Herb: | Zerwikaptur |
Battlecry: | - |
Alternative: | Koziegłowy |
Mention: | Unknown |
Families: | Bionetowski, Cieszkiewicz, Cieszkowski, Dobrogwil, Kozieglowski, Minolganski, Pasiowski, Podbipieta, Pollupieta, Zbigwicz, Zerwikaptur, |
Towns: | None |
Zerwikaptur is a Polish coat of arms. It was used by several gentry families in the times of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
A legend about the origination of the coat of arms is used in the novel With Fire and Sword by Henryk Sienkiewicz, whereby a character Longinus Podbipięta managed to cut off the heads of three knights bearing the goat's head on their arms with a single swing of his huge sword. Therefore he named his sword "Zerwikaptur", literally meaning "coif-snapper", and later got the coat of arms of this name. In fact, Zerwikaptur originated well before the times of the novel.