Jaroszynski

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Jaroszynski (also: von Jaroszinski or von Jarrosch ) is the name of a Polish noble family that appears for the first time in 1629 with a Dimitr, owner of the Jaroszynice estate (in Podolia). Fedor (Teodor) Jaroszynski was raised to the Polish nobility in 1674.

history

At the beginning of the 17th century the family owned the Jaroszynice and Uhluwki estates in Podolia and Volynia . Fedor Jaroszynski was raised to the Polish nobility in 1674 and the family was included in the Korczak family. In the 18th century, the family expanded their western Ukrainian property to include the goods Olizarowa, Maryanowka, Kryzwego Jeziora, Zerdynowki, Kuny, Tywrowa and Dzwonichy. Until the end of the Polish monarchy, representatives of the family were starosts in Wyszogrod and Wyszodrowic and marshals of the Schlachta von Braclaw and Haisynskiego. The brothers Antoni (1762–1830), Wincent (1763–1815) and Czeslaw Jaroszynski (1768–1848) had been knights of the Order of Saint Stanislaus since 1792 .

After the last Polish partition , with which the Polish parts of Ukraine fell to Russia, some members of the family were in the service of the Russian tsar as aristocratic marshals of the Schlachta of Mogilev and Braclaw. Oktawian Jaroszynski († 1882) was chamberlain at the Russian court and marshal of the battle of West Kiev.

On June 18, 1884, Sigismund Marian and Bernhard Johann received a confirmation of the Polish nobility as Austrian nobility with "Edler von Jaroszynski" and the Korczak odmieny coat of arms.

The officer and actor Feodor von Jaroszinski-Jarosch (1822–1913) immigrated from Kraków to Prussia in the mid-19th century. The name of this line changed due to the “Germanization” of the name from the second half of the 19th century to “von Jarrosch”.

family members

  • Severin von Jaroszynski (1789-1827), a Polish nobleman who for robbery murder of Johann Conrad Blank was executed
  • Cecylia Jaroszynska (1906–1962), wife of Count Edward Raczynski (1891–1993), Polish diplomat, patron of the arts and later Polish president-in-exile in London
  • Stanislaus von Jaroszynski (1869–1935), kuk lieutenant of the cavalry, participant in the distance ride 1892 Vienna-Berlin, manor owner on Maltsch (Oder)
  • Herbert von Jarrosch (1900–1942), actor in Cuxhaven, Neuhaldensleben, Wittstock; later acting director in Groß-Strehlitz

coat of arms

The noble family belongs to the Korczak odmieny coat of arms and shows three red crossbars, of which the top is the largest and the bottom is the smallest. Above it lies a fallen silver (or gold) arrow, the tip of which ends at the bottom bar. There are three ostrich feathers in gold, blue and red on the helmet.

literature

  • Emilian von Źernicki-Szeliga : The Polish aristocracy and the foreign aristocratic families who joined the same. General Directory, Volume 1, Henri Grand, Hamburg 1900.
  • Karl Friedrich von Frank: Status surveys and acts of grace for the German Empire and the Austrian hereditary lands up to 1806. Volume 2, Senftenegg Castle.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Wiktor Wittyg: Nieznana szlachta polska i jei herby. Krakow 1908, pp. 390-392
  2. ^ Karl Friedrich von Frank: Status surveys and acts of grace. Volume 2, Senftenegg Castle, 1970, p. 263.