The noble Polish family Niezgoda.

Die adlige polnische Familie Niezgoda.

Niezgoda. Discord.

 

Discord. In a blue field a silver horseshoe, open at the bottom, which surrounds a feathered arrow pointing vertically downwards with the tip. This coat of arms is covered by wage law with a bare sword pointing to the left; Helmet decoration: a peacock's tail, often a vulture's wing or three ostrich feathers were also used. About the origin of this coat of arms it is said: Two brothers of the coat of arms Dolega live in disagreement (niezgoda), die in a quarrel in which one brother was killed by the other. As a punishment for his crime, the cross was taken from his coat of arms and the sword was placed in it. This coat of arms, which was given the name Niezgoda, is used by:      

Gorsek, Klonicki, Lewandowski, Letowski, Minkowski, Naganowski, Napolski, Radoszewski, Radziszowski, Uderski.

 

Other names of this coat of arms:

Description of the coat of arms:
In the blue field; from the center of the silver horseshoe turned with the shoulder up, the sword pierced to the left, the arrow pointing down. Gemstone: peacock tail. Widespread in the countries :: Legend of the coat of arms : According to the legend , the Knight of the Dołęga Coat of Arms murdered his brother and therefore the cross was removed from his coat of arms and the sword was put through a horseshoe instead. Siegel Klanicki, Klaniecki, Klaniński, Kłonicki, Napolski, Radoszewski, Łętowski, Minkowski. Mentions: Coat of arms from the reign of the king of the Piast dynasty. It was founded between the 12th and 14th centuries and several families were sealed with the coat of arms.  





 






 

Niezgoda, Dołęga coat of arms, (other names: Dołega, Dolega) coat of arms of the nobility .    

 

In the azure field, a gold bachelor's cross on the shoulder of a silver horseshoe. From the middle of the horseshoe comes a silver arrow pointing down. In the jewel there is a black wing that is pierced by a silver arrow.    

There is said to be a white horseshoe, shoulder to shoulder, and a raised gate, with a gold cross at the top and center, in the center of the horseshoe, a white arrow or a downward-pointing latch in a blue field. In the helmet the wing of the vulture and through it the arrow with the iron turned to the right. Kasper Niesiecki , Herbarz, III, pp. 362-363   

the oldest seal from the year 1345, the first mention in written sources from the year 1402, which by the Union of Horodel in 1413 after Lithuania transferred was .          

This coat of arms was born in Poland: because when Bolesław the Breitmund was at war with the Prussians, a knight named Dołęga from the coat of arms of Pobóg hit him at the side of an ambush, the commander of the Prussian army, so well with a crossbow that he threw him off his horse and unleashed his life; terrified his people, and then it became more likely that they would be hit by the Polish saber. For this favor of the king with his home coat of arms, he put an arrow in the appendage, and the coat of arms was named Dolęgan after his name. It seems to me that this coat of arms is older than the time of Bolesław Krzywousta: well, during his reign, family members sat in the Senate during his reign. Some add that the Niezgoda coat of arms originated from Dołęga.    

Babicki, Babiłło, Baczewski, Bajrulewicz, Barsoba, Bartnicki, Bogaszewski, Bogaszycki, Boguszycki, Bołtuć, Borejka, Borejko, Borejko, Boreyka, Borsa, Borsza, Boreyka, Borsa, Borsza, Boreyki, Chodyski, Chodyski, Byzodyski, Bruszudzi, Bruszewski, Byzodki, Chodyski, Chodys Cski, Bruszewski, Byzodyski, Chodyski , Chodykin, Cieszkowski, Ciołuchowski, Cyganski, Cymdacki, Czochanski, Czygański, Czyndacki, Dargiłowicz, Diakiewicz, Dluzniewski, Dmiński , Dniński, Doblinowicz, Dobrzykowski , Dołęga, Dołęgowski, Dołobowski, Dołobowski, Dołobowski, Dołobowski, Domniewski, DRAMINSKI, Dabrowski, Dusinkiewicz , Dymiński, Dziedzicki, Dziedzielewicz, Dzięgielewski, Dzimiński, Dziubiński , Dziublewski, Eminowicz, Fechner, Fedorowicz, Felden, Fudakowski, Gczynik, G. Grabski, Grunwalt, Guadkłiewski, Jarmziski, Jarmzłski, Jarmziski, Jarmzrski, Jarmzrski, Jarmzrski, Jarmzrski, Jarmzrski , Jarmzrski, Jarmzowski, Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dzimiński, Dziubiński , Dzimiński, Dziubiński , Dzimiński, Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubiński , Dziubi? , Jerzmanowski, Jurgielewski, Kadowsk i, Kalicki, Kamieński, Kamiński, Kawiecki, Kliczewski, Kniaźnin, Kobiernicki, Kolankowski, Komorowski , Kossowski, Kostkowski, Kos zka, Koszko, Koszkowski, Teuer, Teuer, Kowalewski, Kowalowski, Kozarewiczowski, Kozarowic, Kozarowicski, zier, Kozarowicski, Kozarowicski Kretkowski, Kretowicz, Krośnia, Krusieński, Krusiński, Kruski, Kryzanżński, Krusiński, Kryzanzki, Kryzanzki, Kryzanzki, Kryzankutski, Kryzanlański, Kryzanlański, Kzyuskizki, Kozarewiczki, Kozarewiczski, Kryzanzski, Kozarewiczowski, Kozarowic, Kozarewiczowski, Kozarowic, Kozarewiczowski, K , Lamparski, Lasocki, Laszany, Leski, Lewandowski , Liberacki , Liberadzki, Liberadzki, Lupackzo Lusiński, Łęski, Łączyński, ukoski, Łukowski, ukowski na Łukoszyn, Mackowicz, Mackun, Makowiecki, Mazowiecki, Mchewski, Mchewski Mohylowski, Mohyłowski, Mohyłowski, Monstowicz, Mystwilski, Marlibowski Nalepiński, Narzymski, Nestorowicz, Niegłowski, Niesułowski, Niesułtowski, Nietosławski, Neviadomski, Niewiadowski, Niewiardowski, Niski, Nitosławski, Nitostawski, Nosarzewski, Olsiejko, O lszewski , Osiecki, Osowski, Ossowski, Ostrowicki, Otocki, Owicki, Owidzki, Peldowicz, Pełdowicz, Pietrasiewicz, Pietraszewicz, Piskorek, Piskorski, Podkowicz, Podymiński, Polichnowski, Proniewiczy, Pryzsiewiczim e Putradzimowski, Radziwiłłowicz, Radziwiłowicz, Reindl, Rodlinowicz, Rogoszewski, Roskowski, Roszkowski, Rościecki, Ruchladko, Rurawski, Rusieński, Rychalski, Rycharski, Rykacki, Rykaczewski ,. Skłotowski, Skonieczny, Skoszewski, Slucki, Słuszkiewicz, Służowiecki, Smarzykowski, Snowski, Sobiejuski, Sobierajski, Sobiński, Srebrowski, Srzeński, Starozębski, Starozrzębski , Szczerbiński, Szczutowski, Szczytowski, Szernel, Szornel, Szreński, Szyrma, Sz yszka, Szyszkowicz, Szyszło, Tochman, Tocki, Topiczewski, Truchelski, Trupelski, Trzciński, Turksiński, Uśuliściski, Uskiński, Turński, Turskiści, Uski, Uski, Uścliński, Uśuliściński, Uskiśiński, Uściściński, Uściściński, Uścliśski , Wermiński, Weyden, Wishkiolski, Weyden, Zaleski, Zeleski ,imsiecki, Destinationsiewski, Ząbieński, Żabieński, Żabiński, Żebrański, Żeleski, Świętochowski                 

Bernatowicz (Vol. 11 pp. 14-16)

Bell coat of arms (vol. 2 pp. 93-98)

Belina coat of arms . Belina's coat of arms consists of three white horseshoes with their backs to one another, so that one is on the right, the other on the left, the third below, on which the German sword has been smashed, twisted between the other two horseshoes, in a blue field. A golden hand over the helmet and the crown, stretched upwards, pointing to the right shield with a sword. Paprocki in the nest, fol. 603. About coats of arms, fol. Schmuck, Folk 108. Potocki put on the coat of arms of folklore 223. MS Patris Rutka Societatis Jesu There are many families in France and Great Britain who use three horseshoes in their coat of arms, but arranged in a different shape.  

Writing about the origins of this coat of arms, Długosz claims that, like all the other houses, the horseshoes they take from Jastrzębiec are also the Belinów: Paprocki testifies to him in the Nest of Virtues, where he says that he is Żelisław Jastrzębczyk from Bolesław the Bold on this occasion; for when this king started the war with Russia, and if where, then there is no fortune on the Martian square; luck was not in his favor. Żelisław, who was behind the cover that caused the dark night, cut off the enemy guard and struck the rest of the flooded Rus with a deeper sleep. For that the king, for a horseshoe that had no cross, which he then sealed, gave him two others and a short sword in place of the cross. And that Rus, terrified of his defeat, stayed in the fields between Perennial grew out of getting lost [p. 94] hid, went out where they were beaten; instead the name of the coat of arms that was given to Belina. He confirmed his opinion, and in the second book on coats of arms he confirmed it. Okolski followed him and others.         

But in a later book, which he called the garden, this opinion was not supported by any historian, says Paprocki fol. 179. that all Belins, both in Bohemia and Poland, have inherited their elements from Billy or Biła Tetka; it was, as he says there, the daughter of stage two of the Czech prince, the granddaughter of stage one, sister of Libussy, who after the death of her father so strongly accepted the rule of the Czech state that she dared to fit in mighty bear, so happy that and after defeating him, killed her too. They got their surname from the city of Belina, from which he had long inherited the title of Count of Belina. His former son Stomir entered the Czech state after his mother, but was thrown off by Hostywit by the Czech hetman, he rubbed someone else's land to Bavaria: there he hid for a long time, Stylfried called: but the Czechs who cling to theirs remembered his own master, called him back to the throne against Prince Bořivoj: but Stomir stayed there for a long time, because of his inability or forgetting the Slavic language he had to return to Bavaria, for the rich were initially regulated by gifts. It happened around 895. You can see it all in the Chronicle of the 1563 Czech Bielski edition. fol. 321.       

However, in another book, which he called Stromat, Paprocki brings another plot from Wacław Hagek to the Czech historian. Bila, the daughter of Biwog, Graf, Wappenschweinkopf, in the year 747. At the wedding, Kossal got three horseshoes, which were arranged so that they all stand upside down, two on top of each other, and the third below. From this son, Sukosław named the castle and the town of Belina he founded around 879 after her name, in memory of his mother. Their sons were five years old, the descendants of Prince Przemysław were waged by a long war. Stomir, the count of Belina, son of Sukoslaw, was placed in the Czech principality by mutual agreement against Bořivoj, the first Christian of the Czech monarchs. In spite of all of this, this novel is not founded in everything; and first in a hundred years, thirty-two, Sukoslaw grants his son Kossal what, or maybe everyone, will judge. Then Ms. Bogusław Balbinus Soc. Jesus in the Czech story with Chrystann proves that this Sukoslaw was not a father but a brother of Stomir, the count and heir in Belin, which is also useful, [p. 95] that when Sukoslaw or Suchoslaw rebelled against Bořivoj's father Hostywit, defeated and had to go into exile with his brother Stomir, whom he had drawn into this covenant with him; Stomir spent thirteen years in Bavaria. It was only when the Czechs swore against Bořivoj and deposed the hereditary throne that the summoned principality took over from them; But because he could not speak Slavic and showed himself to be an insecure Christian, had only been in the kingdom for nine months and had taken ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retreat to Bavaria. Jesus in the Czech story with Chrystann proves that this Sukoslaw was not a father, but a brother of the count and heir Stomir in Belin, where he is also useful, [p. 95] that when Sukoslaw or Suchoslaw rebelled against Bořivoj's father Hostywit, defeated and had to go into exile with his brother Stomir, whom he had drawn into this covenant with him; Stomir spent thirteen years in Bavaria. It was only when the Czechs swore against Bořivoj and threw the hereditary throne from them that the principality was convened by them; But that he did not speak Slavic and was proving himself to be an insecure Christian, sitting in the kingdom for barely nine months, taking ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retreat to Bavaria. Jesus in the Czech story with Chrystann proves that this Sukoslaw was not a father but a brother of Stomir, the count and heir in Belin, which is also useful, [p. 95] that when Sukoslaw or Suchoslaw rebelled against Bořivoj's father Hostywit, defeated and had to go into exile with his brother Stomir, whom he had drawn into this covenant with him; Stomir spent thirteen years in Bavaria. It was only when the Czechs swore against Bořivoj and deposed the hereditary throne that the summoned principality took over from them; But because he could not speak Slavic and showed himself to be an insecure Christian, had barely sat in the kingdom for nine months and had taken ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retire to Bavaria. 95] that when Sukoslaw or Suchoslaw rebelled against Bořivoj's father Hostywit, he was defeated and had to go into exile with his brother Stomir, whom he had drawn into this covenant with him; Stomir spent thirteen years in Bavaria. It was only when the Czechs swore against Bořivoj and threw the hereditary throne from them that the principality was appointed by them; But that he did not speak Slavic and was proving himself to be an insecure Christian, sitting in the kingdom for barely nine months, taking ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retreat to Bavaria. 95] that when Sukoslaw or Suchoslaw rebelled against Bořivoj's father Hostywit, he was defeated and had to go into exile with his brother Stomir, whom he had drawn into this covenant with him; Stomir spent thirteen years in Bavaria. It was only when the Czechs swore against Bořivoj and threw the hereditary throne from them that the principality was convened by them; But that he did not speak Slavic and was proving himself to be an insecure Christian, sitting in the kingdom for barely nine months, taking ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retreat to Bavaria. and from the heir they deposed the throne; the appointed principality took possession of them; but because he could not speak Slavic and showed himself to be an insecure Christian, had barely sat in the kingdom for nine months and had taken ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retire to Bavaria. and from the heir they deposed the throne; the appointed principality took possession of them; But that he did not speak Slavic and was proving himself to be an insecure Christian, sitting in the kingdom for barely nine months, taking ten talents of silver and three talents of gold with him, he had to retreat to Bavaria.                                   

However, such differences of opinion between historians were exacerbated by some circumstance; But the essence of the story is still there. My basis is that it is a Belins house, both in the Polish and Czech crowns, which I understand enough - it basically supports the Belins surname everywhere, as a local gem or variation in our coat of arms for theirs Merits. : the same opinion with me Balbinus g and Paprocki already better. After I have established this, I bring from Balbin, Hagek, Bielski and Chrystann to the authors cited here that the name of Belina is not from the herb Bylina, above the overgrown fields of the plantation, but from the financed city of Byliny in the Czech Republic. But the Jastrzębczyk of this coat of arms was not an ancestor either, because these historians openly show that even before Bolesław the Bold,    

It seems certain that the Belins, from the blood of the old Czech princes and monarchs, followed their mother (was she Bala, as it was said above, or Kassa, as she wills [page 96]. Balbinus Epitome histor. Bohem. Lib 1. in notis ad cap. 10.) to the daughter of Krok the second, Sister Libussy, the wife of Biwog, the son of Count Sudywoj, and when they were born later, some of them stayed with their home fortune in Bohemia, the others became the Czech princess Dąbrówka, the wife of Dąbrówka, Mieczysław of the Polish prince, the first Christian, was transferred to Poland. Years later, a year and a half in knightly works with us, they blossomed in unwavering fidelity. Later, when Bolesław Krzywousty fought, Moravia, and with their prince Swentopełk; Żelisław Belina stumbled so bravely that he overtook victories and a friendly soldier, and he dismissed the healthy chief. But on that occasion the advancing enemy was severely cut off arm to arm. What Bolesław rewarded him with other honors and prizes, sent his golden hand as a gift and up to three horseshoes, a broken sword attached to it, an armed arm with a raised sword, placed on Belina's helmet, and this appendix is ​​different from the coat of the coat of arms of the Belins in Bohemia, our Belina.      

Herbowni.

Belina, Borzymowski, Brzozowski, Czech Republic Hungarian, Wolski, Żeligowski.

Ancestors of this house.

First in the Czech Republic. Suchoslaw and Stomir, the counts in Belin, the descendants, one in the Bohemian kingdom, of their ancestors walked along the path. Including Prokop, the Count of Belin, the highest of Bretyslav's troops, Prince Hetman, against Henry III. To the Roman emperor and his general Othard, the prince of Saxony in 1040. But when the war luckily failed and the Germans stormed Bohemia, realizing that Bretysław, who was tainted with gold, had voluntarily let go of the enemy gold Procopius , first poking out the eyes, then the legs, hands and head should be cut off, he ordered the corpse to be drowned in the river near Belin. Aeneas [p. 97] Silvius apud Balbin. lib. 3. c. 5. Since then, says Paprocki in Stromat, the Belins of the Counties of Counties in the Czech Republic have given up their fortune, a very thin fortune. Against King Matthias, one of them for the whole army, Hetmanil. Cureus in Paproc. whose descendants of the Żeleńskis from Sebużna wrote. It was from these that Krzysztof Żeleński from Sebużyn came to Rudolf the emperor of his second name, such an appreciation that he entrusted him with the highest seal of the Bohemian kingdom: his coat of arms: three horseshoes on the chest of a black eagle but without a sword and half a black eagle on the helmet. The Pruszkowskis come from these ancestors in the Czech Republic, now in Silesia and Morawa. Balbinus lib. 3. cap. 5. At the time of this author it was in Bolesław on the grave of St. Wenceslas, (where his body was first laid), dense stone tombstones on which three horseshoes have been carved, but now some places are removed, the others damaged by antiquity, whence this author comes from that the Belins must have served this place great blessing . I do not know whether Count Belina is not one of them, a man of moderation and prudence, the husband of the Paris Senate and of the whole city with this dignity; that, according to common sense of all classes, the city's presidium was entrusted to him during the storm of 1594, when heresy was prevalent in France. Sondanus cat. Num. 7th and 9th and 1596. Annalium Ecclesiast. Number 11.                      

The second descendants of Suchosława and Stomir, who moved to Poland, brought with them the title of Count of Belina. Paprocki in stream. Balbinus lib., 3rd century 5. They installed Zelisław on behalf of Bolesław the Bold in 1064 of the former. lost his right hand on the occasion of Swentoełk, as was said above: he was rewarded with a golden krzywousty, which was anything more expensive than gold, which had a Polish fortune. He was a man of great vitality, wit, agile industry, great strength, his face breathed in Mars, symmetry of the body to gravity, experienced in a military expedition, and what is admirable about him after he had laid another hand he kept one and a rich harvest, the strength of a slave brought to the king in 1103. Bielski fol. 94. Starowolski in Bellat. Sarmatian. He died in 1120 as castellan of Krakow. Paprocki read Belina Bolesław in 1149 with various privileges. Jarosław of the year 1199 was divided among several sons of this Borysław (of whom different surnames of the Belins are shared on [Page 98]).        

Belina Borysław, Archbishop of Gniezno. Accepting him into the Nałęcz family attracts him, but like most authors, I believe that this is where he belongs. For important virtues that stood out in him, as a measure of passion, piety, ship, reason, seriousness, by the archdeacon of Posen and the canon of Gniezno, according to Jakub Świnka, on this chapter from the chapter. Our writers disagree on this point: Because Długosz says he was elected in 1304, he died in 1306. Janicius Paprocki and Okolski determined his election in 1307 and his death in 1311. The same goes for the Bielski folklore about his descent. 213. Nakielski in Miechów fol. 237. Damalewicz and in Archiep. Gnes. Admission to the archbishopric under 1314 means that his ancestor was still alive in 1313, as can be seen from his letter from Damalewicz: from where all these historians about Borysław collapse. The disagreements of the cardinals on the side of the choice of the successor to the chair of Peter delayed the confirmation of Belina until John the twenty-second, or better the twenty-first, of whom he confirmed the interests of the first homeland with the Teutonic Order before the Pope. The case that his predecessor was with the Bishop of Chełmno, that he joined Archbishop Riga after parting with Gnieźnieński, won and ended happily. More for the common good and for her diocese, which she contemplated, she found her death in the second year after her consecration in Avignon: there in the Church of the Fathers. Dominicans buried. from which he confirmed the interests of the first homeland with the Teutonic Order before the Pope. The case that his predecessor was with the Bishop of Chełmno, that he separated from Gniezno, he attached himself to the Archbishop of Riga, won and ended happily. More for the common good and for her diocese, which she contemplated, she found her death in the second year after her consecration in Avignon: there in the Church of the Fathers. Dominicans buried. from which he confirmed the interests of the first homeland with the Teutonic Order before the Pope. The case that his predecessor was with the Bishop of Chełmno, that he joined Archbishop Riga after separating from Gniezno, won and ended happily. More for the common good and for the thinking of her diocese about death, she found death in Avignon, the second year after her consecration: there in the Church of the Fathers. Dominicans buried.                    

Today there are also some named by the old Belins in Mazovia and Podgórze, and there are also Belins from Leszczyno in Cracow, but I will speak to the Leszczyński family about them in my place. But I cannot leave Belina here, who was shot in the arm with the others in the attack near Pleszków on foot. Paprocki for the coat of arms. fol. -405. Piotr, also Belina, a bachelor of S. Sepulchri, with Mikołaj Radziwiłł Sierotka, named after him, visited Palestine.     

Dołęga Coat of Arms (vol. 3 pp. 362-365)

Coat of arms of Dołęga. A white horseshoe should stand shoulder to shoulder, and the gate should be exposed, with a gold cross on top and in the middle, in [p. 363] in the middle of the horseshoe a white arrow or a bolt, with an iron edge pointing downwards, in a blue field, a vulture's wing in the helmet and an arrow with an iron, twisted right iron, they write about it, Biel fol. 314. Papro. Foil slot. 1007th and 1180th About the coat of arms. fol. 308. Approx. Fol. 150 vol. 1. He was a friend of MS. The authors say that he was born in Poland: because when Bolesław Krzywousty fought against the Prussians, the knight named Dołęga, from the Pobóg coat of arms, at the side of an ambush, the leader of the Prussian army, hit him so well with a crossbow who knocked him off his horse and delivered him from life; terrified his people, and then it became more likely that they would be hit by the Polish saber. For this favor of the king on his home coat of arms, he put an arrow in the appendage, and the coat of arms was named after his name Dolęgan. It seems to me that this coat of arms is older than the time of Bolesław Krzywousta: during his reign, family members sat in the Senate during his reign. Some say that the Niezgoda coat of arms originated in Dołęga.                

Aleksander, the bishop of Płock, the tithe who did not fight for this miter, elected as he was, and science and piety enabled him to enter in 1129. He was ordained and confirmed by Jakub, the Archbishop of Gniezno, everything was done so that some customs might be corrupted, he made a better club, heavier against those who were far away, and after admonition, of recovery; graciously he sat on this cathedral for twenty-seven years, withdrawing from life and from it; the first to knock down a wooden cathedral began to build out of the wall. Lubien. Vitae Episc. Płr oc.    

Arnold, the bishop of Pozna, elected to this dignity by the canons of Pozna and Gniezno in 1177, consecrated by Piotr, the archbishop of Gniezno, although he was naturally devoted to hell, but ruled it with reason, the monastery of the fathers. Cystercjensów in Lubień, the village of Koszęcin, the eternal [p. 364] donated and donated; benevolent to all other servants of God. He ruled this diocese for nine years and died of dysentery in 1186; Długos is buried in the Poznan Cathedral. in Vitis Episc. Evil.