Kotwica coat of arms
Kotwica (Polish for "Anchor") is a Polish coat of arms. It was used by several szlachta (noble) families under the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Kotwica | |
---|---|
Details | |
Battle cry | - |
Alternative names | Kotwica i Grono |
Earliest mention | unknown |
Towns | none |
Families | 22 altogether: Achmatowicz, Achmeciewicz, Barszczewski, Bartoszewicz, Chamyr, Chawryłowicz, Geppert, Gutowski, Idzykowski, Jesiotrowski, Kęstowicz, Kołątaj, Misiuna, Missun, Missuna, Obuchow, Onichimowski, Oniechimowski, Stumberg, Turnowski, Wargira, Wiłkucki |
History
The Kotwica coat of arms was particularly popular among families of foreign origin indigenated in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Blazon
Gules, an Argent anchor, with three lopped branches on the dexter, all proper, debruised of a loop or anille in chief, also proper. Out of a crest coronet, three feathers.
Alternatively the shield is Argent and the anchor Black, Brunatre or Or.
Notable bearers
Notable bearers of this coat of arms have included:
- Hugo Kołłątaj, priest, politician, co-author of the Constitution of May 3, 1791;
- Andrzej Suski, Bishop of Toruń.
gollark: If they don't have backups, they're idiots anyway.
gollark: It's not like they couldn't just switch to a different provider if whatever that is is bad.
gollark: TJ09: near-instantly responds to API requests which he wants to *kill* because they end up using data from EATW, leaves other requests sitting for ages.
gollark: It... has gone down?
gollark: Sure!
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.