Danielewicz (surname)
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Danielewicz (surname)
Danielewicz is a Polish-language surname, of patronymic origin, meaning descendants of Daniel or Danilo. Notable people with this surname include: *Danielewicz families, several Polish noble families * Wincenty Danilewicz (1787–1878), Chevau-léger (light-horse cavalryman) in campaigns of the Napoleonic Wars; Secretary of Chancellery of Senate of Poland (Polish: Senat) in Congress Poland; chief archivist of heraldry administration of Congress Poland, in Warsaw. *Adam Danielewicz (1846–1935), Polish statistician * Sigismund Danielewicz (1847–1927), California trade union organizer and anarchist * (born 1942), Polish classical philologist * (1921–1997), Polish historian * Krzysztof Danielewicz (born 1991), Polish footballer *Ludomir Danilewicz Ludomir Danilewicz (1905–1960) was a Polish engineer and, for some ten years before the outbreak of World War II, one of the four directors of the AVA Radio Company in Warsaw, Poland. AVA designed and built radio equipment for th ...
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Polish-language Surname
Polish names have two main elements: the given name, and the surname. The usage of personal names in Poland is generally governed by civil law (legal system), civil law, church law, personal taste and family custom. The law requires a given name to indicate the person's gender. Almost all Polish female names end in a vowel ''-a'', and most male names end in a consonant or a vowel other than ''a''. There are, however, a few male names that end in ''a'', which are very old and uncommon, such as Barnaba, Bonawentura, Boryna, Jarema, Kosma, Kuba (a diminutive of Jakub) and Saba. Maria (given name), Maria is a female name that can be used also as a middle (second) name for males. Since the High Middle Ages, Polish-sounding surnames ending with the masculine ''-ski'' suffix, including ''-cki'' and ''-dzki'', and the corresponding feminine suffix ''-ska/-cka/-dzka'' were associated with the nobility (Polish ''szlachta''), which alone, in the early years, had such suffix distinctions.Zen ...
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Patronymic Surname
A patronymic surname is a surname originated from the given name of the father or a patrilineal ancestor. Different cultures have different ways of producing patronymic surnames. For example, early patronymic Welsh surnames were the result of the Anglicizing of the historical Welsh naming system, which sometimes had included references to several generations: e.g., Llywelyn ap Gruffydd ap Morgan (Llywelyn son of Gruffydd son of Morgan), and which gave rise to the quip, "as long as a Welshman's pedigree." As an example of Anglicization, the name Llywelyn ap Gruffydd was turned into Llywelyn Gruffydds; i.e., the "ap" meaning "son of" was replaced by the genitive suffix "-s", but there are other cases like "ap Evan" being turned into "Bevan". Some Welsh surnames, such as John or Howell, did not acquire the suffix "-s." In some other cases the suffix was affixed to the surname much later, in the 18th or 19th century. Likewise, in some cases the "ap" coalesced into the name in some fo ...
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Danielewicz Families
Danielewicz is a patronymic surname, meaning descendants of Daniel or Danilo. Several Danielewicz families were members of Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth nobility and their descendants continue to the present. Danielewicz families Spelling: Danielewicz, Danilewicz, Daniłowicz, Daniełowicz, Danieliwicz, Danielewitz and en: Danilovich. The family in Russia that took their name after Daniel goes back to Daniel of Moscow. Daniel's son Afanasy Danilovich was the Prince of Novgorod (died 1322) followed by Yury Danilovich, the prince of Moscow and Novgorod. In the 15th century another family is mentioned in the chronicles: Daniel Alexandrovich and his son Vladimir Danilovich were elected as princes of Pskov. Vladimir Danilovich (Danielewicz) settled down in Lithuania and his descendants used Ostoja Coat of Arms * Ostoja Danielewicz family: (Danielewicz of Ostoja Coat of Arms, Danielewicz of clan Ostoja, pl, Danielewicz herbu Ostoja) - from 14th century in Pskov and in 15th cen ...
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Wincenty Danilewicz
Wincenty Danilewicz (1787 – 23 March 1878) - Chevau-léger in the Napoleonic campaign, secretary of Chancellery of Senat in Congress Poland, chief archivist of heraldric administration of Congress Poland in Warsaw. Biography ''Wincenty Danilewicz'', born 1787 in Minsk (Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth) – died 23 March 1878 in Jędrzejów (Russian Empire)- was a member of the Ostoja Danielewicz family and served as a Chevau-léger in the Napoleonic campaign, for which he was awarded the French Order of Legion of Honour and Saint Helena Medal. He took part (among others) in The Battle of Arcis-sur-Aube (20–21 March 1814), where he was wounded.(Polish) Masłowski M. oll. Stanisław Masłowski – Materiały do życiorysu i twórczości (Stanisław Masłowski – Materials for the biography and works), Wrocław 1957, ed. "Ossolineum" – Polish Academy of Sciences, pp. 17–19 In 1815 he returned home, and started to work as a secretary of Chancellery of Senat in C ...
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Adam Danielewicz
Adam Danielewicz (1846–1935) was a Polish statistician. Publications * ''Równania Ablowe oraz ich zastosowanie do wpisywania wielokątów foremnych w koło'' (1869) * ''W kwestyi statystyki śmiertelności'' (1877) * ''O układaniu tablic śmiertelności z powodu zamierzonego spisu ludności'' (1878) * ''W przedmiocie badań tablic śmiertelności'' (1878) * ''Zasady taryf ubezpieczeń życiowych'' (1878) * ''Zabezpieczenie kapitałów przez częściowe oszczędności'' (1884) * ''Z dziedziny statystyki matematycznej'' (1884) * ''Ludność miasta Warszawy w obrazach graficznych. Według spisu jednodniowego z 1882 roku'' (1887) * ''Warszawska śmiertelność według przyczyn śmierci'' (1889-1893) * ''Przyczynek do metody Zeunera'' (1890) * ''Wykup czy redukcya polis'' (1892) * ''Podstawy matematyczne ubezpieczeń życiowych'' (1896) * ''O metodzie najmniejszych kwadratów'' (1904) * ''Zarys arytmetyki politycznej'' (1910, with Samuelem Dicksteinem) References * ''Biogramy ucz ...
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Sigismund Danielewicz
Sigismund Danielewicz (1847–1927) was a Polish-born labor organizer in San Francisco. After an 1885 speech advocating against persecution of Chinese people by the labor movement made him unwelcome in the movement, he worked as an anarchist writer and publisher in San Diego and Chicago as well as San Francisco. Early life Danielewicz was born in 1847. He traveled from Congress Poland to San Francisco in the late 1870s, where he held a variety of occupations. Also in the 1870s, he spent time in the Kingdom of Hawaii where he participated in labor organizing. He was Jewish and multilingual, speaking languages including Polish, Yiddish, English and Italian. In 1879, a city directory listed him as a barber near Chinatown, San Francisco; by 1880 he had relocated to the Tenderloin. Trade organizing Danielewicz attended a trades' assembly convention in 1881 as a delegate for the Barbers' Union, making him part of a group that would go on to play a central role in trade unionist ...
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Krzysztof Danielewicz
Krzysztof Danielewicz (born 26 July 1991) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a central midfielder for Stal Rzeszów.Transfer nr 7: Krzysztof Danielewicz
€š mkschojniczanka.pl, 10 July 2017


Honours

Stal Rzeszów * II liga: 2021–22


External links

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References

1991 births Living people
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Ludomir Danilewicz
Ludomir Danilewicz (1905–1960) was a Polish engineer and, for some ten years before the outbreak of World War II, one of the four directors of the AVA Radio Company in Warsaw, Poland. AVA designed and built radio equipment for the Polish General Staff's Cipher Bureau, which was responsible for the radio communications of the General Staff's '' Oddział II'' (Section II, the General Staff's intelligence section). Beginning in 1933, after the Cipher Bureau's mathematician-cryptologist Marian Rejewski reconstructed the German military Enigma rotor cipher machine, AVA built Enigma "doubles" as well as all the electro-mechanical equipment subsequently designed at the Cipher Bureau to expedite routine breaking and reading of Enigma ciphers. AVA's other directors were Edward Fokczyński, Antoni Palluth, and Ludomir Danilewicz's younger brother, Leonard Danilewicz. The company took its name from the combined radio callsigns of the Danilewicz brothers (''TPAV'') and Palluth (''TPVA'' ...
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Polish-language Surnames
Polish (Polish: ''język polski'', , ''polszczyzna'' or simply ''polski'', ) is a West Slavic language of the Lechitic group written in the Latin script. It is spoken primarily in Poland and serves as the native language of the Poles. In addition to being the official language of Poland, it is also used by the Polish diaspora. There are over 50 million Polish speakers around the world. It ranks as the sixth most-spoken among languages of the European Union. Polish is subdivided into regional dialects and maintains strict T–V distinction pronouns, honorifics, and various forms of formalities when addressing individuals. The traditional 32-letter Polish alphabet has nine additions (''ą'', ''ć'', ''ę'', ''ł'', ''ń'', ''ó'', ''ś'', ''ź'', ''ż'') to the letters of the basic 26-letter Latin alphabet, while removing three (x, q, v). Those three letters are at times included in an extended 35-letter alphabet, although they are not used in native words. The traditional set com ...
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