词条 | Aksak coat of arms |
释义 |
|name = Aksak |color = #de251a |color_text = #ffffff |image = POL COA Aksak.svg |battle_cry = |alternative_names = Akszak, Axak, Kara, Obrona |earliest_mention = 14th century[1] |families = {{hidden begin|title=20 names|toggle=left}} Aksak, Akszak, Assanowicz, Białocki, Downarowicz, Erbejder, Erbreiter, Grużewicz, Hurko, Janczura, Kardasewicz, Kardaszewicz, Kasperowicz, Okieńczyc, Okińczyc, Seliminowicz, Selimowicz, Szaguniewicz, Szahuniewicz, Talkowski. {{hidden end}}|cities = |divisions_type = Divisions |divisions = }} Aksak is a Polish coat of arms of Tatar origin. It was used by several szlachta families in the times of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. HistoryKasper Okińczyc was granted with a noble title by King Jan III Sobieski in 1683, after the Battle of Vienna, together with an estate called Luzinky. He was given also the command over the garrison of the city of Mścisław (modern Mstislav, Belarus), close to the border with MuscovyThe name of the coat of arms stems from Okińczyc's personal nickname, possibly a Turkish language word aksak meaning lame. Possibly Okińczyc received a wound during the battle and started using the term as his nickname and later as a name of the symbol of his family. BlazonThe blazon exists also with a heart pierced by an arrow, with blood drops.[2] Notable bearersNotable bearers of this coat of arms include:
GallerySee also
Bibliography
References1. ^Juliusz Karol Ostrowski, Księga herbowa rodów polskich. {{Polish CoA|state=collapsed}}{{Coats of arms of Polish families|state=collapsed}}{{poland-heraldry-stub}}2. ^Genealogy of Kaspar Aksak Okinczyc {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716014011/http://christian.scherer.com/genealogie/okinczyc.html |date=2011-07-16 }} 3. ^Alfred Znamierowski, Herbarz rodowy. 1 : Polish coats of arms |
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