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Polish Heraldry





HISTORY


The history of Polish heraldry is an integral part of the history of the Szlachta , the Polish Nobility .
Unlike in Western Europe, the Polish szlachta did not emerge from the class of Knights under Chivalry , but rather from a Slavic class of Free Warriors or Mercenaries . These were often hired by Princes to form guard units ( Polish ''Drużyna'') and were eventually paid in land.

Only a small number of szlachta families or clans ( system. Most Szlachta , since at least the 12th Century , were not related and their unions were mostly voluntary and based on Followership and Brotherhood rather than Kinship .
Since Poland emerged almost at once as a relatively unified Duchy in the 10th Century , it was the Prince or, later, the King who was considered the patron of all the Clan s. He granted privileges and land to clan members rather than to clans as such and was allowed to assign new Knight s to the clans of his choice, in theory... As a result a stable system of strong and wealthy groups of relatives never developed in Poland, as in Scotland. The Polish clans, perhaps, were much more like the Norse Clan s. So they were much more unstable than their western counterparts.

Heraldic symbols began to be used in Poland in the 13th Century . The generic Polish term for a coat of arms, herb, dates from the early 15th Century , originating as a translation of the Czech ''erb'', which in turn came from German ''Erbe'' - ''heritage''.

Under the Union Of Horodlo (1413) the noble families of the Grand Duchy Of Lithuania , such as the Mielzynski s, were adopted '' en masse ''into the Polish noble clans and began to use Polish coats of arms.


PECULIARITIES


Although the Polish heraldic system evolved under the influence of French and German heraldry, there are many notable differences.

The most striking peculiarity of the system is that a coat of arms does not belong to a single family. A number of unrelated families (sometimes hundreds of them), usually with a number of different family names, may use a coat of arms, and '''each coat of arms has its own name'''. The total number of coats of arms in this system was relatively low – ca. 200 in the late Middle Ages.
One side-effect of this unique arrangement was that it became customary to refer to noblemen by both their family name and their coat of arms/clan name. For example: Jan Zamoyski herbu Jelita means '' Jan Zamoyski of the Jelita coat of arms '' (though it is often translated as '' ...of the clan Jelita '').
From 15th to 17th centuries, the formula seems to copy the ancient (nazwisko złożone).
Later, the double-barrelled name will be joined with a hyphen: ''Jan Jelita-Zamoyski''. {Link without Title}

A single coat of arms could appear in slightly different versions, typically in different colours, depending on the custom of the family using it. Such versions ('' odmiany '') are still considered to represent the same coat of arms.

One of the most visually striking characteristics of Polish heraldry is the abundance of Gules fields. Among the oldest Coats Of Arms in Poland, nearly half use a red background, with blue ( Azure ) coming in a distant second. Nowhere else in Europe, shows such a strong bias towards a particular color scheme.

Other typical features used in Polish heraldry include horseshoes, arrows, Maltese crosses, scythes, stars and crescents. There are also many purely geometrical shapes for which a separate set of heraldic terms was invented. It has been suggested that originally all Polish coats of arms were based on such abstract geometrical shapes, but most were gradually "rationalized" into horseshoes, arrows and so on. If this hypothesis is correct, it suggests in turn that Polish heraldry, again unlike western European heraldry, may be at least partly derived from a kind of or the Avars , to mark property. However, the evidence about the origins of the system is scanty, and this hypothesis has been criticized as being part of the Polish noble tradition of romanticizing their supposed Sarmatian ancestry. On this matter, research and controversy continue.

A Polish coat of arms consists of: Shield , Crest , Helm and Crown . The 18th and 19th centuries fashion includes the Mantling .
Supporters , Mottos and Compartments normally do not appear, although certain individuals used them, especially in the final stages of the system's development, partly in response to French and German influence.


Shield


Polish coats of arms are divided in the same way as their Western Counterparts . However, since coats of arms were originally granted to clans rather than to separate families, there was no need to join coats of arms into one when a new branch of a family was formed. Thus Polish Escutcheon s are rarely parted.




The tradition of differentiating between the Coat Of Arms proper and a Lozenge granted to women did not develop in Poland. Usually men inherited a coat of arms from their fathers (or a member of a clan who had adopted them), while women either inherited a coat from their mothers or adopted the arms of their husbands. The Brisure was rarely used.

Heart-shaped shields were mostly used in representations of the coats of arms of royalty. Following the union between Poland and Lithuania, and the creation of the elective monarchy, it became customary to place the coats of Poland and Lithuania diagonally, with the coat of arms of the specific Monarch placed centrally on top.


Tinctures


In addition to these seven basic tinctures, which were standard in English heraldry and elsewhere in western Europe, many more tinctures were used in Poland and (after the union with Poland) Lithuania, including grey, steel, brunatre, weasel and carnation.


BIBLIOGRAPHY AND LISTINGS OF COATS OF ARMS


Traditionally coats of arms were published in various listings of Szlachta and in Armorial s, known in Polish as ''herbarz''. Some of the most notable among such publications are:

# Bartosz Paprocki , ''Gniazdo cnoty''. Kraków , 1578 .
# Bartosz Paprocki, ''Herby rycerstwa polskiego''; Kraków, 1584 (II ed. Kraków, 1858 ).
# Szymon Okolski , ''Orbis Polonus''; V. 1-3. Kraków, 1641-1643 .
# Wacław Potocki , ''Poczet herbów szlachty Korony Polskiey i Wielkiego Xsięstwa Litewskiego''; Krakow, 1696 .
# rev. Kacper Niesiecki , ''Herby i familie rycerskie tak w Koronie jako y w W.X.L.''; Lwów , 1728 .
# rev. Kacper Niesiecki, ''Korona polska''; Lwów, 17281743 .
# rev. Benedykt Chmielowski , ''Zbiór krótki herbów polskich, oraz wsławionych cnotą i naukami Polaków''; Warsaw , 1763 .
# rev Kasper Niesiecki, ''Herbarz Polski''; Leipzig , 1839 - 1846 .
# Teodor Żychliński , ''Złota księga szlachty polskiej''; Poznań , 1879 - 1908
# Adam Boniecki , ''Herbarz polski''; Warsaw , 1899 - 1913 .
# hr. Jerzy Dunin-Borkowski , ''Almanach błękitny. Genealogia żyjących rodów polskich''; Lwów , 1908 .
# Edward Borowski , ''Genealogie niektórych polskich rodzin utytułowanych''; Buenos Aires - Paris , 1964 .
# Sławomir Górzyński , Jerzy Kochanowski ''Herby szlachty polskiej''; Warsaw , 1990
# Alfred Znamierowski ''Insygnia, symbole i herby polskie''; Warsaw , 2003


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FURTHER READING

  • Tadeusz Gajl , "Herby szlacheckie Rzeczypospolitej Obojga Narodow", Gdansk, 2003



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