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Sas coat of arms

Sas[1] or Szász[2] (origin: Slavic for "Saxon", Polish: Sas, Hungarian: Szász, Romanian: Saș, Ukrainian: Сас) is a Central European coat of arms. It was borne since the medieval period by several Transylvanian-Saxon Hungarian, Ruthenian, Ukrainian,[3] and Polish-Lithuanian noble families.[1][2][4][5][6][7][8][9] The house was once a mighty princely and ducal house with origins in Saxony, Transylvania, Hungary and Ruthenia.[1][2][5][6][7][8]

Sas (Saxon) coat of arms
Versions
Gules tincture variation (in Orbis Polonus 1641–43). Referred to as Sas II in Siebmacher's Armorial Book[1]
Adoptedca. 13th century
Blazongold (Or) crescent with its horns pointed upwards; on each horn a gold (Or) star. In its center a gold (Or) or silver (Argent) arrow pointed upwards.

History

Ancient Polish-Lithuanian historians like Szymon Okolski say that the origin of these arms is derived from Saxony, where during the mid-12th century King Géza II of Hungary invited Germanic peoples of Saxony to settle in, establish trading centres and defend relatively sparsely populated Transylvania in the Kingdom of Hungary, upon which the Transylvanian Saxons were later given a privileged status in the "Diploma Andreanum" (Golden Charter of Transylvanian Saxons) issued by King Andrew II of Hungary[4][6][10][11] (see Transylvanian Saxons).

The origins of the dynastic House of Sas[12] or Szász vary depending on the source. According to the chronicles of Albertus Strepa;[6] the outstanding military leader Comes Huyd of Hungary (a Transylvanian-Saxon), entered Galicia in 1236 with his mighty army of allied mounted warrior knights to the service of Daniel of Galicia King of Ruthenia, and each was rewarded with lands in Red Ruthenia that Huyd and his allied noble knights settled, being referred to as the Sas/Szász (Saxon) due to their Transylvanian Saxon dialect and origin.[5][6][9][10]

According to the chronicles of Wojciech Strepa;[4] Comes Huyd [Hujd] of Hungary, having come with his mighty army of allied mounted warrior knights to the service of Lev I of Galicia (1269–1301) the son of Daniel of Galicia King of Ruthenia, and having allied himself with Lithuania, drove the Eastern barbarians out of Mazovia. In reward for his knightly deeds, he was given, among other gifts, Lev's widowed sister-in-law N.N. of Galicia Princess of Kholm as a wife (the widow of Lev's brother Shvarn Daniilovich,[13] sister of Vaišvilkas, daughter of King Mindaugas of Lithuania from the House of Mindaugas)[14] and along with his allied knights lands in the territory of Red Ruthenia that they settled.[4][10]

Count Huyd, who bore on his coat of arms the blue (azure) escutcheon with the gold (or) crescent, gold stars and gold arrow, and the knights who allied under his battle banner, are said to have been the progenitors of the House of Sas (Szász).[4][9][10][15]

 
Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary medieval ducat (Magyar aranyforint) gold coin struck in 1491 by the Baia Mare (Nagybánya) mint house in Transylvania. Reverse shows a crowned and nimbate standing figure of Saint Ladislaus I King of Hungary holding a horseman's battle axe and globus cruciger above the below mint mark "n" and mint house (mint master) shield Sas coat of arms of Bartolomeu Drágfi de Beltiug.

Early origins also point to the Hungarian Transylvanian-Saxon Voivodes Dragoş I de Bedeu (Bedő) voivode of Maramureș Prince of Moldavia[16] and his successor son Sas de Beltiug (Hungarian Szász de Béltek) Prince of Moldavia,[7][8][17] who bore the blue (azure) escutcheon with the gold crescent, gold stars and gold arrow on their coat of arms.[7][8] Other notable scions of Dragoş I were Bartolomeu Drágfi of Beltiug (Béltek), Comes Perpetuus of Middle Szolnok (1479–1488), Voivode of Transylvania and Comes of the Székely people (1493–1499),[17] who had distinguished himself earlier as a royal knight of the Hungarian Royal Court defeating the Ottoman Turks at the Battle of Breadfield (1479) together with Pál Kinizsi, István Báthory, Vuk Branković and Basarab Laiotă cel Bătrân.[18][19][20] At the time of King Matthias Corvinus' death, Bartholomew Drágfi of Beltiug (Béltek) was among the wealthiest landowners of the country, three castles, two manor houses, eight market towns and about 200 villages were in his property.[17] His estates in Middle Szolnok and Satu Mare included the castles of Chioar and Ardud together with the large lordships surrounding them, and further, the castles of Șoimi and the castellum of Ceheiu.[17] Another important family member, among others, was Ioan Drágfi of Beltiug (Béltek) Comes of Temes County in 1525, who died 1526 in the Battle of Mohács.[18][19][20]

Written descriptions of the Sas/Szász coat of arms in classical heraldic references, such as in "Herby rycerstwa polskiego" (1584), "Korona Polska/Herbarz Polski" (1728–1846) and Siebmacher's armorial book on the Hungarian and Transylvanian nobility, describe the arms in blue (azure) tincture, as borne by the families Drágfi (Hungarian patronym for "son of Drag") of Beltiug (Béltek) scions of Dragoş I of Bedeu, Jan Daniłowicz herbu Sas, Dziedoszycki (Dzieduszycki) h. Sas and Berlicz-Strutynskių (Strutyński) h. Sas.[1][2][4][5][7][8][9][12] Some families, however, bear this coat of arms on a red (gules) tincture field, in "Orbis Polonus" (1641–43) the Sas clan arms is described as being of "sanguineus" Latin for "blood red" tincture,[6] such as borne by the Counts Komarnicki herbu Sas family in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria.

Blazon

 
Sas coat of arms on the central facade of Uruski Palace, Warsaw, which now forms the University of Warsaw.

In 1843 the former palace became the property of Count Seweryn Uruski herbu Sas (1817–1890),[12] marshal of the nobility of Warsaw Province, privy counselor of the Imperial Court and president of the College of Arms of the Polish Kingdom, who demolished the former palace and commissioned architect Andrzej Gołoński to design and raise a new palace in its place with Renaissance architecture. The sculptor Ludwika Kaufman was commissioned to carve the Sas coat of arms in reverence of the great progenitors of the Sas (Saxon) house. After the death of Seweryn Uruski in 1890 the palace became the property of his wife Countess Ermancja Tyzenhauz h. Bawół, then his youngest surviving issue Countess Maria Uruska h. Sas (1860–1931) who married Vladimir Światopełk-Czetwertyński.

Burned during World War II by the occupying German forces in the Warsaw uprising, the palace remained in the ownership of the Światopełk-Czetwertyński family until 1947, then passed into the possession of the University of Warsaw. During the years 1948–1951 the palace was restored by the architect Jan Dąbrowski. Today it houses the Department of Geography and Regional Studies.

Other blazon images

Bearers, family members of the House of Sas

The following family names are listed in the classical genealogical and heraldic reference "Korona Polska/Herbarz Polski (Crown of Poland/Polish Armorial) 1728–1846" authored by heraldist Kasper Niesiecki:[4] Baczyński, Bandrowski, Baraniecki, Bereznicki, Biliński, Błazowski, Bojarski, Bratkowski, Bryliński, Brześciański, Buchowski, Chodakowski, Czołhański, Czolowski/Czolowscy, Daniłowicz, Długopolski, Dobrzański, Dubrawski, Dziedoszycki, Dziedziel, Hoszowski, Hrebnicki, Huhernicki, Jamiński, Jasiński, Jaworski, Kłodnicki, Komarnicki, Kropiwnicki, Kruszelnicki, Kulczycki, Lityński, Łucki, Mańczak, Manesterski, Matkowski, Mikulski, Mściszewski, Nowosielski, Odrzechowski, Orłowski, Podwysocki, Raszkowski, Rosźniatowski, Rudnicki, Siemiasz, Skotnicki, Strutyński, Strzelbicki, Sulatycki, Świstelnicki, Tarnawski, Tatomir, Terlecki, Tesmer, Tyssarowski, Uniatycki, Winnicki, Wisłocki, Witwicki, Wołkowicki, Wołosiecki, Woryski, Wysoczanski (Wytag z metryk Stanow Krol.Galic i Lodom.) , Zapłatyński, Zawisza, Zeliborski, Zesteliński, Zurakowski, Żukotyński.[4]

According to addendum added to "Herbarz Polski" by the 19th-century editor and publisher Bobrowicz,[4] other authors, like Duńczewski, Kuropatnicki, Małachowski, Wielądek, assign the Sas coat of arms to the following noble families:"[4] Brzuski, Charewicz, Husarzewski, Kumarnicki, Nechrebecki, Obertynski, Olewnicki, Pochorecki, Popiel, Sasimowski, Sasowski, Tyzdrowski.[4][9] Bearers mentioned in other sources include: Uruski[12] and Knihinicki[citation needed].

According to Aleksander Czolowski as well as Kasper Niesecki and Bobrowicz, Nanowski. <http://bcpw.bg.pw.edu.pl/Content/962/herbarz_t2_hpii.pdf></Herbarz polski Kaspra Niesieckiego, S. J. Powiększony dodatkami z ..., Volume 10>

Notable individuals

Notable bearers of this coat of arms include:

http://www.poles.org/db/Z_names/Zukotynski_T.html

Note: as name spellings were fairly fluid between local vernaculars spoken and written in past history throughout the Slavic-speaking states or central Europe region, so differences in name spellings exist from one place to another.

Related coat of arms

See also

Literature

  • von Czergheö, Nagy (1885–1893). Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch, Band 4, Der Adel von Ungarn samt den Nebenländern der St. Stephanskrone [Siebmacher's Great Armorial Book, Vol. 4, The Nobility of Hungary inclusive the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen] (in German). Nürnberg: Bauer & Raspe.
  • von Reichenau; von Czergheö; von Bárczay (1898). Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch, Band 4, Der Adel von Siebenbürgen [Siebmacher's Great Armorial Book, Vol. 4, The Nobility of Transylvania] (in German). Nürnberg: Bauer & Raspe.
  • Kovács, András (2012). Institutional Structures and Elites in Sălaj Region and in Transylvania in the 14th–18th Centuries (PDF). Vol. XXI, Supplement No. 2. Cluj-Napoca: Romanian Academy, Centre for Transylvanian Studies. pp. 43–45, 110.
  • HERBARZ POLSKI Kaspra Niesieckiego S.J. (English Polish Armorial – Kaspra Niesieckiego S.J.), Author: Kasper Niesiecki, Publisher: Jan Nepomucen Bobrowicz, Breitkopf & Härtel, Lipsku (Leipzig), 1841, Vol. 8, p. 284–285. (in Polish)
  • ORBIS POLONUS, Tom III, (Simple English Armorial of Polish nobility, Volume 3), Author: Szymon Okolski, 1641–43, Kraków, p. 195–202. (in Latin)
  • Herby rycerstwa polskiego (English Coat of Arms of Polish Nobility), Author: Bartosz Paprocki, Publisher: Biblioteka Polska, 1584 Kraków, reprinted 1858 Kraków, reprinted 1982 Warsaw, p. 695–697 (in Polish)
  • Małachowski herbu Nałęcz, Piotr (1805). Zbiór nazwisk szlachty z opisem herbów własnych familiom zostaiącym w Królestwie Polskim i Wielkim ięstwie Litewskim [A collection of the names of the nobility, descriptions of their coats of arms and heraldic clan in the Polish Kingdom and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania] (in Polish). Trynitarzow: w Drukarni J. C. K. Mci, XX.
  • Ludwik Wyrostek: Ród Dragów – Sasów na Węgrzech i Rusi Halickiej, Kraków, 1932. (in Polish)
  • Franciszek Piekosiński: Heraldyka polska wieków średnich, Kraków, 1899. (in Polish)
  • Tadeusz Gajl: Herbarz polski od średniowiecza do XX wieku : ponad 4500 herbów szlacheckich 37 tysięcy nazwisk 55 tysięcy rodów. L&L, 2007. ISBN 978-83-60597-10-1. (in Polish)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e von Czergheö, Nagy (1885–1893). Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch, Band 4, Der Adel von Ungarn samt den Nebenländern der St. Stephanskrone [Siebmacher's Great Armorial Book, Vol. 4, The Nobility of Hungary inclusive the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen] (in German). Nürnberg: Bauer & Raspe. pp. 4597–4598.
  2. ^ a b c d von Reichenau; von Czergheö; von Bárczay (1898). Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch, Band 4, Der Adel von Siebenbürgen [Siebmacher's Great Armorial Book, Vol. 4, The Nobility of Transylvania] (in German). Nürnberg: Bauer & Raspe. pp. 223–224.
  3. ^ Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Entry: Petty Gentry, written by Yaroslav Isaievych Volume 3 (1993). Published by University of Toronto.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Kasper Niesiecki – HERBARZ POLSKI Kaspra Niesieckiego S.J. (English Polish Armorial – Kaspra Niesieckiego S.J.), Author: Kasper Niesiecki, Publisher: Jan Nepomucen Bobrowicz, Breitkopf & Härtel, Lipsku (Leipzig), 1841, Vol. 8, p. 284-285, (in Polish). [1]
  5. ^ a b c d Herby rycerstwa polskiego (English Coat of Arms of Polish Nobility), Author: Bartosz Paprocki, Publisher: Biblioteka Polska, 1584 Kraków, reprinted 1858 Kraków, reprinted 1982 Warsaw, p. 695-697 (in Polish). [2]
  6. ^ a b c d e f ORBIS POLONUS, Tom III, (Simple English Armorial of Polish nobility, Volume 3), Author: Szymon Okolski, 1641–43, Kraków, p. 195-202 (in Latin), p. 207-214 digital.
  7. ^ a b c d e von Reichenau; von Czergheö; von Bárczay (1898). Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch, Band 4, Der Adel von Siebenbürgen [Siebmacher's Great Armorial Book, Vol. 4, The Nobility of Transylvania] (in German). Nürnberg: Bauer & Raspe. p. 104.
  8. ^ a b c d e von Reichenau, von Czergheö und von Bárczay (1885–1893). Siebmacher's großes Wappenbuch, Band 4, Der Adel von Ungarn samt den Nebenländern der St. Stephanskrone [Siebmacher's Great Armorial Book, Vol. 4, The Nobility of Hungary inclusive the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen] (in German). Nürnberg: Bauer & Raspe. p. 1298.
  9. ^ a b c d e Małachowski herbu Nałęcz, Piotr (1805). Zbiór nazwisk szlachty z opisem herbów własnych familiom zostaiącym w Królestwie Polskim i Wielkim ięstwie Litewskim [A collection of names of the nobility and descriptions of their coats of arms in the Polish Kingdom and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania] (in Polish). Lublin: w Drukarni J. C. K. Mci, XX. Trynitarzow.
  10. ^ a b c d Żernicki-Szeliga, Emilian (1904). Die polnischen Stammwappen : ihre Geschichte und ihre Sagen [The Polish Ancestral Coat of Arms : its history and its legends] (in German). Hamburg: Henri Grand. p. 82.
  11. ^ Transylvanian Saxons, Encyclopædia Britannica
  12. ^ a b c d Uruski, Seweryn (1862). Notices sur les familles illustres et titrées de la Pologne [Notices on the illustrious and titled families of Poland] (in French). Paris: Librairie A. Franck. pp. 34, 64, 74, 298, 306, 312, 321.
  13. ^ Dimnik, Martin (1981). Mikhail, Prince of Chernigov and Grand Prince of Kiev 1224–1246. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. p. 220. ISBN 9780888440525.
  14. ^ Терлецький М. Контури роду Драго-Сасів / Вид.2-ге.– Львів:"Центр Європи", 2005.– 172 c. (Виклад історії цих давних вихідців з Підкарпаття на Захід, у Саську землю [Верхню Лужицю – Саксонію], їхні мандри та повернення через Волощину [Угорщину] на свою прабатьківщину – Галичину),
  15. ^ Терлецький М. (2005). Контури роду Драго-Сасів / Вид.2-ге.– Львів:"Центр Європи", 2005.– 172 c.
  16. ^ Vásáry, István (2005). Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 158. ISBN 9780511110153.
  17. ^ a b c d Kovács, András (2012). Institutional Structures and Elites in Sălaj Region and in Transylvania in the 14th–18th Centuries (PDF). Vol. XXI, Supplement No. 2. Cluj-Napoca: Romanian Academy, Centre for Transylvanian Studies. pp. 43–45, 110.
  18. ^ a b Joan cavaler de Puscariu – Date istorice privitoare la familiile nobile române (English History of the Romanian Noble Families). Editura societății culturale Pro Maramures "Dragoș Vodă", Cluj-Napoca, 2003 (in Romanian).
  19. ^ a b Prof. Alexandru Filipascu de Dolha și Petrova – Istoria Maramureșului (English History of Maramureş), Editura "Gutinul" Baia Mare, 1997 (in Romanian).
  20. ^ a b Wyrostek, Ludwik – Rod Dragow-Sasow na Wegrzech i Rusi Halickiej (English Clan Dragow-Saxon in Hungary and neighbouring Galicia). RTH t. XI/1931-1932 (in Polish).
  21. ^ "Nowy sezon polsko-ukraińskich prac konserwatorskich – 2015".
  22. ^ "Podsumowanie polsko-ukraińskich prac konserwatorskich na Cmentarzu Łyczakowskim – 2015".

coat, arms, szász, origin, slavic, saxon, polish, hungarian, szász, romanian, saș, ukrainian, Сас, central, european, coat, arms, borne, since, medieval, period, several, transylvanian, saxon, hungarian, ruthenian, ukrainian, polish, lithuanian, noble, familie. Sas 1 or Szasz 2 origin Slavic for Saxon Polish Sas Hungarian Szasz Romanian Saș Ukrainian Sas is a Central European coat of arms It was borne since the medieval period by several Transylvanian Saxon Hungarian Ruthenian Ukrainian 3 and Polish Lithuanian noble families 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 The house was once a mighty princely and ducal house with origins in Saxony Transylvania Hungary and Ruthenia 1 2 5 6 7 8 Sas Saxon coat of armsVersionsGules tincture variation in Orbis Polonus 1641 43 Referred to as Sas II in Siebmacher s Armorial Book 1 Adoptedca 13th centuryBlazongold Or crescent with its horns pointed upwards on each horn a gold Or star In its center a gold Or or silver Argent arrow pointed upwards Contents 1 History 2 Blazon 2 1 Other blazon images 3 Bearers family members of the House of Sas 3 1 Notable individuals 4 Related coat of arms 5 See also 6 Literature 7 ReferencesHistory EditAncient Polish Lithuanian historians like Szymon Okolski say that the origin of these arms is derived from Saxony where during the mid 12th century King Geza II of Hungary invited Germanic peoples of Saxony to settle in establish trading centres and defend relatively sparsely populated Transylvania in the Kingdom of Hungary upon which the Transylvanian Saxons were later given a privileged status in the Diploma Andreanum Golden Charter of Transylvanian Saxons issued by King Andrew II of Hungary 4 6 10 11 see Transylvanian Saxons The origins of the dynastic House of Sas 12 or Szasz vary depending on the source According to the chronicles of Albertus Strepa 6 the outstanding military leader Comes Huyd of Hungary a Transylvanian Saxon entered Galicia in 1236 with his mighty army of allied mounted warrior knights to the service of Daniel of Galicia King of Ruthenia and each was rewarded with lands in Red Ruthenia that Huyd and his allied noble knights settled being referred to as the Sas Szasz Saxon due to their Transylvanian Saxon dialect and origin 5 6 9 10 According to the chronicles of Wojciech Strepa 4 Comes Huyd Hujd of Hungary having come with his mighty army of allied mounted warrior knights to the service of Lev I of Galicia 1269 1301 the son of Daniel of Galicia King of Ruthenia and having allied himself with Lithuania drove the Eastern barbarians out of Mazovia In reward for his knightly deeds he was given among other gifts Lev s widowed sister in law N N of Galicia Princess of Kholm as a wife the widow of Lev s brother Shvarn Daniilovich 13 sister of Vaisvilkas daughter of King Mindaugas of Lithuania from the House of Mindaugas 14 and along with his allied knights lands in the territory of Red Ruthenia that they settled 4 10 Count Huyd who bore on his coat of arms the blue azure escutcheon with the gold or crescent gold stars and gold arrow and the knights who allied under his battle banner are said to have been the progenitors of the House of Sas Szasz 4 9 10 15 Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary medieval ducat Magyar aranyforint gold coin struck in 1491 by the Baia Mare Nagybanya mint house in Transylvania Reverse shows a crowned and nimbate standing figure of Saint Ladislaus I King of Hungary holding a horseman s battle axe and globus cruciger above the below mint mark n and mint house mint master shield Sas coat of arms of Bartolomeu Dragfi de Beltiug Early origins also point to the Hungarian Transylvanian Saxon Voivodes Dragos I de Bedeu Bedo voivode of Maramureș Prince of Moldavia 16 and his successor son Sas de Beltiug Hungarian Szasz de Beltek Prince of Moldavia 7 8 17 who bore the blue azure escutcheon with the gold crescent gold stars and gold arrow on their coat of arms 7 8 Other notable scions of Dragos I were Bartolomeu Dragfi of Beltiug Beltek Comes Perpetuus of Middle Szolnok 1479 1488 Voivode of Transylvania and Comes of the Szekely people 1493 1499 17 who had distinguished himself earlier as a royal knight of the Hungarian Royal Court defeating the Ottoman Turks at the Battle of Breadfield 1479 together with Pal Kinizsi Istvan Bathory Vuk Brankovic and Basarab Laiotă cel Bătran 18 19 20 At the time of King Matthias Corvinus death Bartholomew Dragfi of Beltiug Beltek was among the wealthiest landowners of the country three castles two manor houses eight market towns and about 200 villages were in his property 17 His estates in Middle Szolnok and Satu Mare included the castles of Chioar and Ardud together with the large lordships surrounding them and further the castles of Șoimi and the castellum of Ceheiu 17 Another important family member among others was Ioan Dragfi of Beltiug Beltek Comes of Temes County in 1525 who died 1526 in the Battle of Mohacs 18 19 20 Written descriptions of the Sas Szasz coat of arms in classical heraldic references such as in Herby rycerstwa polskiego 1584 Korona Polska Herbarz Polski 1728 1846 and Siebmacher s armorial book on the Hungarian and Transylvanian nobility describe the arms in blue azure tincture as borne by the families Dragfi Hungarian patronym for son of Drag of Beltiug Beltek scions of Dragos I of Bedeu Jan Danilowicz herbu Sas Dziedoszycki Dzieduszycki h Sas and Berlicz Strutynskiu Strutynski h Sas 1 2 4 5 7 8 9 12 Some families however bear this coat of arms on a red gules tincture field in Orbis Polonus 1641 43 the Sas clan arms is described as being of sanguineus Latin for blood red tincture 6 such as borne by the Counts Komarnicki herbu Sas family in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria Blazon Edit Sas coat of arms on the central facade of Uruski Palace Warsaw which now forms the University of Warsaw In 1843 the former palace became the property of Count Seweryn Uruski herbu Sas 1817 1890 12 marshal of the nobility of Warsaw Province privy counselor of the Imperial Court and president of the College of Arms of the Polish Kingdom who demolished the former palace and commissioned architect Andrzej Golonski to design and raise a new palace in its place with Renaissance architecture The sculptor Ludwika Kaufman was commissioned to carve the Sas coat of arms in reverence of the great progenitors of the Sas Saxon house After the death of Seweryn Uruski in 1890 the palace became the property of his wife Countess Ermancja Tyzenhauz h Bawol then his youngest surviving issue Countess Maria Uruska h Sas 1860 1931 who married Vladimir Swiatopelk Czetwertynski Burned during World War II by the occupying German forces in the Warsaw uprising the palace remained in the ownership of the Swiatopelk Czetwertynski family until 1947 then passed into the possession of the University of Warsaw During the years 1948 1951 the palace was restored by the architect Jan Dabrowski Today it houses the Department of Geography and Regional Studies Other blazon images Edit Sas coat of arms depicted in the 14th century Collegium Maius courtyard first university of Poland the oldest building of Jagiellonian University in Krakow Old Town Coat of arms at the entrance of Olesko Castle Quarterly coat of arms of Jan Danilowicz h Sas Duke of the Duchy of Ruthenia Ruthenian Voivodeship and landowner of Olesko in 1605 Coat of arms of the Transylvanian Saxon family Dragfi de Beltiug Hungarian Dragffy de Beltek scions of Dragos I of Bedeu Sas coat of arms 1797 document of the Berlicz Strutynskiu Strutynski h Sas family of Utena Grand Duchy of Lithuania document held at the Lithuanian State Historical Archives Sas coat of arms in red Gules tincture of the Komarnicki herbu Sas house Baron Blazowski h Sas coat of armsBearers family members of the House of Sas EditThe following family names are listed in the classical genealogical and heraldic reference Korona Polska Herbarz Polski Crown of Poland Polish Armorial 1728 1846 authored by heraldist Kasper Niesiecki 4 Baczynski Bandrowski Baraniecki Bereznicki Bilinski Blazowski Bojarski Bratkowski Brylinski Brzescianski Buchowski Chodakowski Czolhanski Czolowski Czolowscy Danilowicz Dlugopolski Dobrzanski Dubrawski Dziedoszycki Dziedziel Hoszowski Hrebnicki Huhernicki Jaminski Jasinski Jaworski Klodnicki Komarnicki Kropiwnicki Kruszelnicki Kulczycki Litynski Lucki Manczak Manesterski Matkowski Mikulski Msciszewski Nowosielski Odrzechowski Orlowski Podwysocki Raszkowski Roszniatowski Rudnicki Siemiasz Skotnicki Strutynski Strzelbicki Sulatycki Swistelnicki Tarnawski Tatomir Terlecki Tesmer Tyssarowski Uniatycki Winnicki Wislocki Witwicki Wolkowicki Wolosiecki Woryski Wysoczanski Wytag z metryk Stanow Krol Galic i Lodom Zaplatynski Zawisza Zeliborski Zestelinski Zurakowski Zukotynski 4 According to addendum added to Herbarz Polski by the 19th century editor and publisher Bobrowicz 4 other authors like Dunczewski Kuropatnicki Malachowski Wieladek assign the Sas coat of arms to the following noble families 4 Brzuski Charewicz Husarzewski Kumarnicki Nechrebecki Obertynski Olewnicki Pochorecki Popiel Sasimowski Sasowski Tyzdrowski 4 9 Bearers mentioned in other sources include Uruski 12 and Knihinicki citation needed According to Aleksander Czolowski as well as Kasper Niesecki and Bobrowicz Nanowski lt http bcpw bg pw edu pl Content 962 herbarz t2 hpii pdf gt lt Herbarz polski Kaspra Niesieckiego S J Powiekszony dodatkami z Volume 10 gt Notable individuals Edit Notable bearers of this coat of arms include House of Dragoș Baczewski family Leon Bilinski Danilowicz family Roman Danylovich Prince of Black Ruthenia Jan Danilowicz grandfather of King Jan III Sobieski Teofila Zofia Sobieska nee Danilowicz mother of King Jan III Sobieski Mikolaj Danilowicz Albin Dunajewski pl Jozef Dwernicki Jadwiga Dzieduszycka Wlodzimierz Dzieduszycki Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki Jan Sas Zubrzycki pl Seweryn Uruski Tadeusz Zukotynski Polish count and painterhttp www poles org db Z names Zukotynski T html Jozef Sas Czulowski Polish captain who fought in the Battle of Somosierra and was Adjutant to Jan Nepomucen Dziewanoski 21 22 Dr Mieczyslaw Jan de Sas Kropiwnicki 1912 1971 The first Polish veterinarian to perform a caesarean section on a brood mare http www medycynawet edu pl archives 423 6495 summary med weter 77 02 6495 2021Note as name spellings were fairly fluid between local vernaculars spoken and written in past history throughout the Slavic speaking states or central Europe region so differences in name spellings exist from one place to another Related coat of arms EditFrampol town in Lublin Voivodeship the eastern part of the province was historically part of Red Ruthenia Sasiv Polish Sasow Sassow town in Ukraine historically in the Ruthenian Voivodeship of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland Bilinski coat of armsSee also EditSas II Coat of Arms Polish heraldry Heraldic family Sarmatism List of rulers of Moldavia Olesko Castle History of Transylvania History of Maramureș Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen Ruthenian nobility Lithuanian nobility Western Ukrainian nobilityLiterature Editvon Czergheo Nagy 1885 1893 Siebmacher s grosses Wappenbuch Band 4 Der Adel von Ungarn samt den Nebenlandern der St Stephanskrone Siebmacher s Great Armorial Book Vol 4 The Nobility of Hungary inclusive the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen in German Nurnberg Bauer amp Raspe von Reichenau von Czergheo von Barczay 1898 Siebmacher s grosses Wappenbuch Band 4 Der Adel von Siebenburgen Siebmacher s Great Armorial Book Vol 4 The Nobility of Transylvania in German Nurnberg Bauer amp Raspe Kovacs Andras 2012 Institutional Structures and Elites in Sălaj Region and in Transylvania in the 14th 18th Centuries PDF Vol XXI Supplement No 2 Cluj Napoca Romanian Academy Centre for Transylvanian Studies pp 43 45 110 HERBARZ POLSKI Kaspra Niesieckiego S J English Polish Armorial Kaspra Niesieckiego S J Author Kasper Niesiecki Publisher Jan Nepomucen Bobrowicz Breitkopf amp Hartel Lipsku Leipzig 1841 Vol 8 p 284 285 in Polish ORBIS POLONUS Tom III Simple English Armorial of Polish nobility Volume 3 Author Szymon Okolski 1641 43 Krakow p 195 202 in Latin Herby rycerstwa polskiego English Coat of Arms of Polish Nobility Author Bartosz Paprocki Publisher Biblioteka Polska 1584 Krakow reprinted 1858 Krakow reprinted 1982 Warsaw p 695 697 in Polish Malachowski herbu Nalecz Piotr 1805 Zbior nazwisk szlachty z opisem herbow wlasnych familiom zostaiacym w Krolestwie Polskim i Wielkim iestwie Litewskim A collection of the names of the nobility descriptions of their coats of arms and heraldic clan in the Polish Kingdom and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in Polish Trynitarzow w Drukarni J C K Mci XX Ludwik Wyrostek Rod Dragow Sasow na Wegrzech i Rusi Halickiej Krakow 1932 in Polish Franciszek Piekosinski Heraldyka polska wiekow srednich Krakow 1899 in Polish Tadeusz Gajl Herbarz polski od sredniowiecza do XX wieku ponad 4500 herbow szlacheckich 37 tysiecy nazwisk 55 tysiecy rodow L amp L 2007 ISBN 978 83 60597 10 1 in Polish References Edit a b c d e von Czergheo Nagy 1885 1893 Siebmacher s grosses Wappenbuch Band 4 Der Adel von Ungarn samt den Nebenlandern der St Stephanskrone Siebmacher s Great Armorial Book Vol 4 The Nobility of Hungary inclusive the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen in German Nurnberg Bauer amp Raspe pp 4597 4598 a b c d von Reichenau von Czergheo von Barczay 1898 Siebmacher s grosses Wappenbuch Band 4 Der Adel von Siebenburgen Siebmacher s Great Armorial Book Vol 4 The Nobility of Transylvania in German Nurnberg Bauer amp Raspe pp 223 224 Encyclopedia of Ukraine Entry Petty Gentry written by Yaroslav Isaievych Volume 3 1993 Published by University of Toronto a b c d e f g h i j k Kasper Niesiecki HERBARZ POLSKI Kaspra Niesieckiego S J English Polish Armorial Kaspra Niesieckiego S J Author Kasper Niesiecki Publisher Jan Nepomucen Bobrowicz Breitkopf amp Hartel Lipsku Leipzig 1841 Vol 8 p 284 285 in Polish 1 a b c d Herby rycerstwa polskiego English Coat of Arms of Polish Nobility Author Bartosz Paprocki Publisher Biblioteka Polska 1584 Krakow reprinted 1858 Krakow reprinted 1982 Warsaw p 695 697 in Polish 2 a b c d e f ORBIS POLONUS Tom III Simple English Armorial of Polish nobility Volume 3 Author Szymon Okolski 1641 43 Krakow p 195 202 in Latin p 207 214 digital 3 a b c d e von Reichenau von Czergheo von Barczay 1898 Siebmacher s grosses Wappenbuch Band 4 Der Adel von Siebenburgen Siebmacher s Great Armorial Book Vol 4 The Nobility of Transylvania in German Nurnberg Bauer amp Raspe p 104 a b c d e von Reichenau von Czergheo und von Barczay 1885 1893 Siebmacher s grosses Wappenbuch Band 4 Der Adel von Ungarn samt den Nebenlandern der St Stephanskrone Siebmacher s Great Armorial Book Vol 4 The Nobility of Hungary inclusive the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen in German Nurnberg Bauer amp Raspe p 1298 a b c d e Malachowski herbu Nalecz Piotr 1805 Zbior nazwisk szlachty z opisem herbow wlasnych familiom zostaiacym w Krolestwie Polskim i Wielkim iestwie Litewskim A collection of names of the nobility and descriptions of their coats of arms in the Polish Kingdom and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in Polish Lublin w Drukarni J C K Mci XX Trynitarzow a b c d Zernicki Szeliga Emilian 1904 Die polnischen Stammwappen ihre Geschichte und ihre Sagen The Polish Ancestral Coat of Arms its history and its legends in German Hamburg Henri Grand p 82 Transylvanian Saxons Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d Uruski Seweryn 1862 Notices sur les familles illustres et titrees de la Pologne Notices on the illustrious and titled families of Poland in French Paris Librairie A Franck pp 34 64 74 298 306 312 321 Dimnik Martin 1981 Mikhail Prince of Chernigov and Grand Prince of Kiev 1224 1246 Toronto Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies p 220 ISBN 9780888440525 Terleckij M Konturi rodu Drago Sasiv Vid 2 ge Lviv Centr Yevropi 2005 172 c Viklad istoriyi cih davnih vihidciv z Pidkarpattya na Zahid u Sasku zemlyu Verhnyu Luzhicyu Saksoniyu yihni mandri ta povernennya cherez Voloshinu Ugorshinu na svoyu prabatkivshinu Galichinu Terleckij M 2005 Konturi rodu Drago Sasiv Vid 2 ge Lviv Centr Yevropi 2005 172 c Vasary Istvan 2005 Cumans and Tatars Oriental Military in the Pre Ottoman Balkans 1185 1365 New York Cambridge University Press p 158 ISBN 9780511110153 a b c d Kovacs Andras 2012 Institutional Structures and Elites in Sălaj Region and in Transylvania in the 14th 18th Centuries PDF Vol XXI Supplement No 2 Cluj Napoca Romanian Academy Centre for Transylvanian Studies pp 43 45 110 a b Joan cavaler de Puscariu Date istorice privitoare la familiile nobile romane English History of the Romanian Noble Families Editura societății culturale Pro Maramures Dragoș Vodă Cluj Napoca 2003 in Romanian a b Prof Alexandru Filipascu de Dolha și Petrova Istoria Maramureșului English History of Maramures Editura Gutinul Baia Mare 1997 in Romanian a b Wyrostek Ludwik Rod Dragow Sasow na Wegrzech i Rusi Halickiej English Clan Dragow Saxon in Hungary and neighbouring Galicia RTH t XI 1931 1932 in Polish Nowy sezon polsko ukrainskich prac konserwatorskich 2015 Podsumowanie polsko ukrainskich prac konserwatorskich na Cmentarzu Lyczakowskim 2015 Wikimedia Commons has media related to 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