Łuk coat of arms
Łuk | |
---|---|
Battle cry: {{{battlecry}}} | |
Details | |
Alternative names | - |
Earliest mention | 1500s |
Towns | none |
Families | Assanowicz, Bajraszewicz, Bajraszewski, Bałakir, Bohdziewicz, Bohusz, Borysowski, Brzumiński, Bublik, Burczymucha, Choromowicz, Chorumowicz, Czyczud, Dargiewicz, Derewiński, Eggert, Egort, Ejdziatowicz, Eydziatowicz, Gułak, Halecki, Halkiewicz, Hulkiewicz, Jakowlewicz, Jakóbowicz, Kamiński, Kierszański, Knichycki, Kosanowski, Kosarski, Kosarzewski, Kosicki, Kozarewski, Kozarzewski, Krukowicz, Kuleśnicki, Łuk, Łukasiewicz, Łukaszewicz, Łukaszowicz, Murzicz, Murzycz, Narkiewicz, Ołyk, Ołyka, Paluszkiewicz, Paszczyc, Paszyc, Piskarzewski, Pluszkiewicz, Podwiński, Przedżymirski, Przewalski, Radzinowicz, Rawena, Reniger, Rodziewicz, Saffarewicz, Snitowski, Śnitowski, Sulejmanowicz, Sulimanowicz, Szabłowski, Szczucki, Szehidewicz, Szułowski, Tatarowicz, Tur, Waliński, Zabołocki |
Łuk (Polish for "Bow") is a Polish coat of arms. It was used by several szlachta (noble) families under the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Notable bearers
Notable bearers of this coat of arms have included:
See also
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, June 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.