Yunchik ( Polish Juńczyk ) - Polish coat of arms
| Yunchik | |
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Emblem Description
In the red box is a silver anchor with two paws, on which it stands, or, according to others, two fishing hooks facing in opposite directions and attached to a pole that ends with two white crosses. There are five ostrich feathers on the helmet.
The beginning of this emblem, as well as many others, lies in the days of paganism and its struggle against Christianity. It is said that in one battle, when the enemy was located on the riverbank with his own forces, a certain Yunchik, letting the Christian army know about it, brought him to the enemy and, defeating him, caught him as if by chance. In memory of that, Yunchik was granted the coat of arms described.
Childbirth - carriers of the coat of arms
Bogushevskys (Boguszewski), Bolesławski, Bołdysz, Enczyk, Flodzyński, Gomontowicz, Inczyk, Jucewicz, Jucowicz, Juńczyk, Juński, Pietrykowski, Pietrzykowski, Rostocki, Rostowski, Skrutziżzkikikikzkiżzkizzkiżzkiowszkiżkikizkiżkiiski ki kizi, uski
See the coats of arms of the Islenevs (IV, 20). See also the arms of Soltan , Stolobot , Syrokomlya .
Links
- Lakier A. B. Chapter Seventeen, § 90-1. General remarks about Polish heraldic emblems or banners // Russian heraldry. - M .: Book, 1990.
- Lychkovsky Yu. Coats of arms of the Belarusian gentry . (Russian)
- Stamp of the Belarusian gentry . (Russian)
- The arms of Yunchik (used by the Bogushevsky, Skrutkovsky) is included in Part 3 of the Herbarium of the noble families of the Kingdom of Poland, p. 15
- Site of the gentry clan Vabishchevich-Plotnitsky
- Gajl T. Polish Armorial Middle Ages to 20th Century . - Gdańsk: L&L, 2007 .-- ISBN 978-83-60597-10-1 . (polish)