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Leičiai

Leičiai ([lɛɪˈt͡ɕɪɐɪ], lay-CHAI; singular: leitis, also spelled laičiai)[1][2] were a distinct social group of the Lithuanian society in the early Grand Duchy of Lithuania subordinate to the Lithuanian ruler or the state itself.[3][4][5][6][7][8] Leičiai were native to the Lietuva Land and formed the core of the Lithuanian society in the pre-state era and during the establishment of the state. Leičiai made up the majority of the military-economic staff of the state: they enforced state authority in the periphery, protected state borders, and performed various other war-related functions, such as breeding riding horses.[9] By the 15th and 16th centuries, leičiai were in decline, already losing some of their functions and prestige, and they disappeared as a social class after the implementation of the Wallach Reform.[10]

Lithuanian soldiers (14–15th century, reenactment)
Extent of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 13th–15th centuries.

According to the hypothesis brought forward by Lithuanian historian Artūras Dubonis and linguist Simas Karaliūnas, the name of Lithuania (Lietuva) derived from leičiai. Leičiai is an old ethnonym used by Latvians to denote the Lithuanians (leiši in Latvian) and was historically known to the Germans in the same sense.[11] Opponents to the hypothesis which attempts to relate the words leitis, leičiai and Lietuva, claim that the form leičiai, leitis, with a diphthong -ei- instead of -ie-, is likely to be of Western Baltic origin.

Leičiai service

Leičiai were war-like servants of a ruler, the staff enforcing his authority. Their duties were likely war-related, among which possibly were breeding riding horses, providing roadmen, protecting state borders. They were a possession of the monarch, that is, subordinates to the state and not to nobles. The first mention of them in written sources is known from 1407, when Grand Duke Vytautas granted an estate and its staff, including leytey, to Manvydas, then an elder of Vilnius. Later Grand Dukes Alexander Jagiellon and Sigismund I the Old used to transfer royal estates to nobles for a temporary administration in exchange for cash, which was needed to finance continuous wars with the Grand Duchy of Moscow. These contracts are the major primary source on leičiai. Their name was rendered in various forms: leythey, leyty, leytten, litten, лейти, лейци, лейтеве, лойти, людей лейтъскихъ, etc.[9] These forms are considered to be the same as in у Лейтахъ – in Leičiai (administrative area).[12]

By the 15th century, this social group and their services were in decline. For example, one leitis from volost of Eišiškės, in a 1514 litigation against a minor landowner over his patrimonial plot, said that he was an "eternal leitis" (лейти звечный, leity evechniy). From other sources of the first half of the 16th century, it is known that new people could not become leičiai although they could be accepted to perform the same services. Leičiai, unlike villeins, owned their patrimonial plots, had the right to relocate and return, and were accountable for performing their duties as brethren and not as households. After the Wallach Reform, leičiai became equal to other villeins and this distinct social group disappeared.[9]

Leičiai were replaced by boyars.[13]

Hypothesis on etymology of Lietuva

Leičiai and Lietuva

The synonymy of the words leičiai and Lietuva is shown by the historical naming of one place near Anykščiai in the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Ten villages in Anykščiai volost was called Leičiai, Lietuva, also possibly Leituva: у Лейтахъ (1532; an example of Leičiai (as a place name) in writing); у войтовъстве Левътевскомъ (< Лейтевском; 1569), до Лейтовского рубежа (1545; possibly derived from Leituva); we … wojtowstwie Liejtowskim (1597); войтовъстве Летувъском (1595, 1597; derived from Lietuva or Lētuva).[9] Lithuanian -i.e.- was rendered as -и- or -е- in writing, or as -е- if it was -ē- instead of -i.e.-. A case of rendering Karšuva place name as w Korszewie, Korszewska, Korszewski powiat (16th century) shows that Левътевскомъ (< Лейтевском) could be reconstructed as Leituva. The variant Lietuva or Lētuva was also old, for example, the form of the name of the same place from the end of the 14th century: a Hilgebeke [...] usque Borchwal, nomine Lettow (from Šventoji River up to the castle, of a name Lithuania). The location of this castle has been determined to be the Šeimyniškėliai hill fort. The word Lettow means Lithuania (compare, for example, an inscription of Jogaila's seal: Yagal, Dey gracia rex in Lettow; 1377–1386), the word 'castle' had maybe a meaning of the whole administrative area or volost.

 
Žemaitukas - a historic horse breed from Lithuania. Known from the 6–7th centuries, it was used as a warhorse by the Lithuanians.

The ethnonymic meaning of leičiai, e.g. "Lithuanians", is known from several sources. This word is used by Latvians to name Lithuanians: leiši, sg. leitis. In Samogitian dialect there were words leičiuoti (to speak in other than Samogitian, or to speak in Aukštaitian dialect) and leičiukas, leičiūkas (person speaking in another dialect than Samogitian, has an accent). Compare, for example, with modern Lithuanian žemaičiuoti (to speak in the Samogitian dialect). In historical written sources, an important example is known from one participant of the Conference of Lutsk in 1429. John Steinkeller, who was a member of a council of Wrocław (Breslau), wrote in a letter addressed to his home town, that Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor, was going to grant Vytautas the title of the King of Lithuanians: her wolde machen herczog Wytolten eynen konyng der Leytten.[11] The word forms, which have meanings Lithuanian, Lithuanians, Lithuania and are most likely derived from the word leitis, are constantly found in the historical sources from the 14th and 15th centuries. For example, Lithuania is rendered as in writing as czwicshen Lythen und Prewssen (1415); as das land Litten with a further clarification that it was Aukštaitija in a narrative of a participant or witness of the Battle of Strėva. The ruler of Lithuanians was rendered as die Litischen konige in the chronicle of Wigand von Marburg.[9] It seems that the presence of such forms with -ei- in Latvian (more known in a western part), German and Samogitian dialect itself has a high possibility that the forms could derive from Western Balts, but it is unclear why they have no suffix -uva / -ava.

Simas Karaliūnas claims that the word Lietuva had a meaning of bodyguard, retinue, attendant soldiery, troops. Such use is recorded, for example, in Russian sources: krestil knjazja Litovskago imenem Evnutija i ego družinu Litvu (baptized the duke of Lithuania Jaunutis and his retinue Lithuania); I pšišed posol Totui i vydal Korjadą i ego družinu Litvu knjazju velikomu Semenu Ivanovičiu (and came an envoy Totui and handed Karijotas and his retinue Lithuania over to Grand Duke Semyon Ivanovich).[14] Karaliūnas accepts the synonymy of the words leičiai and Lietuva as proven and supposes that the word leitis, leičiai (< *leitiai) derives from the form *leitā, a synonym of *lietuvā, *leitavā, which, as it is shown above, had the meaning of armed retinue.

Place names and surnames

According to the hypothesis proposing the relation between leičiai and Lietuva, the name of Lietava, a small river which flows between Neris and Šventoji and which is the leading explanation for the origin of the name of Lithuania, should be an example of a toponym which was derived from leičiai. In the same area there is Rukla town, maybe relating with the name Ruklys, son of King Mindaugas, and it is thought that leičiai could have lived in an estate now known as Perelozai located by Lietava. Among place-names considered to be derived from the word leičiai are, for example, Leičiai / Laičiai, Leitiškės(/-iai), Laiteliai villages in Aukštaitija, Leičiai, Lietuva / Lētuva, Leitava area near Anykščiai,[12] Leitkapiai (modern Mataitiškė, Nosaičiai), Laitikai (modern Laitekiai) placenames in Samogitia, etc. There are also surnames possibly derived from the word: Leita, Leitis, Leitanis, Leitanas, Leitonas, Leitėnas, Leičiūnas.

Criticism

The hypothesis deriving Lietuva from leičiai was not accepted by linguist Zigmas Zinkevičius, who claims that the diphthong -ei- shows a Curonian origin of the word leičiai and that the word laičiai (place name) could not possibly be derived from *leičiai.[9] Dubonis' counterargument is that the use of such form is present in historical sources.

In popular culture

In the video game Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition, the Leitis appears as the unique unit of the Lithuanian civilization as a cavalry unit whose attack ignores melee armor.[15]

References

  1. ^ "Lituanistica". Mokslas. March 9, 1995 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Lituanus". Lithuanian Student Association, Secretariate for External Relations. March 9, 2009 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Dubonis, Artūras. "Leičiai". Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  4. ^ Čeponis, Tomas; Sakalauskas, Mindaugas. Leičiai (PDF). Vilnius: Ministry of National Defence of Lithuania. ISBN 978-609-412-143-2. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  5. ^ Dubonis, Artūras. "LDK istorija: didžiojo kunigaikščio leičiai – etninė ar socialinė grupė?". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  6. ^ Patackas, Algirdas. "Lietuva, Lieta, Leitis, arba ką reiškia žodis "Lietuva"". lrytas.lt. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  7. ^ Dubonis, Artūras. "Lietuvos didžiojo kunigaikščio leičiai XIII–XVI a.: Lietuvių ankstyvojo feodalizmo visuomenės tyrimas". Leitgiris.lt. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  8. ^ Dubonis, Artūras. "Leičiai | Orbis Lituaniae". LDKistorija.lt (in Lithuanian). Vilnius University. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Dubonis, Artūras (1998). Lietuvos didžiojo kunigaikščio leičiai: iš Lietuvos ankstyvųjų valstybinių struktūrų praeities (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla. p. 98. ISBN 9986780160.
  10. ^ A privilege of Sigismund I the Old to Jan Zaberezinski, by which he transfers the Ašmiany estate for a temporary use: двор нашъ Ошъмену в тых пятисом копахъ грошей его милости дали з мешчаны и со всими людми того двора нашого путъными и данными, и тягълыми, и зъ лейти, и с конокормъцы, и с осочники, и с ковали, и дойлиды, и конюхи, и со всими иными людми того двора – the estate of ours for пятисом kopas / sixties of groschen his grace gave with people from town-dwellers and with all people of this estate of ours: roadmen (путъными) and tributary, and corvée doers, and from leičiai (лейти), and with horse-feeders, and with trackers, and with smiths, and woodworkers, and stablemen, and with all other people of this estate. Taken from: Dubonis, A., Lietuvos didžiojo kunigaikščio leičiai, 1998, p. 27
  11. ^ a b Dubonis, Artūras (1998). Lietuvos didžiojo kunigaikščio leičiai: iš Lietuvos ankstyvųjų valstybinių struktūrų praeities (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla. p. 15. ISBN 9986780160.
  12. ^ a b Dubonis, Artūras (1998). Lietuvos didžiojo kunigaikščio leičiai: iš Lietuvos ankstyvųjų valstybinių struktūrų praeities (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla. pp. 10–13. ISBN 9986780160.
  13. ^ Praleika, Aidanas. "Vytautas Didysis ir bajoriškoji LDK kariuomenė". Alfa.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  14. ^ "Lietuvos vardo ir valstybingumo ištakos. Voruta, Vartiklis". www.spauda.lt.
  15. ^ "Lithuanians - Forgotten Empires". Forgottenempires.net. Retrieved 29 August 2021.

leičiai, lɛɪˈt, ɕɪɐɪ, chai, singular, leitis, also, spelled, laičiai, were, distinct, social, group, lithuanian, society, early, grand, duchy, lithuania, subordinate, lithuanian, ruler, state, itself, were, native, lietuva, land, formed, core, lithuanian, soci. Leiciai lɛɪˈt ɕɪɐɪ lay CHAI singular leitis also spelled laiciai 1 2 were a distinct social group of the Lithuanian society in the early Grand Duchy of Lithuania subordinate to the Lithuanian ruler or the state itself 3 4 5 6 7 8 Leiciai were native to the Lietuva Land and formed the core of the Lithuanian society in the pre state era and during the establishment of the state Leiciai made up the majority of the military economic staff of the state they enforced state authority in the periphery protected state borders and performed various other war related functions such as breeding riding horses 9 By the 15th and 16th centuries leiciai were in decline already losing some of their functions and prestige and they disappeared as a social class after the implementation of the Wallach Reform 10 Lithuanian soldiers 14 15th century reenactment Extent of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 13th 15th centuries According to the hypothesis brought forward by Lithuanian historian Arturas Dubonis and linguist Simas Karaliunas the name of Lithuania Lietuva derived from leiciai Leiciai is an old ethnonym used by Latvians to denote the Lithuanians leisi in Latvian and was historically known to the Germans in the same sense 11 Opponents to the hypothesis which attempts to relate the words leitis leiciai and Lietuva claim that the form leiciai leitis with a diphthong ei instead of ie is likely to be of Western Baltic origin Contents 1 Leiciai service 2 Hypothesis on etymology of Lietuva 2 1 Leiciai and Lietuva 2 2 Place names and surnames 2 3 Criticism 3 In popular culture 4 ReferencesLeiciai service EditLeiciai were war like servants of a ruler the staff enforcing his authority Their duties were likely war related among which possibly were breeding riding horses providing roadmen protecting state borders They were a possession of the monarch that is subordinates to the state and not to nobles The first mention of them in written sources is known from 1407 when Grand Duke Vytautas granted an estate and its staff including leytey to Manvydas then an elder of Vilnius Later Grand Dukes Alexander Jagiellon and Sigismund I the Old used to transfer royal estates to nobles for a temporary administration in exchange for cash which was needed to finance continuous wars with the Grand Duchy of Moscow These contracts are the major primary source on leiciai Their name was rendered in various forms leythey leyty leytten litten lejti lejci lejteve lojti lyudej lejtskih etc 9 These forms are considered to be the same as in u Lejtah in Leiciai administrative area 12 By the 15th century this social group and their services were in decline For example one leitis from volost of Eisiskes in a 1514 litigation against a minor landowner over his patrimonial plot said that he was an eternal leitis lejti zvechnyj leity evechniy From other sources of the first half of the 16th century it is known that new people could not become leiciai although they could be accepted to perform the same services Leiciai unlike villeins owned their patrimonial plots had the right to relocate and return and were accountable for performing their duties as brethren and not as households After the Wallach Reform leiciai became equal to other villeins and this distinct social group disappeared 9 Leiciai were replaced by boyars 13 Hypothesis on etymology of Lietuva EditLeiciai and Lietuva Edit The synonymy of the words leiciai and Lietuva is shown by the historical naming of one place near Anyksciai in the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Ten villages in Anyksciai volost was called Leiciai Lietuva also possibly Leituva u Lejtah 1532 an example of Leiciai as a place name in writing u vojtovstve Levtevskom lt Lejtevskom 1569 do Lejtovskogo rubezha 1545 possibly derived from Leituva we wojtowstwie Liejtowskim 1597 vojtovstve Letuvskom 1595 1597 derived from Lietuva or Letuva 9 Lithuanian i e was rendered as i or e in writing or as e if it was e instead of i e A case of rendering Karsuva place name as w Korszewie Korszewska Korszewski powiat 16th century shows that Levtevskom lt Lejtevskom could be reconstructed as Leituva The variant Lietuva or Letuva was also old for example the form of the name of the same place from the end of the 14th century a Hilgebeke usque Borchwal nomine Lettow from Sventoji River up to the castle of a name Lithuania The location of this castle has been determined to be the Seimyniskeliai hill fort The word Lettow means Lithuania compare for example an inscription of Jogaila s seal Yagal Dey gracia rex in Lettow 1377 1386 the word castle had maybe a meaning of the whole administrative area or volost Zemaitukas a historic horse breed from Lithuania Known from the 6 7th centuries it was used as a warhorse by the Lithuanians The ethnonymic meaning of leiciai e g Lithuanians is known from several sources This word is used by Latvians to name Lithuanians leisi sg leitis In Samogitian dialect there were words leiciuoti to speak in other than Samogitian or to speak in Aukstaitian dialect and leiciukas leiciukas person speaking in another dialect than Samogitian has an accent Compare for example with modern Lithuanian zemaiciuoti to speak in the Samogitian dialect In historical written sources an important example is known from one participant of the Conference of Lutsk in 1429 John Steinkeller who was a member of a council of Wroclaw Breslau wrote in a letter addressed to his home town that Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor was going to grant Vytautas the title of the King of Lithuanians her wolde machen herczog Wytolten eynen konyng der Leytten 11 The word forms which have meanings Lithuanian Lithuanians Lithuania and are most likely derived from the word leitis are constantly found in the historical sources from the 14th and 15th centuries For example Lithuania is rendered as in writing as czwicshen Lythen und Prewssen 1415 as das land Litten with a further clarification that it was Aukstaitija in a narrative of a participant or witness of the Battle of Streva The ruler of Lithuanians was rendered as die Litischen konige in the chronicle of Wigand von Marburg 9 It seems that the presence of such forms with ei in Latvian more known in a western part German and Samogitian dialect itself has a high possibility that the forms could derive from Western Balts but it is unclear why they have no suffix uva ava Simas Karaliunas claims that the word Lietuva had a meaning of bodyguard retinue attendant soldiery troops Such use is recorded for example in Russian sources krestil knjazja Litovskago imenem Evnutija i ego druzinu Litvu baptized the duke of Lithuania Jaunutis and his retinue Lithuania I psised posol Totui i vydal Korjada i ego druzinu Litvu knjazju velikomu Semenu Ivanoviciu and came an envoy Totui and handed Karijotas and his retinue Lithuania over to Grand Duke Semyon Ivanovich 14 Karaliunas accepts the synonymy of the words leiciai and Lietuva as proven and supposes that the word leitis leiciai lt leitiai derives from the form leita a synonym of lietuva leitava which as it is shown above had the meaning of armed retinue Place names and surnames Edit According to the hypothesis proposing the relation between leiciai and Lietuva the name of Lietava a small river which flows between Neris and Sventoji and which is the leading explanation for the origin of the name of Lithuania should be an example of a toponym which was derived from leiciai In the same area there is Rukla town maybe relating with the name Ruklys son of King Mindaugas and it is thought that leiciai could have lived in an estate now known as Perelozai located by Lietava Among place names considered to be derived from the word leiciai are for example Leiciai Laiciai Leitiskes iai Laiteliai villages in Aukstaitija Leiciai Lietuva Letuva Leitava area near Anyksciai 12 Leitkapiai modern Mataitiske Nosaiciai Laitikai modern Laitekiai placenames in Samogitia etc There are also surnames possibly derived from the word Leita Leitis Leitanis Leitanas Leitonas Leitenas Leiciunas Criticism Edit The hypothesis deriving Lietuva from leiciai was not accepted by linguist Zigmas Zinkevicius who claims that the diphthong ei shows a Curonian origin of the word leiciai and that the word laiciai place name could not possibly be derived from leiciai 9 Dubonis counterargument is that the use of such form is present in historical sources In popular culture EditIn the video game Age of Empires II Definitive Edition the Leitis appears as the unique unit of the Lithuanian civilization as a cavalry unit whose attack ignores melee armor 15 References Edit Lituanistica Mokslas March 9 1995 via Google Books Lituanus Lithuanian Student Association Secretariate for External Relations March 9 2009 via Google Books Dubonis Arturas Leiciai Universal Lithuanian Encyclopedia in Lithuanian Retrieved 13 July 2021 Ceponis Tomas Sakalauskas Mindaugas Leiciai PDF Vilnius Ministry of National Defence of Lithuania ISBN 978 609 412 143 2 Retrieved 13 July 2021 Dubonis Arturas LDK istorija didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai etnine ar socialine grupe 15min lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 13 July 2021 Patackas Algirdas Lietuva Lieta Leitis arba ka reiskia zodis Lietuva lrytas lt Retrieved 13 July 2021 Dubonis Arturas Lietuvos didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai XIII XVI a Lietuviu ankstyvojo feodalizmo visuomenes tyrimas Leitgiris lt Retrieved 13 July 2021 Dubonis Arturas Leiciai Orbis Lituaniae LDKistorija lt in Lithuanian Vilnius University Retrieved 13 July 2021 a b c d e f Dubonis Arturas 1998 Lietuvos didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai is Lietuvos ankstyvuju valstybiniu strukturu praeities in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla p 98 ISBN 9986780160 A privilege of Sigismund I the Old to Jan Zaberezinski by which he transfers the Asmiany estate for a temporary use dvor nash Oshmenu v tyh pyatisom kopah groshej ego milosti dali z meshchany i so vsimi lyudmi togo dvora nashogo putnymi i dannymi i tyaglymi i z lejti i s konokormcy i s osochniki i s kovali i dojlidy i konyuhi i so vsimi inymi lyudmi togo dvora the estate of ours for pyatisom kopas sixties of groschen his grace gave with people from town dwellers and with all people of this estate of ours roadmen putnymi and tributary and corvee doers and from leiciai lejti and with horse feeders and with trackers and with smiths and woodworkers and stablemen and with all other people of this estate Taken from Dubonis A Lietuvos didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai 1998 p 27 a b Dubonis Arturas 1998 Lietuvos didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai is Lietuvos ankstyvuju valstybiniu strukturu praeities in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla p 15 ISBN 9986780160 a b Dubonis Arturas 1998 Lietuvos didziojo kunigaikscio leiciai is Lietuvos ankstyvuju valstybiniu strukturu praeities in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuvos istorijos instituto leidykla pp 10 13 ISBN 9986780160 Praleika Aidanas Vytautas Didysis ir bajoriskoji LDK kariuomene Alfa lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 29 August 2021 Lietuvos vardo ir valstybingumo istakos Voruta Vartiklis www spauda lt Lithuanians Forgotten Empires Forgottenempires net Retrieved 29 August 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leiciai amp oldid 1143751804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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