Wróblewski (feminine Wróblewska) is a Polish locational surname, which originally meant a person from one of several places called Wróblew or Wróblewo in Poland, with these villages in turn named for the Polish word wróbel ("sparrow").[1] Alternative spellings abroad include Wroblewski and Wroblewsky. Russian-language transliteration: Vrublevsky, Latvian: Vrubļevskis, Lithuanian: Vrublevskis.
Notable people include:
- Andrzej Wróblewski (1927–1957), Polish painter
- Andrzej Krzysztof Wróblewski (1935–2012), Polish journalist
- Anna Wroblewski (born 1985), American poker player
- Augustyn Wróblewski (1866–1913), Polish anarchist
- Bogusław Wróblewski (born 1955), Polish literary critic
- Bartłomiej Wróblewski (born 1975), Polish politician
- David Wroblewski (born 1959), American novelist
- Franciszek Wróblewski (1789–1857), Polish doctor
- Jan Ptaszyn Wróblewski (born 1936), Polish musician
- Jan Wróblewski (glider pilot) (born 1940), Polish glider pilot
- Jerzy Wróblewski (1926–1990), Polish legal scholar
- Krystyna Wróblewska (1904–1994), Polish artist
- Paul Wroblewski, British television director
- Stanisław Wróblewski (1959–2019), Polish wrestler
- Tadeusz Wróblewski (1858–1925), Polish politician
- Tomasz Wróblewski (born 1980), Polish musician
- Walery Antoni Wróblewski (1836–1908), Polish politician
- Władysław Wróblewski (1875–1951), Polish politician
- Zygmunt Florenty Wróblewski (1845–1888), Polish scientist
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Dictionary of American Family Names. "Wroblewski Family History", Oxford University Press, 2013. Retrieved on 15 January 2016.