Herb: | Juńczyk |
Alternative: | Junczyk[1] [2] |
Mention: | 13th century |
Families: | Apostoł, Boguszewski, Bohuszewski, Bolesławski, Bołdyk, Bołdysz, Dobrzański, Drohomierecki, Enczyk, Flodzyński, Gomontowicz, Inczyk, Jamont, Jamonth, Jasewicz, Jassewicz, Jucewicz, Juchniewicz, Jucowicz, Juniewicz, Juńczyk, Juński, Pietrykowski, Pietrzykowski, Rostocki, Rostowski, Rzętkowski, Skrutkowski, Szulce, Szulecki, Szyryński-Agiszewicz, Wabiszczewicz, Waskiewicz[3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] |
Herb: | Juńczyk II |
Alternative: | Junczyk II |
Families: | Boguszewski, Bolbas, Gołub, Krzyżanowski, Rostowski, Turkowski[9] |
Juńczyk (Junczyk, Iunczyk) is a Polish coat of arms. It was used by several szlachta families in the times of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
The Juńczyk coat of arms was created in the 13th century.[10]
Aleksandr Lakier in his work from 1855 entitled The Russian Heraldry, in the part devoted to Polish heraldry, describes the Juńczyk coat of arms and gives the
following coat of arms legend:[11]
In the red field, a silver double cross torn into a mustache. Gem: five ostrich feathers.
In the red field, a Latin cross torn into a mustache, silver. Jewel: three ostrich feathers.