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Grand Duchy of Lithuania

The Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a European state that existed from the 13th century[5] to 1795,[6] when the territory was partitioned among the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Prussia, and the Habsburg Empire of Austria. The state was founded by Lithuanians, who were at the time a polytheistic nation born from several united Baltic tribes from Aukštaitija.[7][8][9]

Grand Duchy of Lithuania
c. 1236–17951
Supposed appearance of the royal (military) banner with design derived from a 16th century coat of arms[1][2]
The Grand Duchy of Lithuania at the height of its power in the 15th century superimposed on a modern day map
Status
Capital
Common languagesLithuanian, Ruthenian, Polish, Latin, German, Yiddish, Tatar, Karaim (see § Languages)
Religion
Government
Grand Duke 
• 1236–1263 (from 1251 as King)
Mindaugas (first)
• 1764–1795
Stanisław August Poniatowski (last)
LegislatureSeimas
• Privy Council
Council of Lords
History 
• Consolidation began
1180s
1251–1263
14 August 1385
1 July 1569
24 October 1795
Area
1260[3]200,000 km2 (77,000 sq mi)
1430[3]930,000 km2 (360,000 sq mi)
1572[3]320,000 km2 (120,000 sq mi)
1791[3]250,000 km2 (97,000 sq mi)
1793[3]132,000 km2 (51,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1260[3]
400,000
• 1430[3]
2,500,000
• 1572[3]
1,700,000
• 1791[3]
2,500,000
• 1793[3]
1,800,000
1. Unsuccessful Constitution of 3 May 1791 envisioned a unitary state whereby the Grand Duchy would be abolished, however an addendum to the Constitution, known as the Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations, restored Lithuania on 20 October 1791.[4]

The Grand Duchy expanded to include large portions of the former Kievan Rus' and other neighbouring states, including what is now Lithuania, Belarus and parts of Ukraine, Latvia, Poland, Russia and Moldova. At its greatest extent, in the 15th century, it was the largest state in Europe.[10] It was a multi-ethnic and multiconfessional state, with great diversity in languages, religion, and cultural heritage.

The consolidation of the Lithuanian lands began in the late 13th century. Mindaugas, the first ruler of the Grand Duchy, was crowned as Catholic King of Lithuania in 1253. The pagan state was targeted in a religious crusade by the Teutonic Knights and the Livonian Order, but survived. Its rapid territorial expansion started late in the reign of Gediminas,[11] and continued under the diarchy and co-leadership of his sons Algirdas and Kęstutis.[12] Algirdas's son Jogaila signed the Union of Krewo in 1386, bringing two major changes in the history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania: conversion to Christianity of Europe's last pagan state,[13] and establishment of a dynastic union between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland.[14]

The reign of Vytautas the Great, son of Kęstutis, marked both the greatest territorial expansion of the Grand Duchy and the defeat of the Teutonic Knights in the Battle of Grunwald in 1410. It also marked the rise of the Lithuanian nobility. After Vytautas's death, Lithuania's relationship with the Kingdom of Poland greatly deteriorated.[15] Lithuanian noblemen, including the Radvila family, attempted to break the personal union with Poland.[16] However, unsuccessful wars with the Grand Duchy of Moscow forced the union to remain intact.

Eventually, the Union of Lublin of 1569 created a new state, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. In the Federation, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania maintained its political distinctiveness and had separate ministries, laws, army, and treasury.[17] The federation was terminated by the passing of the Constitution of 3 May 1791, when it was supposed to become a single country, the Commonwealth, under one monarch, one parliament and no Lithuanian autonomy. Shortly afterward, the unitary character of the state was confirmed by adopting the Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations.

However, the newly reformed Commonwealth was invaded by Russia in 1792 and partitioned between neighbouring states. A truncated state (whose principal cities were Kraków, Warsaw and Vilnius) remained that was nominally independent. After the Kościuszko Uprising, the territory was completely partitioned among the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Prussia and Austria in 1795.

Etymology

The name of Lithuania (Litua) was first mentioned in 1009 in Annals of Quedlinburg. Some older etymological theories relate the name to a small river not far from Kernavė, the core area of the early Lithuanian state and a possible first capital of the would-be Grand Duchy of Lithuania, is usually credited as the source of the name. This river's original name is Lietava.[18] As time passed, the suffix -ava could have changed into -uva, as the two are from the same suffix branch. The river flows in the lowlands and easily spills over its banks, therefore the traditional Lithuanian form liet- could be directly translated as lietis (to spill), of the root derived from the Proto-Indo-European leyǝ-.[19] However, the river is very small and some find it improbable that such a small and local object could have lent its name to an entire nation. On the other hand, such a fact is not unprecedented in world history.[20] The most credible modern theory of etymology of the name of Lithuania (Lithuanian: Lietuva) is Artūras Dubonis's hypothesis,[21] that Lietuva relates to the word leičiai (plural of leitis, a social group of warriors-knights in the early Grand Duchy of Lithuania). The title of the Grand Duchy was consistently applied to Lithuania from the 14th century onward.[22]

In other languages, the grand duchy is referred to as:

  • Belarusian: Вялікае Княства Літоўскае
  • German: Großfürstentum Litauen
  • Estonian: Leedu Suurvürstiriik
  • Latin: Magnus Ducatus Lituaniæ
  • Latvian: Lieitija or Lietuvas Lielkņaziste
  • Lithuanian: Lietuvos Didžioji Kunigaikštystė
  • Old literary Lithuanian: Didi Kunigystė Lietuvos (didi Kunigiſte Lietuwos[23])
  • Polish: Wielkie Księstwo Litewskie
  • Romanian: Marele Ducat al Lituaniei
  • Russian: Великое княжество Литовское
  • Ruthenian: Великое кнѧзство Литовское
  • Ukrainian: Велике князiвство Литовське

Naming convention of both title of ruler (hospodar)[24] and the state changed as it expanded its territory. Following the decline of the Kingdom of Ruthenia[25] and incorporation of its lands into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Gediminas started to title himself as "King of Lithuanians and many Ruthenians",[26][27][28] while the name of the state became the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Ruthenia.[29][30] Similarly the title changed to "King of Lithuanians and Ruthenians, ruler and duke of Semigallia" when Semigallia became part of the state.[31][32] The 1529 edition of the Statute of Lithuania described the titles of Sigismund I the Old as "King of Poland, the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Ruthenia, Prussia, Samogitia, Mazovia, and other [ lands ]".[33] When southern and western Ruthenian lands were transferred to the Crown after the Union of Lublin, the titles of the Grand Duke of Lithuania were transferred to the titles of the rulers of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[citation needed]

The country was also called the Republic of Lithuania (Latin: Respublica Lituana) since at least the mid-16th century, already before the Union of Lublin in 1569.[34]

History

Establishment of the state

 
Lithuania in the Mappa mundi of Pietro Vesconte, 1321. The inscription reads: Letvini pagani – pagan Lithuanians.
 
Balts in the 12th century

The first written reference to Lithuania is found in the Quedlinburg Chronicle, which dates from 1009.[35] In the 12th century, Slavic chronicles refer to Lithuania as one of the areas attacked by the Rus'. Pagan Lithuanians initially paid tribute to Polotsk, but they soon grew in strength and organized their own small-scale raids. At some point between 1180 and 1183 the situation began to change, and the Lithuanians started to organize sustainable military raids on the Slavic provinces, raiding the Principality of Polotsk as well as Pskov, and even threatening Novgorod.[36] The sudden spark of military raids marked consolidation of the Lithuanian lands in Aukštaitija.[5] The Lithuanians are the only branch within the Baltic group that managed to create a state entity in premodern times.[37]

The Lithuanian Crusade began after the Livonian Order and Teutonic Knights, crusading military orders, were established in Riga and in Prussia in 1202 and 1226 respectively. The Christian orders posed a significant threat to pagan Baltic tribes, and further galvanized the formation of the Lithuanian state. The peace treaty with Galicia–Volhynia of 1219 provides evidence of cooperation between Lithuanians and Samogitians. This treaty lists 21 Lithuanian dukes, including five senior Lithuanian dukes from Aukštaitija (Živinbudas, Daujotas, Vilikaila, Dausprungas and Mindaugas) and several dukes from Žemaitija. Although they had battled in the past, the Lithuanians and the Žemaičiai now faced a common enemy.[38] Likely Živinbudas had the most authority[36] and at least several dukes were from the same families.[39] The formal acknowledgement of common interests and the establishment of a hierarchy among the signatories of the treaty foreshadowed the emergence of the state.[40]

Kingdom of Lithuania

Mindaugas, the duke[41] of southern Lithuania,[42] was among the five senior dukes mentioned in the treaty with Galicia–Volhynia. The Livonian Rhymed Chronicle, reports that by the mid-1230s, Mindaugas had acquired supreme power in the whole of Lithuania.[43] In 1236, the Samogitians, led by Vykintas, defeated the Livonian Order in the Battle of Saule.[44] The Order was forced to become a branch of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia, making Samogitia, a strip of land that separated Livonia from Prussia, the main target of both orders. The battle provided a break in the wars with the Knights, and Lithuania exploited this situation, arranging attacks on the Ruthenian provinces and annexing Navahrudak and Hrodna.[43]

In 1248, a civil war broke out between Mindaugas and his nephews Tautvilas and Edivydas. The powerful coalition against Mindaugas included Vykintas, the Livonian Order, Daniel of Galicia and Vasilko of Volhynia. Taking advantage of internal conflicts, Mindaugas allied with the Livonian Order. He promised to convert to Christianity and exchange some lands in western Lithuania in return for military assistance against his nephews and the royal crown. In 1251, Mindaugas was baptized and Pope Innocent IV issued a papal bull proclaiming the creation of the Kingdom of Lithuania. After the civil war ended, Mindaugas was crowned as King of Lithuania on 6 July 1253, starting a decade of relative peace. Mindaugas later renounced Christianity and converted back to paganism. Mindaugas tried to expand his influence in Polatsk, a major centre of commerce in the Daugava River basin, and Pinsk.[43] The Teutonic Knights used this period to strengthen their position in parts of Samogitia and Livonia, but they lost the Battle of Skuodas in 1259 and the Battle of Durbe in 1260.[45] This encouraged the conquered Semigallians and Old Prussians to rebel against the Knights.[46]

Encouraged by Treniota, Mindaugas broke the peace with the Order, possibly reverted to pagan beliefs. He hoped to unite all Baltic tribes under the Lithuanian leadership. As military campaigns were not successful, the relationships between Mindaugas and Treniota deteriorated. Treniota, together with Daumantas of Pskov, assassinated Mindaugas and his two sons, Ruklys and Rupeikis, in 1263.[47] The state lapsed into years of internal fighting.[48]

Rise of the Gediminids

 
Gediminas' Tower in Vilnius

From 1263 to 1269, Lithuania had three grand dukes – Treniota, Vaišvilkas, and Švarnas. The state did not disintegrate, however, and Traidenis came to power in 1269. He strengthened Lithuanian control in Black Ruthenia and fought with the Livonian Order, winning the Battle of Karuse in 1270 and the Battle of Aizkraukle in 1279. There is considerable uncertainty about the identities of the grand dukes of Lithuania between his death in 1282 and the assumption of power by Vytenis in 1295. During this time the Orders finalized their conquests. In 1274, the Great Prussian Rebellion ended, and the Teutonic Knights proceeded to conquer other Baltic tribes: the Nadruvians and Skalvians in 1274–1277, and the Yotvingians in 1283; the Livonian Order completed its conquest of Semigalia, the last Baltic ally of Lithuania, in 1291.[49] The Orders could now turn their full attention to Lithuania. The "buffer zone" composed of other Baltic tribes had disappeared, and Grand Duchy of Lithuania was left to battle the Orders on its own.[50]

The Gediminid dynasty ruled the grand duchy for over a century, and Vytenis was the first ruler of the dynasty.[51] During his reign Lithuania was in constant war with the Order, the Kingdom of Poland, and Ruthenia. Vytenis was involved in succession disputes in Poland, supporting Boleslaus II of Masovia, who was married to a Lithuanian duchess, Gaudemunda. In Ruthenia, Vytenis managed to recapture lands lost after the assassination of Mindaugas and to capture the principalities of Pinsk [lt] and Turov. In the struggle against the Order, Vytenis allied with Riga's citizens; securing positions in Riga strengthened trade routes and provided a base for further military campaigns. Around 1307, Polotsk, an important trading centre, was annexed by military force.[52] Vytenis also began constructing a defensive castle network along Nemunas.[53] Gradually this network developed into the main defensive line against the Teutonic Order.[53]

 
Lithuanian state in 13–15th centuries

Territorial expansion

The expansion of the state reached its height under Grand Duke Gediminas, also titled by some contemporaneous German sources as Rex de Owsteiten (English: King of Aukštaitija),[54] who created a strong central government and established an empire that later spread from the Black Sea to the Baltic Sea.[55][56] In 1320, most of the principalities of western Rus' were either vassalized or annexed by Lithuania. In 1321, Gediminas captured Kiev, sending Stanislav, the last Rurikid to rule Kiev, into exile. Gediminas also re-established the permanent capital of the Grand Duchy in Vilnius,[57] presumably moving it from Old Trakai in 1323.[58] The state continued to expand its territory under the reign of Grand Duke Algirdas and his brother Kęstutis, who both ruled the state harmonically.[59][60]

 
Lubart's Castle in Ukraine, built by the son of Gediminas' Liubartas in the mid-14th century, is famous for the Congress of Lutsk which took place in 1429

Lithuania was in a good position to conquer the western and the southern parts of former Kievan Rus'. While almost every other state around it had been plundered or defeated by the Mongols, the hordes stopped at the modern borders of Belarus, and the core territory of the Grand Duchy was left mostly untouched. The weak control of the Mongols over the areas they had conquered allowed the expansion of Lithuania to accelerate. Rus' principalities were never incorporated directly into the Golden Horde, maintaining vassal relationships with a fair degree of independence. Lithuania annexed some of these areas as vassals through diplomacy, as they exchanged rule by the Mongols or the Grand Prince of Moscow with rule by the Grand Duchy. An example is Novgorod, which was often in the Lithuanian sphere of influence and became an occasional dependency of the Grand Duchy.[61] Lithuanian control resulted from internal frictions within the city, which attempted to escape submission to Moscow. Such relationships could be tenuous, however, as changes in a city's internal politics could disrupt Lithuanian control, as happened on a number of occasions with Novgorod and other East-Slavic cities.[citation needed]

The Grand Duchy of Lithuania managed to hold off Mongol incursions and eventually secured gains. In 1333 and 1339, Lithuanians defeated large Mongol forces attempting to regain Smolensk from the Lithuanian sphere of influence. By about 1355, the State of Moldavia had formed, and the Golden Horde did little to re-vassalize the area. In 1362, regiments of the Grand Duchy army defeated the Golden Horde at the Battle at Blue Waters.[62] In 1380, a Lithuanian army allied with Russian forces to defeat the Golden Horde in the Battle of Kulikovo, and though the rule of the Mongols did not end, their influence in the region waned thereafter. In 1387, Moldavia became a vassal of Poland and, in a broader sense, of Lithuania. By this time, Lithuania had conquered the territory of the Golden Horde all the way to the Dnieper River. In a crusade against the Golden Horde in 1398 (in an alliance with Tokhtamysh), Lithuania invaded northern Crimea and won a decisive victory. In an attempt to place Tokhtamish on the Golden Horde throne in 1399, Lithuania moved against the Horde but was defeated in the Battle of the Vorskla River, losing the steppe region.[63]

 
Grand Duchy of Lithuania under the rule of Vytautas the Great

Personal Union with Poland

 
Poland and Lithuania in 1386–1434
 
Trakai Island Castle, residence of the Grand Duke Vytautas

Lithuania was Christianized in 1387, led by Jogaila, who personally translated Christian prayers into the Lithuanian language[64] and his cousin Vytautas the Great who founded many Catholic churches and allocated lands for parishes in Lithuania. The state reached a peak under Vytautas the Great, who reigned from 1392 to 1430. Vytautas was one of the most famous rulers of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, serving as the Grand Duke from 1401 to 1430, and as the Prince of Hrodna (1370–1382) and the Prince of Lutsk (1387–1389). Vytautas was the son of Kęstutis, uncle of Jogaila, who became King of Poland in 1386, and he was the grandfather of Vasili II of Moscow.[65]

In 1410, Vytautas commanded the forces of the Grand Duchy in the Battle of Grunwald. The battle ended in a decisive Polish-Lithuanian victory against the Teutonic Order. The war of Lithuania against military Orders, which lasted for more than 200 years, and was one of the longest wars in the history of Europe, was finally ended. Vytautas backed the economic development of the state and introduced many reforms. Under his rule, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania slowly became more centralized, as the governours loyal to Vytautas replaced local princes with dynastic ties to the throne. The governours were rich landowners who formed the basis for the nobility of the Grand Duchy. During Vytautas' rule, the Radziwiłł and Goštautas families started to gain influence.[66][67]

 
The Battle of Grunwald, 1410, with Ulrich von Jungingen and Vytautas at center

The rapid expansion of the influence of Moscow soon put it into a comparable position to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and after the annexation of Novgorod in 1478, Muscovy was among the preeminent states in northeastern Europe. Between 1492 and 1508, Ivan III further consolidated Muscovy, winning the key Battle of Vedrosha and regaining such ancient lands of Kievan Rus' as Chernihiv and Bryansk.[68]

On 8 September 1514, the allied forces of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland, under the command of Hetman Konstanty Ostrogski, fought the Battle of Orsha against the army of the Grand Duchy of Moscow, under Konyushy Ivan Chelyadnin and Kniaz Mikhail Golitsin. The battle was part of a long series of Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars conducted by Russian rulers striving to gather all the former lands of Kievan Rus' under their rule. According to Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii by Sigismund von Herberstein, the primary source for the information on the battle, the much smaller army of Poland–Lithuania (under 30,000 men) defeated the 80,000 Muscovite soldiers, capturing their camp and commander. The Muscovites lost about 30,000 men, while the losses of the Poland–Lithuania army totalled only 500. While the battle is remembered as one of the greatest Lithuanian victories, Muscovy ultimately prevailed in the war. Under the 1522 peace treaty, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania made large territorial concessions.[69]

Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth

 
The Grand Duchy of Lithuania within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth c. 1635

The wars with the Teutonic Order, the loss of land to Moscow, and the continued pressure threatened the survival of the state of Lithuania, so it was forced to ally more closely with Poland, uniting with its western neighbour as the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (Commonwealth of Two Nations) in the Union of Lublin of 1569. During the period of the Union, many of the territories formerly controlled by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were transferred to the Crown of the Polish Kingdom, while the gradual process of Polonization slowly drew Lithuania itself under Polish domination.[70][71][72] The Grand Duchy retained many rights in the federation (including separate ministries, laws, army, and treasury) until the May Constitution of Poland and Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations were passed in 1791.[73]

Partitions and the Napoleonic period

Following the partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, most of the lands of the former Grand Duchy were directly annexed by the Russian Empire, the rest by Prussia. In 1812, just prior to the French invasion of Russia, the former Grand Duchy revolted against the Russians. Soon after his arrival in Vilnius, Napoleon proclaimed the creation of a Commissary Provisional Government of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania which, in turn, renewed the Polish-Lithuanian Union.[74] The union was never formalized, however, as only half a year later Napoleon's Grande Armée was pushed out of Russia and forced to retreat further westwards. In December 1812, Vilnius was recaptured by Russian forces, bringing all plans of recreation of the Grand Duchy to an end.[74] Most of the lands of the former Grand Duchy were re-annexed by Russia. The Augustów Voivodeship (later Augustów Governorate), including the counties of Marijampolė and Kalvarija, was attached to the Kingdom of Poland, a rump state in personal union with Russia.[citation needed]

Administrative division

 
Lithuania and its administrative divisions in the 17th century

Administrative structure of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (1413–1564).[75]

Voivodeship (Palatinatus) Established
Vilnius 1413
Trakai 1413
Samogitian eldership 1413
Kiev 1471
Polotsk 1504
Naugardukas 1507
Smolensk 1508
Vitebsk 1511
Podlaskie 1514
Brest Litovsk 1566
Minsk 1566
Mstislavl 1569
Volhyn 1564–1566
Bratslav 1564
Duchy of Livonia 1561

Religion and culture

Christianity and paganism

 
Church of St. Johns in Vilnius. Example of Vilnian Baroque style[76]
 
St. Anne's Church and the church of the Bernardine Monastery in Vilnius. Two examples of Gothic architecture.

After the baptism in 1252 and coronation of King Mindaugas in 1253, Lithuania was recognized as a Christian state until 1260, when Mindaugas supported an uprising in Courland and (according to the German order) renounced Christianity. Up until 1387, Lithuanian nobles professed their own religion, which was polytheistic.[77] Ethnic Lithuanians were very dedicated to their faith. The pagan beliefs needed to be deeply entrenched to survive strong pressure from missionaries and foreign powers. Until the 17th century, there were relics of old faith reported by counter-reformation active Jesuit priests, like feeding žaltys with milk or bringing food to graves of ancestors. The lands of modern-day Belarus and Ukraine, as well as local dukes (princes) in these regions, were firmly Orthodox Christian (Greek Catholic after the Union of Brest), though. While pagan beliefs in Lithuania were strong enough to survive centuries of pressure from military orders and missionaries, they did eventually succumb. A separate Eastern Orthodox metropolitan eparchy was created sometime between 1315 and 1317 by the Constantinople Patriarch John XIII. Following the Galicia–Volhynia Wars which divided the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland, in 1355 the Halych metropoly was liquidated and its eparchies transferred to the metropoles of Lithuania and Volhynia.[78]

In 1387, Lithuania converted to Catholicism, while most of the Ruthenian lands stayed Orthodox, however, on 22 February 1387, Supreme Duke Jogaila banned Catholics marriages with Orthodox, and demanded those Orthodox who previously married with the Catholics to convert to Catholicism.[79] At one point, though, Pope Alexander VI reprimanded the Grand Duke for keeping non-Catholics as advisers.[80] Consequently, only in 1563 did Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus issue a privilege that equalized the rights of Orthodox and Catholics in Lithuania and abolished all previous restrictions on Orthodox.[81] There was an effort to polarise Orthodox Christians after the Union of Brest in 1596, by which some Orthodox Christians acknowledged papal authority and Catholic catechism, but preserved their liturgy. The country also became one of the major centres of the Reformation.[82]

In the second half of the 16th century, Calvinism spread in Lithuania, supported by the families of Radziwiłł, Chodkiewicz, Sapieha, Dorohostajski and others. By the 1580s the majority of the senators from Lithuania were Calvinist or Socinian Unitarians (Jan Kiszka).[83]

In 1579, Stephen Báthory, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, founded Vilnius University, one of the oldest universities in Northern Europe. Due to the work of the Jesuits during the Counter-Reformation the university soon developed into one of the most important scientific and cultural centres of the region and the most notable scientific centre of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[84] The work of the Jesuits as well as conversions from among the Lithuanian senatorial families turned the tide and by the 1670s Calvinism lost its former importance though it still retained some influence among the ethnically Lithuanian peasants and some middle nobility.[citation needed]

Islam

Islam in Lithuania, unlike many other northern and western European countries, has a long history starting from 14th century.[85] Small groups of Muslim Lipka Tatars migrated to ethnically Lithuanian lands, mainly under the rule of Grand Duke Vytautas (early 15th century). In Lithuania, unlike many other European societies at the time, there was religious freedom. Lithuanian Tatars were allowed to settle in certain places, such as Trakai and Kaunas.[86] Keturiasdešimt Totorių is one of the oldest Tatar settlements in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. After a successful military campaign of the Crimean Peninsula in 1397, Vytautas brought the first Crimean Tatar prisoners of war to Trakai and various places in the Duchy of Trakai, including localities near Vokė river just south of Vilnius. The first mosque in this village was mentioned for the first time in 1558. There were 42 Tatar families in the village in 1630.[87]

Judaism

Languages

 
Constitution of 3 May, one of the first official state documents issued in both Polish and Lithuanian, Lithuanian edition

In the 13th century, the centre of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was inhabited by a majority that spoke Lithuanian,[88] though it was not a written language until the 16th century.[89] In the other parts of the duchy, the majority of the population, including Ruthenian nobles and ordinary people, used both spoken and written Ruthenian.[88] Nobles who migrated from one place to another would adapt to a new locality and adopt the local religion and culture and those Lithuanian noble families that moved to Slavic areas often took up the local culture quickly over subsequent generations.[90] Ruthenians were native to the east-central and south-eastern parts of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[citation needed]

Ruthenian, also called Chancery Slavonic in its written form, was used to write laws alongside Polish, Latin and German, but its use varied between regions. From the time of Vytautas, there are fewer remaining documents written in Ruthenian than there are in Latin and German, but later Ruthenian became the main language of documentation and writings, especially in eastern and southern parts of the Duchy. In the 16th century at the time of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Lithuanian lands became partially polonized over time and started to use Polish for writing much more often than the Lithuanian and Ruthenian languages. Polish finally became the official chancellery language of the Commonwealth in 1697.[90][91][92][93]

The voivodeships with a predominantly ethnic Lithuanian population, Vilnius, Trakai, and Samogitian voivodeships, remained almost wholly Lithuanian-speaking, both colloquially and by ruling nobility.[94] Ruthenian communities were also present in the extreme southern parts of Trakai voivodeship and south-eastern parts of Vilnius Voivodeship. In addition to Lithuanians and Ruthenians, other important ethnic groups throughout the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were Jews and Tatars.[90]

Languages for state and academic purposes

 
Lithuanian primer for kids, published in Vilnius, Grand Duchy of Lithuania, 1783 edition

Numerous languages were used in state documents depending on which period in history and for what purpose. These languages included Lithuanian, Ruthenian,[93][95] Polish and, to a lesser extent (mostly in early diplomatic communication), Latin and German.[89][90][92]

The Court used Ruthenian to correspond with Eastern countries while Latin and German were used in foreign affairs with Western countries.[93][96] During the latter part of the history of the Grand Duchy, Polish was increasingly used in State documents, especially after the Union of Lublin.[92] By 1697, Polish had largely replaced Ruthenian as the "official" language at Court,[89][93][97] although Ruthenian continued to be used on a few official documents until the second half of the 18th century.[91]

It is known that Jogaila, being ethnic Lithuanian by the man's line, himself knew and spoke in the Lithuanian language with Vytautas the Great, his cousin from the Gediminids dynasty.[98][99][100] Also, during the Christianization of Samogitia, none of the clergy, who came to Samogitia with Jogaila, were able to communicate with the natives, therefore Jogaila himself taught the Samogitians about the Catholicism, thus he was able to communicate in the Samogitian dialect of the Lithuanian language.[101] Use of Lithuanian still continued at the Court after the death of Vytautas and Jogaila.[102] Since the young Grand Duke Casimir IV Jagiellon was underage, the supreme control over the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was in the hands of the Lithuanian Council of Lords, presided by Jonas Goštautas, while Casimir was taught Lithuanian language and the customs of Lithuania by appointed court officials.[103][104] Grand Duke Alexander Jagiellon also could understand and speak Lithuanian.[102] While Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus maintained both Polish-speaking and Lithuanian-speaking courts.[102]

From the beginning of the 16th century, and especially after a rebellion led by Michael Glinski in 1508, there were attempts by the Court to replace the usage of Ruthenian with Latin.[105] The use of Ruthenian by academics in areas formerly part of Rus' and even in Lithuania proper was widespread. Court Chancellor of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Lew Sapieha noted in the preface of the Third Statute of Lithuania (1588) that all state documents to be written exclusively in Ruthenian. The same was stated in part 4 of the Statute:

And clerk must use Ruthenian letters and Ruthenian words in all pages, letters and requests, and not any other language or words...

— А писаръ земъский маеть по-руску литерами и словы рускими вси листы, выписы и позвы писати, а не иншимъ езыкомъ и словы..., The Statute of GDL 1588. Part 4, article 1[106]

Despite that, Polish-language editions stated the same in Polish.[107] Statutes of the Grand Duchy were translated into Latin and Polish. One of the main reasons for translations into Latin was that Ruthenian had no well defined and codified law concepts and definitions, which caused many disputes in courts. Another reason to use Latin was a popular idea that Lithuanians were descendants of Romans – the mythical house of Palemonids. Augustinus Rotundus translated the Second Statute into Latin.[108]

According to scientist Rita Regina Trimonienė, the Lithuanians surnames are not slavified and are written as they were pronounced by parishioners in the registers of baptism of Šiauliai Church (dated in the 17th century).[109]

In 1552, Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus ordered that orders of the Magistrate of Vilnius be announced in Lithuanian, Polish, and Ruthenian.[110] The same requirement was valid for the Magistrate of Kaunas.[111][112]

Mikalojus Daukša, writing in the introduction to his Postil (1599) (which was written in Lithuanian) in Polish, advocated the promotion of Lithuanian in the Grand Duchy, noting in the introduction that many people, especially szlachta, preferred to speak Polish rather than Lithuanian, but spoke Polish poorly.[citation needed] Such were the linguistic trends in the Grand Duchy that, by the political reforms of 1564–1566, parliaments, local land courts, appellate courts and other State functions were recorded in Polish,[105] and Polish became increasingly spoken across all social classes.[citation needed]

Lithuanian language situation

"We do not know on whose merits or guilt such a decision was made, or with what we have offended Your Lordship so much that Your Lordship has deservedly been directed against us, creating hardship for us everywhere. First of all, you made and announced a decision about the land of Samogitia, which is our inheritance and our homeland from the legal succession of the ancestors and elders. We still own it, it is and has always been the same Lithuanian land, because there is one language and the same inhabitants. But since the land of Samogitia is located lower than the land of Lithuania, it is called Samogitia, because in Lithuanian it is called lower land [ Žemaitija ]. And the Samogitians call Lithuania Aukštaitija, that is, from the Samogitian point of view, a higher land. Also, the people of Samogitia have long called themselves Lithuanians and never Samogitians, and because of such identity (sic) we do not write about Samogitia in our letter, because everything is one: one country and the same inhabitants."

Vytautas the Great, excerpt from his 11 March 1420 Latin letter sent to Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor, in which he described the core of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, composed from Žemaitija (lowlands) and Aukštaitija (highlands), and its language.[113][114] The term Aukštaitija has been known since the 13th century.[115]

 
Area where Lithuanian was spoken in the 16th century
 
Lithuania proper (in green) and Samogitia (in red) within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in a map from 1712

Ruthenian and Polish were used as state languages of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, besides Latin and German in diplomatic correspondence. However, Lithuanian was dominant in parts of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania like Samogitia, where the local nobility's reliance on Lithuanian resulted in Stanislovas Radvila remarking in a letter to his brother Mikalojus Kristupas Radvila Našlaitėlis immediately after becoming the Elder of Samogitia that: "While learning various languages, I forgot Lithuanian, and now I see, I have to go to school again, because that language, as I see, God willing, will be needed."[116] Vilnius, Trakai and Samogitia were the core voivodeships of the state, being part of Lithuania Proper, as evidenced by the privileged position of their governors in state authorities, such as the Council of Lords. Peasants in ethnic Lithuanian territories spoke exclusively Lithuanian, except in transitional border regions, but the Statutes of Lithuania and other laws and documentation were written in Ruthenian, Latin and Polish. Following the example of the royal court, there was a tendency to replace Lithuanian with Polish in the ethnic Lithuanian areas, whereas Ruthenian was stronger in ethnic Belarusian and Ukrainian territories. A note written by Sigismund von Herberstein's states that, in an ocean of Ruthenian in this part of Europe, there were two non-Ruthenian regions: Lithuania and Samogitia.[105]

 
Panegyric to Sigismund III Vasa, visiting Vilnius, first hexameter in Lithuanian, 1589

Since the founding of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the higher strata of Lithuanian society from ethnic Lithuania spoke Lithuanian, although from the later 16th century gradually began using Polish, and those from Ruthenia – Ruthenian. Samogitia was unique because of its economic situation – it lay near sea ports and there were fewer people under corvee, instead of that, many commoners were taxpayers.[clarification needed] As a result, the stratification of society was not as sharp as in other areas. Being more similar to a commoner population, the local szlachta spoke Lithuanian to a bigger extent than in the areas close to the capital Vilnius, which itself had become the starting point of intensive linguistic Polonization of the surrounding areas since the 18th century.[citation needed]

In Vilnius University, there are preserved texts written in the Lithuanian language of the Vilnius area, a dialect of Eastern Aukštaitian, which was spoken in a territory located south-eastwards from Vilnius. The sources are preserved in works of graduates from Stanislovas Rapolionis-based Lithuanian language schools, graduate Martynas Mažvydas and Rapalionis relative Abraomas Kulvietis.[117][118]

One of the main sources of Lithuanian written in the Eastern Aukštaitian dialect (Vilnius dialect) was preserved by Konstantinas Sirvydas in a trilingual (Polish-Latin-Lithuanian) 17th-century dictionary, Dictionarium trium linguarum in usum studiosæ juventutis, which was the main Lithuanian dictionary used until the late 19th century.[119][120]

Universitas lingvarum Litvaniæ, published in Vilnius, 1737, is the oldest surviving grammar of the Lithuanian language published in the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[121]

Demographics

"This is the peace made by the Livonian Master and the King of Lithuania and expressed in the following words:
(...) Next, a German merchant can travel safely concerning his life and property through Rus' [ Ruthenia ] and Lithuania as far as the King of Lithuania's authority seeks.
(...) Next, if something is stolen from a German merchant in Lithuania or Rus', it must be put on trial where it happens; if it happens that a German steals from a Rus [ Ruthenian ] or a Lithuanian, the same way it must be put on trial where it happens.
(...) Moreover, if a Lithuanian or a Rus [ Ruthenian ] wants to sue a German for an old thing, he must apply to the person to whom the person is subordinate; the same must be done by a German in Lithuania or Rus'.
(...) That peace was made in the one thousand three hundred and thirty-eighth year of the birth of God, on All Saints' Day, with the consent of the Master, the Marshal of the Land and many other nobles, as well as the City Council of Riga; they kissed the cross on the matter; With the consent of the King of Lithuania [ Gediminas ], his sons and all his nobles; they also performed their sacred rites in this matter [ Pagan rites ]; and with the consent of the Bishop of Polotsk [ Gregory ], the Duke of Polotsk [ Narimantas ] and the city, the Duke of Vitebsk [ Algirdas ] and the city of Vitebsk; they all, in approval of the said peace treaty, kissed the cross."

— From the 1338 Peace and Trade Agreement, concluded in Vilnius, between the Grand Duke of Lithuania Gediminas and his sons and the Master of the Livonian Order Everhard von Monheim, establishing a peace zone, which clearly distinguishes the Lithuanians and the Rus' people [ Ruthenians ], and Lithuania from Rus' [ Ruthenia ].[122][123]

In 1260, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the land of Lithuania, and ethnic Lithuanians formed the majority (67.5%) of its 400,000 people.[124] With the acquisition of new Ruthenian territories, in 1340 this portion decreased to 30%.[125] By the time of the largest expansion towards Rus' lands, which came at the end of the 13th and during the 14th century, the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was 800 to 930 thousand km2, just 10% to 14% of which was ethnically Lithuanian.[124][126]

On 6 May 1434, Grand Duke Sigismund Kęstutaitis released his privilege which tied the Orthodox and Catholic Lithuanian nobles rights in order to attract the Slavic nobles of the eastern regions of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania who supported the former Grand Duke Švitrigaila.[127]

An estimate of the population in the territory of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania together gives a population at 7.5 million for 1493, breaking them down by ethnicity at 3.75 million Ruthenians (ethnic Ukrainians, Belarusians), 3.25 million Poles and 0.5 million Lithuanians.[128] With the Union of Lublin, 1569, Lithuanian Grand Duchy lost large part of lands to the Polish Crown.

According to an analysis of the tax registers in 1572, Lithuania proper had 850,000 residents of which 680,000 were Lithuanians.[129]

In the mid and late 17th century, due to Russian and Swedish invasions, there was much devastation and population loss on throughout the Grand Duchy of Lithuania,[130] including ethnic Lithuanian population in Vilnius surroundings. Besides devastation, the Ruthenian population declined proportionally after the territorial losses to Russian Empire. By 1770 there were about 4.84 million inhabitants in the territory of 320 thousand km2, the biggest part of whom were inhabitants of Ruthenia and about 1.39 million or 29% – of ethnic Lithuania.[124] During the following decades, the population decreased in a result of partitions.[124]

Legacy

Prussian tribes (of Baltic origin) were the subject of Polish expansion, which was largely unsuccessful, so Duke Konrad of Masovia invited the Teutonic Knights to settle near the Prussian area of settlement. The fighting between Prussians and the Teutonic Knights gave the more distant Lithuanian tribes time to unite. Because of strong enemies in the south and north, the newly formed Lithuanian state concentrated most of its military and diplomatic efforts on expansion eastward.

The rest of the former Ruthenian lands were conquered by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Some other lands in Ukraine were vassalized by Lithuania later. The subjugation of Eastern Slavs by two powers created substantial differences between them that persist to this day. While there were certainly substantial regional differences in Kievan Rus', it was the Lithuanian annexation of much of southern and western Ruthenia that led to the permanent division between Ukrainians, Belarusians, and Russians. And even four Grand Dukes of Lithuania are appeared on the Millennium of Russia monument.

In the 19th century, the romantic references to the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were an inspiration and a substantial part of both the Lithuanian and Belarusian national revival movements and Romanticism in Poland.

Notwithstanding the above, Lithuania was a kingdom under Mindaugas, who was crowned by the authority of Pope Innocent IV in 1253. Vytenis, Gediminas and Vytautas the Great also assumed the title of King, although uncrowned by the Pope. A failed attempt was made in 1918 to revive the Kingdom under a German Prince, Wilhelm Karl, Duke of Urach, who would have reigned as Mindaugas II of Lithuania.

In the first half of the 20th century, the memory of the multiethnic history of the Grand Duchy was revived by the Krajowcy movement,[131][132] which included Ludwik Abramowicz (Liudvikas Abramovičius), Konstancja Skirmuntt, Mykolas Römeris (Michał Pius Römer), Józef Albin Herbaczewski (Juozapas Albinas Herbačiauskas), Józef Mackiewicz and Stanisław Mackiewicz.[133][134] This feeling was expressed in poetry by Czesław Miłosz.[134]

Pseudoscientific theory of litvinism was developed since the 1990s.[135]

According to the 10th article of the Law on the State Flag and Other Flags of the Republic of Lithuania (Lithuanian: Lietuvos Respublikos valstybės vėliavos ir kitų vėliavų įstatymas), adopted by the Seimas, the historical Lithuanian state flag (with horseback knight on a red field, which initial design dates back to the reign of Grand Duke Vytautas the Great)[136] must be constantly raised over the most important governmental buildings (e.g. Seimas Palace, Government of Lithuania and its ministries, Lithuanian courts, municipal council buildings) and significant historical buildings (e.g. Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania, Trakai Island Castle), also in Kernavė and in the site of the Senieji Trakai Castle.[137]

Gallery

See also

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  93. ^ a b c d Wiemer, Björn (2003). "Dialect and language contacts on the territory of the Grand Duchy from the 15th century until 1939". In Kurt Braunmüller; Gisella Ferraresi (eds.). Aspects of Multilingualism in European Language History. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 109–114. ISBN 90-272-1922-2. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
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  95. ^ Stone, Daniel. The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386–1795. Seattle: University of Washington, 2001. p. 4.
  96. ^ Kamuntavičius, Rustis. Development of Lithuanian State and Society. Kaunas: Vytautas Magnus University, 2002. p.21.
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  102. ^ a b c Daniel. Z Stone, A History of East Central Europe, p.52
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  106. ^ [...] не обчымъ яким языкомъ, але своимъ властнымъ права списаные маемъ ...; Dubonis, A. Lietuvių kalba
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  113. ^ Vytautas the Great; Valkūnas, Leonas (translation from Latin). Vytauto laiškai [ Letters of Vytautas the Great ] (PDF) (in Lithuanian). Vilnius University, Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore. p. 6. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
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  119. ^ "Konstantinas Sirvydas". Vle.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 26 March 2021.
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  122. ^ Rowell, Stephen Christopher (2003). Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans (PDF) (in German and Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vaga [lt]. pp. 380–385. ISBN 5-415-01700-3. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  123. ^ "Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans / tekstus, vertimus bei komentarus parengė S.C. Rowell. – 2003". epaveldas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  124. ^ a b c d Letukienė, Nijolė; Gineika, Petras (2003). "Istorija. Politologija: kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui" (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Alma littera: 182. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help). Statistical numbers, usually accepted in historiography (the sources, their treatment, the method of measuring is not discussed in the source), are given, according to which in 1260 there were about 0.27 million Lithuanians out of a total population of 0.4 million (or 67.5%). The size of the territory of the Grand Duchy was about 200 thousand km2. The following data on population is given in the sequence – year, total population in millions, territory, Lithuanian (inhabitants of ethnic Lithuania) part of population in millions: 1340 – 0.7, 350 thousand km2, 0.37; 1375 – 1.4, 700 thousand km2, 0.42; 1430 – 2.5, 930 thousand km2, 0.59 or 24%; 1490 – 3.8, 850 thousand km2, 0.55 or 14% or 1/7; 1522 – 2.365, 485 thousand km2, 0.7 or 30%; 1568 – 2.8, 570 thousand km2, 0.825 million or 30%; 1572, 1.71, 320 thousand km2, 0.85 million or 50%; 1770 – 4.84, 320 thousand km2, 1.39 or 29%; 1791 – 2.5, 250 km2, 1.4 or 56%; 1793 – 1.8, 132 km2, 1.35 or 75%
  125. ^ Letukienė, N., Istorija, Politologija: Kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui, 2003, p. 182; there were about 0.37 million Lithuanians of 0.7 million of a whole population by 1340 in the territory of 350 thousand km2 and 0.42 million of 1.4 million by 1375 in the territory of 700 thousand km2. Different numbers can also be found, for example: Kevin O'Connor, The History of the Baltic States, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, ISBN 0-313-32355-0, Google Print, p.17. Here the author estimates that there were 9 million inhabitants in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and 1 million of them were ethnic Lithuanians by 1387.
  126. ^ Wiemer, Björn (2003). "Dialect and language contacts on the territory of the Grand Duchy from the 15th century until 1939". In Kurt Braunmüller; Gisella Ferraresi (eds.). Aspects of Multilingualism in European Language History. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 109, 125. ISBN 90-272-1922-2. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
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  129. ^ "Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunigaikštystės gyventojai". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian).
  130. ^ Kotilaine, J. T. (2005), Russia's Foreign Trade and Economic Expansion in the Seventeenth Century: Windows on the World, Brill, p. 45, ISBN 90-04-13896-X, retrieved 12 August 2016
  131. ^ Gil, Andrzej. "Rusini w Rzeczypospolitej Wielu Narodów i ich obecność w tradycji Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego – problem historyczny czy czynnik tworzący współczesność?" [Ruthenians/Rus/Rusyns in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and their presence in the tradition of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania – an historical problem or contemporary creation?] (PDF) (in Polish). Instytut Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej (Central and Eastern European Institute). Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  132. ^ Pawełko-Czajka, Barbara (2014). "The Memory of Multicultural Tradition of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Thought of Vilnius Krajowcy" (PDF). International Congress of Belarusian Studies. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  133. ^ Gałędek, Michał (January 2003). "Wielkie Księstwo Litewskie w myśli politycznej Stanisława Cata-Mackiewicza" [The Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Political Thought of Stanisław Cat-Mackiewicz]. Ostatni Obywatele Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego [Last Citizens of Grand Duchy of Lithuania], Eds. T. Bujnicki, K. Stępnik, Lublin: University of Mariae Curie Skłodowska Press (in Polish). academia.edu. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  134. ^ a b Diena, Kauno; Vaida Milkova (5 May 2011). "Miłosz's Anniversary in the Context of Dumb Politics". Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  135. ^ Bakaitė, Jurga (27 December 2019). "LRT FAKTAI. Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusių nacionalinio atgimimo?". Lrt.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 4 July 2021.
  136. ^ "The Historical Lithuanian State Flag". President of Lithuania (Dalia Grybauskaitė). 5 January 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  137. ^ "I-1497 Lietuvos Respublikos valstybės vėliavos ir kitų vėliavų įstatymas". e-seimas.lrs.lt (in Lithuanian). Seimas. Retrieved 13 May 2021.

Sources

  • Grand Duchy of Lithuania: Encyclopedia in Three Volumes, Volume I, 2nd edition, 2007. 688 pages, illustrated, ISBN 985-11-0314-4
  • Grand Duchy of Lithuania: Encyclopedia in Three Volumes, Volume II, 2nd edition, 2007. 792 pages, illustrated, ISBN 985-11-0378-0
  • Grand Duchy of Lithuania: Encyclopedia in Three Volumes, Volume III, 1st edition, 2010. 696 pages, illustrated, ISBN 978-985-11-0487-7
  • Norman Davies. God's Playground. Columbia University Press; 2nd edition (2002), ISBN 0-231-12817-7.
  • Drungila, Jonas (2019). Erelis lokio guolyje (in Lithuanian).
  • Robert Frost. The Oxford History of Poland-Lithuania: Volume I: The Making of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, 1385–1569. Oxford University Press, 2015, ISBN 978-0198208693
  • Alan V. Murray. Crusade and Conversion on the Baltic Frontier 1150–1500 (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series). Routledge, 2001. ISBN 9780754603252.
  • Alan V. Murray. The Clash of Cultures on the Medieval Baltic Frontier Routledge, 2016. ISBN 978-0754664833.
  • Zenonas Norkus. An Unproclaimed Empire: The Grand Duchy of Lithuania: From the Viewpoint of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires, Routledge, 2017, 426 p. ISBN 978-1138281547
  • S. C. Rowell. Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans. Gedimino laiškai. Vilnius, 2003, ISBN 5-415-01700-3. e-copy
  • S. C. Rowell. Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire within East-Central Europe, 1295–1345 (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series). Cambridge University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1107658769.
  • S. C. Rowell, D. Baronas. The conversion of Lithuania. From pagan barbarians to late medieval Christians. Vilnius, 2015, ISBN 9786094251528.
  • Daniel Z. Stone. The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386–1795. University of Washington Press. 2014. pp. xii, 374. ISBN 9780295803623
  • A. Dubonis, D. Antanavičius, R. Ragauskiene, R. Šmigelskytė-Štukienė. The Lithuanian Metrica : History and Research. Academic Studies Press. Brighton, United States, 2020. ISBN 9781644693100
  • Jūratė Kiaupienė. Between Rome and Byzantium: The Golden Age of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania's Political Culture. Second half of the fifteenth century to first half of the seventeenth century. Academic Studies Press. Brighton, United States, 2020. ISBN 9781644691465

External links

  • History of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania
  • Cheryl Renshaw. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1253–1795
  • Grand Duchy of Lithuania administrative map
  • Lithuanian-Ruthenian state at the Encyclopedia of Ukraine
  • Zenonas Norkus. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Retrospective of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires

grand, duchy, lithuania, european, state, that, existed, from, 13th, century, 1795, when, territory, partitioned, among, russian, empire, kingdom, prussia, habsburg, empire, austria, state, founded, lithuanians, were, time, polytheistic, nation, born, from, se. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a European state that existed from the 13th century 5 to 1795 6 when the territory was partitioned among the Russian Empire the Kingdom of Prussia and the Habsburg Empire of Austria The state was founded by Lithuanians who were at the time a polytheistic nation born from several united Baltic tribes from Aukstaitija 7 8 9 Grand Duchy of Lithuaniac 1236 17951Supposed appearance of the royal military banner with design derived from a 16th century coat of arms 1 2 Coat of armsThe Grand Duchy of Lithuania at the height of its power in the 15th century superimposed on a modern day mapStatusPart of the Kingdom of Lithuania 1251 1263 Part of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569 1795 CapitalVoruta hypothetical 13th century Kernave after 1279 before 1321 Trakai c 1321 1323 Vilnius from 1323 Common languagesLithuanian Ruthenian Polish Latin German Yiddish Tatar Karaim see Languages ReligionRoman Catholicism Lithuanian polytheism Eastern Orthodox Judaism IslamGovernmentHereditary monarchy 1230 1572 Elective monarchy 1572 1795 Grand Duke 1236 1263 from 1251 as King Mindaugas first 1764 1795Stanislaw August Poniatowski last LegislatureSeimas Privy CouncilCouncil of LordsHistory Consolidation began1180s Kingdom of Lithuania1251 1263 Union of Krewo14 August 1385 Union of Lublin1 July 1569 Third Partition24 October 1795Area1260 3 200 000 km2 77 000 sq mi 1430 3 930 000 km2 360 000 sq mi 1572 3 320 000 km2 120 000 sq mi 1791 3 250 000 km2 97 000 sq mi 1793 3 132 000 km2 51 000 sq mi Population 1260 3 400 000 1430 3 2 500 000 1572 3 1 700 000 1791 3 2 500 000 1793 3 1 800 000Preceded by Succeeded byKingdom of Lithuania Kingdom of PrussiaRussian EmpireWest Galicia1 Unsuccessful Constitution of 3 May 1791 envisioned a unitary state whereby the Grand Duchy would be abolished however an addendum to the Constitution known as the Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations restored Lithuania on 20 October 1791 4 The Grand Duchy expanded to include large portions of the former Kievan Rus and other neighbouring states including what is now Lithuania Belarus and parts of Ukraine Latvia Poland Russia and Moldova At its greatest extent in the 15th century it was the largest state in Europe 10 It was a multi ethnic and multiconfessional state with great diversity in languages religion and cultural heritage The consolidation of the Lithuanian lands began in the late 13th century Mindaugas the first ruler of the Grand Duchy was crowned as Catholic King of Lithuania in 1253 The pagan state was targeted in a religious crusade by the Teutonic Knights and the Livonian Order but survived Its rapid territorial expansion started late in the reign of Gediminas 11 and continued under the diarchy and co leadership of his sons Algirdas and Kestutis 12 Algirdas s son Jogaila signed the Union of Krewo in 1386 bringing two major changes in the history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania conversion to Christianity of Europe s last pagan state 13 and establishment of a dynastic union between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland 14 The reign of Vytautas the Great son of Kestutis marked both the greatest territorial expansion of the Grand Duchy and the defeat of the Teutonic Knights in the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 It also marked the rise of the Lithuanian nobility After Vytautas s death Lithuania s relationship with the Kingdom of Poland greatly deteriorated 15 Lithuanian noblemen including the Radvila family attempted to break the personal union with Poland 16 However unsuccessful wars with the Grand Duchy of Moscow forced the union to remain intact Eventually the Union of Lublin of 1569 created a new state the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth In the Federation the Grand Duchy of Lithuania maintained its political distinctiveness and had separate ministries laws army and treasury 17 The federation was terminated by the passing of the Constitution of 3 May 1791 when it was supposed to become a single country the Commonwealth under one monarch one parliament and no Lithuanian autonomy Shortly afterward the unitary character of the state was confirmed by adopting the Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations However the newly reformed Commonwealth was invaded by Russia in 1792 and partitioned between neighbouring states A truncated state whose principal cities were Krakow Warsaw and Vilnius remained that was nominally independent After the Kosciuszko Uprising the territory was completely partitioned among the Russian Empire the Kingdom of Prussia and Austria in 1795 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Establishment of the state 2 2 Kingdom of Lithuania 2 3 Rise of the Gediminids 2 4 Territorial expansion 2 5 Personal Union with Poland 2 6 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 2 7 Partitions and the Napoleonic period 3 Administrative division 4 Religion and culture 4 1 Christianity and paganism 4 2 Islam 4 3 Judaism 5 Languages 5 1 Languages for state and academic purposes 5 2 Lithuanian language situation 6 Demographics 7 Legacy 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEtymology EditSee also Name of Lithuania The name of Lithuania Litua was first mentioned in 1009 in Annals of Quedlinburg Some older etymological theories relate the name to a small river not far from Kernave the core area of the early Lithuanian state and a possible first capital of the would be Grand Duchy of Lithuania is usually credited as the source of the name This river s original name is Lietava 18 As time passed the suffix ava could have changed into uva as the two are from the same suffix branch The river flows in the lowlands and easily spills over its banks therefore the traditional Lithuanian form liet could be directly translated as lietis to spill of the root derived from the Proto Indo European leyǝ 19 However the river is very small and some find it improbable that such a small and local object could have lent its name to an entire nation On the other hand such a fact is not unprecedented in world history 20 The most credible modern theory of etymology of the name of Lithuania Lithuanian Lietuva is Arturas Dubonis s hypothesis 21 that Lietuva relates to the word leiciai plural of leitis a social group of warriors knights in the early Grand Duchy of Lithuania The title of the Grand Duchy was consistently applied to Lithuania from the 14th century onward 22 In other languages the grand duchy is referred to as Belarusian Vyalikae Knyastva Litoyskae German Grossfurstentum Litauen Estonian Leedu Suurvurstiriik Latin Magnus Ducatus Lituaniae Latvian Lieitija or Lietuvas Lielknaziste Lithuanian Lietuvos Didzioji Kunigaikstyste Old literary Lithuanian Didi Kunigyste Lietuvos didi Kunigiſte Lietuwos 23 Polish Wielkie Ksiestwo Litewskie Romanian Marele Ducat al Lituaniei Russian Velikoe knyazhestvo Litovskoe Ruthenian Velikoe knѧzstvo Litovskoe Ukrainian Velike knyazivstvo LitovskeNaming convention of both title of ruler hospodar 24 and the state changed as it expanded its territory Following the decline of the Kingdom of Ruthenia 25 and incorporation of its lands into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Gediminas started to title himself as King of Lithuanians and many Ruthenians 26 27 28 while the name of the state became the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Ruthenia 29 30 Similarly the title changed to King of Lithuanians and Ruthenians ruler and duke of Semigallia when Semigallia became part of the state 31 32 The 1529 edition of the Statute of Lithuania described the titles of Sigismund I the Old as King of Poland the Grand Duke of Lithuania Ruthenia Prussia Samogitia Mazovia and other lands 33 When southern and western Ruthenian lands were transferred to the Crown after the Union of Lublin the titles of the Grand Duke of Lithuania were transferred to the titles of the rulers of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth citation needed The country was also called the Republic of Lithuania Latin Respublica Lituana since at least the mid 16th century already before the Union of Lublin in 1569 34 History EditEstablishment of the state Edit Main articles History of Lithuania 1219 1295 Duchy of Lithuania and Lithuanian Crusade Lithuania in the Mappa mundi of Pietro Vesconte 1321 The inscription reads Letvini pagani pagan Lithuanians Balts in the 12th century The first written reference to Lithuania is found in the Quedlinburg Chronicle which dates from 1009 35 In the 12th century Slavic chronicles refer to Lithuania as one of the areas attacked by the Rus Pagan Lithuanians initially paid tribute to Polotsk but they soon grew in strength and organized their own small scale raids At some point between 1180 and 1183 the situation began to change and the Lithuanians started to organize sustainable military raids on the Slavic provinces raiding the Principality of Polotsk as well as Pskov and even threatening Novgorod 36 The sudden spark of military raids marked consolidation of the Lithuanian lands in Aukstaitija 5 The Lithuanians are the only branch within the Baltic group that managed to create a state entity in premodern times 37 The Lithuanian Crusade began after the Livonian Order and Teutonic Knights crusading military orders were established in Riga and in Prussia in 1202 and 1226 respectively The Christian orders posed a significant threat to pagan Baltic tribes and further galvanized the formation of the Lithuanian state The peace treaty with Galicia Volhynia of 1219 provides evidence of cooperation between Lithuanians and Samogitians This treaty lists 21 Lithuanian dukes including five senior Lithuanian dukes from Aukstaitija Zivinbudas Daujotas Vilikaila Dausprungas and Mindaugas and several dukes from Zemaitija Although they had battled in the past the Lithuanians and the Zemaiciai now faced a common enemy 38 Likely Zivinbudas had the most authority 36 and at least several dukes were from the same families 39 The formal acknowledgement of common interests and the establishment of a hierarchy among the signatories of the treaty foreshadowed the emergence of the state 40 Kingdom of Lithuania Edit Main article Kingdom of Lithuania Mindaugas the duke 41 of southern Lithuania 42 was among the five senior dukes mentioned in the treaty with Galicia Volhynia The Livonian Rhymed Chronicle reports that by the mid 1230s Mindaugas had acquired supreme power in the whole of Lithuania 43 In 1236 the Samogitians led by Vykintas defeated the Livonian Order in the Battle of Saule 44 The Order was forced to become a branch of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia making Samogitia a strip of land that separated Livonia from Prussia the main target of both orders The battle provided a break in the wars with the Knights and Lithuania exploited this situation arranging attacks on the Ruthenian provinces and annexing Navahrudak and Hrodna 43 In 1248 a civil war broke out between Mindaugas and his nephews Tautvilas and Edivydas The powerful coalition against Mindaugas included Vykintas the Livonian Order Daniel of Galicia and Vasilko of Volhynia Taking advantage of internal conflicts Mindaugas allied with the Livonian Order He promised to convert to Christianity and exchange some lands in western Lithuania in return for military assistance against his nephews and the royal crown In 1251 Mindaugas was baptized and Pope Innocent IV issued a papal bull proclaiming the creation of the Kingdom of Lithuania After the civil war ended Mindaugas was crowned as King of Lithuania on 6 July 1253 starting a decade of relative peace Mindaugas later renounced Christianity and converted back to paganism Mindaugas tried to expand his influence in Polatsk a major centre of commerce in the Daugava River basin and Pinsk 43 The Teutonic Knights used this period to strengthen their position in parts of Samogitia and Livonia but they lost the Battle of Skuodas in 1259 and the Battle of Durbe in 1260 45 This encouraged the conquered Semigallians and Old Prussians to rebel against the Knights 46 Encouraged by Treniota Mindaugas broke the peace with the Order possibly reverted to pagan beliefs He hoped to unite all Baltic tribes under the Lithuanian leadership As military campaigns were not successful the relationships between Mindaugas and Treniota deteriorated Treniota together with Daumantas of Pskov assassinated Mindaugas and his two sons Ruklys and Rupeikis in 1263 47 The state lapsed into years of internal fighting 48 Columns of Gediminas Rise of the Gediminids Edit Main article Gediminids Gediminas Tower in Vilnius From 1263 to 1269 Lithuania had three grand dukes Treniota Vaisvilkas and Svarnas The state did not disintegrate however and Traidenis came to power in 1269 He strengthened Lithuanian control in Black Ruthenia and fought with the Livonian Order winning the Battle of Karuse in 1270 and the Battle of Aizkraukle in 1279 There is considerable uncertainty about the identities of the grand dukes of Lithuania between his death in 1282 and the assumption of power by Vytenis in 1295 During this time the Orders finalized their conquests In 1274 the Great Prussian Rebellion ended and the Teutonic Knights proceeded to conquer other Baltic tribes the Nadruvians and Skalvians in 1274 1277 and the Yotvingians in 1283 the Livonian Order completed its conquest of Semigalia the last Baltic ally of Lithuania in 1291 49 The Orders could now turn their full attention to Lithuania The buffer zone composed of other Baltic tribes had disappeared and Grand Duchy of Lithuania was left to battle the Orders on its own 50 The Gediminid dynasty ruled the grand duchy for over a century and Vytenis was the first ruler of the dynasty 51 During his reign Lithuania was in constant war with the Order the Kingdom of Poland and Ruthenia Vytenis was involved in succession disputes in Poland supporting Boleslaus II of Masovia who was married to a Lithuanian duchess Gaudemunda In Ruthenia Vytenis managed to recapture lands lost after the assassination of Mindaugas and to capture the principalities of Pinsk lt and Turov In the struggle against the Order Vytenis allied with Riga s citizens securing positions in Riga strengthened trade routes and provided a base for further military campaigns Around 1307 Polotsk an important trading centre was annexed by military force 52 Vytenis also began constructing a defensive castle network along Nemunas 53 Gradually this network developed into the main defensive line against the Teutonic Order 53 Lithuanian state in 13 15th centuries Territorial expansion Edit Main articles Battle on the Irpin River and Muscovite Lithuanian Wars The expansion of the state reached its height under Grand Duke Gediminas also titled by some contemporaneous German sources as Rex de Owsteiten English King of Aukstaitija 54 who created a strong central government and established an empire that later spread from the Black Sea to the Baltic Sea 55 56 In 1320 most of the principalities of western Rus were either vassalized or annexed by Lithuania In 1321 Gediminas captured Kiev sending Stanislav the last Rurikid to rule Kiev into exile Gediminas also re established the permanent capital of the Grand Duchy in Vilnius 57 presumably moving it from Old Trakai in 1323 58 The state continued to expand its territory under the reign of Grand Duke Algirdas and his brother Kestutis who both ruled the state harmonically 59 60 Lubart s Castle in Ukraine built by the son of Gediminas Liubartas in the mid 14th century is famous for the Congress of Lutsk which took place in 1429 Lithuania was in a good position to conquer the western and the southern parts of former Kievan Rus While almost every other state around it had been plundered or defeated by the Mongols the hordes stopped at the modern borders of Belarus and the core territory of the Grand Duchy was left mostly untouched The weak control of the Mongols over the areas they had conquered allowed the expansion of Lithuania to accelerate Rus principalities were never incorporated directly into the Golden Horde maintaining vassal relationships with a fair degree of independence Lithuania annexed some of these areas as vassals through diplomacy as they exchanged rule by the Mongols or the Grand Prince of Moscow with rule by the Grand Duchy An example is Novgorod which was often in the Lithuanian sphere of influence and became an occasional dependency of the Grand Duchy 61 Lithuanian control resulted from internal frictions within the city which attempted to escape submission to Moscow Such relationships could be tenuous however as changes in a city s internal politics could disrupt Lithuanian control as happened on a number of occasions with Novgorod and other East Slavic cities citation needed The Grand Duchy of Lithuania managed to hold off Mongol incursions and eventually secured gains In 1333 and 1339 Lithuanians defeated large Mongol forces attempting to regain Smolensk from the Lithuanian sphere of influence By about 1355 the State of Moldavia had formed and the Golden Horde did little to re vassalize the area In 1362 regiments of the Grand Duchy army defeated the Golden Horde at the Battle at Blue Waters 62 In 1380 a Lithuanian army allied with Russian forces to defeat the Golden Horde in the Battle of Kulikovo and though the rule of the Mongols did not end their influence in the region waned thereafter In 1387 Moldavia became a vassal of Poland and in a broader sense of Lithuania By this time Lithuania had conquered the territory of the Golden Horde all the way to the Dnieper River In a crusade against the Golden Horde in 1398 in an alliance with Tokhtamysh Lithuania invaded northern Crimea and won a decisive victory In an attempt to place Tokhtamish on the Golden Horde throne in 1399 Lithuania moved against the Horde but was defeated in the Battle of the Vorskla River losing the steppe region 63 Grand Duchy of Lithuania under the rule of Vytautas the Great Personal Union with Poland Edit Main articles Union of Krewo Lithuanian Civil War 1389 1392 and Jagiellonian dynasty Poland and Lithuania in 1386 1434 Trakai Island Castle residence of the Grand Duke Vytautas Lithuania was Christianized in 1387 led by Jogaila who personally translated Christian prayers into the Lithuanian language 64 and his cousin Vytautas the Great who founded many Catholic churches and allocated lands for parishes in Lithuania The state reached a peak under Vytautas the Great who reigned from 1392 to 1430 Vytautas was one of the most famous rulers of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania serving as the Grand Duke from 1401 to 1430 and as the Prince of Hrodna 1370 1382 and the Prince of Lutsk 1387 1389 Vytautas was the son of Kestutis uncle of Jogaila who became King of Poland in 1386 and he was the grandfather of Vasili II of Moscow 65 In 1410 Vytautas commanded the forces of the Grand Duchy in the Battle of Grunwald The battle ended in a decisive Polish Lithuanian victory against the Teutonic Order The war of Lithuania against military Orders which lasted for more than 200 years and was one of the longest wars in the history of Europe was finally ended Vytautas backed the economic development of the state and introduced many reforms Under his rule the Grand Duchy of Lithuania slowly became more centralized as the governours loyal to Vytautas replaced local princes with dynastic ties to the throne The governours were rich landowners who formed the basis for the nobility of the Grand Duchy During Vytautas rule the Radziwill and Gostautas families started to gain influence 66 67 The Battle of Grunwald 1410 with Ulrich von Jungingen and Vytautas at center The rapid expansion of the influence of Moscow soon put it into a comparable position to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and after the annexation of Novgorod in 1478 Muscovy was among the preeminent states in northeastern Europe Between 1492 and 1508 Ivan III further consolidated Muscovy winning the key Battle of Vedrosha and regaining such ancient lands of Kievan Rus as Chernihiv and Bryansk 68 On 8 September 1514 the allied forces of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland under the command of Hetman Konstanty Ostrogski fought the Battle of Orsha against the army of the Grand Duchy of Moscow under Konyushy Ivan Chelyadnin and Kniaz Mikhail Golitsin The battle was part of a long series of Muscovite Lithuanian Wars conducted by Russian rulers striving to gather all the former lands of Kievan Rus under their rule According to Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii by Sigismund von Herberstein the primary source for the information on the battle the much smaller army of Poland Lithuania under 30 000 men defeated the 80 000 Muscovite soldiers capturing their camp and commander The Muscovites lost about 30 000 men while the losses of the Poland Lithuania army totalled only 500 While the battle is remembered as one of the greatest Lithuanian victories Muscovy ultimately prevailed in the war Under the 1522 peace treaty the Grand Duchy of Lithuania made large territorial concessions 69 Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Edit Main articles Union of Lublin and Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Grand Duchy of Lithuania within the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth c 1635 The wars with the Teutonic Order the loss of land to Moscow and the continued pressure threatened the survival of the state of Lithuania so it was forced to ally more closely with Poland uniting with its western neighbour as the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Commonwealth of Two Nations in the Union of Lublin of 1569 During the period of the Union many of the territories formerly controlled by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were transferred to the Crown of the Polish Kingdom while the gradual process of Polonization slowly drew Lithuania itself under Polish domination 70 71 72 The Grand Duchy retained many rights in the federation including separate ministries laws army and treasury until the May Constitution of Poland and Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations were passed in 1791 73 Partitions and the Napoleonic period Edit Following the partitions of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth most of the lands of the former Grand Duchy were directly annexed by the Russian Empire the rest by Prussia In 1812 just prior to the French invasion of Russia the former Grand Duchy revolted against the Russians Soon after his arrival in Vilnius Napoleon proclaimed the creation of a Commissary Provisional Government of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania which in turn renewed the Polish Lithuanian Union 74 The union was never formalized however as only half a year later Napoleon s Grande Armee was pushed out of Russia and forced to retreat further westwards In December 1812 Vilnius was recaptured by Russian forces bringing all plans of recreation of the Grand Duchy to an end 74 Most of the lands of the former Grand Duchy were re annexed by Russia The Augustow Voivodeship later Augustow Governorate including the counties of Marijampole and Kalvarija was attached to the Kingdom of Poland a rump state in personal union with Russia citation needed Administrative division EditMain article Administrative divisions of Lithuania See also List of cities in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Lithuania and its administrative divisions in the 17th century Administrative structure of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1413 1564 75 Voivodeship Palatinatus EstablishedVilnius 1413Trakai 1413Samogitian eldership 1413Kiev 1471Polotsk 1504Naugardukas 1507Smolensk 1508Vitebsk 1511Podlaskie 1514Brest Litovsk 1566Minsk 1566Mstislavl 1569Volhyn 1564 1566Bratslav 1564Duchy of Livonia 1561Religion and culture EditChristianity and paganism Edit See also Lithuanian mythology and Christianization of Lithuania Church of St Johns in Vilnius Example of Vilnian Baroque style 76 St Anne s Church and the church of the Bernardine Monastery in Vilnius Two examples of Gothic architecture After the baptism in 1252 and coronation of King Mindaugas in 1253 Lithuania was recognized as a Christian state until 1260 when Mindaugas supported an uprising in Courland and according to the German order renounced Christianity Up until 1387 Lithuanian nobles professed their own religion which was polytheistic 77 Ethnic Lithuanians were very dedicated to their faith The pagan beliefs needed to be deeply entrenched to survive strong pressure from missionaries and foreign powers Until the 17th century there were relics of old faith reported by counter reformation active Jesuit priests like feeding zaltys with milk or bringing food to graves of ancestors The lands of modern day Belarus and Ukraine as well as local dukes princes in these regions were firmly Orthodox Christian Greek Catholic after the Union of Brest though While pagan beliefs in Lithuania were strong enough to survive centuries of pressure from military orders and missionaries they did eventually succumb A separate Eastern Orthodox metropolitan eparchy was created sometime between 1315 and 1317 by the Constantinople Patriarch John XIII Following the Galicia Volhynia Wars which divided the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland in 1355 the Halych metropoly was liquidated and its eparchies transferred to the metropoles of Lithuania and Volhynia 78 In 1387 Lithuania converted to Catholicism while most of the Ruthenian lands stayed Orthodox however on 22 February 1387 Supreme Duke Jogaila banned Catholics marriages with Orthodox and demanded those Orthodox who previously married with the Catholics to convert to Catholicism 79 At one point though Pope Alexander VI reprimanded the Grand Duke for keeping non Catholics as advisers 80 Consequently only in 1563 did Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus issue a privilege that equalized the rights of Orthodox and Catholics in Lithuania and abolished all previous restrictions on Orthodox 81 There was an effort to polarise Orthodox Christians after the Union of Brest in 1596 by which some Orthodox Christians acknowledged papal authority and Catholic catechism but preserved their liturgy The country also became one of the major centres of the Reformation 82 In the second half of the 16th century Calvinism spread in Lithuania supported by the families of Radziwill Chodkiewicz Sapieha Dorohostajski and others By the 1580s the majority of the senators from Lithuania were Calvinist or Socinian Unitarians Jan Kiszka 83 In 1579 Stephen Bathory King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania founded Vilnius University one of the oldest universities in Northern Europe Due to the work of the Jesuits during the Counter Reformation the university soon developed into one of the most important scientific and cultural centres of the region and the most notable scientific centre of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 84 The work of the Jesuits as well as conversions from among the Lithuanian senatorial families turned the tide and by the 1670s Calvinism lost its former importance though it still retained some influence among the ethnically Lithuanian peasants and some middle nobility citation needed Islam Edit See also Islam in Lithuania and Lipka Tatars Islam in Lithuania unlike many other northern and western European countries has a long history starting from 14th century 85 Small groups of Muslim Lipka Tatars migrated to ethnically Lithuanian lands mainly under the rule of Grand Duke Vytautas early 15th century In Lithuania unlike many other European societies at the time there was religious freedom Lithuanian Tatars were allowed to settle in certain places such as Trakai and Kaunas 86 Keturiasdesimt Totoriu is one of the oldest Tatar settlements in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania After a successful military campaign of the Crimean Peninsula in 1397 Vytautas brought the first Crimean Tatar prisoners of war to Trakai and various places in the Duchy of Trakai including localities near Voke river just south of Vilnius The first mosque in this village was mentioned for the first time in 1558 There were 42 Tatar families in the village in 1630 87 Judaism Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2022 See also History of the Jews in Lithuania and Crimean KaraitesLanguages Edit Constitution of 3 May one of the first official state documents issued in both Polish and Lithuanian Lithuanian edition In the 13th century the centre of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was inhabited by a majority that spoke Lithuanian 88 though it was not a written language until the 16th century 89 In the other parts of the duchy the majority of the population including Ruthenian nobles and ordinary people used both spoken and written Ruthenian 88 Nobles who migrated from one place to another would adapt to a new locality and adopt the local religion and culture and those Lithuanian noble families that moved to Slavic areas often took up the local culture quickly over subsequent generations 90 Ruthenians were native to the east central and south eastern parts of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania citation needed Ruthenian also called Chancery Slavonic in its written form was used to write laws alongside Polish Latin and German but its use varied between regions From the time of Vytautas there are fewer remaining documents written in Ruthenian than there are in Latin and German but later Ruthenian became the main language of documentation and writings especially in eastern and southern parts of the Duchy In the 16th century at the time of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Lithuanian lands became partially polonized over time and started to use Polish for writing much more often than the Lithuanian and Ruthenian languages Polish finally became the official chancellery language of the Commonwealth in 1697 90 91 92 93 The voivodeships with a predominantly ethnic Lithuanian population Vilnius Trakai and Samogitian voivodeships remained almost wholly Lithuanian speaking both colloquially and by ruling nobility 94 Ruthenian communities were also present in the extreme southern parts of Trakai voivodeship and south eastern parts of Vilnius Voivodeship In addition to Lithuanians and Ruthenians other important ethnic groups throughout the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were Jews and Tatars 90 Languages for state and academic purposes Edit Lithuanian primer for kids published in Vilnius Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1783 edition Numerous languages were used in state documents depending on which period in history and for what purpose These languages included Lithuanian Ruthenian 93 95 Polish and to a lesser extent mostly in early diplomatic communication Latin and German 89 90 92 The Court used Ruthenian to correspond with Eastern countries while Latin and German were used in foreign affairs with Western countries 93 96 During the latter part of the history of the Grand Duchy Polish was increasingly used in State documents especially after the Union of Lublin 92 By 1697 Polish had largely replaced Ruthenian as the official language at Court 89 93 97 although Ruthenian continued to be used on a few official documents until the second half of the 18th century 91 It is known that Jogaila being ethnic Lithuanian by the man s line himself knew and spoke in the Lithuanian language with Vytautas the Great his cousin from the Gediminids dynasty 98 99 100 Also during the Christianization of Samogitia none of the clergy who came to Samogitia with Jogaila were able to communicate with the natives therefore Jogaila himself taught the Samogitians about the Catholicism thus he was able to communicate in the Samogitian dialect of the Lithuanian language 101 Use of Lithuanian still continued at the Court after the death of Vytautas and Jogaila 102 Since the young Grand Duke Casimir IV Jagiellon was underage the supreme control over the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was in the hands of the Lithuanian Council of Lords presided by Jonas Gostautas while Casimir was taught Lithuanian language and the customs of Lithuania by appointed court officials 103 104 Grand Duke Alexander Jagiellon also could understand and speak Lithuanian 102 While Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus maintained both Polish speaking and Lithuanian speaking courts 102 From the beginning of the 16th century and especially after a rebellion led by Michael Glinski in 1508 there were attempts by the Court to replace the usage of Ruthenian with Latin 105 The use of Ruthenian by academics in areas formerly part of Rus and even in Lithuania proper was widespread Court Chancellor of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Lew Sapieha noted in the preface of the Third Statute of Lithuania 1588 that all state documents to be written exclusively in Ruthenian The same was stated in part 4 of the Statute And clerk must use Ruthenian letters and Ruthenian words in all pages letters and requests and not any other language or words A pisar zemskij maet po rusku literami i slovy ruskimi vsi listy vypisy i pozvy pisati a ne inshim ezykom i slovy The Statute of GDL 1588 Part 4 article 1 106 Despite that Polish language editions stated the same in Polish 107 Statutes of the Grand Duchy were translated into Latin and Polish One of the main reasons for translations into Latin was that Ruthenian had no well defined and codified law concepts and definitions which caused many disputes in courts Another reason to use Latin was a popular idea that Lithuanians were descendants of Romans the mythical house of Palemonids Augustinus Rotundus translated the Second Statute into Latin 108 According to scientist Rita Regina Trimoniene the Lithuanians surnames are not slavified and are written as they were pronounced by parishioners in the registers of baptism of Siauliai Church dated in the 17th century 109 In 1552 Grand Duke Sigismund II Augustus ordered that orders of the Magistrate of Vilnius be announced in Lithuanian Polish and Ruthenian 110 The same requirement was valid for the Magistrate of Kaunas 111 112 Mikalojus Dauksa writing in the introduction to his Postil 1599 which was written in Lithuanian in Polish advocated the promotion of Lithuanian in the Grand Duchy noting in the introduction that many people especially szlachta preferred to speak Polish rather than Lithuanian but spoke Polish poorly citation needed Such were the linguistic trends in the Grand Duchy that by the political reforms of 1564 1566 parliaments local land courts appellate courts and other State functions were recorded in Polish 105 and Polish became increasingly spoken across all social classes citation needed Lithuanian language situation Edit Main articles Lithuanian language and Lithuanian literature We do not know on whose merits or guilt such a decision was made or with what we have offended Your Lordship so much that Your Lordship has deservedly been directed against us creating hardship for us everywhere First of all you made and announced a decision about the land of Samogitia which is our inheritance and our homeland from the legal succession of the ancestors and elders We still own it it is and has always been the same Lithuanian land because there is one language and the same inhabitants But since the land of Samogitia is located lower than the land of Lithuania it is called Samogitia because in Lithuanian it is called lower land Zemaitija And the Samogitians call Lithuania Aukstaitija that is from the Samogitian point of view a higher land Also the people of Samogitia have long called themselves Lithuanians and never Samogitians and because of such identity sic we do not write about Samogitia in our letter because everything is one one country and the same inhabitants Vytautas the Great excerpt from his 11 March 1420 Latin letter sent to Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor in which he described the core of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania composed from Zemaitija lowlands and Aukstaitija highlands and its language 113 114 The term Aukstaitija has been known since the 13th century 115 Area where Lithuanian was spoken in the 16th century Lithuania proper in green and Samogitia in red within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in a map from 1712 Ruthenian and Polish were used as state languages of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania besides Latin and German in diplomatic correspondence However Lithuanian was dominant in parts of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania like Samogitia where the local nobility s reliance on Lithuanian resulted in Stanislovas Radvila remarking in a letter to his brother Mikalojus Kristupas Radvila Naslaitelis immediately after becoming the Elder of Samogitia that While learning various languages I forgot Lithuanian and now I see I have to go to school again because that language as I see God willing will be needed 116 Vilnius Trakai and Samogitia were the core voivodeships of the state being part of Lithuania Proper as evidenced by the privileged position of their governors in state authorities such as the Council of Lords Peasants in ethnic Lithuanian territories spoke exclusively Lithuanian except in transitional border regions but the Statutes of Lithuania and other laws and documentation were written in Ruthenian Latin and Polish Following the example of the royal court there was a tendency to replace Lithuanian with Polish in the ethnic Lithuanian areas whereas Ruthenian was stronger in ethnic Belarusian and Ukrainian territories A note written by Sigismund von Herberstein s states that in an ocean of Ruthenian in this part of Europe there were two non Ruthenian regions Lithuania and Samogitia 105 Panegyric to Sigismund III Vasa visiting Vilnius first hexameter in Lithuanian 1589 Since the founding of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania the higher strata of Lithuanian society from ethnic Lithuania spoke Lithuanian although from the later 16th century gradually began using Polish and those from Ruthenia Ruthenian Samogitia was unique because of its economic situation it lay near sea ports and there were fewer people under corvee instead of that many commoners were taxpayers clarification needed As a result the stratification of society was not as sharp as in other areas Being more similar to a commoner population the local szlachta spoke Lithuanian to a bigger extent than in the areas close to the capital Vilnius which itself had become the starting point of intensive linguistic Polonization of the surrounding areas since the 18th century citation needed In Vilnius University there are preserved texts written in the Lithuanian language of the Vilnius area a dialect of Eastern Aukstaitian which was spoken in a territory located south eastwards from Vilnius The sources are preserved in works of graduates from Stanislovas Rapolionis based Lithuanian language schools graduate Martynas Mazvydas and Rapalionis relative Abraomas Kulvietis 117 118 One of the main sources of Lithuanian written in the Eastern Aukstaitian dialect Vilnius dialect was preserved by Konstantinas Sirvydas in a trilingual Polish Latin Lithuanian 17th century dictionary Dictionarium trium linguarum in usum studiosae juventutis which was the main Lithuanian dictionary used until the late 19th century 119 120 Universitas lingvarum Litvaniae published in Vilnius 1737 is the oldest surviving grammar of the Lithuanian language published in the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 121 Demographics EditSee also Demographic history of Poland Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569 1795 This is the peace made by the Livonian Master and the King of Lithuania and expressed in the following words Next a German merchant can travel safely concerning his life and property through Rus Ruthenia and Lithuania as far as the King of Lithuania s authority seeks Next if something is stolen from a German merchant in Lithuania or Rus it must be put on trial where it happens if it happens that a German steals from a Rus Ruthenian or a Lithuanian the same way it must be put on trial where it happens Moreover if a Lithuanian or a Rus Ruthenian wants to sue a German for an old thing he must apply to the person to whom the person is subordinate the same must be done by a German in Lithuania or Rus That peace was made in the one thousand three hundred and thirty eighth year of the birth of God on All Saints Day with the consent of the Master the Marshal of the Land and many other nobles as well as the City Council of Riga they kissed the cross on the matter With the consent of the King of Lithuania Gediminas his sons and all his nobles they also performed their sacred rites in this matter Pagan rites and with the consent of the Bishop of Polotsk Gregory the Duke of Polotsk Narimantas and the city the Duke of Vitebsk Algirdas and the city of Vitebsk they all in approval of the said peace treaty kissed the cross From the 1338 Peace and Trade Agreement concluded in Vilnius between the Grand Duke of Lithuania Gediminas and his sons and the Master of the Livonian Order Everhard von Monheim establishing a peace zone which clearly distinguishes the Lithuanians and the Rus people Ruthenians and Lithuania from Rus Ruthenia 122 123 The Statute of Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1588 in Ruthenian printed in Vilnius In 1260 the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the land of Lithuania and ethnic Lithuanians formed the majority 67 5 of its 400 000 people 124 With the acquisition of new Ruthenian territories in 1340 this portion decreased to 30 125 By the time of the largest expansion towards Rus lands which came at the end of the 13th and during the 14th century the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was 800 to 930 thousand km2 just 10 to 14 of which was ethnically Lithuanian 124 126 On 6 May 1434 Grand Duke Sigismund Kestutaitis released his privilege which tied the Orthodox and Catholic Lithuanian nobles rights in order to attract the Slavic nobles of the eastern regions of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania who supported the former Grand Duke Svitrigaila 127 An estimate of the population in the territory of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania together gives a population at 7 5 million for 1493 breaking them down by ethnicity at 3 75 million Ruthenians ethnic Ukrainians Belarusians 3 25 million Poles and 0 5 million Lithuanians 128 With the Union of Lublin 1569 Lithuanian Grand Duchy lost large part of lands to the Polish Crown According to an analysis of the tax registers in 1572 Lithuania proper had 850 000 residents of which 680 000 were Lithuanians 129 In the mid and late 17th century due to Russian and Swedish invasions there was much devastation and population loss on throughout the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 130 including ethnic Lithuanian population in Vilnius surroundings Besides devastation the Ruthenian population declined proportionally after the territorial losses to Russian Empire By 1770 there were about 4 84 million inhabitants in the territory of 320 thousand km2 the biggest part of whom were inhabitants of Ruthenia and about 1 39 million or 29 of ethnic Lithuania 124 During the following decades the population decreased in a result of partitions 124 Legacy Edit The first printed book in Lithuanian Catechism of Martynas Mazvydas by Martynas Mazvydas Prussian tribes of Baltic origin were the subject of Polish expansion which was largely unsuccessful so Duke Konrad of Masovia invited the Teutonic Knights to settle near the Prussian area of settlement The fighting between Prussians and the Teutonic Knights gave the more distant Lithuanian tribes time to unite Because of strong enemies in the south and north the newly formed Lithuanian state concentrated most of its military and diplomatic efforts on expansion eastward The rest of the former Ruthenian lands were conquered by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Some other lands in Ukraine were vassalized by Lithuania later The subjugation of Eastern Slavs by two powers created substantial differences between them that persist to this day While there were certainly substantial regional differences in Kievan Rus it was the Lithuanian annexation of much of southern and western Ruthenia that led to the permanent division between Ukrainians Belarusians and Russians And even four Grand Dukes of Lithuania are appeared on the Millennium of Russia monument In the 19th century the romantic references to the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were an inspiration and a substantial part of both the Lithuanian and Belarusian national revival movements and Romanticism in Poland Notwithstanding the above Lithuania was a kingdom under Mindaugas who was crowned by the authority of Pope Innocent IV in 1253 Vytenis Gediminas and Vytautas the Great also assumed the title of King although uncrowned by the Pope A failed attempt was made in 1918 to revive the Kingdom under a German Prince Wilhelm Karl Duke of Urach who would have reigned as Mindaugas II of Lithuania In the first half of the 20th century the memory of the multiethnic history of the Grand Duchy was revived by the Krajowcy movement 131 132 which included Ludwik Abramowicz Liudvikas Abramovicius Konstancja Skirmuntt Mykolas Romeris Michal Pius Romer Jozef Albin Herbaczewski Juozapas Albinas Herbaciauskas Jozef Mackiewicz and Stanislaw Mackiewicz 133 134 This feeling was expressed in poetry by Czeslaw Milosz 134 Pseudoscientific theory of litvinism was developed since the 1990s 135 According to the 10th article of the Law on the State Flag and Other Flags of the Republic of Lithuania Lithuanian Lietuvos Respublikos valstybes veliavos ir kitu veliavu įstatymas adopted by the Seimas the historical Lithuanian state flag with horseback knight on a red field which initial design dates back to the reign of Grand Duke Vytautas the Great 136 must be constantly raised over the most important governmental buildings e g Seimas Palace Government of Lithuania and its ministries Lithuanian courts municipal council buildings and significant historical buildings e g Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania Trakai Island Castle also in Kernave and in the site of the Senieji Trakai Castle 137 Gallery Edit Lithuanian ancient hill fort in Rudamina Lithuanian ancient hill fort mounds in Kernave now listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site Vilnius Old Town the political and cultural center of the Grand Duchy today a UNESCO World Heritage Site Kaunas Castle Lida Castle Ruins of Navahrudak Castle Current state 2004 Ruins of Kreva Castle Mir Castle a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Belarus Kamianets Podilskyi Castle in Ukraine Medininkai Castle Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania in Vilnius Vilnius University and the Church of St John St George Church 1487 in Kaunas Church of Vytautas the Great in Kaunas House of Perkunas in Kaunas Pazaislis Monastery church decorated with expensive marble St Peter and St Paul s Church a masterpiece of Lithuanian Baroque architecture Royal insignias of the rulers of Lithuania in the Vilnius Cathedral 1931 Coins of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Coins of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Coins of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Lithuanian double Denar of Grand Duke Sigismund III Vasa with his monogram and Lithuanian Vytis Waykimas minted in Vilnius 1621 Recreation of the Lithuanian soldiers Showcase of the Crimean Karaites traditional lifestyle in Trakai Lithuania Zemaitukas a historic horse breed from Lithuania known from the 6 7th centuries used as a warhorse by the Lithuanians Christianization of Lithuania in 1387 oil on canvas by Jan Matejko 1889 Royal Castle in Warsaw Lithuanian soldiers of the 16th century Priest lexicographer Konstantinas Sirvydas the cherisher of the Lithuanian language in the 17th century Lithuanian national coats of arms Columns of Gediminas Double Cross of the Jagiellonians Jogaila and Samogitian bear Coat of arms of the Grand Chancellors of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Coat of arms of the Grand Marshals of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania A detailed 1613 map of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania by Mikolaj Krzysztof the Orphan Radziwill The map is considered to be one of the best cartographic works of the Renaissance Kept in the Uppsala Museum Saliamonas Mozerka Slavocinskis book named Giesmes tikieimuy katholickam pridiarancias o per metu szwietes giedamas Kuriup priliduoda Pfalmay Dowida s in the Lithuanian language published in Vilnius 1646 Lithuanian Metrica Reciprocal Guarantee of Two Nations which distinguishes Poles Lithuanians Ruthenians and others adopted on 20 October 1791See also EditPortals History Lithuania Belarus Ukraine Cities of Grand Duchy of Lithuania Crimea History of Belarus History of Lithuania History of Ukraine List of Belarusian rulers List of Lithuanian rulers List of Ukrainian rulers Belarus Lithuania UkraineReferences Edit History of the national coat of arms Seimas Retrieved 8 July 2021 Herby Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej i Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego Orly Pogonie wojewodztwa ksiazeta kardynalowie prymasi hetmani kanclerze marszalkowie in Polish Jagiellonian Library 1875 1900 pp 6 30 32 58 84 130 160 264 282 300 Retrieved 21 August 2021 a b c d e Vaitekunas Stasys Lietuvos Didziosios Kunigaikstystes gyventojai Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 19 September 2021 Tumelis Juozas Abieju Tautu tarpusavio įzadas Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 9 April 2021 a b Baranauskas Tomas 2000 Lietuvos valstybes istakos The Lithuanian State in Lithuanian Vilnius viduramziu istorija net Retrieved 20 July 2016 Suziedelis Saulius 2011 Historical dictionary of Lithuania 2nd ed Lanham Md Scarecrow Press p 119 ISBN 978 0 8108 4914 3 Rowell S C Lithuania Ascending A pagan empire within east central Europe 1295 1345 Cambridge 1994 p 289 290 Ch Allmand The New Cambridge Medieval History Cambridge 1998 p 731 Encyclopaedia Britannica Grand Duchy of Lithuania R Bideleux A History of Eastern Europe Crisis and Change Routledge 1998 p 122 Rowell Lithuania Ascending p 289 Z Kiaupa Algirdas ir LDK rytu politika Gimtoji istorija 2 Nuo 7 iki 12 klases Lietuvos istorijos vadovelis CD 2003 Elektronines leidybos namai Vilnius Kowalska Pietrzak Anna 2015 History of Poland During the Middle Ages PDF Core N Davies Europe A History Oxford 1996 p 392 J Kiaupiene Gediminaiciai ir Jogailaiciai prie Vytauto palikimo Gimtoji istorija 2 Nuo 7 iki 12 klases Lietuvos istorijos vadovelis CD 2003 Elektronines leidybos namai Vilnius J Kiaupiene Valdzios krizes pabaiga ir Kazimieras Jogailaitis Gimtoji istorija 2 Nuo 7 iki 12 klases Lietuvos istorijos vadovelis CD 2003 Elektronines leidybos namai Vilnius D Stone The Polish Lithuanian state 1386 1795 University of Washington Press 2001 p 63 Zigmas Zinkevicius Kelios mintys kurios kyla skaitant Alfredo Bumblausko Senosios Lietuvos istorija 1009 1795m Voruta 2005 Indo European etymology Query result starling rinet ru Zinkevicius Zigmas 30 November 1999 Lietuvos vardo kilme Voruta in Lithuanian 3 669 ISSN 1392 0677 Archived from the original on 10 May 2022 Dubonis Arturas 1998 Lietuvos didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai is Lietuvos ankstyvuju valstybiniu strukturu praeities Leiciai of Grand Duke of Lithuania from the past of Lithuanian stative structures in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla Bojtar Endre 1999 Foreword to the Past A Cultural History of the Baltic People Central European University Press p 179 ISBN 978 963 9116 42 9 Archivum Lithuanicum PDF Institute of the Lithuanian Language Vilnius 15 81 2013 Kolodziejczyk Dariusz 22 June 2011 The Crimean Khanate and Poland Lithuania International Diplomacy on the European Periphery 15th 18th Century A Study of Peace Treaties Followed by Annotated Documents BRILL ISBN 978 9004191907 via Google Books Depending on translation of the source here and below original Rus name can be translated as Russia or Ruthenia Gedimino laiskai Letters of Gediminas PDF in Lithuanian Vilnius Vilnius University Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore p 2 Retrieved 30 May 2021 Rosenwein Barbara H 3 May 2018 Reading the Middle Ages Volume II From c 900 to c 1500 Third Edition University of Toronto Press ISBN 9781442636804 via Google Books Mickunaite Giedre 10 September 2006 Making a Great Ruler Grand Duke Vytautas of Lithuania Central European University Press ISBN 9786155211072 via Google Books Parker William Henry 11 November 1969 An Historical Geography of Russia Aldine Publishing Company via Google Books Kunitz Joshua 11 November 1947 Russia the Giant that Came Last Dodd Mead via Google Books Between Two Worlds A Comparative Study of the Representations of Pagan Lithuania in the Chronicles of the Teutonic Order and Rus Lietuvos valdovo zodis pasauliui atveriame musu zeme ir valdas kiekvienam geros valios zmogui Loewe Karl F von 1976 Studien Zur Geschichte Osteuropas Brill Archive p 19 ISBN 978 90 04 04520 0 Kuolys Darius 2005 Lietuvos Respublika idejos istakos Senoji Lietuvos literatura 157 198 ISSN 1822 3656 Lithuania Encarta 1997 Archived from the original on 29 October 2009 Retrieved 21 September 2006 a b Encyclopedia Lituanica Boston 1970 1978 Vol 5 p 395 Lithuania History Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 21 May 2021 Lithuania Ascending p 50 A Bumblauskas Senosios Lietuvos istorija 1009 1795 The early history of Lithuania Vilnius 2005 p 33 Irsenas Marius Raciunaite Tojana 2015 The Lithuanian Millennium History Art and Culture PDF Vilnius Vilnius Academy of Arts Press p 45 ISBN 978 609 447 097 4 Retrieved 5 July 2021 By contemporary accounts the Lithuanians called their early rulers kunigas kunigai in plural The word was borrowed from German kuning konig Later on kunigas was replaced by the word kunigaikstis used to describe to medieval Lithuanian rulers in modern Lithuanian while kunigas today means priest Z Kiaupa J Kiaupiene A Kunevicius The History of Lithuania Before 1795 Vilnius 2000 p 43 127 a b c V Speciunas Lietuvos valdovai XIII XVIII a Enciklopedinis zinynas Vilnius 2004 p 15 78 The Battle of Saule VisitLithuania net Retrieved 5 July 2021 Batura Romas Places of Fighting for Lithuania s Freedom PDF General Jonas Zemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania pp 1 2 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Baranauskas Tomas Medieval Lithuania Chronology 1183 1283 viduramziu istorija net Retrieved 5 July 2021 Senosios Lietuvos istorija p 44 45 The Grand Duchy of Lithuania 13 18th century valstybingumas lt Seimas Retrieved 21 May 2021 Kiaupa Zigmantas Jurate Kiaupiene Albinas Kunevicius 2000 1995 Establishment of the State The History of Lithuania Before 1795 English ed Vilnius Lithuanian Institute of History pp 45 72 ISBN 9986 810 13 2 Balt people Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Lithuania Ascending p 55 New Cambridge p 706 a b Gudavicius Edvardas Matulevicius Algirdas Varakauskas Rokas Vytenis Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 5 July 2021 Rowell Stephen Christopher 1994 Lithuania Ascending A Pagan Empire Within East Central Europe 1295 1345 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 107 65876 9 Retrieved 14 July 2021 Gediminas grand duke of Lithuania Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Toynbee Arnold Joseph 1948 A Study Of History Volume II Fourth impression ed Great Britain Oxford University Press p 172 Retrieved 11 July 2021 Vilnius national capital Lithuania Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Trakai The Old Capital of Lithuania VisitWorldHeritage com Retrieved 5 July 2021 Kestutis duke of Lithuania Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Algirdas grand duke of Lithuania Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Hinson E Glenn 1995 The Church Triumphant A History of Christianity Up to 1300 Mercer University Press p 438 ISBN 978 0 86554 436 9 Cherkas Borys 30 December 2011 Bitva na Sinih Vodah Yak Ukrayina zvilnilasya vid Zolotoyi Ordi Battle at Blue Waters How Ukraine freed itself from the Golden Horde in Ukrainian istpravda com ua Retrieved 22 February 2016 Battle of the Vorskla River Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Kloczowski Jerzy 2000 A History of Polish Christianity Cambridge University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 521 36429 4 Vytautas the Great Lithuanian leader Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 5 July 2021 Jasas Rimantas Matulevicius Algirdas Radvilos Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 5 July 2021 Jurginis Juozas Gostautai Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 5 July 2021 Matulevicius Algirdas Vedrosos musis Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 5 July 2021 Zikaras Karolis 2017 Battle of Orsha 1514 PDF Vilnius Ministry of National Defence of Lithuania pp 1 18 ISBN 978 609 412 068 8 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Makuch Andrij Ukraine History Lithuanian and Polish rule Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 20 July 2016 Within the Lithuanian grand duchy the Ruthenian Ukrainian and Belarusian lands initially retained considerable autonomy The pagan Lithuanians themselves were increasingly converting to Orthodoxy and assimilating into the Ruthenian culture The grand duchy s administrative practices and legal system drew heavily on Slavic customs and an official Ruthenian state language also known as Rusyn developed over time from the language used in Rus Direct Polish rule in Ukraine in the 1340s and for two centuries thereafter was limited to Galicia There changes in such areas as administration law and land tenure proceeded more rapidly than in Ukrainian territories under Lithuania However Lithuania itself was soon drawn into the orbit of Poland following the dynastic linkage of the two states in 1385 86 and the baptism of the Lithuanians into the Latin Roman Catholic church Union of Lublin Poland Lithuania 1569 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 20 July 2016 Formally Poland and Lithuania were to be distinct equal components of the federation But Poland which retained possession of the Lithuanian lands it had seized had greater representation in the Diet and became the dominant partner Stranga Aivars Lithuania History Union with Poland Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 12 August 2016 While Poland and Lithuania would thereafter elect a joint sovereign and have a common parliament the basic dual state structure was retained Each continued to be administered separately and had its own law codes and armed forces The joint commonwealth however provided an impetus for cultural Polonization of the Lithuanian nobility By the end of the 17th century it had virtually become indistinguishable from its Polish counterpart Eidintas Alfonsas Bumblauskas Alfredas Kulakauskas Antanas Tamosaitis Mindaugas Kondratas Skirma Kondratas Ramunas 2013 The history of Lithuania PDF 2nd ed Vilnius Eugrimas p 101 ISBN 978 609 437 163 9 Retrieved 20 May 2021 a b Marek Sobczynski Procesy integracyjne i dezintegracyjne na ziemiach litewskich w toku dziejow The process of integration and disintegration in the territories of Lithuania in the course of events PDF in Polish Zaklad Geografii Politycznej Uniwersytetu Lodzkiego Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Lietuvos Didziosios Kunigaikstystes administracinis teritorinis suskirstymas vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 9 June 2020 Vilniaus barokas vilniausbarokas weebly com in Lithuanian Retrieved 30 July 2018 Vardys Vytas Stanley Christianity in Lithuania Lituanus org Lituanus Retrieved 14 May 2021 Halych metropoly Encyclopedia of Ukraine Gudavicius Edvardas Jucas Mecislovas Matulevicius Algirdas Jogaila Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija in Lithuanian Retrieved 19 May 2021 von Pastor Ludwig 1899 The History of the Popes from the Close of the Middle Ages Vol 6 p 146 Retrieved 18 July 2016 he wrote to the Grand Duke of Lithuania admonishing him to do everything in his power to persuade his consort to abjure the Russian religion and accept the Christian Faith 1563 06 07 Vilniaus privilegija sulygino Lietuvos DK staciatikiu ir kataliku teises DELFI in Lithuanian Lithuanian Institute of History Retrieved 14 May 2021 Wisner Henryk The Reformation and National Culture Lithuania PDF rcin org pl Digital Repository of the Scientific Institutes Poland Retrieved 14 May 2021 Slavenas Maria Grazina The Reformation in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Lituanus org State University of New York Retrieved 14 May 2021 Vilniaus Universitetas History of Vilnius University Retrieved on 2007 04 16 Gorak Sosnowska Katarzyna 2011 Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe widening the European discourse on Islam University of Warsaw Faculty of Oriental Studies pp 207 208 ISBN 9788390322957 OCLC 804006764 Shirin Akiner 2009 Religious Language of a Belarusian Tatar Kitab A Cultural Monument of Islam in Europe with a Latin script Transliteration of the British Library Tatar Belarusian Kitab OR 13020 on CD ROM Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 51 ISBN 978 3 447 03027 4 Hussain Tharik 1 January 2016 The amazing survival of the Baltic Muslims BBC News Retrieved 26 October 2021 a b Daniel Z Stone A History of East Central Europe p 4 a b c O Connor Kevin 2006 Culture and Customs of the Baltic States Greenwood Publishing Group p 115 ISBN 978 0 313 33125 1 retrieved 12 August 2016 a b c d Burant S R Zubek V 1993 Eastern Europe s Old Memories and New Realities Resurrecting the Polish lithuanian Union East European Politics amp Societies 7 2 370 393 doi 10 1177 0888325493007002007 ISSN 0888 3254 S2CID 146783347 a b Zinkevicius Zigmas 1995 Lietuvos Didziosios kunigaikstystes kanceliarines slavu kalbos termino nusakymo problema in Lithuanian Vilnius viduramziu istorija net Retrieved 19 July 2016 a b c Daniel Z Stone A History of East Central Europe p 46 a b c d Wiemer Bjorn 2003 Dialect and language contacts on the territory of the Grand Duchy from the 15th century until 1939 In Kurt Braunmuller Gisella Ferraresi eds Aspects of Multilingualism in European Language History John Benjamins Publishing pp 109 114 ISBN 90 272 1922 2 Retrieved 19 July 2016 Dubonis Arturas Lietuviu kalba poreikis ir vartojimo mastai XV a antra puse XVI a pirma puse viduramziu istorija net Retrieved 5 May 2021 Stone Daniel The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 Seattle University of Washington 2001 p 4 Kamuntavicius Rustis Development of Lithuanian State and Society Kaunas Vytautas Magnus University 2002 p 21 Eberhardt Piotr 2003 Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth Century Central Eastern Europe M E Sharpe p 177 ISBN 978 0 7656 1833 7 Retrieved 19 July 2016 Pancerovas Dovydas Ar perrasinejamos istorijos pasaku įkvepta Baltarusija gali kesintis į Rytu Lietuva 15min lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 July 2021 Statkuviene Regina Jogailaiciai Kodel ne Gediminaiciai 15min lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 July 2021 Plikune Dalia Kodel Jogaila buvo geras o Vytautas Didysis genialus DELFI in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 July 2021 Baronas Darius 2013 Zemaiciu krikstas tyrimai ir refleksija PDF in Lithuanian Vilnius Lithuanian Catholic Academy of Science pp 33 34 ISBN 978 9986 592 71 6 Retrieved 17 July 2021 a b c Daniel Z Stone A History of East Central Europe p 52 Lietuviu kalba ir literaturos istorija Archived 26 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Stryjkowski Maciej 1582 Kronika Polska Litewska Zmodzka i wszystkiej Rusi Warszawa Nak G L Glusksverga p 207 Retrieved 17 July 2021 a b c Dubonis Arturas 2002 Lietuviu kalba poreikis ir vartojimo mastai XV a antra puse XVI a antra puse Lithuanian language the need for and extent of use second half XV c second half XVI c in Lithuanian viduramziu istorija net Retrieved 19 July 2016 ne obchym yakim yazykom ale svoim vlastnym prava spisanye maem Dubonis A Lietuviu kalba Statut wielkiego ksiestwa litewskiego Statut des Grossfurstenthums Lithauen in Polish 1786 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Narbutas Sigitas Augustinas Rotundas Vle lt Retrieved 28 March 2021 Trimoniene Rita Regina Petro Tarvainio Linksmas pasveikinimas ir Siauliu Sv Petro ir Pauliaus baznycia Lituanistika lt in Lithuanian and English Retrieved 2 May 2021 Menelis E Samavicius R Vilniaus miesto istorijos chronologija PDF Vilnijosvartai lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 28 March 2021 Kauno rotuse Autc lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 28 March 2021 Butenas Domas 1997 Lietuvos Didziosios Kunigaikstystes valstybiniu ir visuomeniniu instituciju istorijos bruozai XIII XVIII a Vilnius Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla pp 145 146 Vytautas the Great Valkunas Leonas translation from Latin Vytauto laiskai Letters of Vytautas the Great PDF in Lithuanian Vilnius University Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore p 6 Retrieved 9 May 2021 Lietuvos etnografiniai regionai ar pazįstate juos visus DELFI in Lithuanian Retrieved 9 May 2021 Aukstaitija Ekgt lt in Lithuanian Etnines kulturos globos taryba Council for the Protection of Ethnic Culture Retrieved 9 May 2021 Drungila 2019 p 131 Pociute Abukeviciene Dainora Martynas Mazvydas Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 July 2021 Tumelis Juozas Abraomas Kulvietis Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 July 2021 Konstantinas Sirvydas Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 26 March 2021 Sirvydas Konstantinas 1713 Dictionarium trium lingvarum in usum studiosae iuventutis Vilnius Academicis Societatis Jesu Retrieved 26 March 2021 Sabaliauskas Algirdas Universitas lingvarum Litvaniae Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 August 2021 Rowell Stephen Christopher 2003 Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans PDF in German and Lithuanian Vilnius Vaga lt pp 380 385 ISBN 5 415 01700 3 Retrieved 5 April 2021 Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans tekstus vertimus bei komentarus parenge S C Rowell 2003 epaveldas lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 5 April 2021 a b c d Letukiene Nijole Gineika Petras 2003 Istorija Politologija kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui in Lithuanian Vilnius Alma littera 182 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Statistical numbers usually accepted in historiography the sources their treatment the method of measuring is not discussed in the source are given according to which in 1260 there were about 0 27 million Lithuanians out of a total population of 0 4 million or 67 5 The size of the territory of the Grand Duchy was about 200 thousand km2 The following data on population is given in the sequence year total population in millions territory Lithuanian inhabitants of ethnic Lithuania part of population in millions 1340 0 7 350 thousand km2 0 37 1375 1 4 700 thousand km2 0 42 1430 2 5 930 thousand km2 0 59 or 24 1490 3 8 850 thousand km2 0 55 or 14 or 1 7 1522 2 365 485 thousand km2 0 7 or 30 1568 2 8 570 thousand km2 0 825 million or 30 1572 1 71 320 thousand km2 0 85 million or 50 1770 4 84 320 thousand km2 1 39 or 29 1791 2 5 250 km2 1 4 or 56 1793 1 8 132 km2 1 35 or 75 Letukiene N Istorija Politologija Kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui 2003 p 182 there were about 0 37 million Lithuanians of 0 7 million of a whole population by 1340 in the territory of 350 thousand km2 and 0 42 million of 1 4 million by 1375 in the territory of 700 thousand km2 Different numbers can also be found for example Kevin O Connor The History of the Baltic States Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 ISBN 0 313 32355 0 Google Print p 17 Here the author estimates that there were 9 million inhabitants in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and 1 million of them were ethnic Lithuanians by 1387 Wiemer Bjorn 2003 Dialect and language contacts on the territory of the Grand Duchy from the 15th century until 1939 In Kurt Braunmuller Gisella Ferraresi eds Aspects of Multilingualism in European Language History John Benjamins Publishing pp 109 125 ISBN 90 272 1922 2 Retrieved 12 August 2016 Zygimanto Kestutaicio privilegija Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 16 April 2021 Pogonowski Iwo 1989 Poland A Historical Atlas Dorset p 92 ISBN 978 0 88029 394 5 Based on 1493 population map a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Lietuvos Didziosios Kunigaikstystes gyventojai Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija in Lithuanian Kotilaine J T 2005 Russia s Foreign Trade and Economic Expansion in the Seventeenth Century Windows on the World Brill p 45 ISBN 90 04 13896 X retrieved 12 August 2016 Gil Andrzej Rusini w Rzeczypospolitej Wielu Narodow i ich obecnosc w tradycji Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego problem historyczny czy czynnik tworzacy wspolczesnosc Ruthenians Rus Rusyns in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and their presence in the tradition of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania an historical problem or contemporary creation PDF in Polish Instytut Europy Srodkowo Wschodniej Central and Eastern European Institute Retrieved 12 August 2016 Pawelko Czajka Barbara 2014 The Memory of Multicultural Tradition of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Thought of Vilnius Krajowcy PDF International Congress of Belarusian Studies Retrieved 12 August 2016 Galedek Michal January 2003 Wielkie Ksiestwo Litewskie w mysli politycznej Stanislawa Cata Mackiewicza The Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Political Thought of Stanislaw Cat Mackiewicz Ostatni Obywatele Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego Last Citizens of Grand Duchy of Lithuania Eds T Bujnicki K Stepnik Lublin University of Mariae Curie Sklodowska Press in Polish academia edu Retrieved 12 August 2016 a b Diena Kauno Vaida Milkova 5 May 2011 Milosz s Anniversary in the Context of Dumb Politics Vytautas Magnus University Lithuania Retrieved 12 August 2016 Bakaite Jurga 27 December 2019 LRT FAKTAI Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusiu nacionalinio atgimimo Lrt lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 4 July 2021 The Historical Lithuanian State Flag President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaite 5 January 2015 Retrieved 13 May 2021 I 1497 Lietuvos Respublikos valstybes veliavos ir kitu veliavu įstatymas e seimas lrs lt in Lithuanian Seimas Retrieved 13 May 2021 Sources EditGrand Duchy of Lithuania Encyclopedia in Three Volumes Volume I 2nd edition 2007 688 pages illustrated ISBN 985 11 0314 4 Grand Duchy of Lithuania Encyclopedia in Three Volumes Volume II 2nd edition 2007 792 pages illustrated ISBN 985 11 0378 0 Grand Duchy of Lithuania Encyclopedia in Three Volumes Volume III 1st edition 2010 696 pages illustrated ISBN 978 985 11 0487 7 Norman Davies God s Playground Columbia University Press 2nd edition 2002 ISBN 0 231 12817 7 Drungila Jonas 2019 Erelis lokio guolyje in Lithuanian Robert Frost The Oxford History of Poland Lithuania Volume I The Making of the Polish Lithuanian Union 1385 1569 Oxford University Press 2015 ISBN 978 0198208693 Alan V Murray Crusade and Conversion on the Baltic Frontier 1150 1500 Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought Fourth Series Routledge 2001 ISBN 9780754603252 Alan V Murray The Clash of Cultures on the Medieval Baltic Frontier Routledge 2016 ISBN 978 0754664833 Zenonas Norkus An Unproclaimed Empire The Grand Duchy of Lithuania From the Viewpoint of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires Routledge 2017 426 p ISBN 978 1138281547 S C Rowell Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans Gedimino laiskai Vilnius 2003 ISBN 5 415 01700 3 e copy S C Rowell Lithuania Ascending A Pagan Empire within East Central Europe 1295 1345 Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought Fourth Series Cambridge University Press 2014 ISBN 978 1107658769 S C Rowell D Baronas The conversion of Lithuania From pagan barbarians to late medieval Christians Vilnius 2015 ISBN 9786094251528 Daniel Z Stone The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 University of Washington Press 2014 pp xii 374 ISBN 9780295803623 A Dubonis D Antanavicius R Ragauskiene R Smigelskyte Stukiene The Lithuanian Metrica History and Research Academic Studies Press Brighton United States 2020 ISBN 9781644693100 Jurate Kiaupiene Between Rome and Byzantium The Golden Age of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania s Political Culture Second half of the fifteenth century to first half of the seventeenth century Academic Studies Press Brighton United States 2020 ISBN 9781644691465External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grand Duchy of Lithuania History of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Cheryl Renshaw The Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1253 1795 Grand Duchy of Lithuania Grand Duchy of Lithuania administrative map Lithuanian Ruthenian state at the Encyclopedia of Ukraine Zenonas Norkus The Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Retrospective of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Duchy of Lithuania amp oldid 1128191032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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