The noble Polish family Komorowski. Die adlige polnische Familie Komorowski.
By Werner Zurek
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About this ebook
Dies ist ein Sammelsurium einer ungeordneten, systematisch geordneten Sammlung des polnischen Adels. Auf diesen Seiten erfahren Sie alles über: Abstammung, Adel, Adelsliteratur, Adelsnamenendungen, Adelsverband, Genealogie, Bibliographie, Bücher, Familienforschung, Forschung, Genealogie, Geschichte, Heraldik, Heraldik, Kräuterkunde, Informationen , Literatur, Namen, Adelsakten, Adel, Personengeschichte, Polen, Szlachta, Wappen, Wappenforschung, Wappenliteratur, Adel, Ritter, Polen, Herbarz. Sammelsurium, Übersetzungen in: Englisch, Deutsch, Französisch.
Il s'agit d'un méli-mélo d'une collection désordonnée et systématiquement organisée de la noblesse polonaise. Sur ces pages, vous apprendrez tout sur : l'ascendance, la noblesse, la littérature aristocratique, les terminaisons de noms aristocratiques, l'association aristocratique, la généalogie, la bibliographie, les livres, la recherche familiale, la recherche, la généalogie, l'histoire, l'héraldique, l'heraldique, l'herboristerie, l'information, la littérature, les noms, dossiers aristocratiques, noblesse, histoire personnelle, Pologne, Szlachta, armoiries, recherche d'armoiries, littérature d'armoiries, noblesse, chevaliers, Pologne, herbarz. Conglomération, traductions en : anglais, allemand, français.
Werner Zurek
The Zurek family comes from an old noble Polish family Werner Zurek was born on March 13, 1952 in Voelklingen in the Saarland as the son of the employee Heinz Kurt Zurek and his wife Maria, née Kußler. At the age of 6 he attended the Catholic elementary school Voelklingen - Geislautern and finished secondary school in Geislautern in 1968 From 1968 to 1970 he began training as a machine fitter. From 1970 to 1972 he completed an apprenticeship at Roechling - Völklingen as a rolling mill (metallurgical skilled worker). From 1972 to 1974 he was a two-year soldier with the German Federal Armed Forces in Daun, where he was trained as a radio operator in electronic combat reconnaissance. He finished his service as a sergeant. As a reservist, he was promoted to sergeant-major. Acquisition of secondary school leaving certificate at ILS From 1975 he was a civil servant candidate in the Ministry of Finance (Federal Customs Administration). After passing the final examination, he served as a border inspection officer according to the Federal Border Guard Act and as a customs officer in customs and tax matters and was therefore also an assistant to the public prosecutor In 1975 he married his wife Ulrike, née Daub. In 1982 his daughter Sandra was born. In 2014 he retired. Awards: Air defense training at the technical aid organization Rifle line of the Federal Armed Forces Training at the German Red Cross State Explosives Permit Basic certificate from the German Lifesaving Society European police sport badge at the Federal Customs Administration. Also valid for the European Community. Admission to the Royal Brotherhood of Saint Teotonius. Protector is the heir to the throne of Portugal, HRH the Duke of Braganza. Bundeswehr veteran badge. Aid organization sponsor: Bringing Hope to the Community Uganda (BHCU) Member of the Brotherhood of Blessed Gérard
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The noble Polish family Komorowski. Die adlige polnische Familie Komorowski. - Werner Zurek
The noble Polish family Komorowski. Die adlige polnische Familie Komorowski.
Titelseite
Titel
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek (Vol. 5 p. 169)
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek (Vol. 5 p. 169) - 1
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Komorovsky of Ostoja Coat of Arms (Vol. 5 p. 175)
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Komorowski des Ciołek-Wappens (Bd. 11 S. 225-228)
Wappen von Komorowski, Ciołek (Bd. 5 S. 169)
Wappen von Komorowski, Ciołek (Bd. 5 S. 169) - 1
orowski des Wappens von Dołęga (Bd. 5 S. 169-170)
Komorowski des Korczak-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 170-175)
Komorowski des Kotwicz-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175)
Komorowski vom Schwanenwappen (Bd. 5 S. 175)
Komorowski des Nałęcz-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175)
Komorowski des Ostoja-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175)
Komorowski des Rola-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175)
Komorowski des Ciołek-Wappens (Bd. 11 S. 225-228) - 1
Komorowski des Korczak-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 170-175) - 1
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Armoiries de Komorowski, Ciołek (Vol. 5 p. 169)
Armoiries de Komorowski, Ciołek (Vol. 5 p. 169) - 1
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Komorowski des armoiries du cygne (Vol. 5 p. 175)
Komorowski des armoiries de Nałęcz (Vol. 5 p. 175)
Armoiries de Komorovsky d'Ostoja (Vol. 5 p. 175)
Komorowski des armoiries de Rola (Vol. 5 p. 175)
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Komorowski des Ciołek-Wappens (Bd. 11 S. 225-228) - 2
Wappen von Komorowski, Ciołek (Bd. 5 S. 169) - 2
Wappen von Komorowski, Ciołek (Bd. 5 S. 169) - 3
orowski des Wappens von Dołęga (Bd. 5 S. 169-170) - 1
Komorowski des Korczak-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 170-175) - 2
Komorowski des Kotwicz-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175) - 1
Komorowski vom Schwanenwappen (Bd. 5 S. 175) - 1
Komorowski des Nałęcz-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175) - 1
Komorowski des Ostoja-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175) - 1
Komorowski des Rola-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 175) - 1
Komorowski des Ciołek-Wappens (Bd. 11 S. 225-228) - 3
Komorowski des Korczak-Wappens (Bd. 5 S. 170-175) - 3
Impressum
The noble Polish family Komorowski.
Die adlige polnische Familie Komorowski.
Komorovsky. In a red field a silver horseshoe on which a bird is sitting with a snake in its beak; Helmet adornment: an armored arm armed with a saber.
The Komorowski family
Komorowski, coat of arms of Boża Wola (Vol. 5 p. 169)
Titel
Komorowski of the Ciołek Coat of Arms (Vol. 11 p. 225-228)
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek . We have already talked about the beginnings of Ciołków at Poniatowskie and Ciołki. If you compare the genealogy of the Komorowski houses, you can see that Niesiecki confused the Korczak Komorowski family with others, for example with Ciołków, because when official documents show that there was an old Ciołki Komorowski family, in Herbarz he closed the Message about them in just a few lines. - The Ciołek Komorowski family was called from the Komorów estate, and the first of them, Piotr Ciołek from Komarów, was handed over to the Liptowieckie district, and the process of this family begins here.
Piotr had four sons: Andrzej, Adam, Krzysztof and Franciszek, he received the county of Liptawieckie in 1469.
Adam Komorowski, Piotr's second son, had a son, Jan.
Jan Komorowski had a son, Krzysztof née Zborowska, a Kraków voivode.
Krzysztof Komorowski, castellan of Santocki, son of Jan and Zborowska, an excellent husband for his native country, was married by King Sigismund III. He was married to Helena, Countess Granowska of the Leliwa Coat of Arms and had a son, Mikołaj, and a daughter, Katarzyna, married to Zbigniew Lanckoroński, Chamberlain of Sandomierz.
Mikołaj, son of Krzysztof and Granowska, titled Voivode in all family records. Płocka, he entered into a marriage with Beata, Princess Korybut Wiśniowiecka, the daughter of Prince Michał, Starost von Owrucki and Regina Mohylanka, and the aunt of King Michał Korybut, had a son, Jerzy.
Jerzy in Komorów, Pogorzelec, Poniatów, etc. The heir, who was also referred to in family transactions as the Sieradz castellan, married Elżbieta Tarłówna with the Topór coat of arms and her son Andrzej.
This Andrzej Swordfish of the Crown pledged his life to Zofia Sieniawska, to Fr. Radziwiłłowny, Hetman of the Voivode of the Field Crown of Volhynia, had a son, Adam.
Adam, first butler of Nowogrodzki, then chamberlain of Halicki, at the end of the crown and the crown, a knight of the Order of the White Eagle, a chivalrous man with whom he was the head of the army many times, with whom he was associated throughout his life was Eleonora Piaskowska, a starosta, he had four sons: Stefan, Jakub, Józef and Jan.
Stefan, First Lieutenant of the Crown, Knight of the Order of the Eagle [p. 226] knows, he twice sent the envoy at his expense, first to Rome, then to the port, and since he liked his Turkish robe, he changed clothes for a long time and remained childless there.
Jakub, Adam's second son, Grand Regimentar of the Crown, Knight of the Order of the White Eagle and St Stanislaus childless.
Józef, Starost of Lemberg, Knight of St. Stanislaus.
Johann, Adam's youngest son during his childhood, came into the care of the Saxon Elector August II. He grew up there and at the age of just 18 became a colonel in the artillery of the Crown Forces. When internal unrest began to worsen our country, he left the service and went to France to Stanisław Leszczyński and for a long time to the court of Louis XV. lived where and with the Order of St. He was honored with the spirit. After spending 10 years abroad, he saw his calmer homeland and returned to Poland to end the rest of his life in peace. Stanisław Poniatowski had known him personally for a long time, and in order to get him more on his side, the king immediately offered him the presidency of the Bełska castellan - despite this, he lived in his house for a long time, since he married Ludwika Cielecka, the general's daughter, and whose considerable dowry compensated, at least in part, for the harm suffered by the native property—urged by the king in a handwritten letter to engage him in the election of deputies to the Sejm, and invariably to come down himself, he could not turn down such glorious confidence, and since he knowing how much he was using Komorowski's opinion among his compatriots, he insisted on his early arrival in the capital - there he devoted himself to work for the country with all the enthusiasm of his youth; His efforts were in vain, and failing health during the public raids forced him to leave the capital shortly after the Seym ended. After dividing the last remnants of the once large fortune of three sons and saving a small income for himself, he settled in Lemberg and lived out his life in the bosom of his family in 1796. He also had three daughters: Tekla, married with Cieszkowski, Anna for Zaleski, Marshal Wołyński and Eleonora. And the sons of those Erasmus below. Jacob and Balthazar.
This man of great scholarship and virtues universally valued at home and abroad, he was a member of the council of perpetual knights of the Order of the White Eagle, St. Geist and St. Stanislaus. He left a rich treasury and many books, all of which went to Belshazzar's youngest son.
Erasmus, the eldest son of a general in the Polish army, chamberlain of the Austrian court, knight of the National Order, commander of St. Leopold, etc. Lord of the manor in Łuczyce, [p. 227] Szempańach, Leszczetów, Remenowie, etc. He married Anna Baronna de Storach from Komorowska, coat of arms of Korczak, he had a son, Ignacy, and two daughters: Magdalena, married to Zaleski, and Franciszka, Count Michał. Komorovsky. - He repeated his marriages with Countess Maria Dulska, he had a son, Władysław, with whom he died young - in 1817 he became the Count of St. Imperii and he left this world in 1835. He was buried in Lviv.
Jakub Ciołek Komorowski, Jan's second son, Captain of the National Chancellery, President of the gub. Podolska had three sons and seven daughters, he left this world in 1840.
Baltazar Ciołek Komorowski, the youngest son of Jan, who graduated from the University of Berlin in the 16th year of his birth, entered the military service and was a colonel under the then General Madaliński and his companion; after his discharge he had to leave the service and, having crossed Europe from East to West and from South to North, he visited both parts of America, from where he returned to Paris. Long honored with the friendship and respect of Tadeusz Kościuszko, he was introduced to Napoleon, who was then the First Consul. - The handwritten letters of Napoleon and Kościuszko, still hidden in the family of Count Belshazzar, testify to what extent he was able to win their esteem. Eventually, for family reasons, he returned to Lviv and had to stay with his restless mother for a long time. - Deprived of the goods left by his father in the kingdom, he went to St. Petersburg, assuming that they would be returned , where he also remained in service, appointed chamberlain of the Russian court, he was forced by circumstances to live entirely in to live in this country, and due to various family inheritances, having again inherited a fairly considerable fortune, he bought goods in Volhynia and settled in his Rożyszcze estate on Sterem. There N. Emperor Alexander honored him with his stay in his own house. R. 1816. elected President of the 1st Department gub. Wołyńska, and when he resigned from office with the rescript of N. Emperor, he was appointed President of the Tax Chamber; At the end of the day he was appointed to perform the duties of civil governor of that governorship and after many years of work due to illness he was forced to retire from all offices. He was married to Ludwika Hulewiczowska, daughter of Franciszek, former adjutant to Senator JK Mci, later Chamberlain von Kijowski, and Konstancja Sumowska née Szembekowska, the Hulewicz couple; with her he had two sons: August and Kazimierz and a daughter, Teofila. Convened for the coronation of Emperor Nicholas in a year [p. 228] later, that is: 1827 in St. Petersburg lived his life. He was awarded the rank of real Councilor of State and St. Włodzimierz with a star 2nd class and St. Anna with diamonds and many others, both domestic and domestic, as well as the Commandership of the Cross of St. John of Jerusalem. He left the power of expensive souvenirs, both family mementos, which he received from his father, and newly acquired and Italian paintings. A rich archive, many medals and other antiquities were also left after him. He inherited in Rożyszcze, Topolna, Załobawice, Dubieszy big and small, Czebenia, Kulczany, Kopaczowce, Maydan, Biełaszów, Rohitnica, Woronny, etc. - apart from other estates that are still in Galicia and his wife's dowry. - Due to the nobility of Heroldia Ces. Russian approved and family papers.
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek (Vol. 5 p. 169)
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek . Samuel Ciołek Komorowski in Minsk Voivodeship, so he signed the election of Władysław IV. N. Lenarda Kostra's wife, she was a resident of Połock.
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek (Vol. 5 p. 169)
Coat of arms of Komorowski, Ciołek . Samuel Ciołek Komorowski in Minsk Voivodeship, so he signed the election of Władysław IV. N. Lenarda Kostra's wife, she was a resident of Połock.
Titel
orowski of the coat of arms of Dołęga (Vol. 5 p. 169-170)
Komorowski of the coat of arms of Dołęga. Kojalowicz at MS. He says that they moved from Dobrzyń to the Wilkomierski district with this coat of arms, but at the conclusions. In the halls of Vilnius he saw a horseshoe, as in the coat of arms of Dołęga, with a cross, but sewn diagonally from below into the left side of the horseshoe, and three ostrich feathers on the helmet. Jerzy Komorowski, Wilkomierski land clerk, commissioner for Courland. constant fol. 861. His sons: Jan a country clerk, then a judge Wilkomierski, a brave husband, a sea captain and a royal colonel, famous on infantile expeditions. Samuel, the ensign of Wilkomierski, then the starost of Wilkomierski and the Lithuanian Oboźny, did not miss the knight games from his youth until his death; he was a captain and a happy colonel; Near Łojów, the force helped over the Krzyczewski Cossack Hetman as he hit him from behind. After taking Hetman Gosiewski from Moscow near Verkia, he became a regimental soldier, he did much and happily against the Swedes and Moscow, he died in 1659. He is mentioned in the 1670 Constitution. fol. 5. and his brother Elijah and [p. 170] by commending their bravery. One of them was the Wilkomier eunuch, as can be seen from the constitution of 1667, where Konstancja von Judyckie Komorowska was confirmed by the Wilkomier eunuch through the foundation of the nuns of S. Franciszek in Słonim. constant fol. 21. Elia, the third of these brothers, first cupbearer and country clerk, then ensign Wilkomierski, brave husband, royal captain, killed by treason at Nitawa 1659. had behind him Felicjanna Rudomianka, the Minsk voivode, with whom he left these sons : Krzysztof, Samuel, Jan and Elijah. Of these, Krzysztof was first the Wilkomierski chair, from which Seym 1685. Commissar on the borders of Courland, Constit. fol. 9. then Lithuanian cook Staroste Wołkowyski, member of the Seym 1699. Commissar for contracts with the military, const. fol. 15. and to write the constitution. In 1703 the Lithuanian Voivode from Brzesko was a deputy of the Lithuanian Tax Court of the Sejm. constant f. 29. I wrote it in the first volume of the coat of arms Pobóg 2do to resemble the coat of arms of Dołęga with pobog. Samuel first of sub-capital Wilkomierski and instigator W. Ks. Litewski, deputy 1647. from there commissioner. Payment of Dyneburg's Infantry, Constit. fol. 24th then Chamberlain Wileński. Jan Kazimierz Mozyrski clerk, governor of Brześć province, 1697. his constitution 1690. fol. Successor to her uncle Samuel, oboźny Litewski, she gave ten thousand on the lands of Suchowice and Nosowice and his wife. Historian. sapieh p. 3. fol. 76. says that Komorowski (but doesn't do him any good,
From 1778. probably this coat of arms) Antoni Komorowski from the sub-capital Wilkomierski. - Franciszek the guardian of Wilkomierski. - Footnotes by Krasicki.
Titel
Komorowski of the Korczak Coat of Arms (Vol. 5 p. 170-175)
Coats of arms of Komorowski, Korczak, in Kraków and Sandomierskie and other provinces. Kochowski climate point. 3rd lib. 4th fol. 163. claims that the coat of arms of the Komorowski family came from Hungary, where many estates abounded, as well as merits and the honors of the counts in Orawa and Liptov, but when the Polish kings and the Hungarian scepter began to rule after they the Having tasted Polish freedom, they gave up their own homeland and lived for some time in a chamber in Poland, for which they were called Komorowskie. Stawicki Ord certifies him. S. Pauli in the Kazan Fortress. With all this, without touching the first Korczak from where they came to us, what they say about the Komorowski family in particular is not tenable: Because according to [p. 171] our historians are sure that the Komorowski family flourished in Poland long before that, only under Władysław, the Polish and Hungarian king, who died near Varna, they moved with him to Hungary, where they bought goods from which then lost them. Dlugosz lib. 11. 1431. commemorates Ja-kób Komorowski, who died in distress with Świdrygiełło, killed by the Tatars, and Bielski fol. 338. Mikołaj, over the Starowol. in Bellat. Sarmatian. fol. 108. To Władysław, the Polish and Hungarian king, among other Polish cavalry, who voluntarily went to eat with him in Hungary, and he was not the last with his banners, and indeed how many surpassed in wealth and kindness. There, having conspired against Eperias, the city that Iskra Bohemia had fortified with his people, Chaika happily stormed into the city at night on the ladders through the walls, plundered and returned home profitably. A spark fell on the careless from the ambush, he beat his people, he took the harvest, sent him back to Bohemia and with Czajka to prison (the same Długosz writes Lib. 12 fol. 766), from which he only under the rule dismissed by King Kazimierz; his name is Starovol. Count Liptowski and tenant of Podolinic. Piotr Komorowski from Hungary, along with the people of this nation, Chamberlain Pieniążek and Starost from Kraków, came to dine against the playful mob who robbed and devastated the Oświęcim Principality. Dlugosz lib. 13th fol. 297. The same Peter from whom Maciej, the king of Hungary, in 1474 took away seven castles: Rozemberg, Hradek, Sobieniecz, Starygrod, S. Michał, Likawa and Orawa, so much that only eight thousand who took away from the king, wife and with everything had to leave for Poland, adds Długosz lib. 13. f. 511. eadem facilitate septem castra insignis apud Hungariam amisit, qua illa quaesierat. The King of Hungary was offended by this and took Kazimierz, the prince called to the throne by the Hungarian lords, promising him to surrender the same castles he held. Bielski fol. The 461st added that he retreated to Poland to Żywiec as you know that King Kazimierz i.e. Berwald, Seflary and Żywiec as a reward for lost goods in Hungary gave him three castles as a reward for lost goods in Hungary in 1477 fol . 553. When he writes that he was suspended Mikołaj Komorowski, as if to catch up with Maciej the king of Hungary, he took back the castles, and at this point Krasnystaw let the city in the Chełm country go. Cromer lib. 28. Biel. fol. However, the 469th adds that he was later transferred back to Żywiec, since he inherited this house for a long time. Jan Komorowski Ordin. [P 172] minor. Monitoring. 1518 provincial superior of the Polish province. of his general visit to Poland for this time, Harold. epit. annals Number 4. wrote the life of B. Jan von Dukla. In the genealogy of this house he ascribes to this Peter two sons, Jan and Aleksander, who were childless. Piotr Mikołaj's brother, on the other hand, fathered Aleksander Steril and Krzysztof, castellan from Sądecki, who were two sons: Wawrzyniec and Piotr, who left this world without descendants. The third, Jan, castellan from Połaniecki, staroste from Oświęcim, from countess Barbara from Tarnowska, he had two daughters: Zofia, Mikołaj Myszkowski, castellan from Wojnicki, and after his death Hieronim Filipowski: Anna, Jan Myszkowski, the Castellan of Oświęcim, wife, so many sons, ie barren, the second Krzysztof. In the genealogy of this house he ascribes to this Peter two sons, Jan and Aleksander, who were childless. Piotr Mikołaj's brother, on the other hand, fathered Aleksander Steril and Krzysztof, castellan from Sądecki, who were two sons: Wawrzyniec and Piotr, who left this world without descendants. The third, Jan, castellan from Połaniecki, staroste from Oświęcim, from countess Barbara from Tarnowska, he had two daughters: Zofia, Mikołaj Myszkowski, castellan from Wojnicki, and after his death Hieronim Filipowski: Anna, Jan Myszkowski, the Castellan of Oświęcim, wife, so many sons, ie