Czacki is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Count Tadeusz Czacki was a Polish historian, pedagogue and numismatist. Czacki played an important part in the Enlightenment in Poland.
Pavlivka is a town now located in northwestern Ukraine, in Volyn Oblast, near Volodymyr, on the Luha river. For centuries, Poryck was property of several noble Polish families. The town is the birthplace of a Polish statesman Tadeusz Czacki. On 11 July 1943, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, supported by local nationalists murdered here more than 300 Polish civilians, who had gathered in a local Roman Catholic church for a Sunday ceremony.
Kowalewski is a Polish surname. It may refer to:
Pawlikowski is a Polish surname. Notable people with this surname include:
Pawlik is a surname. It is a diminutive of the Polish given name Paweł ("Paul"). Pawlik is related to the Czech surname Pavlík.
Młynarczyk is a Polish surname meaning a "small miller". Notable people with the surname include:
Pawlas is a Polish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Młynarski is a Polish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Szulc is a Polish surname, a version of the German surname Schulz. Notable people with the surname include:
Pawlicki is a Polish surname. It may refer to:
Kowalik is a Polish surname, a diminutive of Kowal, meaning "smith". Notable people with the surname include:
Białkowski is a Polish surname. Its Russified form is Belkovsky/Belkovski.
Kuźniar is a Polish-language surname. It is an occupational surname literally meaning "blacksmith" (archaic), from "kuźnia", "smithy".
Krawczuk is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Białecki, feminine: Białecka; plural: Białeccy) is a Polish-language surname. It is a toponymic surname literally meaning "from Białcz".
Pawelek or Pawełek is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Białek is a Polish-language surname. Archaic feminine forms: Białkówna, Białkowa. Notable people with this surname include:
Petrusewicz is a Polish gender-neutral surname of Eash-Slavic origin. Archaic feminine forms: Petrusewiczowna, Petrusewiczowa. It should be distinguished from the spelling Pietrusiewicz which conforms to the Polish phonology, which is usually a by-name in the noble Polish clan Wysoczański. It is a patronymic surname derived from the East Slavic given name Petrus', a diminutive of Piotr/Petro/Piatro (Peter).
Petrusevičius is the Lithuanian-language form of the Polish surname Petrusewicz. Feminine forms: Petruševičienė, Petrusevičiūtė
Groszek is a Polish and Yiddish surname. The word is a diminutive of grosz, a Polish lesser coin. Therefore, the surname may be an occupational surname for a person dealing with money or a nickname for a wealthy of greedy person.