Coat of arms of Belina ( Polish: Belina ) - Polish noble coat of arms , first mentioned in 1431 and includes 99 genera .
| Coat of arms of Belin | |
|---|---|
| Details | |
| First mention | 1431 year |
Emblem Description
In the field of azure, there are three horseshoes, located in a triangle with the front inwards, spiked one to the right, the other to the left side of the shield, and the third to its sole. The sword rests against the last, the golden hilt of which looks like a cross; a hand armed with a sword is visible in the golden armor above the crown .
Some coats of arms of the same name depict a raven with a raised wing and a gold ring in its mouth in the crest , while in others, an owl is sitting on a sword. Paprotsky attributes the beginning of this emblem to the time of Alexander the Great and narrates that 500 years after his death, namely in 278 AD e., the coat of arms of three horseshoes with the Illyrian commander Lubos moved to Bohemia ; Okolsky believes that in Poland , during the war of Boleslav the Brave with the Russians, the king’s relative, hetman and Krakow governor Count Zhelislav Belina , the bearer of the coat of arms of Podkova, received an increment in the coat of arms, two horseshoes and a sword for his victory. Without the third horseshoe below, the coat of arms is called Lzava .
Coat of arms used
Barzhymovsky (Barzymowski), Bellina (Belina, Belina-Swiantkowski, Belina Wensierski), Borkovsky (Borkowski), Borislav (Boryslaw), Borzhymovsky (Borzymowski), Borislavsky (Borzhislavsky, Borimyslawski, Borzyslawski) Borzyz, Borzys , Brzozowski, Bylina , Chlewinski, Chwalecki, Czechowski, Falecki, Falencki, Goleniewski, Golenioski, Golenioski, Golen Grodzky (Grodzki), Gruszczynski (Gruszczynski), Grushetskie (Gruszetski), Gulchevskie (Gulczewski), Yascholtovskie (Yashchultovskie, Jaszczoltowski, Jasczultowski), Kadlubovskie (Kadlubowski, Kadlubzerzki), Kadlubzerzki (Kadlubzzzi), Kadlubzzki) rzynski), Konojacki, Kosko (Koszko), Kraska, Krupinski, Leszczynski, Lochowski, Lojowski, Milecki, Mlochki Mlochki ), Mlynarski (Młynarski), Modzelewski, Naropinski, Okun (Ossowski), Ostrowski, Parzniewski, Podhorezki Poruzki, Poruženi Prazenski (Prague) , Prazmowski z Prazmowa), Proskowski (Proskowski), Rakhovsky (Rachowski), Sarbinskie (Sarbinski), Satkovsky (Satkowski), Sekutsky (Sekucki), Skupi (Skup), Skupensky (Skupienski), Skupevsky (Skki) (Old) , Stawski, C Suski, Shchitnitsky (Sczytnicki, Szczytnicki), Shpakovsky (Szpakowski), Tabulsky (Tabulski), Taranowski (Taranowski), Tarapovsky (Telatycki), Tengoborsky (Wandrovorski, Wandrovorski, Wandrovorski) (Wagowski), Wagrowski (Wagrowski), counts and noblemen of Vensersky (Wesersky, Wensierski, Wesierski), Hungarian (Wegierski), Wierciechowski, Wolski (Wolski), Zalyutynsky (Zadky, Zadky) Zdanovsky (Zdanowski), Zeligovsky (Zheligovsky, Zeligowski), Zelevich (Zielewicz).
- Belina rev .:
- Belina II: Venser .
- Belina III: Skupiewski .
- Lzava
The description of the coat of arms, its history and the list of surnames that carry it can also be found in the classic Polish coat of arms:
- Bartosz Paprocki Herby rycerstwa polskiego. Kraków, 1584.
- Simon Okolski . Orbis Polonus. Krakow, 1642. T.1.
- Ks. Kacper Niesiecki. Herby i familie rycerskie tak w Koronie jako yw WXL Lwów, 1728.
The coat of arms of Belin is included in Part 1 of the Stamp of the noble family of the Kingdom of Poland, p. 49.
Links
- Coats of arms of the Belarusian gentry Coat of arms of Belin and its carriers. (Russian)
- Polish noble coats of arms
- Belina, coat of arms // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
- Gajl T. Polish Armorial Middle Ages to 20th Century . - Gdańsk: L&L, 2007 .-- ISBN 978-83-60597-10-1 . (polish)