Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.
The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.
The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.
Ebook204 pages3 hours

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

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

This is a hodgepodge of a disorderly, systematically arranged collection of Polish nobility. On these pages you will learn everything about: descent, nobility, aristocratic literature, aristocratic name endings, aristocratic association, genealogy, bibliography, books, family research, research, genealogy, history, heraldry, heraldry, herbalism, information, literature, names, aristocratic files, nobility, personal history, Poland, Szlachta, coat of arms, coat of arms research, coat of arms literature, nobility, knights, Poland, herbarz. Conglomeration, translations into: English, German, French.
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.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 4, 2022
ISBN9783755761204
The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.
Author

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

Read more from Werner Zurek

Related to The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.

Related ebooks

History For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    The noble Polish family Turzo. Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo. - Werner Zurek

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

    Titelseite

    Turzo of the Turzo Crest (Vol. 9 p. 154-155)

    Turzo des Turzo-Wappens (Bd. 9 S. 154-155)

    Turzo du Turzo Crest (Vol. 9 p. 154-155)

    Turzo du Turzo Crest (Vol. 9 p. 154-155) - 1

    Impressum

    Werner Zurek

    The noble Polish family Turzo.

    Die adlige polnische Familie Turzo.

    Turzo. In a red and gold divided shield above a growing, crowned, golden lion, below three red roses arranged in 2s and 1s; Helmet decoration: a growing lion. It comes from Hungary and was already led in 1477 by the Turzo in Kraków.

    Tarnowski from the Leliwa Coat of Arms (vol. 9, pp. 27-50)

    Tarnowski, coat of arms Leliwa , in Kraków Voivodeship and in Ruskie, one of the first houses of merit and honor in that homeland. Everyone agrees that Spicimir, who came to our homeland from the Rhine, started this honorable family, which supports Długosz: sub tempore Vladislai primi advenit, Spicimirium primarium auctorem habuit, qui ex prisco ignile deferebat, dum ex Rheno venit , sed processu dierum, in ea domo Polonorum, quae defectuosam lunam cum stella deferebat, se conjunxit et inwit; in qua viri providi, industriosi, Reipubl. studosi. From this it must be concluded that this Spicimir did not come to Poland with the coat of arms of Leliwa, but that he adopted it as his homeland and that Leliwa was already prospering in Poland before his arrival. The second, the time when Spicimir came to this kingdom, they shift to 1280. And Długosz writes: that under Władysław the First, that is, during Władysław Herman, whose death fell in 1102: Paprocki and others add that this Spicimierz a founded a village named after him, which he later gave to the Archbishop of Gniezno, according to Crom. lib. 5. But they are wrong, because this Spicimir had a different coat of arms and was the ancestor of all Ogońscy, from which the Ogonów family blossomed, as Długosz remembers Paweł Spicimier Ogon in his story. And the ancestor of the House of Tarnowski came to our kingdom not long after, as he would soon say. and the ancestor of all Ogońscy from which the Ogonów family blossomed, as Długosz recalls Paweł Spicimier Ogon in his story. And the ancestor of the House of Tarnowski came to our kingdom not long after, as he would soon say. and the ancestor of all Ogońscy from which the Ogonów family blossomed, as Długosz recalls Paweł Spicimier Ogon in his story. And the ancestor of the House of Tarnowski came to our kingdom not long after, as he would soon say.

    Spicimir, first the voivode of Kraków, from whose chair he moved to the castellanship of Kraków in 1330, signed this title on Casimir the Great's list with Łaski in the folklore statute. 167. The after Warszawicki Orat. by Laud. Tarnow and Łobzyński in Acroam. He founded two cities. Tarnów and with the Castle and Melsztyn, as evidenced by the privileges of the Przeworsk Monastery in 1391. The same Łobzyn. he says he had behind him Gertrude, daughter of Bolesław, the Duke of Sieradz and Mazowiecki, niece of Leszek Czarny and Władysław Łokietek of the Polish monarchs. This Spicimier came to these favorites at Władysław Łokietek Król [p. 28] Polish, on this occasion. When this monarch was deprived of the throne and expelled from his homeland, he had to smash other lands, he found on the Rhine a stranger to whom he confided privately, hidden dignity and misery that he was expelled from his homeland, his fortune and his throne and was therefore kindly received and generously treated at home for a long time. Grateful for this grace, Łokietek, for when the storm in Poland calmed him and he came to the full and peaceful possession of the crown, he brought with him one of his benefactor's sons, namely me; which could not have happened until around 1305, but that, according to all our historians, Władysław Łokietek returned to the Polish throne from his exile only this year. And that we should keep the seriousness of Długosz mentioned above, or I do not dispute that this Spicimir was related by blood to the same Łokietek, but that he also had a second wife, because his first relationship with parenthood was the Leliwa coat of arms, admit have to; with which he took the coat of arms of Leliwa as his house and his successors, as Długosz testifies, or I proved that the coat of arms of Leliwa and in other countries is common to many houses, so anyone could say that this Spicimir with the coat of arms of Leliwa, came to us. And no earlier than 1305 can be confirmed by the genealogy that I put on it from the Przeworsk monastery.

    Jan von Melsztyn, castellan of Krakowski, son of Spicimir, who is only mentioned after the same chair was occupied after his father's death in 1336. He took leave of Sycie in 1352. As I argued in the first volume, Długosz writes about him in these words, Jasco de Melsztyn Castellanus Cracoviensis vir frugi, industrius et in Republice magni et experti zeli, in Governor illi adjunctus (ie to Kazimierz the Great Son of Władysław Łokietek), ex cujus sententia et ordinatione administratio totius Regni salubriter dirigebatur, cujus quoqueum Providentia magnae conupletae opoque etvoque breventia magnae. That is why Kromer and others say he also founded the city of Yaroslav in Ruthenia, which is now surrounded by a wall, and in churches, monasteries one sees quite ornamental. He founded the Church of S. Małgorzata in Stradom, Pruszcz fol. 61st and to the factory of the Church of St. Catherine in Kraków he contributed to the strength. Führer f. 124. His wife Zofia, near Nakiel. in myself. f. 441. by her there are four sons, of which she is. Starovol. in Bellat. Sarmatian. fol. 88. such an elogium attributed to him. Joannes Melstinus vir gravis et prudens et amans Reipubl., Qui pro Vladislao Łoctico contra Boemos Regnum Poloniae [p. 29] possidentes, saepius strenue pugnavit, et in Silesiam Regem cum suis cohortibus secutus, ad Costinum magna fortitudinis suae praebuit exemplo. Casimiroque Magno, post obitum patris, sceptro Poloniae capessente, juvenilium ejus consiliorum datus fuit a toto procerum conventu Moderator: cujus ille consilio diligenter ubique praedones et infestatores publicarum vi arum perquisivit, exquisavisque liberisis oppressic domesticamecamis, at least admoisset.

    Jan von Melsztyn, castellan of Kraków in 1376. Rafał Jarosławski, heir in Przeworsk in 1462, of the Miechovichi monastery in Przeworsk founded by his grandfather, by auctioning the foundation wanted the former fathers to have a souvenir before God, only for his soul, like their ancestors. He lists them up to the fifth generation, if that's what it says in his letter who you'll find at Nakielski in Miechow. fol. 517. Pro suae, nostrae, nostrorumque Praedecessorum, Raphaelis Castellani Wojnicensis, et Capitanei Russiae, Patris nostri, tum Joannis ac Spitkonis fratrum ejus, patruorum nostrorum Spitkonis, et Joannis Avorum, Joannis Proavi, acci Spicimir Atrios, aciris noni Atrioti, acimir Spicimir Atrioti dictae Matris nostrae Annae, et Joannis Swidwa fratris ejusdem, etc. From this, then, to hurry, the family register of the house, that is, Spicimir, the castellan of Kraków, He was the father of Jan, also castellan of Kraków. These in turn from Jan and Spytek. But not everything of this ancestral house was expressed here, nor their honors, probably only with a straight line of his procedure, this Rafał pointed out, because how - it appears from the story of Długosz and from - other names with the same name that here were not mentioned, and especially Michał of Tarnów, the castellan of Wiślicki before 1366, whose wife Elżbieta died that year when she left the Wielowieś estate to receive Queen Elizabeth with the help of the crowd, in a rich and stately dress, she was in such danger from the Lithuanian bustle that she narrowly escaped their hands, she was bravely rescued by her people, she was protected from the Vistula to Sendomierz. Długosz, B. 10. Then, in 1376, this Jan von Melsztyn, the castellan of Kraków, was not touched, and the jam [p. 30] commanded in the first volume; Jan Jura, the castellan of Kraków, entered the tomb in 1361. John II, the voivode of Sandomierz, said goodbye to this world in 1365. All four of his ancestors also belonged to him when they signed a coat of arms as Paprocki in 1391 when the Kraków Church of All Saints was built . fol. 37?. In Nomine Domini Omen. Ad perpetuam rei memoriam. Nose Joannes de Tarnow alias de Zochow Vexillifer Cracoviensis, Spytko de Melsztyn Zavichostensis, Spytko Palatinus Sendomiriensis et Capitaneus Leopoliensis, Raphaël Castellanus et Capitaneus Sendomiriensis, Regni Poloniae Mareschalcus germani de Jarosław. It is the basis that after laying the chain according to this Rafał, I go to each of them. Dziadów belonged to him, all four, when they signed as paprocki for the coat of arms when Kraków's Church of All Saints was erected in 1391. fol. 37?. In Nomine Domini Omen. Ad perpetuam rei memoriam. Nose Joannes de Tarnow alias de Zochow Vexillifer Cracoviensis, Spytko de Melsztyn Zavichostensis, Spytko Palatinus Sendomiriensis et Capitaneus Leopoliensis, Raphaël Castellanus et Capitaneus Sendomiriensis, Regni Poloniae Mareschalcus germani de Jarosław. It is the basis that after laying the chain according to this Rafał, I go to each of them. Dziadów belonged to him, all four, when they signed as paprocki for the coat of arms when Kraków's Church of All Saints was erected in 1391. fol. 37?. In Nomine Domini Omen. Ad perpetuam rei memoriam. Nose Joannes de Tarnow alias de Zochow Vexillifer Cracoviensis, Spytko de Melsztyn Zavichostensis, Spytko Palatinus Sendomiriensis et Capitaneus Leopoliensis, Raphaël Castellanus et Capitaneus Sendomiriensis, Regni Poloniae Mareschalcus germani de Jarosław. It is the basis that after laying the chain according to this Rafał, I go to each of them. Spytko de Melsztyn Zavichostensis, Spytko Palatinus Sendomiriensis and Capitaneus Leopoliensis, Raphaël Castellanus and Capitaneus Sendomiriensis, Regni Poloniae Mareschalcus germani de Jarosław. It is the basis that after laying the chain according to this Rafał, I go to each of them. Spytko de Melsztyn Zavichostensis, Spytko Palatinus Sendomiriensis and Capitaneus Leopoliensis, Raphaël Castellanus and Capitaneus Sendomiriensis, Regni Poloniae Mareschalcus germani de Jarosław. It is the basis that after laying the chain according to this Rafał, I go to each of them.

    Spytek from Melsztyn, voivode of Kraków, and as the above privilege was said, voivode of Sandomierz and Starost of Lemberg, son of Jan of Melsztyn, the first castellan of Kraków, Długosz writes about him that he was only eighteen years old and in 1383 he was transferred to the Presidency of the Kraków Voivodeship...and he adds that Ziemowit, the Duke of Mazowiecki, was vigorously aspiring to the Polish crown, he and his industry blocked the way there, and King Jagiełło was grateful to him, since Spytkowi ascended the throne of Poland, having received him kindly after his coronation, he gave him sandals of pearls and jewels and precious gold. Długosz in 1386. That wrote Długosz, lib. 10th fol. 148. King Władysław in 1396 sent his army to conquer Wieluń, Ostrzeszów and Bolesławice, which he had pressed against the last fortress with a long-term siege with hunger that it gave up. In 1396 he gave him all the land of Podolia, jure perpetuo feudali, when in 1399 he then advised against Edith the Tatar, commander with the Podolia army and other Polish and Lithuanian lords, Witold, the Lithuanian prince, and the others so that it was for the slaughter would be obvious not to spend so many souls, but when Paweł Sczukowski, coat of arms of Gryf, spoke to him about his beautiful and young wife's anxious heart and regret, a wealth of fortune, Spytko replied: I live, by God's grace , today, I will lay him down, and he will flee the field with an ugly flight; how Spytek died there and Sczukowski escaped. Although it could be a saving of life, like many others, and Witołd himself, the Duke of Lithuania, but a man who loves glory, jumped into the center of the Tatar community, and he fell with them. until he was shed with blood and life. He died childless, and his wife Elżbieta married the Duke of Monszterberg, as Długosz namienia 11 f. 521. [p. 31] The land of Podolia returned to royal hands. Starov. in Bellat. Sarmatian. fol. 87. adds that Jagiełło awarded him the merits of Lubliniec, Strzelec, Domarat, Oleśno and Gorzowo. This is ex Mantissa Diplomatum in Sommersbergiusz de Rebus Silesiae vol. 2nd fol. 87. kędy z munimentów says, Duces Stetinenses, fatentur sibi a Spitkone de Melsztyn Palatino Cracoviensi, obligata esse bona Ducatus Lublinensis, Rosembergensis, et Gorcoviensis, una cum fortalitiis in mille marcis grossorum Progensium, date in Bithom. die 11 MM Virginum anno 1397. Some say he had a son, Raphael, and that he died in this battle with Edyga along with his father. Others say that his wife Elżbieta was born Tęczyńska. He gave his sister Hedwig to Duke Bernhard von Oppeln, a member of the Piast family, who died in 1396.

    Rafał of Tarnów, squire in Jarosław, Castellan and Starost of Sandomierz, Grand Marshal of the Crown, his wife Zofia, in Nakiel's house. fol. 441. Son of Jan, the castellan of Kraków, brother of Spytek, the just mentioned voivode of Kraków, loving fame and good for foreigners: Łobzyński says about him that he was first castellan of Wiślicki and administrator of all Ruthenia, lord of far happiness and big heart; the author of Specimen Historiae Polonae Criticae fol. 102. that I already call it Rafał Jarosławski, already in the first volume Tarnowski, but not rightly so: because that's how he wrote it, and the author himself admits that it was Tarnowski and Jarosławski, that later, when they were born, they were one were only from Tarnów, others wrote only from Jarosław, as you will see below, this Rafał died childless.

    Spytek from Melsztyn, first chamberlain from Kraków, then castellan from Zawichoj, the brother of Spytek and Rafał mentioned above, after he took over the Melsztyn department, became the father of the Melsztyński family. Of these she, Katarzyna Białuszyna from Melsztyn, great holiness, humility, widow's chastity, fasting, strict discipline, hair shirts, was constantly full. Who, as a small good woman, small pieces of bread that would come down from the Dominik Ś brothers' table. She rejoiced that she had a more delicious dinner than others of the many rich and varied dishes, and for this she thanked God very much, she was deeply devoted to the Blessed Virgin, praying the Rosary every day, thinking of the life of Christ and the Immaculate Virgin in it , for whom she also had big blue children in which she had Jacek S. as a patron. Those in the Church of the Holy Trinity. in Cracow and had the small choir sealed at her own expense, and she made many expensive apparatuses for that church [p. 32] the poor was merciful, and she ended her life happily, having eaten the Blessed Sacraments in 1408, and in 1645, when he was seen complete and intact, in Kraków in the Church of St. Trinity in the sacristy, from the wall in front of the great altar where her name is written on the marble floor. Bzovius de Gestis in Polonia cap. 13. Józef Werbski, Canon of Chełm in Starowol. You will find her tombstone inscribed. Victorinus of Melsztyn, about the Vadingus in Annalibus ANnorum Tom. 6. In 1466 he says it, hictorinus de Melsztyn claro genere magnorum in Polonia Baronum stirpe editus, oppida multa villasque reliquit, et in transitu ad religionem, multam distribuit pecuniam, necessitatibus conventuum praesertim in supellectili Ecclesiastica Providendis, obiit in adolescentia in Ordine ANnorum Regularis Observantiae , eximia pietate, et cultu in Beatam Virginem ardentissimo, Diaconus jam fuerat, sepultus Tarnoviae. Warszawicki rejects his death in the Catalogo Sanctorum, the second in 1470 even later. Długosz go to 13f.123. My name is Johannes, so I know at the beginning of the law that his name was after Victorinus. Bielski fol. 266. says that

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1