Lvov is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Wiśniewski is the third most common surname in Poland. It is a toponymic surname derived from any of locations named Wiśniewa, Wiśniewo, Wiśniowa, Wiśniew. It is related to the following surnames in other languages:
Jaworski is a surname of Polish-language origin. It is related to a number of surnames in other languages.
Ostrowski is a surname of Polish-language origin. The original name may have indicated someone who hailed from the Russian city of Ostrov. It is related to a number of surnames in other languages.
Lemberg is the German name for the city of Lviv in Ukraine. It may also refer to:
Maliszewski is a surname of Polish-language origin. It is a toponymic surname associated with one of the places in Poland named Maliszew, Maliszewo, or Maliszów.
Tarnowski is a Polish-language toponymic surname derived from the city of Tarnów.
Rokita is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Sobol is a surname derived from the Slavic word sobol ("sable"), which may also have been a nickname for a fur trader. As a Yiddish surname, it may be a variant of Sobel, which also derives from sobol. It may refer to:
Bielecki is a Polish-language surname. It is related to a number of surnames in other languages.
Rogalski is a Polish locational surname, which means a person from Rogal in Poland. The name may refer to:
Dziuba or Dzyuba is a surname of Polish, Belarusian and Ukrainian origins. It may refer to:
Morawski is a Polish surname. It is related to a number of surnames in other languages.
Skowroński is a Polish surname. It is a habitational name for someone from a place called Skowronów, Skowronna, Skowron, or Skowronki, all named with Polish skowronek ("skylark") or skowron ("hoopoe-lark"). In some cases, it is a modification of the surname Skowron, with the suffix added in imitation of noble surnames.
Borkowski or Borkowsky is a surname of Polish-language origin. It is a toponymic surname originated for a person associated with any of the places named Borków, Borki, Borkowice, or Borek. Russian equivalent: Borkovsky, Lithuanian: Barkauskas.
Zuk, Żuk, or Žuk is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Szeliga is a Polish-language surname. It has archaic feminine forms: Szeligowa for married women and Szeliżanka for unmarried. It is a family name of Polish nobility bearing the Szeliga coat of arms.
Mickiewicz is a Polish form of the Belarusian surname Mickievič. It corresponds to Lithuanianized: Mickevičius, and Belarusian, Russian: Mitskevich. Notable people with this surname include:
Śmigielski and its variants are is a Polish surname meaning someone from Śmigiel and ultimately derived from the verb śmigać, "to move swiftly". Related names include Schmiegel, Smigel and Śmigiel. Variants of the name start with Sm-, Śm-, or Szm-; may or may not contain an 'i' following the 'g'; may or may not contain an 'ł' instead of an 'l'; and end with -chi, -ski, or -szki. Historically, the family was of nobility and used the Łodzia coat of arms.
Ilnicki is a Polish surname. Notable people with this surname include:
Lwów is the Polish name for Lviv, Ukraine; a city formerly in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.