Zagłoba | |
---|---|
Details | |
Battle cry | - |
Alternative names | Zagroba |
Earliest mention | juridical note from 1420, seal image from 1466 |
Towns | none |
Families | Bądkowski, Boguski, Braciszewski, Cygler, Dąbrowski, Dębownik, Dubicki, Dubina, Dubiński, Duliński, Dzierżanowski, Gołębiewski, Grabowski, Grądzki, Jaroszenko, Jaroszewski, Kaniowski, Kleniewski, Kniażycki, Knistowt, Kordaszewski, Koziński, Kraykowski, Kucharski, Kwapiszewski, Lubański, Łabuński, Marzyński, Matowski, Mieczkowski, Naranowicz, Poziemkowski, Pozimak, Pozimski, Poziomak, Sąchocki, Smardzewski, Smarzewski, Smoleński, Smoliński, Sochacki, Sochocki, Steczkowski, Szczepieński, Szczepiński, Ścisek, Śledziewski, Śniegocki, Tarchalski, Trzebiński, Trzeszczkowski, Trzeszkowski, Wąpielski, Zagłobski, Zagrobski, Zatomski, Zatoński, Zygler. |
Zagłoba is a Polish coat of arms. It was used by several noble families in the times of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
History
It originally comes from the city of Plock, Masovia in central Poland. Bearers of this coat of arms took part in January Uprising and Polish-Soviet War.
Blazon
Notable bearers
Notable bearers of this coat of arms include:
Władysław Smoleński (1851–1926), professor of history at Warsaw University.
See also
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.