House of Bordziłowski
Bordziłowski is a Polish surname referring to someone from numerous places (Bordziłówka/Bardilovka, Bordzilovo/Bardilovo) under the Bordziła noble estates (Bialynia) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and then the Russian Empire.[1] The notable patriarch of Bordziłowski is Iwan Garbuz-Bordziłowski (Russian: Иван Бордзиловский-Гарбуз).
Its shortened variant, Bordziła, was derived from the German name Bardilo and toponymically Bardily (Bardzily).
Transliterations
Language | Masculine | Feminine |
---|---|---|
Polish | Bordziłowski
Bardziłowski |
Bordziłowska
Bardziłowska |
Lithuanian | Bardzilauskas, Bardziliauskas,
Barzilauskas |
Bardzilauskaitė, Bardzilauskienė
Bardziliauskaitė, Bardziliauskienė Barzilauskaitė, Barzilauskienė |
Belarusian
(Romanization) |
Бардзілоўскі
(Bardziloŭski, Bardzilowski) |
Бардзілоўская
(Bardziloŭskaja, Bardzilouskaya, Bardzilouskaia, Bardzilowskaja, Bardzilowskaya, Bardzilowskaia) |
German
(Polonized) |
Bardilowski | Bardilowska |
Latvian | Bordzilovskis | Bordzilovska |
Russian
(Romanization) |
Бордзиловский
(Bordzilovskiy, Bordzilovskii, Bordzilovskij, Bordzilovsky, Bordzilovski) |
Бордзиловская
(Bordzilovskaya, Bordzilovskaia, Bordzilovskaja) |
Ukrainian
(Romanization) |
Бордзіловський
(Bordzilovskyi, Bordzilovskyy, Bordzilovskyj, Bordzilovsky) |
Бордзіловська
(Bordzilovska) |
Others (Generational) | Bardzilouskas, Bardzil, Bardzel, Bardzell, Barr, Borris, Bardis, Barziloski, Bard, Bercilosky |
Notable people
- Anton Bordzilovskiy (1876-1962), Soviet military leader, participant in the White movement
- Carl Barzilauskas (1951–2023), American football player
- Evgeny Bordzilovskyy (1875-1949), Soviet botanist
- Fritz Barzilauskas (1920–1990), American football player
- Ivan Bordzilovskiy (1852-1903), Russian botanist
- Jerzy Bordziłowski (1900-1986), Soviet military officer, communist politician
- Vitold Bordzilovskiy (1916-1979), Soviet director, production designer of cartoons
- Viyaleta Bardzilouskaya (born 2005), Belarusian trampoline gymnast
References
- ^ von Żernicki-Szeliga, Emilian (1904). Die Polnischen Stammwappen [The Polish coats of arms, their history, and their legends.] (in German). Bamberg: Verlag von Henri Grand.