Sulima (coat of arms) (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Sulima (coat of arms)" in English language version.

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books.google.com

lodz.pl

warsztathistoryka.uni.lodz.pl

nytimes.com

  • Walsh, Stephen (1999). "STRAVINSKY: A CREATIVE SPRING: RUSSIA AND FRANCE, 1882-1934". The New York Times. New York City, NEW YORK, U.S.A. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2017. The Stravinsky family, like the name, is Polish, a fact which needs to be stressed in view of recent and perfectly understandable attempts by Kiev scholars to claim Stravinsky as a Ukrainian of Cossack lineage. The so-called Soulima-Stravinskys are more accurately described as "Strawinscy Herbu Sulima", to adopt for the moment the old Polish spelling of the two names: that is, the Strawinscy family with the Sulima coat-of-arms. This simply means, for our purposes, that this branch of the Strawinscys claimed descent from the more ancient — probably German — house of Sulima. Stefan Strawinski traced the family tree back to the late sixteenth century, when the Strawinscys held high state office, in a kingdom where there were no hereditary titles and power was symbolized by honorific titles associated with purely ceremonial duties.

tataria.eu

uw.edu.pl

ebuw.uw.edu.pl

wbc.poznan.pl

  • Dziadulewicz, Stanislaw (1929). "herbal Tatar families in Poland". Biblioteka Uniwersytecka W Poznaniu. Vilnius: overburden the author of the Benefit Committee of the National Culture Fund: 166,167,450.

web.archive.org

  • Walsh, Stephen (1999). "STRAVINSKY: A CREATIVE SPRING: RUSSIA AND FRANCE, 1882-1934". The New York Times. New York City, NEW YORK, U.S.A. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2017. The Stravinsky family, like the name, is Polish, a fact which needs to be stressed in view of recent and perfectly understandable attempts by Kiev scholars to claim Stravinsky as a Ukrainian of Cossack lineage. The so-called Soulima-Stravinskys are more accurately described as "Strawinscy Herbu Sulima", to adopt for the moment the old Polish spelling of the two names: that is, the Strawinscy family with the Sulima coat-of-arms. This simply means, for our purposes, that this branch of the Strawinscys claimed descent from the more ancient — probably German — house of Sulima. Stefan Strawinski traced the family tree back to the late sixteenth century, when the Strawinscys held high state office, in a kingdom where there were no hereditary titles and power was symbolized by honorific titles associated with purely ceremonial duties.