CoA Ostoja, which was used by the Dubikowski family from the mid-16th century.[1][2]
Polish medieval CoA Ostoja

The Dubikowski family is an ancient Polish-Lithuanian (Ruthenian) noble family with the Ostoja coat of arms, belonging to the heraldic Clan Ostoja (Moscics). The date when the Dubikowski family joined the heraldic Clan Ostoja (Moscics) is unknown. This could have happened in the 15th–16th centuries.

Families origin and prehistory

In the Files about noble families’ origin the kin of Dubikowski[1][2] is located in the sixth part (ancient descent families) and belongs to a clan Ostoja coat of arms. As noted in these Files of 1795:[2] "Under the evidence of the ancient Polish chronicles[2] and armorials,[2] the Dubikowski family was awarded nobility from the earliest times (natural nobility).[2] The Dubikowski family occupied many different positions in the Kingdom of Poland, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Russian Empire, and was granted privileges, enjoyed all the prerogatives and rights of the nobility".[3][2]

According to family traditions and patrimonial book[3] the Dubikowski kin is the descendants of one of the oldest Slovic-Aryan dynasty. It is fine and entirely correct to say that this Hierophant-Warrior dynasty, which ruled almost the all ancient World, bore the unique Devine kingship. It was a Universal Vedic Slovic-Aryan civilization existed for millennia in the territory from Dublin to Vladivostok, which is eloquently testified by the single-type ring-shaped ancient settlements-observatories throughout Eurasia and burial mounds.[3][4]

According to the ancestral family book,[3] the legendary Oleg Veschiy was the ancestor of the Dubikowski kin. It is well known that Rurik arrived to Rusia in 862 not alone, but with his kin: two native brothers Sineus and Truvor, and Oleg Veschiy / Prophet (duke Fulcoald – Ogneljod – Ful'coal'd – Kol'd – Kold – Holga – Oleg).[3]

Oleg Veschiy ('prophetic') is a prince, wise man – hierophant and warlord from a family (dynasty) close to the Rurikovich's.[3][4] In the Arabian sources there is a repeated reference to the "tsar of Slovs" by the name "al-Olvang" (Oleg) as a "Franconian duke".[3][4] Byzantine chroniclers (as Constantine VII) called Oleg "god-inspired", indicating at the same time his Frankish origin.[3][4] According to the Danish legend Oleg's wife was the daughter of the East Slovic ruler Budimir. In 882 Oleg has won tribes of the western Poles (Lechity) at the coasts of Goplo and Warta (according to Polish historians Lovmianski and Krotossky). He was Leshik, the father of Zemomysl (890–964) and the grandfather of Meshko I (Dag/Dagobert) (930–992) and Stibor (Ostoy). It was Oleg Veschiy who not only founded the first dynasty of Piasts (essentially close to the Rurikids), but also gave the self-name of the future Poland (from Oleg-Leh we get Lehi-Lehits and Po-Lehia, i.e. Poland). As is known, his other son, Oleg of Moravia, was in 940–949 the prince of Great Merovia (Moravia). After the seizure of Merovia by the Ugricians, Oleg went north to his brother Zemomysl. (Two sons of Oleg are told about in Moravian legends: Asmund (most likely Zemomysl, Semyamysl) and Oleg, Oleja, Elijah Moravlanin (Oleg of Moravia). According to annals Oleg Veschiy (the prophet) founded Moscow, and constructed set of other cities. In a study by P. Khavsky "On the Great Princes, contemporaries of Moscow", published in 1851, "...In one of the surviving manuscript legends it was confirmed that Oleg came to the land surrounded by the rivers Yauza, Neglinna and Moskva, and ordered to lay the city there". The legends associated with the personality of Oleg were also preserved in the semi-mythical Scandinavian saga of Odd Orvar (Arrow), indicating that the monarch was widely known in Northern Rusia – Scandinavia. Also Oleg (al-Olvang) was well known to Arab geographers-travelers, in particular al-Masudi.[3][4]

Furthermore, Oleg's descendants devoted themselves to military service, chivalry on the coast of Prusia and priesthood in the Sacred grove at the evergreen oak on the river Dubisse. This kin gave the Lithuanian Grand Dukes Troyden (1220–1282) and his sons Budikid (1240–1290) and Budivid (not the ancestors of the Gedeminoviches).[3][4]

REMARK. In the saga of Odd Orvar (Arrow), it is written that Oleg (Odd) ruled from about 850 to 862 the lands of Scandinavia and Albion. According to DNA research data, Oleg the prophetic is the father of Harald the Fair-Haired, the first konung of Norway and the founder of the Horfager dynasty. Horfagers subjugated the lands of Albion and the Crovan dynasty went from them, which is also confirmed by DNA analysis data[3].

Many other well-known and powerfully families of Eurasia genetically also belong to the genus of Oleg Veschiy / the Prophet.[3]

The estates belonging to the family

Listed below are the most important lands belonging to the Dubikowski of the Ostoja CoA.

More important land estates: tract Pavlovskoe (Branikozhi) near Novogrudok;[1][2][5] estates near Smolensk: Poretskoye,[3][6] Stankovo,[3][6] Korenkovo[3][6] and Folvark Kovalev;[1][3] Verzhbolovo[2][3] (now Virbalis, Prusia, Lithuania) and Osovets,[2][3] Korytno[2][3] and Zaluzhnoye[2][3] in the Oshmiany region, the estates Berezhanka,[3][7] Domaninka,[3][7] Kulikovo[3][7] and Vyshogrodek[3][7] near Kremenets, Gostomel,[3][8] Berdniki[1][3] near Fastov.

Family representatives

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 The CSHAK: F. 481, Reg. 3, Case 1185.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 The NIAB: F. 319, Reg. 2, Case 1019 (also 3775)
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 Ros Kan. The story of one kin. Kiev 2022, 67 s.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 S. Dubikowski, Palimpsest of the Gods, Kiev, 2020.
  5. 1 2 Kroniki Historyczne – kwietnia 2019. Polscy pionierowie nauki i techniki w obcych krajach cz. 2 – W cieniu rajskich jabłoni dr Jan Ciechanowicz. Technika. Jan Jarkowski Konstruktor kolejnictwa.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Metryka Litewska (1654–1662). Księga wpisów nr 131. Województwo Smoleńskie, poz. 1093 za 1662 r.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 https://forum.vgd.ru/post/3450/79632/p2266202.htm?hlt=dubikowski#pp2266202 (No. 1558).
  8. 1 2 3 Urzędnicy Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. NGABM, F. 1729, nr. 10, k. 460. Punkty testamentowe z 12 III 1708 aktykowane 20 t.m.
  9. Rody rycerskie Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego, T. 3 (E-K). Jan Ciechanowicz. Fosze, 2001, s. 203
  10. Rody rycerskie Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. T. 2 (A-D). Jan Ciechanowicz. Fosze, 2001, 403 s.
  11. Miesie̜cznik heraldyczny, Volumes 16–18. Nakł. Oddziału Warszawskiego Polskiego Towarzystwa Heraldycznego, 1937, s. 68, 117.
  12. Census of the troops of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1567. Annex 1. Samogitia (Zemoytskaya Land), Tiuns.
  13. 1 2 3 Metryka Litewska. Ksiega wpisow nr 131. Poezqtek spraw do Metryk WKsL w roku 1658. Instytut Historii PAN, Warszawa, 2001
  14. Register of troops of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1528.
  15. Urzędnicy centralni i dostojnicy Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego XIV-XVIII, Spisy, opr. H. Lulewicz, A. Rachuba, red. A. Gąsiorowski, Kórnik 1994, s. 123–128.
  16. Alexander I. Grusha. Documentary writing of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (end of the 14th – first third of the 16th century). 2017. – 486 p.
  17. Андрей Наукович. Перепись Жемойтских волостей 1537–38. Vilnus: LIJ leidyka, 2003, 449 s.
  18. Oleg Proshak. "Princely Lithuania". Lithuanian principalities, princely clans and princes. 2019, 27 s.
  19. Akty izdavaemye Vilenskoi︠u︡ kommissiei︠u︡ dli︠a︡ razbora drevnikh aktov, Т. 23, s.86
  20. kpbc.ukw.edu.pl/dlibra/plain-content?id=37744
  21. Joseph Tyszkiewicz (hrabia.). Histoire du 17me Régt. de Cavalerie Polonaise (Lanciers du Cte. Michel Tyszkiewicz), 1812–1815. Published by W.L. Anczyc, 1904, s. 68.
  22. 1 2 "Home". wolyn-metryki.pl. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  23. "With the 150th birthday, great-grandfather Maxim Slavinsky!". August 28, 2018.

Bibliography

  • Ros Kan. The Story of One Kin. Kiev 2022, 67 s.
  • Herbarz Szlachty Białoruskiej. T. 5. D, J.S.Hlinski [i in.]; red.nauk.A.Rachuba. – Minsk; Belarus, 2018. – 947 s. [16] ark.il.
  • Szlachta WKL. J.Lyczkowski. (Rody ktore otrzymaly nobilitacju do roku 1795). Herbarz szlachty białoruskiej. Tom 5
  • Rody rycerskie Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego, T. 3 (E-K). Jan Ciechanowicz. Fosze, 2001, s. 203
  • Rody rycerskie Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. T. 2 (A-D). Jan Ciechanowicz. Fosze, 2001, 403 s..
  • Miesie̜cznik heraldyczny, Volumes 16–18. Nakł. Oddziału Warszawskiego Polskiego Towarzystwa Heraldycznego, 1937, s. 68, 117.
  • Starodawne prawa polskiego pomniki z ksiąg rękopiśmiennych dotąd nieużytych główniej zaś z ksiąg dawnych sądowych ziemskich i grodzkich ziemi krakowskiej, wyd. A. Z. Helcel, Kraków 1870.
  • Joseph Tyszkiewicz (hrabia.). Histoire du 17me Régt. de Cavalerie Polonaise (Lanciers du Cte. Michel Tyszkiewicz), 1812–1815. Published by W.L. Anczyc, 1904, s. 68.
  • S. Dubikowski. Palimpsest of the Gods. Kiev, 2020, 276 s.
  • Akty izdavaemye Vilenskou kommissieiu dlia razbora drevnikh aktov, Т. 23, s.86.
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