3-928: Tyszkiewicz Palace or Tiškevičiai Palace can refer to several palaces of Tyszkiewicz family . Places named Tyszkiewicz Palace or "former Tyszkiewicz Palace" and other historically owned properties of the family are located in Warsaw and Kraków , and in numerous towns of modern Poland , Belarus , Lithuania (in Palanga , Kretinga , Lahojsk , Raudondvaris , Berdychiv , Biržai , Kavarskas , Deltuva , Trakai , Lentvaris , Seredžius , and Ukraine . Particular ones include: Tyszkiewicz family The House of Tyszkiewicz ( Polish : Tyszkiewiczowie , singular: Tyszkiewicz , Belarusian : Тышкевічы , singular: Тышкевіч , Lithuanian : Tiškevičiai , singular: Tiškevičius , Ukrainian : Тишкевичі , singular: Тишкевич , Russian : Тышкевичи , singular: Тышкевич )
6-816: The addition of the patronymic , resulting in Tyszkiewicz-Kalenicki. A branch of the family Germanised the name to Tischkowitz and a few members of this branch are still to be found in Germany and the UK. Places named Tyszkiewicz Palace, "former Tyszkiewicz Palace", Tiškevičiai Palace , and other historical properties of the family are located in Warsaw , Kraków and Vilnius , as well as in numerous towns of modern Poland , Belarus , Lithuania and Ukraine (in Palanga , Kretinga , Lahojsk , Raudondvaris , Berdychiv , Biržai , Kavarskas , Deltuva , Trakai , Lentvaris , Seredžius , etc.) Palaces connected with
9-678: Was a wealthy and influential Polish-Lithuanian magnate family of Ruthenian origin, with roots traced to the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania . They held the Polish coat of arms Leliwa . Their nobility was reaffirmed in Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Russian Empire . The family traces its roots to a 15th-century Ruthenian boyar Kalenik Mishkovich and derives from the name of his grandson, Tysha with
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