House of Czartoryski
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House of Czartoryski
Summary
House of Czartoryski is a noble family[1]. It draws 224 Wikipedia views per month (noble_family category, ranking #140 of 999).[2]
Key Facts
- House of Czartoryski is in the country of Grand Duchy of Lithuania[3].
- House of Czartoryski is in the country of Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth[4].
- House of Czartoryski is in the country of Russian Empire[5].
- House of Czartoryski is in the country of Second Polish Republic[6].
- House of Czartoryski is in the country of Poland[7].
- House of Czartoryski's instance of is recorded as noble family[8].
- House of Czartoryski's founder is recorded as Konstanty Koriatowicz[9].
- Chartoryisk is named after House of Czartoryski[10].
- House of Czartoryski's coat of arms is recorded as Pogoń Litewska II[11].
- House of Czartoryski's coat of arms is recorded as Czartoryski[12].
- House of Czartoryski is part of Gediminids[13].
- House of Czartoryski's Commons category is recorded as House of Czartoryski[14].
- House of Czartoryski's family name is recorded as Czartoryski[15].
- House of Czartoryski's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Czartoryski family[16].
- House of Czartoryski's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[17].
- House of Czartoryski's described by source is recorded as Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich[18].
- House of Czartoryski's described by source is recorded as Kniaziowie litewsko-ruscy od końca czternastego wieku[19].
Body
Founding
House of Czartoryski's founder is recorded as Konstanty Koriatowicz[9].
Identity
House of Czartoryski is part of Gediminids[13].
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for House of Czartoryski include Czartoryski Museum[20], a national museum[21], in Poland[22], founded in 1796[23].
Why It Matters
House of Czartoryski draws 224 Wikipedia views per month (noble_family category, ranking #140 of 999).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]
Entities named for it include Czartoryski Museum[20], a national museum[21], in Poland[22], founded in 1796[23].