Holub Name Meaning
Czech, Ukrainian, Belorussian, and Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic): nickname from Czech, Ukrainian, and Belorussian holub ‘dove’, ultimately related to Latin columba (see Colomb), denoting a mild-mannered or peace-loving man. As a Jewish name it is mainly ornamental.
Lukashevsky, Brantz, Holub.
Why are jews like this? Why must they destroy the nation that saved them? Why are they so ungrateful?
Miss Łukaszewski has a Slavic (Polish) surname but she's some kind of an Azn.
Similar to Emma Sułkowicz ("mattress girl").
So shes a half jewish second generation asian. The worst of both worlds, the leftest lefty that every lefted.
Also I now know why "Brantz" didn't ring any bells. It's because it's Dutch, not German.
I never ever heard of any non-Slavic Holub before.
Even here in Poland we have for example Beata Hołub who was our famous sportswoman (Tokyo 1991, Barcelona 1992).
But never any Jew anywhere.
Never heard of any Jewish Łukaszewski too, for that matter (thought we were still talking Holubs here).
I don't know if Brantz is even real. There's a Germanic Brandt, after locations by that name. One Brandt was even Chancellor of West Germany.
And Holub is Czech.
Holub Name Meaning Czech, Ukrainian, Belorussian, and Jewish (eastern Ashkenazic): nickname from Czech, Ukrainian, and Belorussian holub ‘dove’, ultimately related to Latin columba (see Colomb), denoting a mild-mannered or peace-loving man. As a Jewish name it is mainly ornamental.
Source: Dictionary of American Family Names ©2013, Oxford University Press
likely from the same search you did
No, I know it because it's a popular Czech surname. The Polish variants include Hołubka and Hołubowicz.