Zieliński
Zieliński (Polish pronunciation: [ʑɛˈliɲski]; feminine: Zielińska, plural Zielińscy) is the eighth most common surname in Poland (91,522 people in 2009),[1] and is also common in other countries in various forms. The first Polish records of the surname date to the 15th century. Without diacritical marks, it is spelled Zielinski. The Russianized form is Zelinsky.
Origin
Polish surnames ending in "-ski" are of toponymic origin, meaning they identify someone as an inhabitant of a given community, and not through association with what the name's root meant. Thus, given the great number of similarly named localities, linguistically Zielin, Zielinca, Zieliniec and Zielińsk would be the most perfect matches. Some others might include Zieleniec, Zielinice, Zieleniew, Zieleniewo, Zieleń, Zielęcice, Zielięcin, Zielniczki, Zielniki and Zielona.
- Polish: a toponymic surname, with the toponym stemming from the word zieleń, meaning the color green, or referring to vibrancy and youth. It also could have originated from the word 'zioło', meaning plant or herb.
- Jewish (Ashkenazic, from Poland): a habitational name for someone from places in Poland called Zielona or Zielonka, deriving from the root word meaning green.
- German: the name is also particularly well-established in Germany due to migration patterns over centuries. The Germanized version of this surname is Zelinsky or Saleznicky, usually found in the Silesia region.
Clans and Polish coats of arms
Due to the sheer size and frequency distribution of the name, it is difficult to trace common origins or use of armigerous coats of arms (herby) in the Polish clan system.
People
- Chad Zielinski (born 1964), Catholic bishop in the United States
- Damian Zieliński (born 1981), Polish cyclist
- Edmund Zieliński (1909-1992), Polish ice hockey player
- Ewa Zielińska (born 1972), Polish Paralympic athlete
- Ingeborg W. Zielinski was elected Miss Curacao 1973 and participated in the Miss Universe 1973
- Jacek Zieliński, retired Polish national team football player and coach of Lechia Gdańsk in the Polish Ekstraklasa
- Lidia Zielińska (born 1953), Polish composer
- Paul Zielinski (1911-1966), German footballer
- Piotr Zieliński (born 1994), Polish football player
- Ricardo Zielinski (born 1959), Argentine football player and manager
- Tadeusz Stefan Zieliński was a prominent classical philologist, historian, translator of Sophocles, Euripides and other classical authors into Russian. He was the author of works on history of Ancient Greek culture and religion, classical education, and popularization of classical studies (published largely in Russian and German).
- Tony Zielinski, Milwaukee Common Council Alderman and a Democratic Candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin
- Tomasz Zieliński (born 1990), Polish weightlifter
References
- Ministry of Interior (Poland). Statystyka najpopularniejszych nazwisk występujących w Polsce in 2009 Archived 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (The most popular surnames in Poland in 2009). Retrieved August 18, 2013.