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Christianization of Lithuania

The Christianization of Lithuania (Lithuanian: Lietuvos krikštas) occurred in 1387, initiated by King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Władysław II Jagiełło and his cousin Vytautas the Great. It signified the official adoption of Christianity by Lithuania, the last pagan country in Europe.[1] This event ended one of the most complicated and lengthiest processes of Christianization in European history.

The fresco in the Vilnius Cathedral, dating to the Christianization of Lithuania

History

 
Romuva sanctuary in Prussia

Early contacts with Eastern Orthodox Christianity

Lithuanians' contacts with the Christian religion predated the establishment of the Duchy of Lithuania in the 13th century. The first known record of the name Lithuania (Litua), recorded in the Annals of Quedlinburg in 1009, relates to Chalcedonian missionaries led by Bruno of Querfurt, who baptised several rulers of the Yotvingians, a nearby Baltic tribe. However, Lithuanians had more active contacts with the Kievan Rus' and subsequent Eastern Slavic states, which had adopted Eastern Orthodox Christianity following the Christianization of Kievan Rus' in the 10th century.

As the dukes of Lithuania extended their dominion eastwards, the influence of the Slavic states on their culture increased. Their subordinates and the people followed their example, borrowing, for instance, many of the East Slavic versions of Christian names in the 11th–12th centuries. This borrowing became increasingly widespread among the pagan population in Aukštaitija, though much less so in Samogitia. The influence of Orthodox Christianity on pagan Lithuanian culture is evidenced in about one-third of present-day Lithuanian surnames which are constructed from baptismal names are Old Church Slavonic in origin.[2] In addition, the Lithuanian words for "church", "baptism" and "fast" are classed as 'loanwords from Russian rather than Polish.'[3]

Baptism of Mindaugas

The emergence of a monastic state of the Livonian Order around the Lithuanian borders made it rather urgent to choose a state religion. The first Lithuanian Grand Duke to adopt Western Christianity was Mindaugas, although his nephew and rival Tautvilas had done that earlier, in 1250. The first translations of Catholic prayers from German were made during his reign and have been known since.[4]

 
The Pope Innocent IV bull regarding Lithuania's placement under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome, Mindaugas' baptism and coronation

In 1249, Tautvilas' ally Daniel of Halych attacked Navahradak, and in 1250, another ally of Tautvilas, the Livonian Order, organized a major raid against Nalšia land and Mindaugas' domains in Lithuania proper. Attacked from the south and north and facing the possibility of unrest elsewhere, Mindaugas was placed in an extremely difficult position, but managed to use the conflicts between the Livonian Order and the Archbishop of Riga in his own interests. In 1250 or 1251, Mindaugas agreed to receive baptism and relinquish control over some lands in western Lithuania, for which he was to receive a crown in return.

Mindaugas and his family were baptised in the Catholic rite in 1250 or 1251. On July 17, 1251 Pope Innocent IV issued a papal bull proclaiming Lithuania a Kingdom and the state was placed under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome. Mindaugas and his wife Morta were crowned at some time during the summer of 1253, and the Kingdom of Lithuania, formally a Christian state, was established. Even after nominally becoming a Catholic, King Mindaugas did not cease sacrificing to his own gods.[5] Despite the ruling family's baptism, Lithuania had not become a truly Christian state, since there were no fruitful efforts to convert its population; Lithuanians and Samogitians stood firmly for their ancestral religion. Some of this might be attributed to the Golden Horde tumanbashi Burundaj's campaign in 1259 and 1260, which caused destruction in Lithuania proper and Nalšia.

 
Medieval fresco from the Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune Church in Strasbourg, portraying 15 European nations' path towards Christianity. Lithuania presented as the last figure.

Vacillation between East and West

Mindaugas' successors did not express enough interest in following in his footsteps. There were decades of vacillation between the Latin and the Orthodox options.[6] "For Gediminas and Algirdas, retention of paganism provided a useful diplomatic tool and weapon... that allowed them to use promises of conversion as a means of preserving their power and independence".[7] Grand Duke Algirdas had pursued an option of 'dynamic balance'. Throughout his reign he teased both Avignon and Constantinople with the prospects of a conversion;[8] several unsuccessful attempts were made to negotiate the conversion of Lithuania.[9]

To avoid further clashes with the Teutonic Order, in 1349, Lithuanian co-ruler Kęstutis started the negotiations with Pope Clement VI for the conversion and had been promised royal crowns for himself and his sons. Algirdas willingly remained aside of the business and dealt with the order in the Ruthenian part of the state. The intermediary in the negotiations, Polish King Casimir III, made an unexpected assault on Volhynia and Brest in October 1349 that ruined Kęstutis' plan. During the Polish-Lithuanian war for Volhynia, King Louis I of Hungary offered a peace agreement to Kęstutis on 15 August 1351, according to which Kęstutis obliged himself to accept Christianity and provide the Kingdom of Hungary with military aid, in exchange of the royal crown. Kęstutis confirmed the agreement by performing a pagan ritual[10] to convince the other side. In fact, Kęstutis had no intentions to abide the agreement and ran away on his way to Buda.[11]

By the 14th century, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania had emerged as a successor to Kievan Rus in the western part of its dominions.[12] Although its sovereign was pagan, the majority of the population was Slavic and Orthodox. To legitimize their rule in these areas, the Lithuanian royalty frequently married into the Orthodox Rurikid aristocracy of Eastern Europe. As a result, some Lithuanian rulers were baptised into Eastern Orthodoxy either as children (Švitrigaila) or adults. The first one was Vaišelga, son and heir of Mindaugas, who took monastic vows at an Orthodox monastery in Lavrashev[13] near Novgorodok and later established a convent there.[14]

Christianization by Jogaila and Vytautas

The final attempt to Christianize Lithuania was made by Jogaila. Jogaila's Russian mother urged him to marry Sofia, daughter of Prince Dmitri of Moscow, who required him first to convert to Orthodoxy and to make Lithuania a fief of the Grand Duchy of Moscow.[15] That option, however, was unrealistic and unlikely to halt the crusades against Lithuania by the Teutonic Order. Jogaila chose therefore to accept a Polish proposal to become a Catholic and marry Queen Jadwiga of Poland. On these and other terms, on 14 August 1385, at the castle of Krėva, Jogaila agreed to adopt Christianity, signing the Act of Krėva.

Władysław II Jagiełło was duly baptised at the Wawel Cathedral in Kraków on 15 February 1386 and became king of Poland. The royal baptism was followed by the conversion of most of Jogaila's court and knights,[16] as well as Jogaila's brothers Karigaila, Vygantas, Švitrigaila and cousin Vytautas. Jogaila sent Dobrogost, Bishop of Poznań, as ambassador to Pope Urban VI with a petition for the erection of an episcopal see at Vilnius and the appointment of Andrzej Jastrzębiec to fill it.

Jogaila returned to Lithuania in February 1387. The baptism of nobles and their peasants was at first carried out in the capital Vilnius and its environs. The nobility and some peasants in Aukštaitija were baptized in spring, followed by the rest of the Lithuanian nobility. The parishes were established in ethnic Lithuania and the new Vilnius Cathedral was built in 1387 in the site of a demolished pagan temple. According to the information of disputed accuracy provided by Jan Długosz, the first parochial churches were built in Lithuanian pagan towns Vilkmergė, Maišiagala, Lida, Nemenčinė, Medininkai, Kreva, Haina and Abolcy, all belonging to the Jogaila's patrimony. Jogaila destroyed the old places of worship: altars, sacred groves, killed grass snakes and other snakes that were regarded as divine guardians of households at the time.[17] The papal bull issued by Pope Urban VI on 12 March 1388 has information about destruction of pagan cult objects in Vilnius and provided legal grounds for establishment of the Vilnius Cathedral.[1] On 19 April 1389, Pope Urban VI recognized the status of Lithuania as a Roman Catholic state.[18] Lithuania was the last state in Europe to be Christianized.[1]

Samogitia was the last ethnic region of Lithuania to become Christianized in 1413, following the defeat of the Teutonic Order in the Battle of Grunwald and the Peace of Thorn and its subsequent return to the Lithuanian control.[19] In November 1413, Vytautas himself sailed Neman River and Dubysa, reached the environs of Betygala, where he baptised the first groups of Samogitians.[20] In 1416, the construction of eight first parochial churches was started. The Diocese of Samogitia was established on 23 October 1417 and Matthias of Trakai became the first Bishop of Samogitia.[21] The cathedral was built in Medininkai around 1464.[19]

Aftermath

Ethnic Lithuanian nobles were the main converts to Catholicism, but paganism remained strong among the peasantry. Pagan customs prevailed for a long time among the common people of Lithuania and were covertly practiced. There had been no prosecution of priests and adherents of the old faith. However, by the 17th century, following the Counter-Reformation (1545-1648), the Roman Catholic faith had essentially taken precedence over earlier pagan beliefs.

The conversion and its political implications had lasting repercussions for the history of Lithuania. As the majority of the population of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania outside Lithuania proper was Orthodox and the elite gradually converted to Roman Catholicism, religious tensions increased. Some of the Orthodox Gediminids left Lithuania for Muscovy, where they gave rise to such families as the Galitzine and the Troubetzkoy. The Orthodox population of present-day Ukraine and eastern Belarus often sympathized with the rulers of Muscovy, who portrayed themselves as the champions of Orthodoxy. These feelings contributed to such reverses as the Battle of Vedrosha, which crippled the Grand Duchy and undermined its position as a dominant power in Eastern Europe.

On the other hand, the conversion to Roman Catholicism facilitated Lithuania's integration into the cultural sphere of Western Europe and paved the way to the political alliance of Lithuania and Poland, finalized as the Union of Lublin in 1569.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Rowell, Stephen Christopher; Baronas, Darius (2015). The conversion of Lithuania: from pagan barbarians to late medieval Christians. Vilnius: Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore. pp. 2, 273. ISBN 9786094251528. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
  2. ^ (in Lithuanian) Z. Zinkevičius. Krikščionybės ištakos Lietuvoje[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ S.C. Rowell. Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire Within East-central Europe, 1295-1345. Cambridge University Press, 1994. Page 149.
  4. ^ For instance, the initial verse of the Trinitarian formula in Lithuanian, as well as in Latvian and Prussian, is presented as vardan Dievo Tėvo, i.e. "in the name of God the Father", in contrast to the common version "in the name of Father". It shows the influence of German Arianism, which used the denomination Got Vater, on the earliest Lithuanian liturgy. [1]
  5. ^ S. C. Rowell Page 120
  6. ^ Davies, Norman. Europe:A history. Oxford University Press. Page 430.
  7. ^ Muldoon, James. Varieties of Religious Conversion in the Middle Ages. University Press of Florida, 1997. Page 140.
  8. ^ Davies, Page 430
  9. ^ Muldon, Page 137
  10. ^ killing a bull by throwing a knife at it
  11. ^ (in Lithuanian) Kęstutis: was he a proponent or opponent of the Christianization, accessed on 01-07-2007
  12. ^ Daniel Z. Stone. The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386-1795. University of Washington Press, 2001. ISBN 0-295-98093-1. Page 3;
    Paul Robert Magocsi. A History of Ukraine. University of Toronto Press, 1996. Page 67.
  13. ^ Following the Tracks of a Myth, Edvardas Gudavičius
  14. ^ S.C. Rowell. Page 149.
  15. ^ A. Thomas Lane. Lithuania: Stepping Westward. Routledge, 2001. Page XXI.
  16. ^ Kłoczowski, 54-57.
  17. ^ Vaitkevičius, Vykintas (2011). "Lietuvos krikštas: istorija ir tautosaka". Liaudies kultūra (in Lithuanian). 2 (137): 12. Retrieved 5 February 2023.
  18. ^ Eidintas, Alfonsas (2015). The history of Lithuania (PDF). Vilnius: Publishing House “Eugrimas”. p. 51. ISBN 978-609-437-163-9. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
  19. ^ a b Bucevičė, Janina. "Žemaičių Krikšto 600 m. jubiliejaus istorija ir šaltiniai". Roman Catholic Diocese of Telšiai (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 4 March 2023.
  20. ^ (in Lithuanian)Dualistinis lietuvių tautybės susidarymas ir trialistinis Lietuvos krikšto pobūdis 2003-05-02 at the Wayback Machine Dr. Aleksandras Vitkus
  21. ^ "Motiejus Trakiškis". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 4 March 2023.

External links

  • The Conversion of Lithuania 1387

christianization, lithuania, lithuanian, lietuvos, krikštas, occurred, 1387, initiated, king, poland, grand, duke, lithuania, władysław, jagiełło, cousin, vytautas, great, signified, official, adoption, christianity, lithuania, last, pagan, country, europe, th. The Christianization of Lithuania Lithuanian Lietuvos krikstas occurred in 1387 initiated by King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Wladyslaw II Jagiello and his cousin Vytautas the Great It signified the official adoption of Christianity by Lithuania the last pagan country in Europe 1 This event ended one of the most complicated and lengthiest processes of Christianization in European history The fresco in the Vilnius Cathedral dating to the Christianization of Lithuania Contents 1 History 1 1 Early contacts with Eastern Orthodox Christianity 1 2 Baptism of Mindaugas 1 3 Vacillation between East and West 1 4 Christianization by Jogaila and Vytautas 2 Aftermath 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory Edit Romuva sanctuary in Prussia Early contacts with Eastern Orthodox Christianity Edit Lithuanians contacts with the Christian religion predated the establishment of the Duchy of Lithuania in the 13th century The first known record of the name Lithuania Litua recorded in the Annals of Quedlinburg in 1009 relates to Chalcedonian missionaries led by Bruno of Querfurt who baptised several rulers of the Yotvingians a nearby Baltic tribe However Lithuanians had more active contacts with the Kievan Rus and subsequent Eastern Slavic states which had adopted Eastern Orthodox Christianity following the Christianization of Kievan Rus in the 10th century As the dukes of Lithuania extended their dominion eastwards the influence of the Slavic states on their culture increased Their subordinates and the people followed their example borrowing for instance many of the East Slavic versions of Christian names in the 11th 12th centuries This borrowing became increasingly widespread among the pagan population in Aukstaitija though much less so in Samogitia The influence of Orthodox Christianity on pagan Lithuanian culture is evidenced in about one third of present day Lithuanian surnames which are constructed from baptismal names are Old Church Slavonic in origin 2 In addition the Lithuanian words for church baptism and fast are classed as loanwords from Russian rather than Polish 3 Baptism of Mindaugas Edit The emergence of a monastic state of the Livonian Order around the Lithuanian borders made it rather urgent to choose a state religion The first Lithuanian Grand Duke to adopt Western Christianity was Mindaugas although his nephew and rival Tautvilas had done that earlier in 1250 The first translations of Catholic prayers from German were made during his reign and have been known since 4 The Pope Innocent IV bull regarding Lithuania s placement under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome Mindaugas baptism and coronation In 1249 Tautvilas ally Daniel of Halych attacked Navahradak and in 1250 another ally of Tautvilas the Livonian Order organized a major raid against Nalsia land and Mindaugas domains in Lithuania proper Attacked from the south and north and facing the possibility of unrest elsewhere Mindaugas was placed in an extremely difficult position but managed to use the conflicts between the Livonian Order and the Archbishop of Riga in his own interests In 1250 or 1251 Mindaugas agreed to receive baptism and relinquish control over some lands in western Lithuania for which he was to receive a crown in return Mindaugas and his family were baptised in the Catholic rite in 1250 or 1251 On July 17 1251 Pope Innocent IV issued a papal bull proclaiming Lithuania a Kingdom and the state was placed under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome Mindaugas and his wife Morta were crowned at some time during the summer of 1253 and the Kingdom of Lithuania formally a Christian state was established Even after nominally becoming a Catholic King Mindaugas did not cease sacrificing to his own gods 5 Despite the ruling family s baptism Lithuania had not become a truly Christian state since there were no fruitful efforts to convert its population Lithuanians and Samogitians stood firmly for their ancestral religion Some of this might be attributed to the Golden Horde tumanbashi Burundaj s campaign in 1259 and 1260 which caused destruction in Lithuania proper and Nalsia Medieval fresco from the Saint Pierre le Jeune Church in Strasbourg portraying 15 European nations path towards Christianity Lithuania presented as the last figure Vacillation between East and West Edit Mindaugas successors did not express enough interest in following in his footsteps There were decades of vacillation between the Latin and the Orthodox options 6 For Gediminas and Algirdas retention of paganism provided a useful diplomatic tool and weapon that allowed them to use promises of conversion as a means of preserving their power and independence 7 Grand Duke Algirdas had pursued an option of dynamic balance Throughout his reign he teased both Avignon and Constantinople with the prospects of a conversion 8 several unsuccessful attempts were made to negotiate the conversion of Lithuania 9 To avoid further clashes with the Teutonic Order in 1349 Lithuanian co ruler Kestutis started the negotiations with Pope Clement VI for the conversion and had been promised royal crowns for himself and his sons Algirdas willingly remained aside of the business and dealt with the order in the Ruthenian part of the state The intermediary in the negotiations Polish King Casimir III made an unexpected assault on Volhynia and Brest in October 1349 that ruined Kestutis plan During the Polish Lithuanian war for Volhynia King Louis I of Hungary offered a peace agreement to Kestutis on 15 August 1351 according to which Kestutis obliged himself to accept Christianity and provide the Kingdom of Hungary with military aid in exchange of the royal crown Kestutis confirmed the agreement by performing a pagan ritual 10 to convince the other side In fact Kestutis had no intentions to abide the agreement and ran away on his way to Buda 11 By the 14th century the Grand Duchy of Lithuania had emerged as a successor to Kievan Rus in the western part of its dominions 12 Although its sovereign was pagan the majority of the population was Slavic and Orthodox To legitimize their rule in these areas the Lithuanian royalty frequently married into the Orthodox Rurikid aristocracy of Eastern Europe As a result some Lithuanian rulers were baptised into Eastern Orthodoxy either as children Svitrigaila or adults The first one was Vaiselga son and heir of Mindaugas who took monastic vows at an Orthodox monastery in Lavrashev 13 near Novgorodok and later established a convent there 14 Christianization by Jogaila and Vytautas Edit The final attempt to Christianize Lithuania was made by Jogaila Jogaila s Russian mother urged him to marry Sofia daughter of Prince Dmitri of Moscow who required him first to convert to Orthodoxy and to make Lithuania a fief of the Grand Duchy of Moscow 15 That option however was unrealistic and unlikely to halt the crusades against Lithuania by the Teutonic Order Jogaila chose therefore to accept a Polish proposal to become a Catholic and marry Queen Jadwiga of Poland On these and other terms on 14 August 1385 at the castle of Kreva Jogaila agreed to adopt Christianity signing the Act of Kreva Wladyslaw II Jagiello was duly baptised at the Wawel Cathedral in Krakow on 15 February 1386 and became king of Poland The royal baptism was followed by the conversion of most of Jogaila s court and knights 16 as well as Jogaila s brothers Karigaila Vygantas Svitrigaila and cousin Vytautas Jogaila sent Dobrogost Bishop of Poznan as ambassador to Pope Urban VI with a petition for the erection of an episcopal see at Vilnius and the appointment of Andrzej Jastrzebiec to fill it The Baptism of Lithuania by Jan Matejko Jogaila returned to Lithuania in February 1387 The baptism of nobles and their peasants was at first carried out in the capital Vilnius and its environs The nobility and some peasants in Aukstaitija were baptized in spring followed by the rest of the Lithuanian nobility The parishes were established in ethnic Lithuania and the new Vilnius Cathedral was built in 1387 in the site of a demolished pagan temple According to the information of disputed accuracy provided by Jan Dlugosz the first parochial churches were built in Lithuanian pagan towns Vilkmerge Maisiagala Lida Nemencine Medininkai Kreva Haina and Abolcy all belonging to the Jogaila s patrimony Jogaila destroyed the old places of worship altars sacred groves killed grass snakes and other snakes that were regarded as divine guardians of households at the time 17 The papal bull issued by Pope Urban VI on 12 March 1388 has information about destruction of pagan cult objects in Vilnius and provided legal grounds for establishment of the Vilnius Cathedral 1 On 19 April 1389 Pope Urban VI recognized the status of Lithuania as a Roman Catholic state 18 Lithuania was the last state in Europe to be Christianized 1 Samogitia was the last ethnic region of Lithuania to become Christianized in 1413 following the defeat of the Teutonic Order in the Battle of Grunwald and the Peace of Thorn and its subsequent return to the Lithuanian control 19 In November 1413 Vytautas himself sailed Neman River and Dubysa reached the environs of Betygala where he baptised the first groups of Samogitians 20 In 1416 the construction of eight first parochial churches was started The Diocese of Samogitia was established on 23 October 1417 and Matthias of Trakai became the first Bishop of Samogitia 21 The cathedral was built in Medininkai around 1464 19 Aftermath EditEthnic Lithuanian nobles were the main converts to Catholicism but paganism remained strong among the peasantry Pagan customs prevailed for a long time among the common people of Lithuania and were covertly practiced There had been no prosecution of priests and adherents of the old faith However by the 17th century following the Counter Reformation 1545 1648 the Roman Catholic faith had essentially taken precedence over earlier pagan beliefs The conversion and its political implications had lasting repercussions for the history of Lithuania As the majority of the population of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania outside Lithuania proper was Orthodox and the elite gradually converted to Roman Catholicism religious tensions increased Some of the Orthodox Gediminids left Lithuania for Muscovy where they gave rise to such families as the Galitzine and the Troubetzkoy The Orthodox population of present day Ukraine and eastern Belarus often sympathized with the rulers of Muscovy who portrayed themselves as the champions of Orthodoxy These feelings contributed to such reverses as the Battle of Vedrosha which crippled the Grand Duchy and undermined its position as a dominant power in Eastern Europe On the other hand the conversion to Roman Catholicism facilitated Lithuania s integration into the cultural sphere of Western Europe and paved the way to the political alliance of Lithuania and Poland finalized as the Union of Lublin in 1569 See also EditNorthern Crusades History of LithuaniaReferences Edit a b c Rowell Stephen Christopher Baronas Darius 2015 The conversion of Lithuania from pagan barbarians to late medieval Christians Vilnius Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore pp 2 273 ISBN 9786094251528 Retrieved 4 March 2023 in Lithuanian Z Zinkevicius Krikscionybes istakos Lietuvoje permanent dead link S C Rowell Lithuania Ascending A Pagan Empire Within East central Europe 1295 1345 Cambridge University Press 1994 Page 149 For instance the initial verse of the Trinitarian formula in Lithuanian as well as in Latvian and Prussian is presented as vardan Dievo Tevo i e in the name of God the Father in contrast to the common version in the name of Father It shows the influence of German Arianism which used the denomination Got Vater on the earliest Lithuanian liturgy 1 S C Rowell Page 120 Davies Norman Europe A history Oxford University Press Page 430 Muldoon James Varieties of Religious Conversion in the Middle Ages University Press of Florida 1997 Page 140 Davies Page 430 Muldon Page 137 killing a bull by throwing a knife at it in Lithuanian Kestutis was he a proponent or opponent of the Christianization accessed on 01 07 2007 Daniel Z Stone The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 University of Washington Press 2001 ISBN 0 295 98093 1 Page 3 Paul Robert Magocsi A History of Ukraine University of Toronto Press 1996 Page 67 Following the Tracks of a Myth Edvardas Gudavicius S C Rowell Page 149 A Thomas Lane Lithuania Stepping Westward Routledge 2001 Page XXI Kloczowski 54 57 Vaitkevicius Vykintas 2011 Lietuvos krikstas istorija ir tautosaka Liaudies kultura in Lithuanian 2 137 12 Retrieved 5 February 2023 Eidintas Alfonsas 2015 The history of Lithuania PDF Vilnius Publishing House Eugrimas p 51 ISBN 978 609 437 163 9 Retrieved 4 March 2023 a b Bucevice Janina Zemaiciu Kriksto 600 m jubiliejaus istorija ir saltiniai Roman Catholic Diocese of Telsiai in Lithuanian Retrieved 4 March 2023 in Lithuanian Dualistinis lietuviu tautybes susidarymas ir trialistinis Lietuvos kriksto pobudis Archived 2003 05 02 at the Wayback Machine Dr Aleksandras Vitkus Motiejus Trakiskis Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija in Lithuanian Retrieved 4 March 2023 External links EditThe Conversion of Lithuania 1387 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christianization of Lithuania amp oldid 1144990719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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