Coat of arms of the Hungarian town Komádi.

In European heraldry, the decapitated Turk head (Hungarian: Törökfej, Polish: Turecka głowa, Czech and Slovak: Turecká hlava, Serbo-Croatian: Turska glava, Турска глава, Ukrainian: Турецька голова, romanized: Turetska holova), most often as pierced by a sword, signifies the many wars fought by European Christian states against the invading Muslim, Turkish-led Ottoman Empire. Other depictions include the head held up by a victor or picked by a raven. It is used in modern town, municipality and village coat of arms in Hungary, Serbia and Croatia.

List

Cities and towns

Families

It was adopted by some Austro-Hungarian nobility, such as:

  • The Balogh of Nemčice (in Slovakia), Mezőcsávás (in Romania), Csegö (?), Szász-Czegö (?)
  • The Schwarzenberg of Český Krumlov (in Bohemia)[1]
  • The Baky
  • The Benkeö of Kezdi-Sarfalva
  • The Branovacki
  • The Csernovics
  • The Csernoevicz
  • The Csokits
  • The Dunca of Sajo
  • The Eperjessy of Gyulafehérvár (in Romania)
  • The Gaines
  • The Kajdachy
  • The Karácson
  • The Kovács
  • The Kruchió
  • The Latinovics
  • The Nagy
  • The Okolicsányi
  • The Pótsa

See also

References

  1. Charles Stickney (May 2001). World Enough: Travel Memoirs. iUniverse. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-595-18474-3.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.