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Chodakowski Family

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Dołęga Coat of Arms

The Chodakowski family (Lithuanian: Chodakauskas) is a Polish-Lithuanian noble family. They originated in Mazovia in the Kingdom of Poland.[citation needed] The family was known to be in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania since the 16th century.[1] They use the Dołęga Coat of Arms.

In Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth there were two other noble families with the same surname of different Polish and Ruthenian origin. Ruthenian one also used Dołęga Coat of Arms.[2]

History

The family may have originated in Chodaków, a village near Sochaczew in central Poland.[3]

The Chodakowski family can trace their ancestry back to Mikołaj Chodakowski (born c. 1510) who was granted Lichosielce Manor with a land property by Privilege on September 4, 1532, by Sigismund I the Old, the Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland.[4][5]

In the Lithuanian Metrica, Mikołaj is mentioned as Vawkavysk's deputy mayor and local lord. He participated in the examination of some cases with other representatives of the court.[6]

For the following five generations (1532-1807) the family remained in the Vawkavysk area of present-day Belarus.

On July 19, 1565, Jan Chodakowski, son of Mikołaj Chodakowski, the clerk of the Vawkavysk County Land Court of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1565, sent two horsemen to the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army and an additional one for Sigismund II Augustus.[5]

In 1792 Jakub Chodakowski took part in the Battle of Mir in the war between the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and Russia. After the 3rd Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, he was appointed a judge of Grodno-Vawkavysk.[7]

It was not until 1807, when Antoni Chodakowski (1784-1831) joined the 1st Light Cavalry Lancers Regiment of the Imperial Guard, that the family would eventually find itself in Vilnius[8] and later in northern Lithuania.[9]

The family was confirmed as nobility on:

Bobolice Castle
  • September 29, 1817 (Grodno Province)[10]
  • January 28, 1828 (Grodno Province)[10]
  • October 6, 1832 (Grodno Province)[10]
  • March 13, 1834 (Grodno Province)[10]
  • July 26, 1840
  • July 5, 1844
  • October 30, 1844
  • 1882 (District of Panevėžys)[11]

The Chodakowski family were instrumental in the creation and running of interwar Lithuania.[12]

The family remained in the area of present-day Lithuania until World War II when many fled West, to settle in the USA and Canada. Some branches of the family remained in Lithuania during the Communist occupation.

The family are now predominantly in Lithuania, Canada and the United States.

One of the branches of the family once owned Bobolice Castle near Krakow, Poland.[13]

Notable members

References

  1. ^ Buchowski, Krzysztof (2019). "Litewskie siostry Zofia i Jadwiga Chodakowskie (Sofija Smetoniene i Jadvyga Tubeliene)". Czasopismo Naukowe Instytutu Studiów Kobiecych: 176.
  2. ^ Adam Boniecki. Herbarz polski. Wiadomości historyczno-genealogiczne o rodach szlacheckich. T. 3
  3. ^ Uruski, Seweryn (1905). Rodzina, herbarz szlachty polskiej: Bron-Czek. Heroldium. p. 204. Chodakowski h. Dołęga. Wzięli nazwisko od wsi Chodakowa, w ziemi sochaczewskiej, z której licznie rozrodzeni przesiedlali się w różne strony Rzeczypospolitej
  4. ^ 1798 Protocol of confirmation of nobility to Chodakowski (Jacob). Lithuanian State Archives
  5. ^ a b Jakubavičienė, Ingrida (2020). Portretas. Vilnius: Versus Aureus. p. 47.
  6. ^ Lietuvos Metrikos. Sixth court cases Paper input XXVIII
  7. ^ Siudikas V., Žaldokas S., Vitartų dvaro Chodakauskų šeimos kilmė, Šiaurietiški atsivėrimai, Pasvalio krašto istorijos ir kultūros žurnalas, 2011, Nr. 1 (30), p. 16.
  8. ^ Juodytė G., Bajorai Chodakauskai ir Pakruojo kraštas, 2015 11 27. Prieiga per internetą: http://www.skrastas.lt/?data=2015-11-27&rub=1146671142&id=1448551595 , žiūrėta 2019 05 19.
  9. ^ Jakubavičienė, Ingrida (2020). Portretas. Vilnius: Versus Aureus. p. 49.
  10. ^ a b c d State Historical Archives of Russia in St. Petersburg
  11. ^ Extract from the list of the Nobility of the District of Panevėžys - 1882
  12. ^ Jakubavičienė, Ingrida (2020). Portretas. Vilnius: Versus Aureus.
  13. ^ "Kasteel Bobolice een prachtig kasteel in renovatie". Polenforum.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2020-11-14.