last night i went out drinkin, and i got to thinkin,

VMAX  Forum

Help Support VMAX Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Yeah, Polish, can't find anything about the meaning, any help?

Not much my friend. Im not a pro with this but I just check the etymology:

Wieleba - first records are known from 1193 and it comes form "wielbic ?czcic, szanowac, wychwalac" and that basicly means:

"to worship, to revere, extol".

Hope that helps.
 
I don't know....but stop boggarting the morley and pass it this way....:rofl_200::rofl_200::rofl_200:
 
Whitehouse

"This is a famous English surname, of Scottish origin. Whilst recorded in most parts of the country, is especially popular in the West Midlands. It is a topographical surname for one who lived in a "white house", or specifically a house built of lime-stone or one that was white-washed. Such a house would be easily distinguishable in medieval times since houses built of stone were comparatively rare before the 15th century. The derivation is from the Middle English word "whit" meaning white and "hus", a house. Some bearers of the name may originate from a place so called, such as "Whittus", a village in Cumberland. There are three spellings of the name in the modern idiom, Whitehouse, Whitehous and Whitters. Early exam[ples of the surname recording include Mary Whitehouse who married Gualtero Bernard, at the church of St Michaels Cornhill, in the city of London in 1720, and another Mary Whitehouse who married John Nottage at St. Georges chapel, Hanover Square, Westminster, in 1788. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Stephen atte Whitehous. This was dated 1327, in the Subsidy Tax Rolls of the county of Somerset, during the reign of King Edward lllrd of England, known as the Father of the Navy, 1327 - 1377. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was sometimes known as the Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling."

There's a few variants of the crest I found, but all have the same white stripe over red, with two dogs.
 

Attachments

  • Untitled.png
    Untitled.png
    22.5 KB
Not much my friend. Im not a pro with this but I just check the etymology:

Wieleba - first records are known from 1193 and it comes form "wielbic ?czcic, szanowac, wychwalac" and that basicly means:

"to worship, to revere, extol".

Hope that helps.

Cool, thanks, way more than i could find, I vaguely remember my father saying that it meant something to do with worship or something, but he died a long time ago and my memory sucks.
 
Fletch- Charming, not bad look'n, intelligent... :stop:Oh yeah, some people on here have seen me. :ignore:

It's 'fletching'. Arrow maker. I didn't know they made Plymouths back then.:ummm:

Get it? Plymouth Arrow.:th_signs132:
 
Yup, it's the top of a Scottish claymore.
Cool, I ilke white weapons.
Any chance to see it all?

Cool, thanks, way more than i could find, I vaguely remember my father saying that it meant something to do with worship or something, but he died a long time ago and my memory sucks.
No problem, glad I could help.
 
Fletch- Charming, not bad look'n, intelligent... :stop:Oh yeah, some people on here have seen me. :ignore:

It's 'fletching'. Arrow maker. I didn't know they made Plymouths back then.:ummm:

Get it? Plymouth Arrow.
:th_signs132:
Not sure if you'd really want to have your family take credit for making a Plymouth Arrow!:biglaugh: my sister had one of those back in the late 70's and it was not much of a car but did get better gas mileage compared to my hulking golden 1970's Buick LeSabre coupe!:rofl_200:
 
Cool, I ilke white weapons.
Any chance to see it all?

Here are a few, I had a couple of glass broadswords I got from Italy, but they didn't make the trip back in one piece. I'm going to redo the room this summer. needs a paintjob and I have a couple tapestrys on order for the walls not to mention I have a few mounts for the swords that need to be finished.
 

Attachments

  • helmet.jpg
    helmet.jpg
    46 KB
  • room1.jpg
    room1.jpg
    73.3 KB
  • room2.jpg
    room2.jpg
    54.2 KB
  • room3.jpg
    room3.jpg
    36.9 KB
  • room4.jpg
    room4.jpg
    30.5 KB
  • room5.jpg
    room5.jpg
    49.2 KB
  • room6.jpg
    room6.jpg
    33 KB
  • room7.jpg
    room7.jpg
    29.7 KB
  • room8.jpg
    room8.jpg
    37.8 KB
Here are a few, I had a couple of glass broadswords I got from Italy, but they didn't make the trip back in one piece. I'm going to redo the room this summer. needs a paintjob and I have a couple tapestrys on order for the walls not to mention I have a few mounts for the swords that need to be finished.

Thats cool!
My gradpha was a blacksmith. As a child I saw how he was making the swords, just for fun or for his friends.
I still have a hugde piece of blcksmith shop...thats why i like white weapons, especially swords.

Thanks for sharing :)
 
Me too, there is just somthing about them. To me it dosn't matter where they are made, I love the different styles and types. Some can be elegant, others undenyably brutal.

I have a very old sabre from WW II, my gradpha was an polish cavalryman back there.
Its very old sabre with broken end but I like it!
 
I like the sword thing, satariel666. That's a big piece of personal history. Cool. During that time, your grandpa sure had it rough, cavalry vs tanks.
 
Back
Top