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The following items are a direct translation from the
classical genealogical and heraldic reference "Herbarz Polski" by
Kasper Niesiecki, S.J., Lipsk (Leipzig) edition, 1839-1846.
D
DABROWA HERB
The blazon, or verbal description, of the Dabrowa clan
shield for the surname of Kostka is given below in the authentic heraldic
style, then, followed by a translation from the Polish description:
"Arms: azure, between two crosses pated
fitchee or, a horseshoe argent, the heels in base, surmounted of another
cross pated of the second; issuant of a helmet befitting his degree, mantled
of his liveries, whereon is set for a crest: upon a ducal coronet a vol
sable pierced by an arrow fessways, argent, flighted or, the point to
sinister." On a field of blue between two
ancient crosses pointed at the bottom stands a silver horseshoe, with
still another golden cross at its top. On a helmet and crown is a vulture
wing black in color, pierced by a silver arrow with golden feathers in
an angular position pointing to the left. (In heraldry, the right
and left sides of a shield are identified from the standpoint of the bearer,
i. e., the one who is holding the shield. His right would be your left
and vice versa).
The tinctures/metals (colors) in heraldry are as follows: or
= gold; argent = silver; azure = blue; sable =
black.
Mantle liveries: are the colorful swirls eminating from behind the shield
and helmet, as in this case azure and argent (blue and silver).
The Polish blazon is as follows: "w polu blekitnem podkowa biala
polerowana, krzyz na niej zlocisty, a drugie takiez dwa po koncach, barkiem
do gory podniesiona stoi, koncami nadól, na helmie skrzydlo sepie, a przez
nie strzala, z dolu ku górze przelatujaca. "
Niesiecki cites the following sources: Bielski fol. 173, Paprocki in Gniazdo
cnoty, fol. 1104 and 1159, 0 herbach fol. 329 and fol. 662,
Okolski Orbis Polonus, vol. 1 fol. 128, Klejnoty fol.
45,
History of the Dabrowa clan arms and ancestry
I will cite here what Rev. Duryewski says on the origin of these arms
in Niezeszla Pamiatka Kostkow, page 3. The ancestor of this family,
according to Paprocki, was a native-born Pole of that family whose coat
of arms was a horseshoe and on it an elevated cross, which we call Poboze
(as Kromer gives it, vol. 1) or (as in the Statutes of Laski,
page 127) Pobodze, now more commonly known as Pobog.
The author of the first history of Prussian Poland asserts in his manuscripts
that the first ancestor of the Dabrowa clan was a foreign knight who,
when the Christian armies made an expedition in 1096 to recover Jerusalem
and with it the grave of Christ, had accompanied Godfrey of Boullion to
the holy war and dispatched before him a legation to King Boleslaw Krzywousty
of Poland to ask for free passage through his kingdom to Carogrod. When
this ancestor distinguished himself by his courage at Jerusalem, Godfrey,
who had been elevated to the Kingship of Jerusalem, bestowed on him a
new coat of arms, a rendition of Calvary that is, the hill of Our Lord's
death with three crosses, which we call Dabrowa. Returning from
Palestine through our country of Poland, he settled here and propagated
his family. (Histor. Polon. Pruth. Posselii in Coll. Premisl. S. I,
fol. 56.) Konopatski's manuscripts give something similar to this,
with the addition that two brothers from Lotharingia mounted an expedition
to Palestine with several hundred men in 1104 and describes these adornments
earned there by bravery. This story, however, appears to be more fiction
than fact. Firstly, it does not cite any more ancient authors; furthermore,
it does not agree with established history in several matters, among them:
it makes Krzywousty the monarch of Poland in 1096, whereas he did not
ascend to the throne of Poland till 1102; and the arms themselves of this
house show that its author was a member of the Pobogs who added to his
ancestral arms only two lateral crosses. There is also little resemblance
between a horsehoe and Calvary; and the name of these arms, Dabrowa, clearly
demands that it originated in a Slavic language, not a foreign one; and
supposedly this Pobog took these arms out of piety, to the credit of his
relatives, and the occasion of their origin was as follows. A large force
of enemies attacked Polish territory and ravaged it with customary cruelty;
to repel the sudden attack, the Polish nobles and knights of several counties
assembled swiftly, but they could not match their foes in force and numbers;
their leader, wishing to conceal the meagerness of his forces, arrayed
them at Dabrowa or an oak grove [in Polish, a dabrowa] and awaited
a suitable occasion for battle. The foe called this delay cowardice and
scoffed at them. One of the brave men, a member of the Pobog clan, could
not bear this disgrace, and urging his horse forward he attacked the foe
so mightily that he broke their ranks and tore through their detachments,
killing many of them on the spot; the others, seeing this, dashed to his
aid and, behind this one whose heart and fortune had made it possible,
they routed the enemy. Then in memory of this deed of valor, and supposedly
for having fought his way through two detachments of these enemies of
the Holy Cross, he added two lateral crosses to his ancestral coat of
arms. As for the crest on the helmet, however, I understand that it was
acquired by augmentation on another occasion; I do not know, but it might
have come from an extraordinary archer's having shot down a vulture flying
over the army. This was taken as a good sign, for otherwise the ancients
did not take vultures flying over the army as a good omen, believing that
this bird which feeds on corpses could foresee defeat and would head for
wherever more corpses would fall, as Horus Apollo writes - but
about this wing the historians say nothing. What is certain from them
is that the name and the coat of arms Dabrowa came from the Dabrowa
by which our army stood; some also call it Dabowa, but this is
supposedly a printer's error from omission of the letter "r".
Some eulogizers were of the understanding that this first ancestor of
the Dabrowa clan about whom we have been speaking was the renowned Mazovian
wojewoda Przybyslaw z Rostkowa. For me this tidings are groundless, about
which more later. The more ancient authors who mention this give neither
the names of this knight and of the enemies defeated by his example, nor
the year in which this happened, nor the place at which this victory was
accomplished. I would take it as having happened in Mazovia, or on the
border of that province, inasmuch as his descendants had their seat in
Mazovia province since ancient times. I conclude also that the foe was
from those regions adjacent to the Duchy of Mazovia to the north or to
the east, that is, either the Jadzwings, the Podlasians, the Lithuanians,
or the old Prussians, all at that time enemies of the Poles. As for what
I read in the manuscripts of Rev. Rutka, that they were Teutonic Knights,
the cavalry order of the German nation settled in Prussia, that does not
work. For the family of the Dabrowa clan unquestionably appeared in Mazovia
well before the Teutonic Knights in Prussia, for the latter, according
to Treter in 1225, Dusbruchiusz in 1226, and Dlugosz in 1230, were summoned
to those regions by the Mazovian prince Conrad; while the Dabrowa clan,
already well propagated, were holding the first offices of the Mazovian
senate in a creditable manner, as for instance Boguta z Rostkowa,- Mazovian
wojewoda in 1232. Przybyslaw z Rostkowa occupied the same seat
in 1246. Furthermore, it is clear from the annals of Poland that at this
time the Teutonic Knights, having taken benefices within recent memory,
had no quarrel with the Poles, their founders and benefactors; they had
already quarreled with the Pomeranians, but not yet being great in numbers,
they fought, mostly with Polish reinforcements, against the pagan Prussians,
and only began to fight with us after 1300. I also regard as certain that
this family of the Dabrowas had their origins not in the days of King
Wladyslaw Lokietek, but supposedly before his grandfather, the Mazovian
prince Conrad. It is difficult to establish the time, however, although
it can be confirmed that it was perhaps around 1100, as before 1041 the
Pobozans were noted for their good counsel and dignity (Bielski fol.
70), of whom one sent a legation for Kazimierz I. Some have stated
in print that one of the Dabrowa clan, the third from the first author
of this family, accepted holy Baptism in 965 with Mieczyslaw, the first
Christian among the Polish princes, but I take that to refer to a Jastrzebczyk.
I noted Marcin of arms Dabrowa, Mazovian wojewoda in 1937, among
the senators of that province.
Bearers of these arms:
| Budzynski |
Jarzebinski |
Mlodzianowski |
| Chociwski |
Karas |
Morawski |
| Ciechanowiecki |
Karniewski |
Napierski |
| Dabrowski |
Kiszka |
Plodownicki |
| Garlinski |
Koc |
Porzecki |
| Glodowski |
Kostka |
Rostkowski |
| Jablonski |
Laskowski |
Secyminski |
| Jakimowicz |
Lauxmin |
Sierzputowski |
| Januszewski |
Los |
Zgierski |
Kuropatnicki and others also ascribe these arms to these families: Boguta,
Lepkowski, Podolec, Smolechowski, Wdzienk, Dabrowa, Mikoszewski, Siemienski,
Talko, Zelkowski.
Translated by Leonard J. Suligowski; first appeared
in the May 1993 issue of "Rodziny, The Journal of the Polish
Genealogical Society of America".

DROGOSL~AW
ARMS
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Arms: Gules,
upon a demi annulet an arrow in pale, point to chief both Argent.
Out of a crest coronet, a panache of five ostrich plumes proper.
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Arms: Gules, upon
a demi annulet an arrow in pale, point to chief both Argent. Out of a
crest coronet, a panache of five ostrich plumes proper.
This shield is very similar to that of Ogonczyk, The
field is red, and there is a half or demi ring of white (silver), although
Paprocki, in his work O herbach [On Clan shields], could not really
resolve the dilemma as to whether this was a half of a ring, or a crescent
moon, or just a half circle. Upon it is seen an arrow, point upward. Some
families have the field of this shield blue in color, with five ostrich
plumes on the helmet, while others have only three ostrich plumes. Some,
such as the author Kojalowicz in his manuscript, describe it as an arm
in armor with a sword issuing from a wall. See Bielski, pages 217 and
584; Paprocki in Gniazdo cnoty [Cradle of virtue] on page 1, 116,
and in O herbach [Of Clan shields] on page 587; Okolski, volume
1, page 175. The arrow on this shield is supposed to be vertical, with
the arrowhead pointing to the top of the shield.
All authors agree that this shield was brought to Poland
from Silesia. In his manuscript Fr. Rutka adds that this took place in
the year 1333, during the reign of King Kazimierz the Great. Okolski surmises
that the occasion on which these arms were granted to an ancestor of the
house was as follows: the enemy had encircled the army and enclosed it
in a ring, when this ancestor, gathering his courage, used his sword to
open a path and broke through the circle. A Drogoslaw is the first we
know of with these arms, and they took their name from him.
Families with these Arms:
| Bartoszewski |
Gorzycki |
Tolwinski |
| Bukowiecki |
Herstopski |
Truszkowie |
| Czaplinski |
Rdultowski |
Wieckowski |
| Dabrowski |
Srzemski |
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I did not write of the Bartoszewskis in volume one, as
no other authors made mention of them as using this clan shield, except
for Kojalowicz in his manuscript. On the tombstone of Stanislaw Czieniowski
I saw this clan sign in first position, with Ostoja second and Roza third.
[Translator’s Note: According to the illustrations in Chrzanski’s
Tablice Odmian Herbowych (List of Clan Variants), under the surname “Buchowiecki” a
variation of this shield is displayed as a gold crescent moon reversed,
on which stands a vertical arrow, but no crest is displayed. This is
one of five different variations of this shield].
Translated by Leonard J. Suligowski; first appeared
in the Fall/Winter 2000 issue of "White Eagle, The Journal
of the Polish Nobility Association Foundation".

DRZEWICA
ARMS
There is supposed to be a gold crescent moon with the points
upward, as also appears in the Leliwa arms; there is a single star between
the upturned horns of the moon, as well as a second star under the moon,
on a blue field; on the helm are five ostrich feathers, but some show
only three. (Paprocki in Gniazdo cnoty, pg. 1074; 0 herbach,
p. 573; Okolski, vol. 1, page 188; the manuscripts of Rev. Kojalowski).
Paprocki derives the origins of this clan sign in Gniazdo: when
a man named Prokop from Drzewica brought Leszek the Black the news that
the Poles had chosen him as their monarch, Prokop received this clan sign
in addition to other gifts. Others would have it that to Prokop's original
arms, in which he bore a single star, the moon and second star were added.
But a later book on arms tells that these were acquired on another occasion.
A certain foreigner named Arkadyusz was performing military service in
the forces of the prince of Sieradz, descended from the Piast line. The
Lithuanians invaded those parts and were laying waste everything with
fire and sword. Sent out with an advance party, he soon found that the
Lithuanians had camped without guard, and gathering the forces entrusted
to him, he attacked the pagans' advance guard and succeeded in overwhelming
them. Having thus acquitted himself well against the Lithuanians, who
were weighed down by their loot, he informed the following Polish forces
as quickly as possible that they should come on: so they attacked, and
many Lithuanians were killed. In commemoration of this deed for the ages
Arkadyusz received the coat of arms as arranged here. And since this battle
won by our forces was near the village of Drzewica, the arms were called
Drzewica, too. A Drzewicki of these same arms Drzewica, a doctor of Holy
Theology of the Benedictine order, was prior at Holy Cross on the hill
near Sandomierz.
Other families using these arms:
| Drzewiecki |
Mikulowski |
Sierzchowski |
| Jez~ |
Mniszkowski |
Stokowski |
| Kadlubowski |
Poplawski |
Zajaczkowski |
| Lugowski |
Protaszewicz |
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Translated by Leonard J. Suligowski; first appeared in the
November 1993 issue of "Rodziny, The Journal of the Polish
Genealogical Society of America".

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