated and overturned and had a large pond built on this site.          

Ancestors of this house.

The oldest of this house was laid by Paprocki from the monastery privilege of Mszczuj, the castellan of Sandomierz, in 999 during the reign of Bolesław the Brave: two of his sons, Mszczuj and Jan, who wrote from Jakuszewice, were canons of Krakow and became canons from 1061 Lambert Bishop made. You write. In 1084 Długosz remembers the Hungarian Jastrz withbianer with Mieczysław, the son of Bolesław the Bold, the letter from Władysław, the monarch of his uncle, d. HS Stanislaus, the bishop who had all returned. 

Dersław, the cupbearer of Bolesław, the Wrymouth King of Poland, in 1114, whose sons Wojciech and Derszław, of whom Wojciech was the ensign of Sandomierz, granted Bolesław Kędzierzawy in the villages of Jakuszewice and Kobelniki a privilege over his paprock, quoted from the crest . but the long time between their father and them, that is, one hundred and sixty-six, does not make me believe that they are the sons of Derslaus, the cup holder. Bořivoj and Dersław Jastrzębczyki from heirs in Jakuszowice, there he wrote Paprocki from the monastery privilege of 1199. Piotr, son of Wojciech, ensign of Sandomierski, counts there.  

Swentosław of the pastor of Poznan and the canon of Gniezno, who was elected Bishop of Poznan, despite having been burdened for years, broke away from the shepherd's burden after giving up on himself and ruled the sheep by skill and example Entrusted to him, but he chatted in this cathedral for only a year, he said goodbye to the world in 1176. He is buried in his church. Nakiel. in Miechov. fol. 66, his monastery praises the charity of this saint, who at the beginning saved with generous alms: he liked the Pobóg coat of arms, but Długosz in Vitis Episc. Posnan. and others call him a Jastrzębczyk. Paprocki says that there is a grave in Jędrzejów [p. 465] with a stone covered with an important Jastrzębiec coat of arms, but the letters cannot be read, year 1206.        

Piotr Brevis or Little Named, Bishop of Płock, the nineteenth, from the Scholasticism of Płock, elected by the chapter in the fifth year of his capital, moved to another 1254th Łubieński in Vitis Episc. Plocen. Likewise, he did not assign him a coat of arms, but says that a noble family lived there and Paprocki had a coat of arms. it clearly writes about him that he was a Jastrzębczyk.   

Jan Bishop of Wroclaw in Silesia, the first of the Poles to enter this cathedral, because previously only Italians ruled it and voted for this dignity from the Wroclaw Canon 1062. It attests to its chronicle, in which it is clearly written by the Jastrzębiec family. Jakub von Raciborowice, castellan of Sandomierz, died in 1241 near Chmielnik. 

Michał, the castellan of Kraków, 1225. Mistuj, the voivode of Kraków, 1242. Scibor, the voivode of Łęczyca, 1242. Mściug, the voivode of Sandomierz, 1342. These were mentioned in their place in the first volume. Mszczuja Chamberlain from Krakow remembers inter praesentes, a letter from Casimir, the great King of Poland, to the Strzelno monastery. You can find Paweł Koszcziena, who signed from Sendziszów in 1399, in Długosz, and I'll talk about that below.  

Jędrzej, the bishop of Vilnius, named after Lithuania Wasilo, during the reign of King Władysław Jagiełło in 1399. He was an apostolic shepherd who was still in faithless Lithuania and convinced his Christian faith: Kromer calls him a learned and divine man . Marcisz, the brother of Jędrzej, the bishop, of the O0 monastery in Nowe Miasto. He gave the Franciscans and walled them up and bought the same Zborów that the Zborowscy made.  

Wojciech, Archbishop of Gnieźnieński, from father Dersław, from mother Krystyna, born in the village of Łubnica, among other numerous descendants, where, when the father of a small fortune brought him to an institution for training in the parish of Bensowska, he gave him to Długosz in Vitis Episcop. Posnan. That was the speech he made to him. I entrust you to my son, not in the school of the pupils but in the bishops. Remember that after remaining a bishop, you do not forget your present state of seeing me and your mother, your brothers and sisters. Deprivation in the one you were born into is the greatest, and not the one who could be forgotten with the greatest fortune, and after I have become a bishop, I would ask you to do so and build the Church in this place where you [p. 466] to schools. - The son heard everything and promised to carry out the admonition as a fatherly order: both hopes were not disappointed, because by advancing on the steps he became a priest, soon from the Cracow school, as Długosz wishes, that is, from the dean of Cracow and the Pastor of Poznan, and in 1399 became prelate of Poznan Bensów, he threw down the wooden church and then built the 1407 monks from him. He left Paweł, the hermit, and gave him the villages of Bensowa, Bensówka, Bydłowa and Bystronowice. He organized a collegiate church in Warsaw and founded the villas in the Poznan Cathedral. So he made this church gloriously valued for all for 14 years and for his wisdom, which seemed best in him, for the function of his great chancellor, and for the piety to gain weight. However, he burdened them very much when Piotr Wiss from the Leszczyc coat of arms moved from the diocese of Krakow to Poznan, he withdrew through various practices; and he himself had his cathedral in 1412. Or he had an argument about it: because this thing in the Konstancja-Concilium, as soon as it was exalted, moved all the fathers gathered there to pity Peter, and probably Wiss would have returned to his bishopric if he died at that time did not happen. After his death, Wojciech was safer, the town was cut down and forests established; and he named Jastrzębie two parish churches, one in Wysokie in the Lublin region, the other in Korytnica in Sandomierskie, which he founded and donated. The altar of St. Agnes in the Kraków Cathedral nominated a tithe. In 1423 he was promoted to the dignity of the metropolis, and Primate left a monument there, founded two preambles, one theological and one legal, and erected an altar in Łęczyca in Kalisz. He returned to Kłodawa regularly and turned their church into a collegiate church. He left this world in 1436. A serious, sensible man and a great lover of his homeland, as Długosz and Damalew praised him in his story. in Vitis Archiepisc. Gnesn. Starowol. in Vitis Episcop. Cracov. There was a lot of money that he received from his successors, or even during his lifetime Rytwiany bought for them in Sandomierskie and in Łęczycko in Borzysławice, where he founded Prebends in both places. In a way, he was popular with the suspensions, as if he had been shown the collections and treasury of the former Polish kings, the vicars of the Poznan crowd, the former kings of Poland, about which the vicars had kept secret until then. From then on his successors from Rytwiany began to write: His brother was Scibor, the voivode of Łęczyca. [S. 467] he had twenty sons,                          

Herbowni.

Abrahamowicz, Adamowski, Albinowski, Baliński, Baranowski, Bartoszewski, Będzisławski, Bekierski, Bełdowski, Bełkowski, Belzecki, Beski, Biejkowski, Bielewski, Bierczyński, Bniński, Bobrowski, Bogusławski, Brzechozz, Brzeski, Brzylezińowski , Byszewski, Charbicki, Chełstowski, Chmielecki, Chmielowski, Chochoł, Chorczewski, Choszczewski, Chudkowski Ciołkowski, Cudzinowski, Czajka, Czepowski, Czernicki, Czeski, Czeszowski, Dąbńzski, Dęgzewski, Drozadzski, Drzązski, Domaszewski, Dobowski, Dobński, Dębora, Dobowski Drozdowski, Dziębzowski Geraltowski, Gibowski, Glinski; Gliszczyński, Głoskowski, Godziszewski, Golański, Goławski, Gołocki, Gorecki, Gostyński; Goszycki, Grabkowski, Grabowski, Grazimowski, Grębecki, Grodecki, Grzębski, Grzywieński, Hermanowski, Hoholewski, Iwański, Janikowski, Jankowski, Janowski, Jasiński; Jastrzembecki, Jastrzembski, Jędrzejowski, Jeżewski, Jodłownicki, Jurkowski, Kaczyński, Kamiński, Karski, Karsznicki, Kępski, Kierski, Kierznowski, Klembowski, Kliszewski, [p. 468] Konarski, Konopnicki, Koperni, Koścień, Kosnowo, Koziłowski, Kosmaczewski, Koziebrodzki, Kozłowski, Krasowski, Krasowski, Krzesimowski, Krzywański, Kucharski, Kuczkowski, Kudębrynys, Kukzie Łakomieowski, Kudębrynys, Kukzie Lutiski, Knia Łakomieowski, Kudębrynski, Knia Łakomirski, Knia Łakomieowski, Knowski, Kosmaczewski, Koziłowski, Kosmaczewski, Koziłowski, Kosmaczewski. Mączyński, Makomeski, Milewski, Małoklecki; Małuski, Mankowski, Marszewski, Maszkowski, Matczyński, Mayer, Międzyleski, Mierzyński, Mietelski, Milanowski, Milewski, Mirski, Mniewski, Mojkowski; Miski, Morski, Myśliszewski, Myszkowski, Nagora, Necz, Niedroski, Niegoszewski, Niemira, Niemsta, Niemygłowski, Niemyski, Nieśmierski, Niewęgłowski, Nowiewski, Nowomiejski, Nowowiejski, Obłow, Ozki, Olowski Pacowski; Pakosz, Papieski, Paprocki, Pawłowski, Pęcławski, Pełczycki, Pełka, Peszkowski, Piłchowski, Pniewski, Polikowski, Połubiński kniaź, Popławski, Porczyński, Poręba, Powczowski, Preisz, Przedpełbiews, Raczyński, Rozembarski, Roznowski, Rucki, Rudnicki, Rychłowski, Sądzyński, Sarnowski, Sasin, SEK, Siemiętkowski, Skopowski, Skorycki, Skrzetuski, Skrzyszowski, Śladkowski, Sławecki, Slugocki, Smolski, Sokolnicki, Srokowski, Starczewski, Stawiski, Strzelecki, Strzembosz, Strzeszkowski, Stużeński, Suchorski, Sulaczewski, Święcicki, Szaszewicz, Szeczemski, Summit, Szomański, Szuleński, Szomański, Szuleński. 469] Tański, Tłokiński, Tłubicki, Trzebiński, Trzepienski, Turłaj, Tynicki, Uchacz, Ulatowski, Wgkczewski, Wawrowski, Wężyk, Wężyk, Wierzbicki, Wierżbecki, Wydiecki Wodzi, Wolzi. Wyrozębski, Zadorski, Zakrzewski, Zalesicki, Zarski, Zawadzki, Zawidzki, Zawilski, Zawistowski, Zberowski; Zborowski, Zdan, Zdunowski, Zdzieszek, ockegocki, Żernowski, Zielonka, Zukowski, Żytkiewicz. Taczanowski, [p. 469] Tański, Tłokiński, Tłubicki, Trzebiński, Trzepienski, Turłaj, Tynicki, Uchacz, Ulatowski, Wgkczewski, Wawrowski, Wążyk, Wężyk, Wierzbicki, Wierżbecki, Wydiecki Wodzi, Wolzi, ński. Wyrozębski, Zadorski, Zakrzewski, Zalesicki, Zarski, Zawadzki, Zawidzki, Zawilski, Zawistowski, Zberowski; Zborowski, Zdan, Zdunowski, Zdzieszek, ockegocki, Żernowski, Zielonka, Zukowski, Żytkiewicz. Taczanowski, [p. 469] Tański, Tłokiński, Tłubicki, Trzebiński, Trzepienski, Turłaj, Tynicki, Uchacz, Ulatowski, Wgkczewski, Wawrowski, Wężyk, Wężyk, Wierzbicki, Wierżbecki, Wydiecki Wodzi, Wolzi. Wyrozębski, Zadorski, Zakrzewski, Zalesicki, Zarski, Zawadzki, Zawidzki, Zawilski, Zawistowski, Zberowski; Zborowski, Zdan, Zdunowski, Zdzieszek, ockegocki, Żernowski, Zielonka, Zukowski, Żytkiewicz.                     

In addition to the families mentioned here, later heraldists such as Kuropatnicki, Małachowski, Wielądek and others add this coat of arms:

Borejko, Brühl, Butkiewicz, Chiłewski, Cieniejowski, Czesiejko, Grzegorzewski, Jeżowski, Koczański, Koczowski, Kopeszy, Lemnicki, Lgocki, Mosakowski Piniński, Protaszewicz, Przedpolizubi, Skajewicz, Przedpolizubi, Raciciboriews, Skorczyzubski, Sytwiański, Skajewski, Skajewski, Sasytwiackski, Sytwiański, Skajewski , Skurski, Suleński, Sumowski, Szczemski Xiążki, Zakowski, Zawadzicki, Zólkowski, Zub, Zub Zdanowicz.

However, not all of them use the same form of the Jastrzębie coat of arms: some on the red field carry the falcon, which stands on two horseshoes and has three ostrich feathers on their helmets. In other cases, a hawk or raven on a helmet has a ring in its mouth, not a horseshoe in its legs, like Kierscy's. Konopnicki and Leszczyński. In the Rudnicki family, the jastrząb has a horseshoe in its mouth on a helmet. In Miedzyrzycz near Ostrog I saw such a coat of arms with a star above the horseshoe and the cross, as is usual in the coat of arms of Jastrzębiec, and three ostrich feathers on the helmet. On the tombstone of Jan Rokiczany the pseudo-bishop of Prague already has a horseshoe in the middle [p. 470] rivet; a cross but a star: as Balbinus lib testifies. J. cap. 10. Some say of him that he was the son of Kowalski. Haubicki and Płachecki have a different shape of the hawk, as it was said under the letter H. In the Niemyski family, in the horseshoe, the city of the cross, the arrow that is engraved straight up is straight but torn from the ear. There are some who wear a shield over the horseshoe and cross of a standing raven, with its mouth turned in the right shield, a ring in the mouth that is turned with the diamond facing down. Others put an arrow over the horseshoe, but without feathers, on the apple, that is, in the world, on the helmet, three ostrich feathers, like Mirskis: everyone in his place is spoken of. Others above the horseshoe fasten the hunter's trunk in a helmet, three ostrich feathers and the Kierznowskis without any indication. Others in the horseshoe place two arrows and a cross in the middle, as Szaszewiczs. Others put three stars on the horseshoe and three ostrich feathers on the helmet, like Turłaj. in the right shield with his mouth turned, in his mouth he holds the ring with the diamond facing down. Others put an arrow over the horseshoe, but without feathers, on the apple, that is, in the world, on the helmet, three ostrich feathers, like Mirskis: everyone in his place is spoken of. Others above the horseshoe fasten a hunter's trunk without reference in a helmet, three ostrich feathers and a Kierznowskis. Others in the horseshoe place two arrows and a cross in the middle, as Szaszewiczs. Others put three stars on the horseshoe and three ostrich feathers on the helmet, like Turłaj. in the right shield with his mouth turned, in his mouth he holds the ring with the diamond facing down. Others put an arrow over the horseshoe, but without feathers, on the apple, that is, in the world, on the helmet, three ostrich feathers, like Mirskis: everyone in his place is spoken of. Others above the horseshoe fasten the hunter's trunk in a helmet, three ostrich feathers and the Kierznowskis without any indication. Others in the horseshoe place two arrows and a cross in the middle, as Szaszewiczs. Others put three stars on the horseshoe and three ostrich feathers on the helmet, like Turłaj. three ostrich feathers, Bako Kierznowski. Others in the horseshoe place two arrows and a cross in the middle, as Szaszewiczs. Others put three stars on the horseshoe and three ostrich feathers on the helmet, like Turłaj. three ostrich feathers, Bako Kierznowski. Others in the horseshoe place two arrows and a cross in the middle, as Szaszewiczs. Others put three stars on the horseshoe and three ostrich feathers on the helmet, like Turłaj.                                

In my place I spoke about the Domaszewskis of the Jastrzębiec coat of arms, here I add. N. Domaszewski from Kochanowska fathered seven daughters, two of them Bernardine nuns, Justyna and Urszula, the third and fourth were Suffczyński, the fifth Anna Kiełczewska, the midshipman from Lubelska, the sixth Nowosielska, the seventh Rudzińska: three sons, Kazimierz the Swordfish Łukowski, who moved from Marcjanna Marchocka's widow to Żoł-kiewski, had two daughters, a Justyna, 1 month vote for Włodek hunter Żydaczewski, 2 for Aleksander Wronowski, the other for Konstancja for Michał Wronowski: five sons, Mikołaj Karmelita Bossy, Franciszek the Unmarried, Jan, his wife Strzelecka, Michał Reformat, Bernard Jezuita. The Stanisław judge Radomska, the second son from Kochanowska, joined Podkańska for life and gave him two daughters, of whom Katarzyna was married to Balcer Brzeziński. of the magistrate of Radom: the second angel in the order of the PP. Bernardyn, she sacrificed herself to God: five sons, of whom Franciszek Kobyłecka had behind her, and Balcer died with her descendants Wojciech in a clerical state with our nuns in Ostrog in 1718. Jan and Antoni, writers Radomski, his wife Duninovna. Jakub, the bailiff of Sandomierski, the third son of Kochanowska, his wife Brodowska, of whom four sons, Franciszek Jesuit, died in Poznan in 1724. Stanisław, Tomasz and Mikołaj, two daughters, one of whom was Konstancja. Jam loc. He put some of them under the coat of arms of Nieczuja, but they belong here. Jan and Antoni the writer Radomsky, whose wife was Duninovna. Jakub, the bailiff of Sandomierski, the third son of Kochanowska, his wife Brodowska, of whom four sons, Franciszek Jesuit, died in Poznan in 1724. Stanisław, Tomasz and Mikołaj, two daughters, one of whom was Konstancja. Jam loc. He put some of them under the coat of arms of Nieczuja, but they belong here. Jan and Antoni the writer Radomsky, whose wife is Duninovna. Jakub, the bailiff of Sandomierski, the third son of Kochanowska, his wife Brodowska, of whom four sons, Franciszek Jesuit, died in Poznan in 1724. Stanisław, Tomasz and Mikołaj, two daughters, one of whom was Konstancja. Jam loc. He put some of them under the coat of arms of Nieczuja, but they belong here.               

the coat of arms of Jelita (vol. 4, p. 482-485)

Intestinal herb. There should be three gold or yellow copies arranged in the shape of a star in a red box so that the two sides are cut with the ends and the blade facing up. The medium is straight tip down with half a goat jumping over it. The helmet twisted its forelegs to the right of the shield and had horns on its head. Fern. in the fol. 1082. O herb fol. 191. Ok. Volume. 1. fol. 335. Jewels fol: 54. The origins of the coat of arms were arranged as described and all lured for the year of our Lord 1331: when Władysław the Short triumphantly defeated the German knights, so that only forty and some of his men lay down in the square and on The next day he walked around the battlefield among the Polish corpses and attacked one of his knights, Florian Szariusz, who stumbled valiantly in this battle and suffered from many wounds. He pushed his intestines into his bowels with his own hand. When the king saw him, out of pity he said to himself: “How is this considerable soldier tormented?”, For which, after almost exhausting his last strength, he replied: “It is not so much that it bothers me and as you see, king as an evil neighbor who lives in one of my villages plagues me. " -" Do not worry, righteous man, if you get out of here at once, I will free you from neighborly bondage: "- how Elokietek freed him and the Lord struck him. Some understand that he then wore the goat's native coat of arms on the helmet and placed three copies with which he pierced it on the shield; but Długosz does not say so, and yes, as Paprocki thinks, if he had had such a variation of the coat of arms, he would not have left the ancient historians and added this: and Długosz clearly writes, at first he was injured three copies, but with large ones Wounds [p. 483], then he adds that since then the Koźleroga coat of arms (because it was previously called that) has been given a new name by Szariusz Jelit, there is no mention of anything in the coat of arms in the coat of arms. We then know that this coat of arms, as it is used by the Jelitczyks today, is older than that battle. If someone had used the goat in the coat of arms beforehand, some descendants could have found it the next day and sealed it with such a shape as if this Sharia was still alive, there were already many houses of this coat of arms weapons, as you will see below. And the new coat of arms wouldn't benefit everyone but Sharius' own offspring. From Starodawny it is then a coat of arms, and even for the pagan monarchs in Poland it is difficult to guess for Lego's past, where it is well deserved in its coat of arms, where it originated. I know that before that the copy of the mark was of royal dignity, Bina Manu Sommer Crispantem Hastilia Ferro Memorat, Virgil. Aeneid. With Plutarch's testimony, Lysippus gave Alexander the Great a copy in hand when he made his statue. And in the pagan superstitious age of Bo, they gave copies in their hands as a token of their deity and power over Mars. Pallad and so says Cyril. We know from Pompey's Festa that as a token of their bravery, copies were given to the knights, including Lucio Sicinio Dentato, eighteen copies for his courage, shown on various occasions how Valer is doing. Maximus lib. 3. cap. 2. fol. 136. and Lipsius de milit. Roman. lib. 5. fol. 448. I also know that Sarus, the king of the Goths, once flourished, that the Radagas hit the head and took away his slaves by 406. Parisius in Slavia understands that this name in our Poland is from the descendants of Grau from this Sarus. He also says that this coat of arms, acquired from one of the Sarmatians during the war with the Romans, was pierced with three spears as it proves that the Polish copies are longer and the Roman ones are shorter and have the shape that in the coat of arms of Arms, like that, are called sarissae. In other countries I don't know anyone would use a similar coat of arms: just Petra Sancta's hat. 63. claims that the Carloveusz and Great Britain have three gold copies with silver ends in their coat of arms.                                    

Ancestors of this house.

Zdzisław, Archbishop of Gniezno XVI. to say that Janicius relies on the Ciołek coat of arms, but I, along with most authors, believe that it belongs here: he entered this cathedral in 1184 from the Gniezno canon, where he sat for years [p. 484] fifteen he became the whole image of a good shepherd, because the clergy also tightened ecclesiastical discipline and enriched the cathedral church with silver and pearls, which were rich in gold, overgrown fields, he founded many villages and small towns, he went to the Lord in 1199, to pay for his works. In his story he attributes Długosz, the Synod of Łęczyca for which the curses were issued, for all ecclesiastical goods, but Damalew. in Mtis Archiep. Gnesn. It is rightly understood that it was Piotr Antecessor who was his job.     

Thomas, the Bishop of Wroclaw in Silesia, chose 1232, about which Długosz in history, husband and science and unusual cleverness; However, he suffered greatly from this pastoral function, from Bolesław, the bald prince of Legnica, in Gorka, because the property of the abbot S. Mariae de Aranda, where he had gone to consecrate the church, conquered and with Bogufał the parish priest and thrown in prison with Herkard the canon and in the Ulaj castle, where old age had no pity on a bishop, until he was troubled by the prince, until he was exhausted, what he himself wanted; After he left captivity, he soon passed over to the freedom of the Sons of God in 1267. He ruled this cathedral with great piety for 35 years. Dlugosz story.   

Bernard, the Archbishop of Lemberg, became a prelate around 1380 in his enthusiasm for ecclesiastical goods and recognized rights. Scrobiszov. in Vitis Archiep. Halicien. et Leopol. He died around 1391. N. Schary, the star of Bobrownica on Dobrzyńska Street for Władysław Fr. Opolskiego 1396. Długosz. Piotr, the castellan of Sandomierz in 1336.       

The whole Jelitczyk family understands their oldest nest, Mojkowice in Sieradzka Land, in Piotrkowski Poviat, next to which there is a castle not far from the Pilca River, the old brick castle that Surdeg has already devastated, and this was the property of Florian Sariusz , the local knight, was Żegota from Mojkowice, in 1433 ensign of Sieradzki. in the statute. fol. 52nd and Mikołaj, ensign also Sieradzki 1451th in Łask. fol. 83. Florian and Żegota, brothers of the heirs in Mojkowice, reminded Paprocki that Florian had accepted Wroników and Woźniki as well as, egota and Laski into the department in 1410.     

Herbowni.

Anszeński, Bielski, Biesiad, Boglewski, Borzobochaty, Borzymski, Chilchen, Cieszanowski, Czeczel, Czerkawski, Czermiński, Dąbrowski, [p. 485] Dębowski, Dobrzyński, Dziduski, Dzieciigtkowski, Dziewałtowski, Dziugłowski, Fanuel, French, Gajewski, Gawłowski, Geometer, Gerdud, Głowa, Gołocki, Gomoliński, Gorlewski, Jajkapzyński, Lucaziński, Lzelcochiński, Lucnochiński, Luczniński, Lucni Łochiński, Lzelcochniński, Lucazniński, Lzelckniński, Jelitłochniński, Litosłckniński, Jelitłowski, Fanuel. Łukowski; Małecki, Makowski, Marcinowski, Michałowski, Mietelski, Mirski, Misiowski, Modrzewski, Mokrski, alorawicki, Mrowiński, Myśliborski, Pachołowiecki, Paczanowski, Pajewski, Paprocki, Pieczkowski, Rajernygni, Saski, Sickyczkowski, Pieniążek, Radogoski, Skowski, Sickyczkowski, Pieniążek, Radogoski ,owski Skorkowski, Sokolnicki, Stokowski,   

In addition to the families mentioned here, many Niesiecki themselves admit this coat of arms during their work, and even more are used by Kuropatnicki, Małachowski and Wielądek. These families are as follows: 

Białecki, Bielawski, Biesiadecki, Dziaduski, Dzyryłł, Frank, Hilchen, Jakliński, Kicki, Koziaroski, Kozierowski, Krainski, Lasota, Libicki, Lneśmieński, iaziński, Pijakowski, Wrociboriczski, Szyrziechowski, Szyrczepowski, Wojciechowski, Szyrczepowski, Wojciechowski, Szyrczepowski, Wojciechowski, Szyrczepowski, Wojciechowowski, Szyrczepowski, Wojciechowski, Wojciechowowski, Zawisza, echelechoński, Zieliński.

Mirski from the Bialynia coat of arms in the Principality of Lithuania, however, with the difference that the arrow above the horseshoe is not on the cross, but through the apple as if it had pierced it, only its feathers slightly below the apple, and most of it over the apple; that is (as I know it is not an apple, but a full moon, three ostrich feathers on the helmet. Neither Paprocki nor Okolski have written about it. Sebastian Mirski, District Judge Bracławski, his son Jarosław, Chamberlain Bracławski. Constit. 1662 fol. 5. Sebastian's brother Hrehora, the guardian of the Lithuanian principality, a royal colonel, a brave soldier like Calvin, who is granted to him by the constitution of 1623, fol. 16, when she gave him a certain sum to be released from the captivity into which he was and sent him to Seym. Constit. Fol. 23 in 1647; he had a wife Kapaszczewska, of whom his son died in Szkłów [p. 421] from Moscow, when the paternal hussar banner led to battle in 1664. There were six daughters . of these, was a behind Oborski from Roch-arms, the second behind Kłokocki, the standard-bearer of Minski, the third and fourth behind Czyż by Stanisław Niezabitowski from Lubicz coat of arms. the fifth behind the Brzostow ski Ligęza of the Półkozic coat of arms, the sub-capital of Rawski, the sixth behind Cudnowski. Jędrzej the hunter Nowogrodzki. Constit. 1703. fol. 31. N. Deputy of the Lithuanian Tribunal 1697. Some believe that the Mirski house came from Vladimir, the Ruthenian monarch who had a son among his twelve sons, Svyatopełk, Prince Tver, who left two sons, Jędrzej and Dmitri. the dukes of Tver, from whom they went princes Czetwertyński and Mirscy: this is Geneal. Ogiński engraved on the map. Józefat Antoni, Marshal Bracławski, envoy when he was drafted in 1733, and before that Ensign Bracławski, lieutenant to Prince Radziwiłł.          

Antoni Mirski in 1778. Chamberlain Bracławski. - Antoni, the Szawelski district judge. - 1788. Jan Richter Bracławski. - Tadeusz swordsman. - Krasicki.    

Mirski from the Jelita coat of arms . N. had Katarzyna Pachońska behind her.  

Rogowski, Szaszor coat of arms , in Rawskie Voivodeship. Stanisław Rogowski in the country of Warsaw 1674. Jan [p. 127] in "Mud". N. Rogowska, Prokop Lipski Castellan von Rogoziński spouse, Ale Sterilis. Paprocki and Okolski lay here Olbiega von Rogów, an important husband who was the hetman of Witold, the Lithuanian prince, his son Olbieg, Castellan Rawski, heir to Rogów, Kalina, Olsza, Rawica, Bronowice, Rapoty, Wągrach in 1465. Mrogi, whose descendants they left with no male successor, went with their daughters the fortune to someone else's house, and the Rogowscy family remained behind by a few. Of whom Stanisław Rogowski was the bailiff for King Stefan, a man with a big heart, in Pskow during the storm, in the great Luki, in the caves: he took Turowla with Korycki to a small post office. N. had Kozierowska behind him.       

This old house and the expanding Duchy of Mazovia are evidenced by numerous transactions in the Warsaw Fortress files, some of which are only listed here. 1598. feria secunda post dominicam Jubilate in the Curia regia Varsaviensi, Nobilis Joannes and Stanislaus 1664. anno Sabbatho post festum Nativitatis S. Joannis Baptistae Generosus Stanislaus Rogowski red magister Sacrae Regiae Majestatis and Catharina generosi Georgia Mirski excubiarum post fistum article 1693 Margarethae V. and M. in the Curia regia Varsavievsi Gener. Stanislaus Rogowski Rotmagister SR Majestatis, Generose Joanni Rogowski filio suo bona Paprotnia in Palatinatu Raven. Donat. Article 1694. The April 5th Fool's Day between W. JPP. Franciszek and Katarzyna née Gulczewska Bi [p. 128] 1 Mon Voto with Marianna Młocka, the older wife of Zakroczym, with this sterile. 2 to voto with Katarzyna Bromirska, the standard-bearer of Płock, with her he leaves a son, Ignacy, and two daughters: Marianna and Cyryl. - Wielądek heraldry.           

Czetwertyńscy Princes coat of arms. Czetwertyńscy dukes use two coats of arms. The first and most common is this form, a young man who is not fully clothed and is sitting on a white horse that you have neither a seat nor a bridle on. His right shield runs at a gallop, his right hand in the middle of the lance, his left upper part, which is kicked by a black-winged dragon, pierces the gaping gullet. The head of the dragon also points to the right shield, to the front legs of the horse and lies in the shield. So I saw him under the coats of arms of the princes of Czetwertyński in the Lutsk Church of the OO. Successful Dominicans and in other printable sermons brings the love of Jansonius to an armed man on horseback. The second coat of arms is the new moon, not full, silver-colored, both horns are lowered, a gold star with six points girds it, just like the coat of arms of Leliwa, two swords, one on the right side. Second from the left, the same moon pierced from above, the color of the swords was white, the handles were black, the area of ​​the coat of arms was red over the helmet of the Duke Miter. They bear the first coat of arms on the document that they come from the former Ruthenians, who boasted with this coat of arms. The second is that it is also their own, and to know for some heroic works given to them, to know it is from the burial in the Lutsk Church of the Dominican Fathers on the tombstones of the coats of arms of the Dukes of Czetwertyń from the legacy of their in Czetwertnia painted painting from Rajmund Pigłowski's Kazan, to which he gave the title of Peace: For this family, some of these family members put the first coat of arms of the rider in the center, the second of the first moon on the right side, including four coats of arms. on the document that blood came out of the old Russian Jedynowładców, which boasted about this coat of arms. The second is that it is also their own and to know for some heroic works given to them from the graves of the Dominican fathers in the Lutsk church on the tombstones of the coat of arms of the dukes of Czetwertyń, from the legacy of their paintings painted in Czetwertnia, by Rajmund Pigłowski to which he bestowed the title of Peace: For this family, part of the family put the first coat of arms of the rider in the middle, the second of the first moon. On the right-hand side, they put together four coats of arms. on the document that the old Russian Jedynowładców had blood, which boasted about this coat of arms. The second is that it is also their own, and to know for some heroic works given to them, to know it is from the burial in the Lutsk Church of the Dominican Fathers on the tombstones of the coats of arms of the Dukes of Czetwertyń from the legacy of their in Czetwertnia painted painting from Rajmund Pigłowski's Kazan, to which he gave the title of Peace: For this family, some of these family members put the first coat of arms of the rider in the center, the second of the first moon on the right side, including four coats of arms.            

Jędrzej Suski in his book, which he called Italy, or a conversation between an Italian and a Pole about freedoms and [p. 256] on the freedoms of the Polish nation in 1606, edited by Augurius Metafrast and other Greek and Russian writers from here the origins of the first coat of arms. Around 300 after the birth of Christ, during the reign of the Greek prince Theodore, he appeared in his homeland in the province of Achaia, where St. Jędrzej received the martyr's crown, the dragon is strangely large, not only for cattle, but also for the people. Theodore the Prince, with a stranger help from God, attacked him with a horse, pierced him with a lance and cut off his head. Since then, his armed husband's descendants pierced the person on horseback, with the dragon's spear piercing him. took his coat of arms. Later, when the Romans took over Asia and fled their homeland to Europe in three large regiments, some of them settled on the Dnieper. They founded the great city they called Kiev from the spar of the copy in their coat of arms, and therefore Latin historians from Kiev called them Drewlans: others of them stayed on the Wolha River, they built Jarosław, who were called Roxolans. The city of Vilnius, the third on the Neris, was founded by the Litvanen and Liwones, who acquired it. However, the Slovaks called all of these provinces with one name Russia, from place to place with large troops. Hence the princes of Kiev or the Drewlani of the armed rider, Moscow of the naked man who pierced the dragon, Lithuania of the cannon rider, a bare sword in hand, washed away in the coat of arms. Póta Suski. However, this author has included a lot of uncertain things in his novel and disagrees with almost all of our historians, as everyone will judge by what they will write about the Russian princes below.           

Cambdenus in the UK for print says that during his time in the village of Riblechester in Lancastria a stone was dug on which was carved a naked person, sitting on a horse with no seat or bridle, both hands carrying a lance and riding a horse on one Man who lay naked on them all at once and in the hand of the rider handed the rider something square: between the horse and the man there were two letters DM under him and the inscription like Gaul. Sarmatian, the rest of the letters were read by antiquity in such a way that it was impossible to read them according to the testimony of this author: he adds his own sentence that this inscription could have been translated in this way. Centurio Alae Sarmatarum, the two higher letters DM meant the church number five hundred, but with this shape these letters can never mean five hundred known things: they cannot be interpreted in this way by Dux Moschoviae either. for at that time the world had heard nothing of the Moscow princes; soon this [p. 257] the title began. Apparently Cambdenus must have seen himself that the city of the dragon that this husband pierced was the man beneath. he payed. Whatever it is, you will know that this coat of arms of a naked man on a horse has long been normal in Sarmatia. And I don't see that anyone has sealed themselves with this coat of arms, only the Moscow tsars and the dukes of Czetwertyński: because the dukes of Ostrog had a rider in their coat of arms, but an armed one: they must also talk about other ducal houses. that in Sarmatia this coat of arms of a naked man on a horse was common for a long time. And I don't see that anyone has sealed themselves with this coat of arms, only the Moscow Tsars and the Dukes of Czetwertyński: because the Dukes of Ostrog had a rider in their coat of arms, but an armed one: they must also talk about other ducal houses. that in Sarmatia this coat of arms of a naked man on a horse was common for a long time. And I don't see that anyone has sealed themselves with this coat of arms, only the Moscow Tsars and the Dukes of Czetwertyński: because the Dukes of Ostrog had a rider in their coat of arms, but an armed one: I must also talk about other ducal houses.             

Everyone agrees that the princes of Czetwertyńscy emerged from the Włodzimierz Ruski monarchy, as Starowolski fol testified. 735. This one, for among the twelve sons he fathered, he was to leave the son of Prince Swantopełek, and the latter according to the Ogiński genealogy on the map formed (as I will mention elsewhere, the two sons of Prince Tver , Jędrzej and Dimitri were the ancestors of the two royal houses of. For this reason the dukes of Czetwertyń of the Swantopełks write to each other so as not to remember that they had left the body of Prince Swantopełk. She shone on the Polish throne, closed Marriage contracts, and his son Alexander, when he shared his fortune with other brothers, he began to write about it as Czetwertyński prince when he was given Czetwertnia from the river in Styria. Iwan Puciatycz von Czetwertyński recalls: Okolski vol. 1. f 547. During the reign of Alexander the King, he shared a paternal substance with five brothers of the Korecki princes, Fiedor, Ivan, Wasil, Lev and Aleksande r. Prince Andrzej Fiedorowicz, the son of Fiedor or Teodor Czetwertyński, from his inheritance, which he had in Wołyń at that time, according to the law of the Vilnius Sejm (because Volhynia belonged to Lithuania at that time), he had twelve horses on a military expedition should set up. Metryka Wołyńska 1528. Four horses, the second Jędrzej prince Czetwertyński. Six horses from Prince Fiedor. At that time one of them had Czuryłowna, the castellan of Przemyśl. Olympia Rzewuścior. Pigłowski says that in 1519 one of the houses near Sokal bravely fell on the square with the Tatars. Anna, Duchess Czetwertyńska, Janusz of Prince Zbaraski, the Voivode of Bracławski, the mother of Jerzy, the castellan of Cracow, and Krzysztof of the Crown Crown. Fern. Ogrod f. 208. Stefan, Chamberlain Bracławski, is mentioned in the 1613 constitutions. From Bokijovna he fathered Elijah, the royal captain, [p. 258] In 1629 he was sent to Seym, from where he was a member of the Radom Finance Court Constit. fol. 7. and 1638. to be paid to the army, Constit fol. 2. He was also a member of the tribunal: a chivalrous man who for seventeen years did not come down from the field against Tatars in Podolia, Sweden in Prussia, rebellious Cossacks, he was always brave, died in 1640. Starowolski in Monumen. Zachariasz, about whom the constitution of 1629. fol. twenty. the same, it seems to me, was the Starost of Racibórz in 1648. Electoral rules.                    

Mikołaj, castellan of Minsk, 1658. Military computer, envoy of conscription 1632. Acta interregni and deputy of the Bracławski Crown Court 1647. Jansonius: He left two sons, Mikołaj and Aleksander. Stefan in Żywotowo and Kniazia Krynica, Ensign von Wołyński, brother of Mikołaj the castellan, son of Chamberlain Bracławski, a cavalier who was memorable during the Swedish invasion, near Cudnow against two Polish banners, and assisted with a squadron of dragoons his own effort. During the mass mobilization he was a colonel in the Volyn Voivodeship. This Stefan's mother, Katarzyna from Leśniów from Grzymała, his sister of the same castellan Wołyńska, and apparently Lubowiecka or Bieniewska, because at that time they were the castellans of Volhynia, that is around 1665. Sparta Polska fol. 143. Where this author describes at length with the sure revolution of this house. This ensign had a son, Włodzimierz, the Starost von Siewiński, but at the age of eight he disappeared from the world in 1673. Dominic, who had entered under the name of Jack, ended this mortal life in him splendidly. Alexander, Stefan's brother, died during the Swedish War when Janusz, Duke Czetwertyński, was killed by a Cossack saber in Tulczyn. Pigłowski. They use the prince's blood so lavishly for the good of this homeland. However, the Father led the world in the direction of the order of St. Dominic, who had entered under the name of Jack, ended this mortal life in him splendidly. Alexander, Stefan's brother, died during the Swedish War when Janusz, Duke Czetwertyński, was killed by a Cossack saber in Tulczyn. Pigłowski. They use the prince's blood so lavishly for the good of this homeland. However, the Father led the world to the law of St. Dominic, who had entered under the name of Jack, ended this mortal life in him splendidly. Alexander, Stefan's brother, died during the Swedish War when Janusz, Duke Czetwertyński, was killed by a Cossack saber in Tulczyn. Pigłowski. They use the prince's blood so lavishly for the good of this homeland.                    

Grzegorz, Chamberlain of Łucki, member of the Sejm from 1627. Constit. fol. 8 and 1633. Constit fol. 35 and 1638, from where he was a member of the Radom Tribunal. Constit. f. 21. But there was still a schism with him: Jędrzej, the royal captain of our Łuck College, wrote three thousand five hundred of his two sons in Czertach in 1678, for which he owed him eternal gratitude: his son was Jerzy, who took Izabela Horainova. Wacław, the second son of Grzegorz Chamberlain, Ensign Żytomierski, was a member of the Seym in 1667. Constit. fol. 21. His wife Ludwika Wojnianka and their son Jędrzej fell in love with Anna Czaplicowna. [S. 259] Gedeon, ruler of Lutsk, 1681. Wacław's cousin. Hieronim, Grzegorz's son, had Marianna Wielogłowska behind her, who was primo voto for Bartliński. Stefan, Chamberlain Bracławski, born of Konstancja Kosakowska,            

This information about this family was given by Niesiecki, but later the genealogy of this house was collected by Franciszek and Karol Żabicki, some from the found books of Russian cathedrals and monasteries, some from the old and present activities of this house, and arranged for printing in Łuck in 1793 ., which Wielądek also included in heraldry: However, the genealogy about the Ruthenian princes is incorrect in some places. appreciates the reader to compare with the genealogy in the history of the Polish nation of Ad. Including Naruszewicz, but if we are given a more detailed description of the Czetwertyński family, I am including them in their entirety.  

The first prince to come to the Dnieper founded the city of Kiev. He had brothers named Szczyka, Korew and a sister who sat on the banner of a young man without bridle on a horse who was sitting on a viper and a spear that was used by three sons.

Rurik, the first prince of Ruthenia, d. H. After the army was moved from place to place, that is, named after the former commander Rus, others write 861 Prince Roksolański in Kiev.

Sperma is the second childless son.

Tywor, the third son without a child.

The descendants of Rurik from Prince Ruthenian.

Ihor, the first son to be killed by treason for the submission of Kiev and Derewiański. He married Olha, that is, at baptism, Helena Hostomysławowna died, who was the godfather of Jan Zawisza to the Greek emperor in Constantinople, died and was buried in Kiev, Vladimir raised her bones sacred from the ground and the Patriarch of Constantinople was one of the saints. They write about her in various ways, as if Włodzimierz were their grandson, and they bring this sick father to her brother who was born here in Svyatoslav.  

Sviatoslav's son, the second prince of Rus, was to die soon after his father, leaving behind three sons, but only one of these is used here for the procedure. [S. 260]  

A descendant of Sviatoslav, Prince Ruthenian.

Włodzimierz, the first Grand Duke and the only ruler of all Rus, Kijowski, Nowogrodzki, Połocki, Turowski, Rostowski, Muromski, Derewlański, Włodzimierski, Turokański, Smoleński and all of Volhynia, the victor of Moscow, Koreom, married Anna. the daughter of a Greek writer when he and Faith The Greek was adopted in 990. He is one of the saints whose head is in the Kiev church, and now they are showing it. This man had twelve sons, many of whom went many houses. Historians attribute this to Włodzimierz with this policy, that he shared his sons with principalities.  

Izasław, the first son.

Mścisław, the second son, of whom the sons of three went, and from these the line of the Princes of Ruthenians and Halicki grew, for whose expression the sons of Włodzimierz the Great are written out.

Descendants of Mścisław, the son of the second great Włodzimierz.

Mścisław, the first son of Mścisław, Prince Halicki, who was robbed of his brothers from the Principality of Halych, took advantage of the support of Kazimierz, the righteous Polish prince who was poisoned in 1182.

Włodzimierz, the second son, freed the principality of Halych from the Hungarian invasions, inherited his brother from Mstisław and died in 1197. He had a son who later laid the third dream of Mstisław.

A descendant of Włodzimierz, Duke of Halicki, son of Mścisław, Duke of Halicki and grandson of Włodzimierz the Great.

The Roman prince of Halych, who had conquered Włodzimierz, Jaźwingia, i.e. Podlasie, part of Lithuania and other princes from all of Russia, declared himself the sole ruler in 1200. killed in Zawichost at the battle of Leszek, Prince of Poland, of whom the following five sons remained. 

Descendants of Prince Roman von Halych as the sole ruler.

Mścisław, the first son.

Vasilko's second son, Lutsk, had his eyes gouged out.

Daniel, the third son with a crown, sent to Rome by an envoy from Opiss, who was crowned with the king of Halych. The state of Halych was captured by Leszek, the white prince of Poland, and Koloman was returned. He had a son and a daughter and they follow.

Descendants of Daniel Król Halicki.

Lew Daniłowicz Król Halicki founded Lemberg.

Maria, daughter of Troidemma, wife of the Duke of Mazowiecki

The fall of the Kingdom of Halych in 1340. The Kingdom of Halych on the Troidem of the Mazovian prince, the sons of Maria's sister Leon, were born, of whom the elder Bolesław perished by a secret order of the Rus princes with a certain poison. His other brother also died. For Casimir the Great, King of Poland, he renounced his rights and took the land of Belska from the king. Then Halicz became part of Poland in the Ruthenian province.  

The continuation of the descendants of Mścisław, the son of the second great Włodzimierz.

Wszewołod, that is Wszewołodzimierz, the third son of Duke Halicki, and brother of Mścisław, Duke of Halicki, Duke Bełski, part of Halicki, from whom three daughters are descended. [S. 261]  

The descendants of Wszewoł, that is Wszewododzimierz.

Anastasia's first daughter, wife of Bolesław, the fourth Polish prince, in 1151.

Eudoxia, the second daughter of Miecisław Polski, brother of Bolesław, the fourth Polish prince.

Helena, the third daughter of Kazimierz, the second, the third brother of Bolesław, the fourth Prince of Poland, wife and thus the Duchy of Bełskie, moved to Poland.

The continuation of the sons of Vladimir the Great.

Sviatoslav, the third son of Włodzimierz the Great.

Wiszesław, the fourth son,

Vsevolod, the fifth son,

Svyatopelk, the sixth son, Prince Tver, Kiev, was taken over, two brothers younger than him, Prince Bread and Prince Borys, he killed, but twice he was defeated by Jarosław, the one who went to Bolesław, the first king of Poland for help in the year 1008. This was followed by a daughter and two sons, and he himself was to die in Bohemia.

Descendants of Światopełek, the sixth son of Vladimir the Great.

Zbisław Bolesław, the third Wrymouth King of Poland, his wife died in 1168

Dmitri, the first son of Światopełek, the author of Polski Starowolski, mistakenly suspected that this had followed the princes of Czetwertyński and that the Ogiński genealogy was carried out in Vilnius and was even more missing.

Andrzej, the second son of Światopełek.

The continuation of the sons of Vladimir the Great.

Jarosław, the seventh son of Włodzimierz the Great, Prince Rzezański, declared himself the only ruler of Russia after the death of his own brother Światopołek after the death of the Polish king Bolesław the Brave and the refusal of the Polish king Mieczysław. He had five sons and two daughters who, after counting the rest of Włodzimierz's sons large, will be placed.

Stanisław, the eighth son of Włodzimierz, the great Father Dr.

Bracisław, the ninth son: ninth, from whom Juria Włodzimirowicz, Prince Dolhoruki, went. (According to Naruszewicz, Poświzd and Sudysław.) 

Boris, the eleventh son, killed by Prince Sviatopolk at the baptism of Roman Prince Rostovsky in 1004. In Wyszogród, buried, counted among the saints.

Baptism of the twelfth son of Bread David, Prince Muromski killed by Prince Światopołek's brother in Sniatyn in 1007.

Descendants of Yaroslav, the son of Vladimir the Great.

Izasław, the first son, the Prince of Kiev, who was pressed from Kiev by his brothers Stanisław and Wszewold, asked Boleław in 1069 for the help of the second Polish king. Bolesław Łuck, Włodzimierz, Chełm, Kiev took it upon themselves, but after the Rus princes were reconciled, Bolesław Król also left the principalities: Izasław, who was later attacked by the Polovtsy, was pierced by a copy, died, buried in the Tenth Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary In a marble tomb in Kiev he had two sons who were later named.

Swiatosław, the second son of Jarosław, Prince Rzezański, Prince Czerniechowski and, as others write, Prince Pruński, is buried [p. 262] in Czerniechów, in the church of Spasa, he left a son who lies here. 

A descendant of Sviatoslav, the son of the second Yaroslav.

Dawid, son of Światosław, Prince Czerniechowski and Pruński, had three successive sons here.

Descendants of David, son of Sviatoslav, Prince Czerniechowski.

Mikołaj Swiatosz, son of David and Humen Pieczar Kijowskie, whose body is shown in caves to this day, is one of the saints.

Izasław, the second son of David.

Włodzimierz, the third son of David.

The continuation of the descendants of Jarosław, the son of Włodzimierz the Great.

buried there in Kiev in the church of S. Sophia; He had ten sons, after releasing the rest of the sons of Jarosław, Prince Rzezański, they will express themselves. 

Jarosław, the fourth son, gave the white Polish prince his daughter Grzymisława as a wife for Leszek, and Blessed Salomea, born in 1202, was handed over to Koloman, the Hungarian prince, in 1215. Then Leszek Halicz, Pzemyśl and gave it as a dowry.

Jaropełk, the fifth son of Prince Rzezański.

Wyzesława, the first daughter of Prince Jarosław, the son of Włodzimierz the Great, Bolesław, the second King of Poland, wife 1067.

Dobrogniewa is Maria, the second daughter of Prince Jarosław. Casimir, wife of the first Polish king, married in 1038 and died in 1087. 

Descendants of Włodzimierz, Wszewołd, Jarosław's third son.

Stanisław, the first son of Prince Włodzimierz Perejasławski, married Kazimierz, King of Poland, a daughter, and then some principalities were returned from Poland.

Wszewołod Michał, the second son, married the Turokanna princess Połocka, then Moscow rebelled from Ivan Bazylid in Moscow and broke out under the power of Wszewołod and other Russian princes.

The fall of the Principality of Połack. After the extinct line of the Ruthenian Połock princes, the Commonwealth consisted of thirty old men, but this Punigajło was conquered by the Lithuanian prince. 

Światopełk, the third son of Włodzimierz, Prince Perejasławski, Prince Wołyński, Bracławski, Czerniechowski and Włodzimierski. [S. 263] Heinrich assisted the emperor on Bolesław, the third Polish king, in the invasion of Silesia in 1109. Where he was killed by treason, he had three sons who were later to express themselves.  

Ihor the fourth son.

Jaropełk, the fifth son, became the leader of the Kiev principality. He declared war on Bolesław, the third Polish king, in 1134 to regain the Ruthenian principalities from Poland. 

A descendant of Jaropełek.

Bolesław, son of Jaropełek, the last reigning prince of Red Ruthenia, died in 1340. Then Casimir, the great king of Poland, invaded and joined Poland.

The fall of the Ruthenian principalities in 1340 at the end and in 1386 from Bolesław the Brave, Mieczysław the second, Kazimierz the first, Bolesław the second, Bolesław the fourth, Kazimierz the second, Leszek the first white, Bolesław the fifth after Casimir The great Polish kings and Princes, their sisters are their daughters, relatives, the once great Ruthenian principality, which was divided into twenty-eight great principalities by the years 525. The flowering fell and the descendants of Jagiełło, the King of Poland and the Great The Duke of Lithuania, with the titles of princes, left them under the laws and equality with the chivalrously sworn state.

The continuation of the descendants of Włodzimierz, that is, Wszewołd, Jarosław's third son.

Dawid, the fifth son of Włodzimierz, Prince Perejasławski.

Mścisław, the sixth son.

Roman seventh son; from whom was the son. 

Bazyli is the eighth son, followed by the Prince of Ostrog Ostrowscy and the Prince Zasławscy of Zasław.

Włodzimierz, the ninth son.

Rościsław, the tenth son, drowned at the crossroads in the Dnieper.

The descendants of Izasław, Prince of Kiev, the first son of Jarosław, who was the son of Włodzimierz the Great.

Jaropełk, the first son of Izasław, to Wszewołd his uncle that he took over his native Kiev principality, including his favorite named Nieradziec, who drove Jaropełk from Włodzimierz to Zwinogrod, killed a sleeping man, in the monastery of St. Peter, who started construction, will now only have one place near the Mushroom Monastery in Kiev. 

Michał Światopełk, the son of the second prince of Kiev, joined the capital of Kiev after the late uncle of Wszewołda found a stone church and St. Michał Złotowerch Monastery called in the old town of Kiev, where he was buried. There, now St. Barbara's body is said to be headless. From this Światopołek Izasławowicz the dukes of Czetwertyński preceded and he had two sons.    

Descendants of Michał Światopołek, Prince of Kiev, son of Izasław, Prince of Kiev.

Rościsław, the first son of Prince Michał Światopołek; the prince in Ukraine, Kaniów, Bohusław and Korsuń, for whom the Tatars had ruined several years, and pay homage to 1211. He had a son and a daughter. [S. 264]   

The descendants of Prince Roscisław in Ukraine, the reigning son of Prince Michał Światopełek.

Iwo, son of Rościsław, Prince Światopełk in Kiev, who was exiled by his brothers in Lublin Castle with his wife Maria and son Ignacy, had a supply for the needs of the entire court from the Polish king, in Lublin they rest with the Dominican Priests with whom the tree of the holy cross is brought.

Grzymisława, Princess Światopełkowna, daughter of Rościsław, and Leszek the Black, wife of the Polish prince in 1227.

Descendants of Iwo, the son of Prince Rościsław.

Prince Ignatius of Światopełk.

The continuation of the descendants of Michał Światopełek, Prince of Kiev.

Wasyl, the second son of Prince Michał Światopełek.

Jerzy, the third son, Prince Sviatopolk, founded churches in Kiev, ordered the tips to be gilded, and in Lviv he built an Orthodox church for the Ruthenian cathedral, and he had more goods, he had two sons here in his place.

Semeon, the fourth son, Prince Sviatopolk.

Descendants of Jerzy, the son of the third Prince Swiatopełek.

Paweł, Jerzy's first son, Prince Światopełk

Alexander, the second son, Prince Sviatopolk from the town of Czetwertni in Volhynia on the Styr River, founded Czetwertyński, where in 1437 the monastery for both sexes of the clergy of S. Bazyli with the abbey, i.e. Archimandria, was established by the following sons.

Descendants of Prince Aleksander Światopełek, named after Czetwertnia Czetwertyński.

Ivan's son, the first Prince Svyatopełk Czetwertyński named Puciatycz, was to leave his sons behind.

Jerzy, the second son, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński.

Teodor, the third son, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, had a wife, Kalwicka, and left two sons.

Descendants of Teodor, son of Alexander, named after Czetwertnia Czetwertyński.

Wasylprinz Światopełk Czetwertyński, Teodor's first son, left three sons who will be replaced in their place.

Fedora, Prince Sviatopolk Czetwertyński, the second son of Teodor, left a son who will be below.

The descendants of Vasyl, son of Teodor the First and grandson of Aleksander from Czetwertnia Czetwertyński.

Matwiej, the first son, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, heir to the Niemierowszczyzna, Pohrebysz, Obodowski, Daszów, woywo-tów, Kalnika, Kniazy and Palatyna, was married to Eudoxia Wahanowska, he fathered the next daughter.

A descendant of Matwie, Prince Światopołek Czetwertyński.

Anna, Princess Światopełkowna Czetwertyńska, wife of Prince Janusz Korybut Zbaraski, Bracławski voivode. Then the town of Czetwertnia fell into the house of Jerzy the castellan of Kraków and Krzyszt the Crown Prince, who later returned to Hrehor Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, Chamberlain Łuck, his brother, from his uncle's uncle, authentic resignation. He was buried in the Staro-Czetwertyński monastery. [S. 265]    

The continuation of the descendants of Vasyl, son of Teodor, the first and grandson of Alexander, named after Czetwertni Czetwertyński.

Michał was the second son of Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, who was followed by a daughter.

A descendant of Michał, Prince Światopełek Czetwertyński.

Helena, Princess Światopełkowna Czetwertyńska, daughter of Michał, married to Prince Sanguszek in Zasław.

The continuation of the descendants of Vasyl, the son of Teodor the First and grandson of Aleksander from Czetwertnia Czetwertyński.

In Fedora, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński had a successive son.

The descendants of Fedore the Prince.

Eustachy, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, at that time the town of Czetwertnia in the house of the Zbaraski family, was named Staro-Czetwertnia, for the goods near Borowicze, named by Prince Jakow, ie Jacek Światopełk Czetwertyński ;; This Eustachy had a son and a daughter, a nun from Humenio, from the monastery in old Chetwertnia. 

Descendants of Eustace.

Hrehora about the old Czetwertnia Raśniki and Majków, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński Chamberlain Łucki Erbe von Wiśniów, and Czerczyce fathered a daughter for Piotrowski, Maruszo Uskrzyńska, and two sons died on May 12, 1651, to whom the fund was renewed.

Hrehor's descendants.

Zachariasz, Starosta von Raciborowski, old Czetwertnia's first son, and Majków, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, captain of the Polish army, had four sons who would be expressed in their place.

Wacław, the second son in old Czetwertnia, and in Raśniki Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, Życzyński and Daniczowski staroste, who left daughters with Ludwika Wojnianka, Jasinnicka; one Joanna for Prince Ałexander Światopełek Czetwertyński, castellan of Minsk, the other for Borozne to Little Russia, whose two daughters went to Skroropacki, and Miklaszewski, whose houses are related to Gudowicz, Chwasłów, Rozumowski and the Dukes Prożorowskie third was published. 

Descendants of Zacharias son. the first hrehory. 

Hieronim's first son in old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, was married to Bartlemska, nee Wielogłowska.

Andrzej, the second son in old Czetwertnia and Majków, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, captain of the Polish army, married three times. Imo with Magdalena Pniewska. 2do with Zuzanna Zielińska. 3tio with Anna Czapliczowna nee Szpanów, on the left three sons who will be lower, lived around 1701   

Gedeon, the third son, on old Czetwertnia, Prince Sviatopolk Czetwertyński, Bishop of Rusko-Łucki, and Ostrogski, 1632, lived after other years in 1681, then Metropolitan of Kiev, around 1686. Buried in the Metropolitan Cathedral in Kiev Sermons and writings published day famous all over Rossia. [S. 266]  

Hrehory, the fourth son of old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, came down childless.

Descendants of Andrzej, son of the second star of Raciborow Zacharias.

Marcjan, the first son of old Czetwertnia, Duke Światopełk Czetwertyński, had a wife named Wielogłowska without an heir.

Jerzy, the second son of old Czetwertnia, Duke Światopełk Czetwertyński, had a wife, the sister of Shetman's wife from Zaporozhets. He was in Turkish captivity in 1699, which Mazepa, the hetman of Zaporozhye, freed in 1701. He remarried Isabella Horaj, he was brought back by the Turks in 1701. He left a son who followed him.  

Jerzy's descendant.

Bazyli on the old Czetwertnia and Majków, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński became a Bazylian.

The continuation of the descendants of Andrzej, the son of the second Staroste from Raciborow Zachariasz.

Janusz on old Czetwertnia and Majków, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, the third son of Andrzej, a colonel in the Rossi army during the reign of Piotr Aleksiewicz, Tsar of Moscow, died in Lutsk in 1728. The latter left the line of Prince Zachariasz, Starosta von Raciborowski.

Descendants of Wacław, son of the second Prince Hrehor, Chamberlain Łucki.

Janusz, the first son of old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, lived around 170. He was of childless descent.

Stefan, the second son of old Czetwertnia, Duke Światopełk Czetwertyński, died childless.

Gabriel, the third son in old Czetwertnia, and Rźniki, Duke Światopełk Czetwertyński, married twice: Imo with Barbara Stępkowska, castellan of Bracławska, 2do with Marianna Morawińska. He left seven sons and six daughters, the first for Jełowicki, the second for Bogumiła for Radzimiński, the third for Porczyński, the fourth for Domicella, for Kaletyński, two for Józef Czarnecki, Starost von Karoliński, fifth Franciszka for Nowomiejski, Starosta Bracłski sixth nun Benedictine. There was already the last of the princes in the old Czetwertnia writer line that remained. He sold Cheetwertnia to Horajm.   

Silvester, old Czetwertnia's fourth son, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, was the first archimandrite in the Czetwertyński Monastery. After sending officers from Peter the Great Tsar of Moscow, he became Bishop of Belarus and Mohylów.

The descendants of Gabriel, Wacław's third son with Barbara Stępkowska, were born.

Michał, the first son in the old Czetwertnia, Raśniki, Krupa, Rachini, Zabożu, Seredyńce and Drohynicze, Prince Świato-Pełk Czetwertyński, Chamberlain Bracławski, Captain of the Polish Army, Staroste Utajkowski and Żńyczyński in the province of Utajkłachesski and Żńyczyński without the estate of the village , which was buried with the Dominican priests in Łuck in 1763, he bought his house, the old Czetwertnia, back from Horajm. [S. 267]  

Władysław, the second son of old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, Starost Utajkowski, married to Katarzyna Radzimińska, left two sons who will express themselves below.

Alexander, the third son of old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Cze-twertyński, Chamberlain Bracławski, Starost von Pułtowski, signed a marriage contract with Joanna Ostrowska in Tywrów in 1739 and left four sons and a daughter Barbara Army in Mohylów on the Dniester during the Polish riots was captured and died in Mikołajów and was buried with Dominican priests in Konstantynów-Stary in 1769.

Świętosław, the fourth son in old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, heir of Sachnów and Berliniec, married Anna Ostrowska in Tywrów in 1739. He left three sons and daughters, Elżbieta for Maliński, Rozalia for Bykowski, Helena for Dorożyski, died in Sachny, there he was shot by Hajdamak, he was buried in Latyczów with the Dominican priests in 1659,

Stanisław, the fifth son in old Czetwertnia, Prince Światopełk Czetwertyński, had two wives. Imo Euphemia Suchorska, with whom he fathered a daughter Barbara, who wanted to lie down, died in Staroduba in 1760 with Nakowalnianka from the Russian general, a childless daughter. 

Descendants of Stanisław.

Barbara Stanisławowna, Princess Światopełkowna Czetwertyńska, born 1750 in Mało-Rossja, Empress of Catherine the Second, married Jakub Korsakow first in Moscow and came after the widow in 1782 with the permission of Pius VI. To Poland. Pope, on the 28th day of Prince Marcelli, her cousin born in Janków, remarried on October 22nd, 1791, and died there. 

The continuation of the descendants of Gabriel, the third son of Wacław, with his second wife Marianna Morawińska, was born.