Coat of arms Carniola, Styria (Grabenhofen, Graz, ancient Orsini-Rosenberg) and Lower Austria
Cadet branches of the Grabenhofen line. Coat of arms used atthe branches Kornberg, dutch family Graeff, in Tyrol and Switzerland
note:
The Graben of Kornberg bought Kornberg in 1328 with a new Coat of arms
Cadet branches of the Kornberg line
Graben, fief of several branches of the Graben family (Carniolan branch, Grabenhofen, Kornberg, Sommeregg in Carynthia)
Coat of arms Von Graben, both variantes
Nederlands Adelsboek (1914). Family De Graeff
Coat of arms Graeff, ancient; oldest known usage of Jan Pietersz Graeff in 1543 as Schepen of Amsterdam (its not clear if his father Pieter Graeff used the same coat of arms as well)
Coat of arms Dirk Jansz Graeff (1532-1589), son of Jan Pietersz Graeff
Oldest known painted image of Graeff coat of arms (Dirck Jansz Graeff, 1532-1589)
In front of a variant of the Graeff coat of arms: Matthias Laurenz Gräff and Karl von Habsburg - His Imperial Highness Archduke Karl of Austria, chief of the former imperial and royal house of Austria, the historical legacy of Roman majesty and the Austrian Empire
Coat of arms of the lords of Zuid-Polsbroek (1610 - 1870)
Coat of arms as Lords of Zuid-Polsbroek, Purmerland and Ilpendam (17, 18, 19th century)
De Graeff coat of arms as free imperial knights of th Holy roman Empire (Andries de Graeff, 1677)
De Graeff coat of arms as members of the new dutch nobility (Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek, 1885
Coat of arms of Hermann op den Graeff (1585-1642), 'the mennonite Lord bishop' of Krefeld (Germany) from 1630. Herman was an alleged son of Anna op den Graeff van de Aldekerk from an unproven morganatic marriage with an unknown man of unknown social rank. It's possible that Herman took over the swan coat of arms from his biological father.
For the full Op den Graeff windows click here
Descripton (in german):
note:
claimed, unproven
The coat of arms of Pieter de Graeff (1638-1707) is quartered with a heart shield and since 1678 it shows the following symbols: