The
following was prepared from the classic
heraldic reference Herbarz Polski by Kasper Niesiecki, S J.,
Lipsk [Leipzig] edition, 1839-1846.
For each herb [clan shield, coat of arms] the blazon or verbal
description of the arms is first given in authentic heraldic style, followed by
a translation from the Polish description by Niesiecki. The right and left sides
of a shield are identified from the standpoint of the bearer, i. e., the one
holding the shield. His right would be your left and vice versa. The tinctures
(colors) in heraldry are as follows: azure = blue, gules = red; sable
= black; or = gold, argent = silver; vert = green. In
heraldry all charges (pictures) on a shield are assumed to be facing dexter
(right side) unless otherwise specified. In Polish heraldry all animals or birds
are assumed to be in their natural coloring unless otherwise specified.
Arms: azure, a horseshoe
reversed, between its branches, a small cross patée en abime,
both or. Upon a wreath of the colors mantled of his
liveries whereon is set for a crest: out of a ducal coronet, a
hawk proper, wings surgent, belled and jessed, holding in its
dexter talons, a charge of the shield.
On a shield in a blue field is a gold horseshoe, with its heels
pointed straight up, and in its center a cross; on the helmet
over a crown is a Goshawk with its wings slightly raised for
flight, facing the right side of the shield. On its legs are
small bells and a leather strap, in its right talon it holds a
horseshoe with cross, like those on the shield. Thus it is
described by Paprocki 0 herbach, f., 115; Okolski, vol.
1, fol. 315; Potocki, Poczet herbów, fol. 117; Bielski,
fol. 83; Kojalowicz, in MS.
According to Paprocki, this armorial bearing has the name Jastrzebiec
because the clan's ancestors, while still pagans, bore on the
arms only a Goshawk (Jastrzab). But later, in the days
of King Boleslaw the Brave, circa 999, when pagan foes were
masters of Lysa Góra - two miles from Bozecin, now called Swiety
Krzyz [Holy Cross] and stood secure upon it as if in a fortress,
they hurled abuse upon our forces, saying: "Send forth one
from among you who is willing to fight for Christ in a challenge
against one of our men." Having heard this a knight, one
Jastrzebczyk [scion of the Jastrzebiec clan], moved by the fervor
of faith and the praise of God, invented shoes for the horses'
hooves and, having shod a horse with them, succeeded in forcing
his way up the mountain. He fought the Pagan, who had hitherto
been jeering haughtily, captured him, and brought him to the
King. After he had given the other soldiers of the Polish cavalry
this method, when they had shod their horses and made their way
up the slippery mountain, covered with ice, they destroyed and
defeated the enemy. As a reward for his ingenuity he received
from that King a variation of his arms, adding a horschoe with a
cross to the shield and elevating the Goshawk to the helmet. This
is what Paprocki and all others who wrote about these arms
say. I, however, can not verify these authors' notion that
this Jastrzebczyk in 999 was the first among us in Poland to
invent the horseshoe and shoeing horses. For it is clear from
antiquity that as early as Poppea (whose death in the days of
Nero is described by Tacitus, an. 16 Ulyss. Aldr. de quadrup.
lib. 1) she had her horse shod with silver shoes, and it is
known that others before her used iron shoes, and I
have mentioned vol 2, fol. 95 of Balbin, Czech Historian,
that in Bohemia around the year 278 A.D. there was a house which
used a seal with three horsehoes, and as he says, came with Czech
to that country. And here in Poland Leszek the traitor, vying on
the Pradnik field covered with barbs to get to a crown hung on a
pillar, had his horse shod, Cromer lib. 2, and a foreign
author also takes him to be the inventor of horseshoes, Szentivani
in Curios. It is true, one might say that our people did not
use shoes for horses up to that time (which Cromer
explicitly says of the days of Leszek II), and this Jastrzebczyk
renewed this practice on the occasion already mentioned. Except
it was Paprocki - who in Gniazdo cnoty was the first of
the authors to give this origin of the Jastrzebiec arms, about
which it has been told ever since - who dated those origins in
the days of Boleslaw the Brave. But in a later book he produced,
to which he gave the title of Stromata, it was quite
different: the first author of Belina arms was survived by three
sons, who agreed among themselves that the oldest of them would
use three horseshoes in his arms, as we see in Belina arms; the
second would use two, in the form seen in Lzawa arms; and the
third would use one, as in Jastrzebiec arms. But he supports
neither the first nor the second version by citing any author. It
would be better to say that these arms came to Poland with Lech,
and after one of the earlier members of his house was baptized he
added the cross to it.
Nonetheless, as to the antiquity of this house, and the fact that
it flourished in pagan times in the Poland of the monarchs, all
the authors agreed, and some add that one of the Jastrzebczyks
was among the twelve voivodes who at two different times ruled
the whole country. In Stromata Paprocki affirms that one
member of this family was in foreign lands and converted to
Christianity there, and this was the cause of the Polish prince
Mieczyslaw's [Mieszko] conversion. The antiquity of the
Jastrzebczyks is also evident in that no arms have more families
using them than all the ones using Jastrzebiec: and Paprocki says
in 0 herbach that several hundred years ago they called
themselves simply Jastrzebczyks, and it was not until
after the days of Archbishop Wojciech of Gniezno that the
foremost ones of this house began to write z Rytwian
[from Rytwiany], and others named themselves after whatever
[estate] they possessed. The antiquity is also evident from the
fact that many other arms took their origin from Jastrzebiec,
such as Dabrowa, Zagloba, Pobog, and others. These arms are also
called Boleszczyc, in Silesia and in Mazovia Lazanki;
in other places Jastrzebczyks are called by names from what they
call the goshawk, Kaniowa or Kudbrzowa. In
Paprocki's day there was a Jastrzebiec castle, in the inheritance
of the Zborowskis; Piotr Zboroski from Rytwiany, Kraków voivode
and general, tore it down, dug it out, and had a large pond put
in its place.
Ancestors of this House
Based on a grant of privilege to a monastery, Paprocki cites as
the most ancient member of this house Mszczuj, Sandomierz
castellan, in 999, the time of Boleslaw the Brave; his two sons
Mszczuj and Jan, who signed their names as "from Jakuszewice," were Kraków canons, made such by Bishop
Lambert in 1061. Other historians write of this as well. Dlugosz
in 1084 recalls those Jastrzebczyks who came from Hungary, with Mieczyslaw, son of Boleslaw the Bold, based on the writings of
the monarch Wladyslaw, his uncle - that is Borzywoj, Mszczuj's
son, Zbylut, Dobrogost, Zema, Odolaj, Jedrzej - and he returned
all the estates confiscated from them for the killing of St.
Stanislaw the Bishop.
Derszlaw was cupbearer for King Boleslaw Wry-mouth in 1114, and
Boleslaw the Curly granted a title to the villages Jakuszewice
and Kobelniki to his sons Wojciech and Derszlaw, of whom Wojciech
was the Sandomierz standard-bearer. Paprocki cites a fragment of
his in 0 herbach, but the long stretch of time between
them and their father, i. e., 166 years, does not permit me to
believe that they were sons of Derszlaw the cupbearer. Paprocki
cites a monastery grant of privilege given in 1199 for Borzywoj
and Derszlaw Jastrzebczyk, heirs to Jakuszowice. He also includes
Piotr, son of Wojciech, Sandomierz standard-bearer.
Swentoslaw, from the post of Poznan pastor and Gniezno canon, was
chosen to be bishop of Poznan; and in truth already of an
advanced age, he had broken free of his pastoral burden, but he
yielded to those urging him and with his knowledge and by his
example ruled the flock entrusted to him. But he spent only a
year at this see before departing from this world in 1176 and was
buried in the church. Nakiel. w Miechov. fol. 66,
praises the good works of this Swietoslaw for his monastery,
which he saved at its beginnings with his generous alms; he
ascribes to him the Pobog arms; yet Dlugosz in Vitae Episc.
Posnan. and others call him a Jastrebczyk. Paprocki tells
that in Jedrzejów is a grave from the year 1206 covered with a
stone on which the Jastrzebiec arms are still visible, but the
letters can no longer be read.
Piotr Brevis [brevis is Latin, "short"] called
Maly [small], nineteenth bishop of Plock, a Plock scholastic
chosen by the chapter for that office, moved in the fifth year of
his see to another, in 1254. Lubienski in Vitae Episc.
Plocens, however, ascribed no coat of arms to him, and said
of him only that he lived of a noble clan, but Paprocki in 0
herbach writes explicitly of him that he was a Jastrzebczyk.
Bishop Jan of Wroclaw in Silesia, was the first of the Poles to
ascend the episcopacy, inasmuch as only Italians had governed it
previously; he was a Wroclaw canon elected to that dignity in
1062, presided over it for 10 years, and went to his reward for
his pastoral labors in 1072, as Dlugosz attests in his Kronika
where he writes of him explicitly as of the Jastrzebiec clan.
Jakób of Raciborowice, Sandomierz castellan, died at Chmielnik
in 1241.
Michal, Kraków castellan 1225. Mistuj, Kraków voivode 1242. Scibor, Leczyca voivode 1242.
Msciug, Sandomierz voivode 1342.
These were discussed in the first volume in their own place. A
letter of Kazimierz the Great, King of Poland, given to the
Strzelno monastery, mentiones inter praesentes Mszczuj,
Kraków chamberlain. Pawel Koszcziena, who signed himself
"z Sendziszowa," is in Dlugosz under 1899, and I will
speak of this below.
Jedrzej, Bishop of Wilno, called
"Vasilo" by the Lithuanians, truly an apostolic
shepherd, in the days of King Wladyslaw Jagiello in 1399 preached
the Christian faith in Lithuania, at that time still
unbelieving. Kromer calls him a learned and
God-fearing man. Marcisz, brother of Bishop Jedrzej,
endowed the Franciscan Fathers with a monastery made of brick in
Nowe Miasto, and he also bought Zborów, from which came the Zborowskis.
Wojciech the Archbishop of Gniezno; his father
was Derszlaw and mother Krystyna, and he was born in the village
Lubnica among numerous other offspring. When his father,
possessed of a meager fortune, accompanied him to the Bensowa
parish church for instruction, and gave him up to the
institution, according to the Dlugosz in Vitae Episcop.
Posnan., he spoke thus to him. "I give you up, my
son, not into the ranks of students but of bishops.
Remember, when you have become a bishop, do not forget your
current standing, in which you see both your mother and me, your
brothers and sisters: this lack of means in which you were born
is greater than could fade from your memory if you had the
greatest fortune. When you become a bishop, do this for me,
make a church of brick in this place where I give you up for
schooling." His son listened to all of this and
promised to fulfill the exhortation as a paternal order.
The hopes of both did not deceive them, for Wojciech, rising in
rank, became a priest, and soon from being a Kraków scholastic,
as Dlugosz says, or from being a Kraków dean and Poznan pastor,
he became the mitred prelate of Poznan in 1399; tearing down the
wooden church in Bensowa, he had a brick one built in 1407, and
later settled the friars of St. Paul the Hermit there, and gave
it the villages of Bensowa, Bensowka, Bydlowa, and Bystronowice. Besides this he founded the collegiate church
in Warszawa, and cathedral. Thus for 14 years he held that
post at that church in a laudable manner, so that he was held in
high regard by all, both for his wisdom, which appeared at its
best in every chancellory function, and for the piety of his
life. But he put himself under great strain when, having moved
Piotr Wiss of Leszczyc arms from the Kraków episcopacy, he
recalled him to that of Poznan through various practices and
himself occupied his bishopric in 1412, although he had many
quarrels because of it: for as soon as the matter arose at the
Council of Konstanz it moved all the priests assembled there with
compassion for Peter, and surely Wiss would have returned to his
bishopric if he had not been taken by death at that point.
Wojciech, more secure after his death, founded a city, having cut
down the woods, and called it Jastrzebie, and he endowed and gave
to it parish churches in Sandomierz province, one in Wysokie in
Lublin district, the other in Kortynica in Sandomierz district.
He designated a tithe for the Altar of St. Agnes in Kraków
diocese. Then in 1423 he was elevated to the rank of metropolitan
and primate, and left behind there a memory of his generosity.
funding two benefices, one theological and one juridical, and a
third in Kalisz. He set up an altar in Leczyca, returned regular
canons to Klodawa, and named their church to the collegiate
church, and left this world in 1436, an important, judicious man
and a great lover of his country, as Dlugosz and Damalew. praised
him in Vitae Archiepisc. Gnesn. and Starowol. in Vitae
Episc. Cracov. He had amassed considerable money, which he
left his successors, and while yet alive bought for them Rytwiany
in Sandomierz district and Borzyslawice in Leczyca district,
where he funded benefices for both these places. However there
was suspicion of him to some extent, that the curate of the
Poznan cathedral had shown him the collection and treasury of the
ancient Kings of Poland, of which the curates had passed on
knowledge in secret, each to the next, until that time. From that
time on his successors began to sign their names as "z
Rytwian" [from Rytwiany]: his brother was Scibor, Leczyca voivode, and he had twenty sons, and Paprocki saw all their
portraits in the Bensowa church, but the signatures under them
could not be read. Eight of them [i. e., the sons] were lost in
the Prussian war, the other twelve were various castellans.
Families Using These Arms
Abrahamowicz, Adamowski, Albinowski
Balinski, Baranowski, Bartoszewski, Bedzislawski, Bekierski,
Beldowski, Belkowski, Belzecki, Beski, Biejkowski, Bielewski, Bierczynski,
Bninski, Bobrowski, Boguslawski, Bolesz, Borowski, Boruta, Brodecki, Bromirski,
Brudkowski, Brudnicki, Brzechfa, Brzeski, Brzezicki, Brzozowski, Brzuchanski,
Budkowski, Bukowski, Bylecki, Byszewski
Charbicki, Chelstowski, Chmielecki, Chmielowski, Chochol,
Chorczewski, Choszczewski, Chudkowski, Chwalibowski, Chwedkowicz, Chylewski,
Chylinski, Cieklinski, Ciesielski, Cieszewski, Ciolkowski, Cudzinowski, Czajka,
Czepowski, Czernicki, Czeski, Czeszowski
Dabrowski, Debowski, Dobrski, Domaradzki,
Domaszewski, Doranski, Dragowski, Drochowski, Drozdowicz, Drozdowski,
Dziebakowski, Dziegielowski, Dzierzgowski, Dziewanowski
Falecki
Gaszynski, Gembart, Geraltowski, Gibowski, Glinski,
Gliszczynski, Gloskowski, Godziszewski, Golanski, Golawski, Golocki, Gorecki,
Gostynski, Goszycki, Grabkowski,
Grabowski, Grazimowski, Grebecki, Grodecki,
Grzebski, Grzywienski
Hermanowski, Hoholewski
Iwanski
Janikowski, Jankowski,
Janowski, Jasinski, Jastrzembecki, Jastrzembski, Jedrzejowski, Jez~ewski,
Jodlownicki, Jurkowski
Kaczynski,
Kaminski, Karski, Karsznicki, Kepski, Kierski, Kierznowski, Klembowski,
Kliszewski, Konarski, Konopnicki, Koperni, Koscien, Kosilowski, Kosmaczewski,
Kosnowie, Koziebrodzki, Kozlowski, Krasowski, Krzesimowski, Krzywanski, Kucharski,
Kuczkowski, Kudbryn, Kukowski, Kul,
Kuropatwa, Kuz~micki,
Lawdanski, Lazicki, Lazienski, Leszczynski, Letkowski, Lukomski
kniaz, Lutomirski, Lysakowski
Maciejowski, Maczynski, Makomeski, Malewski,
Maloklecki, Maluski, Mankowski, Marszewski, Maszkowski, Matczynski, Mayer,
Miedzyleski, Mierzynski, Mietelski,
Milanowski, Milewski, Mirski, Mniewski, Mojkowski, Mojski, Morski, Mysliszewski,
Myszkowski
Nagora, Necz, Niedroski, Niegoszewski, Niemira, Niemsta, Niemyglowski, Niemyski,
Niesmierski,
Nieweglowski, Nowiewski, Nowomiejski, Nowowiejski
Oblow, Ocieski, Olizarowski,
Olszanski,
Orlowski, Osiecki
Paczowski, Pakosz, Papieski, Paprocki, Pawlowski, Peclawski,
Pelczycki, Pelka,
Peszkowski, Pilchowski, Pniewski, Polikowski, Polubinski kniaz~, Poplawski,
Porczynski, Poreba,
Powczowski, Preisz, Przedpelski, Przedzynski, Przeradzki, Psarski
Rachanski,
Racibor, Raczynski, Rebiecki, Rembiewski, Rodecki, Rogowski, Rozembarski,
Roznowski, Rucki, Rudnicki, Rychlowski
Sadzynski, Sarnowski, Sasin, Sek, Siemietkowski, Skopowski, Skorycki, Skrzetuski,
Skrzyszowski, Sladkowski, Slawecki, Slugocki, Smolski, Sokolnicki, Srokowski,
Starczewski, Stawiski, Strzelecki, Strzembosz, Strzeszkowski, Stuzenski,
Suchorski, Sulaczewski, S~wiecicki, Szaszewicz, Szczyt, Szeczemski, Szomanski,
Szulenski, Szumski
Taczanowski, Tanski, Tlokinski, Tlubicki, Trzebinski,
Trzepienski, Turlaj, Tynicki
Uchacz, Ulatowski
Wakczewski, Wawrowski, Wazenski,
Wez~yk, Wierzbicki, Wierzbowski, Wiewiecki, Wiktorowski, Witoslawski, Witowski,
Wnuczek, Wodzinski, Wolecki, Wroblowski, Wydzga, Wyrozebski
Zadorski,
Zakrzewski, Zalesicki, Zarski, Zawadzki, Zawidzki, Zawilski, Zawistowski,
Zberowski, Zborowski, Zdan, Zdunowski, Zdzieszek, Z~egocki,
Z~ernowski, Zielonka, Zukowski, Z~ytkiewicz
[Addition to Niesiecki's text by the 19th-century editor, J
N. Bobrowicz: In addition to the families listed, later
heraldists such as Kuropatnicki, Malachowski, Wieladek and others
add the following to these arms:
Borejko, Brühl, Butkiewicz, Chilewski, Cieszcjowski, Grzegorzewski,
Jezowski, Koczanski, Koczkowski, Kopeszy, Lemnicki,
Lgocki, Mosakowski, Mszczuj, Nasiegniewski, Niemirowicz, Niemyglowski,
Niezdrowski, Opatkowski, Paczynski, Pakowski, Palczycki, Pelczewski, Pet,
Pininski, Protaszewicz, Przedpolski, Raciborowski, Rytwianski, Sasiewicz,
Sasinski, Siemiatkowski,
Skorczycki, Skorski, Skubajewski, Skubniewski, Skurski, Sulenski, Sumowski,
Szczemski, Szczepkowski,
Szwab, Tarnawiecki, Tlubinski, Trzeszewski, Waszkowski, Wolicki, Worainski,
Wykowski, Wzdulski,
Xiaz~ki, Zakowski, Zawadzicki, Zólkowski, Zub, Zub Zdanowicz]
However not all those listed here use the Jastrzebiec arms in the
same form: some bear the Goshawk standing in a red field on two
horseshoes, with three ostrich plumes on the helmet. With others
the hawk or raven on the helmet holds a ring in its beak, not a
horseshoe in its talons, for instance, Kierski, Konopnicki, and Lesczynski. The Rudnickis have the Goshawk holding a horseshoe in
his beak on the helmet. In Miedzyrzycz near Ostróg I saw a coat
of arms which had above the horseshoe and cross, as are usually
seen in the Jastrzebiec arms, an added star, and on the helmet
three ostrich plumes. On the headstone of Jan Rokiczana,
pseudo-bishop of Prague, a horseshoe was shown, in its center was
a star, not a cross, as Balbinus attests (book 5, chapter 10),
but some say of him that he was a smith's son. Haubicki and
Plachecki bear the hawk in another form, as is discussed under
the letter H. The Niemyskis have an arrow inside the horseshoe,
instead of a cross, with its head pointing straight up but split
on the bottom. There are some who have a raven standing above the
horseshoe and cross, with its beak pointing to the right side of
the shield and holding a ring in in it, with the diamond pointing
downward. Others place an arrow without feathers above the
horseshoe, or on an apple, or on the world, with three ostrich
plumes on the helmet, such as the Mirskis; each of these is
discussed in its place. Others add a hunter's horm over the
horseshoe, without attachments, with three ostrich plumes on the
helmet, as for instance the Kierznowskis. Others place two
arrows and a cross in the center of the horseshoe, as do the Szaszewiczes. Others put three stars over the horseshoe,
with three ostrich plumes on the helmet, as do the Turlajs.
I spoke of the Domaszewskis of Jastrzebiec arms
in their place, here I will add this. N. Domaszewski had
three daughters by Kochanowska, of whom two, Justyna and Urszula,
were Bernardine nuns; the third and forth were Suffczynskas, the
fifth was Anna Kielczewska, wife of the Lublin sub-altern judge,
the sixth Nowosielska, the seventh Rudzinska; and three
sons. Kazimiers, Luków swordbearer, had by Marcyanna Marchocka, Zolkiewski's widow, two daughters - one
Justyna, who
in her first marriage wed Wlodek, Z~ydaczew master of the hunt,
and in her second Alexander Wronowski; the other Konstancya, who
married Michal Wronowski - and five sons, Mikolaj Bossy, a
Carmelite, Franciszek, unmarried, Jan, whose wife was Strzelecka, Michal, a Franciscan friar, and Bernard, a Jesuit.
Stanislaw, Radom judge, the second son by Kochanowska, connected
himslef for life with Podkanska, she bore him two daughters - of
whom Katarzyna was married to Balcer Brzezinski, Radom citadel
judge, and the second, Angela, devoted her life to God in the
order of the Bernardines - and five sons, of whom Franciszek
married Kobylecka, and of their offspring Wojciech was a
clergyman and Balcer died in our order in Ostróg in 1718.
Jan and Antoni, Radom scribe, whose wife was Dunin. Jakób,
Sandomierz chamberlain, the third son by Kochanowska, married Brodowska, and their four sons were the Jesuit Franciszek (died
in Poznan in 1724), Stanislaw, Tomasz and Mikolaj; of their
daughters one was Konstancya. I have placed some of these
under the Nieczuja arms, loc. cit., but they belong
here.
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