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Livonian Crusade

Livonian Crusade
Part of the Northern Crusades

A Teutonic Knight on the left and a Swordbrother on the right.
DateAround 1198 - 1290 (92 years)
Location
Result

Crusader victory

Territorial
changes

Creation of Terra Mariana and the Duchy of Estonia

Belligerents

Crusaders


Baltic pagans (indigenous peoples)


Grand Duchy of Lithuania

Commanders and leaders



The Livonian crusade[1][2] consists of the various military Christianisation campaigns in medieval Livonia – modern Latvia and Estonia – during the Papal-sanctioned Northern Crusades in the 12–13th century. The Livonian crusade was conducted mostly by the Holy Roman Empire and the Kingdom of Denmark. It ended with the creation of Terra Mariana and the Danish duchy of Estonia. The lands on the eastern shores of the Baltic Sea were one of the last parts of Europe to be Christianised. The available information is largely based on Livonian Chronicle of Henry.

On 2 February 1207,[3] in the territories conquered, an ecclesiastical state called Terra Mariana was established as a principality of the Holy Roman Empire,[4] and proclaimed by Pope Innocent III in 1215 as a subject of the Holy See.[5] After the completion of the crusade, the Teutonic- and Danish-occupied territory was divided into six feudal principalities by William of Modena.

Wars against Livs and Latgalians (1198–1209) edit

By the time the first Low German-speaking Saxon merchants began to arrive in the eastern Baltics in the second half of the 12th century to trade along the ancient trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks, some of the natives had already been baptized.

Meinhard of Segeberg arrived in Ikšķile (Üxküll) in 1184 with the mission of converting the pagan Livonians, and was consecrated as Bishop of Üxküll in 1186. In those days the riverside fortified settlement of Üxküll was the center of the missionary activities in the Livonian area.

The indigenous Livonians had often been under attack[6] by their southern neighbours, the Semigallians, who at first had considered the Saxons (Germans) to be useful allies. The first prominent Livonian to be converted was their leader Caupo of Turaida, who was baptized around 1189.

Pope Celestine III had called for a crusade against pagans in Northern Europe in 1193. When peaceful means of conversion failed to produce results, the impatient Meinhard plotted to convert Livonians forcibly but was thwarted. He died in 1196, having failed in his mission. His appointed replacement, bishop Berthold of Hanover, a Cistercian abbot of Loccum arrived with a large contingent of crusaders in 1198. Shortly afterwards, Berthold was killed, and his forces were defeated in a battle by Livonians.

To avenge Berthold's defeat, Pope Innocent III issued a bull declaring a crusade against the Livonians. Albert von Buxthoeven, consecrated as a bishop in 1199, arrived the following year with a large force, and established Riga as the seat of his Bishopric of Riga in 1201. In 1202, he formed the Livonian Brothers of the Sword to aid in the conversion of the pagans to Christianity and, more importantly, to protect German trade and secure German control over commerce.

As the German grip tightened, the Livonians and their christened chief rebelled against the crusaders. Caupo's forces were defeated at Turaida in 1206, and the Livonians were declared to be converted. Caupo subsequently remained an ally of the crusaders until his death in the Battle of St. Matthew's Day in 1217.

By 1208 the important Daugava trading posts of Salaspils (Holme), Koknese (Kokenhusen) and Sēlpils Castle (Selburg) had been taken over as a result of Albert's energetic campaigning. In the same year, the rulers of the Latgalian counties Tālava, Satekle, and Autine established military alliances with the Order, and construction began on both Cēsis Castle and a stone Koknese Castle, where the Daugava and Pērse rivers meet, replacing the wooden castle of Latgalians.

In 1209, Albert, leading the forces of the Order, captured the capital of the Latgalian Principality of Jersika, and took the wife of the ruler Visvaldis captive. Visvaldis was forced to submit his kingdom to Albert as a grant to the Archbishopric of Riga, and received back a portion of it as a fief. Tālava, by then already weakened in wars with its Finnic and East Slavic neighbours, became a vassal state of the Archbishopric of Riga in 1214, and was completely divided up between the Archbishopric and the Order in 1224.

Wars against Estonians (1208–27) edit

Conquest of the Estonian hinterland edit

By 1208 the Crusaders were strong enough to begin operations against the Estonians, who were at that time divided into eight major and seven smaller Counties, led by elders, with limited co-operation between them. With the help of the newly converted local tribes of Livs and Latgalians, the crusaders initiated raids into Sakala and Ugaunia in what is now southern Estonia. The Estonian tribes resisted the attacks from Riga and occasionally sacked territories controlled by the crusaders.

In 1208–27, war parties of the different sides rampaged through Livonia, Latgalia, and northern Estonian counties, with the Livs, Latgalians and troops from the East Slavic Republic of Novgorod serving variously as allies of both crusaders and Estonians. Hill forts, which were the key centers of Estonian counties, were besieged, captured, and re-captured a number of times. A truce between the war-weary sides was established for three years (1213–1215). It proved generally more favourable to the Germanic crusaders, who consolidated their political position, while the Estonians were unable to develop their system of loose alliances into a centralised state. They were led by Lembitu of Lehola, the elder of Sackalia, who by 1211 had come to the attention of Teutonic chroniclers as the central figure of the Estonian resistance. The Livonian leader Caupo was killed in the Battle of St. Matthew's Day near Viljandi (Fellin) on 21 September 1217, but Lembitu was also killed, and the battle was a crushing defeat for the Estonians.

The Christian kingdoms of Denmark and Sweden were also eager for expansion on the eastern shores of the Baltic. In 1218, Albert asked King Valdemar II of Denmark for assistance, but Valdemar instead arranged a deal with the Order. The king was victorious in the Battle of Lindanise in Revelia in 1219 . He subsequently founded the fortress Castrum Danorum in Tallinn (Reval), which was unsuccessfully besieged by the Estonians in 1220 and 1223. King John I of Sweden tried to establish a Swedish presence in the province of Wiek, but his troops were defeated by the Oeselians in the Battle of Lihula in 1220. By that time the entire northern Estonia came under the control of the king of Denmark.

During the uprising of 1223, all Christian strongholds in Estonia save Tallinn (Reval) fell into Estonian hands, with their defenders killed. By 1224, all of the larger fortresses were reconquered by the crusaders, except for Tartu (Dorpat), which was defended by a garrison of local troops and about 200 mercenaries from Novgorod. The leader of the mercenaries was Vetseke, to whom the Novgorod Republic had promised the fortress and its surrounding lands "if he could conquer them for himself".[7] Tartu was finally captured by the crusaders in August 1224 and all its defenders were killed.

Early in 1224 Emperor Frederick II had announced at Catania that Livonia, Prussia, Sambia and a number of neighboring provinces would henceforth be considered reichsfrei, that is, subordinate directly to the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire only, as opposed to being under the jurisdiction of local rulers. At the end of the year Pope Honorius III announced the appointment of Bishop William of Modena as papal legate for Livonia, Prussia, and other countries.

In 1224 the Livonian Brothers of the Sword established their headquarters at Fellin (Viljandi) in Sackalia, where the walls of the Master's castle are still standing. Other strongholds included Wenden (Cēsis), Segewold (Sigulda), and Ascheraden (Aizkraukle).

The Chronicle of Henry of Livonia, one of the greatest medieval narratives, was written probably as a report for William of Modena, giving him the history of the Church in Livonia up to his time. It relates how in 1226, in the stronghold Tarwanpe, William of Modena successfully mediated a peace between the Germans, the Danes and the Vironians.

War against Saaremaa (1206–61) edit

 
German conquests
 
The 1241 Treaty between Livonian Order, Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek and Oeselians at National Archives of Sweden

The last Estonian county to hold out against the invaders was the island country of Saaremaa (Ösel), whose war fleets had continued to raid Denmark and Sweden during the years of fighting against the German crusaders.

In 1206, a Danish army led by the king Valdemar II and Andreas, the Bishop of Lund, landed on Saaremaa and attempted to establish a stronghold, without success. In 1216, the Livonian Brothers of the Sword and the bishop Theodorich joined forces and invaded Saaremaa over the frozen sea. The Oeselians retaliated by raiding German-held territories in Latvia the following spring. In 1220, a Swedish army led by the king John I of Sweden and the bishop Karl of Linköping captured Lihula in Rotalia in Western Estonia. The Oeselians attacked the Swedish stronghold later the same year and killed the entire garrison, including the Bishop of Linköping.

In 1222, the Danish king Valdemar II attempted the second conquest of Saaremaa, this time establishing a stone fortress housing a strong garrison. The stronghold was besieged and surrendered within five days, the Danish garrison returning to Revel while leaving Bishop Albert of Riga's brother Theodoric and others behind as hostages for peace. The castle was leveled by the Oeselians.[8]

In 1227, the Livonian Brothers of the Sword, the town of Riga, and the Bishop of Riga organized a combined attack against Saaremaa. After the destruction of Muhu Stronghold and the surrender of Valjala Stronghold, the Oeselians formally accepted Christianity.

After the defeat of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword in the Battle of Saule in 1236 fighting again broke out on Saaremaa. In 1241 the Oeselians once again accepted Christianity by signing treaties with the Livonian Order's Master Andreas de Velven and the Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek. This was followed by a treaty signed in 1255 by the Master of the Order, Anno Sangerhausenn, and, on behalf of the Oeselians, elders whose names were phonetically transcribed by Latin scribes as Ylle, Culle, Enu, Muntelene, Tappete, Yalde, Melete, and Cake.[9] The treaty granted the Oeselians several distinctive rights regarding the ownership and inheritance of land, the social order, and the practice of religion.

Warfare erupted in 1261 as the Oeselians once more renounced Christianity and killed all the Germans on the island. A peace treaty was signed after the united forces of the Livonian Order, the Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek, and Danish Estonia, including mainland Estonians and Latvians, defeated the Oeselians by capturing their stronghold at Kaarma. Soon thereafter, the Livonian Order established a stone fort at Pöide.

On 24 July 1343 the Oeselians arose yet again, killing all the Germans on the island, drowning all the clerics, and besieging the Livonian Order's castle at Pöide. After the garrison surrendered the Oeselians massacred the defenders and destroyed the castle. In February 1344 Burchard von Dreileben led a campaign over the frozen sea to Saaremaa. The Oeselians' stronghold was conquered and their leader Vesse was hanged. In the early spring of 1345, the next campaign of the Livonian Order ended with a treaty mentioned in the Chronicle of Hermann von Wartberge and the Novgorod First Chronicle.

Saaremaa remained the vassal of the master of the Livonian Order and the Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek until 1559.

Wars against Curonians (1242–67) edit

 
Couronian lands

Following the defeat of the Estonians, the crusade moved against Curonians and Semigallians, Baltic tribes living to the south and west of the Daugava river and closely allied with Samogitians.

In July 1210 Curonians attacked Riga.[10] After a day of fighting, the Curonians were unable to break through the city walls. They crossed to the other bank of the Daugava to burn their dead and mourn for three days.[11] In 1228 Curonians together with Semigallians again attacked Riga. Although they were again unsuccessful in storming the city, they destroyed a monastery in Daugavgriva and killed all the monks.

After the defeat of Estonians and Osilians in 1227, the Curonians were confronted by Lithuanian enemies in the east and south, and harassed by the Livonian Brothers of the Sword from the north; in the west, on the sea-shore, their arch-enemies, the Danes and Swedes, were lurking, waiting for an opportunity. In this hopeless situation, further aggravated by famine, the Curonians preferred to try to make peace with the Christian conquerors, inviting the monks into their country thereby escaping attacks by the Scandinavian nations.[12] In 1230 the Curonians in the northern part of Courland, under their ruler (rex) Lammekinus [lv; lt], signed a peace treaty with the Germans, and the lands they inhabited thus became known as Vredecuronia or Peace Courland. The southern Curonians, however, continued to resist the invaders.

In 1260, the Curonians were involved in the Battle of Durbe, one of the biggest battles in Livonia in the 13th century. They were forced to fight on the crusader side. When the battle started, the Curonians abandoned the knights. Peter von Dusburg alleged that the Curonians even attacked the Knights from the rear. The Estonians and other local people soon followed the Curonians and abandoned the Knights and that allowed the Samogitians to gain victory over the Livonian Order. It was a heavy defeat for the Order and uprisings against the crusaders soon afterwards broke out in the Curonian and Prussian lands.

Curonian resistance was finally subdued in 1266 when the whole of Courland was partitioned between the Livonian Order and the Archbishop of Riga. The Curonian nobles, among them 40 clans of the descendants of the Curonian Kings, who lived in the town of Kuldīga, preserved personal freedom and some of their privileges.[12][13]

Wars against Semigallians (1219–90) edit

 
Tērvete hillfort, main Semigallian centre in 13th century

According to the Livonian Chronicle of Henry, Semigallians formed an alliance with bishop Albert of Riga against rebellious Livonians before 1203, and received military support to hold back Lithuanian attacks in 1205. In 1207, the Semigallian duke Viestards (Latin: dux Semigallorum) helped the christened Livonian chief Caupo conquer back his Turaida Castle from pagan rebels.

In 1219, the Semigallian–German alliance was cancelled after a crusader invasion in Semigallia. Duke Viestards promptly formed an alliance with Lithuanians and Curonians. In 1228, Semigallians and Curonians attacked the Daugavgrīva monastery, the main crusader stronghold at the Daugava river delta. The crusaders took revenge and invaded Semigallia. The Semigallians in turn pillaged land around the Aizkraukle hillfort.

In 1236, Semigallians attacked crusaders retreating to Riga after the Battle of Saule, killing many of them. After regular attacks, the Livonian Order partly subdued the Semigallians in 1254.

In 1270, the Lithuanian Grand Duke Traidenis, together with Semigallians, attacked Livonia and Saaremaa. During the Battle of Karuse on the frozen Gulf of Riga, the Livonian Order was defeated, and its master Otto von Lutterberg was killed.

In 1287, around 1400 Semigallians attacked a crusader stronghold in Ikšķile and plundered nearby lands. As they returned to Semigallia they were caught by the Order's forces, and the great Battle of Garoza began near the Garoza river. The crusader forces were besieged and badly defeated. More than 40 knights were killed, including the master of the Livonian Order Willekin von Endorp, and an unknown number of crusader allies. It was the last Semigallian victory over the growing forces of the Livonian Order.

In 1279, after the Battle of Aizkraukle, Grand Duke Traidenis of Lithuania supported a Semigallian revolt against the Livonian Order led by Duke Nameisis.

In the 1280s, the Livonian Order started a massive campaign against the Semigallians, which included burning their fields and thus causing famine. Semigallians continued their resistance until 1290, when they burned their last castle in Sidabrė [lt; lv] and moved southwards. The Rhymed Chronicle claims that 100,000 migrated to Lithuania and once there continued to fight against the Germans.

The unconquered southern parts of Curonian and Semigallian territories (Sidabrė, Raktė, Ceklis, Mėguva etc.) were united under the rule of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

Aftermath edit

 
Terra Mariana in 1260.
 
Territories controlled by the Teutonic Order in 1410

In 1227 the Livonian Brothers of the Sword conquered all Danish territories in Northern Estonia. After the Battle of Saule the surviving members of the Brothers of the Sword merged into the Teutonic Order of Prussia in 1237 and became known as Livonian Order. On 7 June 1238, by the Treaty of Stensby, the Teutonic knights returned the Duchy of Estonia to Valdemar II, until in 1346, after St. George's Night Uprising, the lands were sold back to the order and became part of the Ordensstaat.

After the conquest, all of the remaining local population were ostensibly Christianized. In 1535, the first extant native language book was printed, a Lutheran catechism.[14] The conquerors upheld military control through their network of castles throughout Estonia and Latvia.[15]

The land was divided into six feudal principalities by Papal Legate William of Modena: Archbishopric of Riga, Bishopric of Courland, Bishopric of Dorpat, Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek, the lands ruled by the Livonian Brothers of the Sword and Dominum directum of King of Denmark, the Duchy of Estonia.[16][17]

Battles edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Urban, William (1981). Livonian Crusade. University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-1683-1.
  2. ^ Riley-Smith, Jonathan (2005). The Crusades: A History. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 161. ISBN 0-8264-7269-9.
  3. ^ Bilmanis, Alfreds (1944). Latvian–Russian Relations: Documents. The Latvian legation.
  4. ^ Herbermann, Charles George (1907). The Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company.
  5. ^ Bilmanis, Alfreds (1945). The Church in Latvia. Drauga vēsts. 1215 proclaimed it the Terra Mariana, subject directly.
  6. ^ Blomkvist Nils, The Discovery of the Baltic: The Reception of a Catholic World-system in the European North (AD 1075–1225) (Leiden 2005) p. 508
  7. ^ Tarvel, Enn (ed.). 1982. Henriku Liivimaa kroonika. Heinrici Chronicon Livoniae. p. 246. Tallinn: Eesti Raamat.
  8. ^ Urban, William L. (October 20, 1994). "The Baltic Crusade". Lithuanian Research and Studies Center – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Hildebrand, Hermann; Schwartz, Philipp; Arbusow, Leonid; Bulmerincq, August Michael von (24 May 1970). "Liv-, est- und kurländisches Urkundenbuch: Bd. 1. 1093–1300. Bd. 2. 1301–1367. Bd. 3. 1368–1393, mit Nachträgen zu Bd. 1 und 2. Bd. 4. 1394–1413. Bd. 5. 1414-Mai 1423. Bd. 6. Nachträge zu Bd. 1–5. Bd. 7. Mai 1423-Mai 1429. Bd. 8. Mai 1429–1435. Bd. 9. 1436–1443. Bd. 10. 1444–1449. Bd. 11. 1450–1459. Bd. 12. 1461–1472. Sachregister zu Abt. 1, Bd. 7–9". Scientia Verlag – via Google Books.
  10. ^ Euratlas. "Euratlas Periodis Web – Map of Livonia in Year 1500". www.euratlas.net.
  11. ^ Chronicle of Henry of Livonia
  12. ^ a b Edgar V. Saks. Aestii. 1960. p. 244.
  13. ^ F. Balodis. Lettland och letterna: Ha de rätt at leva. Stockholm 1943. p. 212.
  14. ^ Estonian Language 2016-04-07 at the Wayback Machine from Estonia.eu, retrieved 12 March 2016
  15. ^ Harrison, Dick (2005). Gud vill det! – Nordiska korsfarare under medeltid (in Swedish). Ordfront. p. 573. ISBN 978-91-7441-373-1.
  16. ^ Christiansen, Eric (1997). The Northern Crusades. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-026653-4.
  17. ^ Knut, Helle (2003). The Cambridge History of Scandinavia: Prehistory to 1520. Cambridge University Press. p. 269. ISBN 0-521-47299-7.
  18. ^ "Kernavė in English". www.kernave.org.

External links edit

    livonian, crusade, part, northern, crusadesa, teutonic, knight, left, swordbrother, right, datearound, 1198, 1290, years, locationthe, baltic, statesresultcrusader, victory, latvian, estonian, tribes, christianized, terra, mariana, fall, livonian, brothers, sw. Livonian CrusadePart of the Northern CrusadesA Teutonic Knight on the left and a Swordbrother on the right DateAround 1198 1290 92 years LocationThe Baltic StatesResultCrusader victory Latvian and Estonian tribes get Christianized in Terra Mariana Fall of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword at the Battle of Saule Ensuring the Livonian Civil WarTerritorialchangesCreation of Terra Mariana and the Duchy of Estonia Creation of Archbishopric of Riga Bishopric of Dorpat Livonian Order Bishopric of Courland and more within Terra Mariana territory Fall of many territories in the region like Principality of Jersika Principality of Koknese Talava Metsepole Oeselians and more within the Baltic regionBelligerentsCrusaders Sword Brothers Livonian Order Medieval Denmark Duchy of Estonia Principality of Rugen Bishopric of Riga Bishopric of Dorpat Sweden Talava christianized Livs Letts Estonians Latgalians and Ungannians Bishopric of Courland Bishopric of Osel Wiek Novgorod Republic Pskov RepublicBaltic pagans indigenous peoples Livs Livonians Latgalians Curonians Estonians Oeselians Ungannians Selonians Semigallians Vends Grand Duchy of Lithuania Samogitians Novgorod Republic Pskov Republic Principality of PolotskCommanders and leadersVolkwin Wenno Wilken von Endorp Otto von Lutterberg Albert of Riga Berthold of Hanover Theoderich von Treyden Anders Sunesen Valdemar II of Denmark Witslaw of Rugen Albert of Saxony John of Sweden Caupo of Turaida Talivaldis of Talava Ako of Salaspils Vesceka of Kukenois Visvaldis of Jersika Lembitu of Lehola Viestards of Tervete Nameisis of Zemgale Vykintas of Samogitia Treniota of Lithuania Traidenis of Lithuania The Livonian crusade 1 2 consists of the various military Christianisation campaigns in medieval Livonia modern Latvia and Estonia during the Papal sanctioned Northern Crusades in the 12 13th century The Livonian crusade was conducted mostly by the Holy Roman Empire and the Kingdom of Denmark It ended with the creation of Terra Mariana and the Danish duchy of Estonia The lands on the eastern shores of the Baltic Sea were one of the last parts of Europe to be Christianised The available information is largely based on Livonian Chronicle of Henry On 2 February 1207 3 in the territories conquered an ecclesiastical state called Terra Mariana was established as a principality of the Holy Roman Empire 4 and proclaimed by Pope Innocent III in 1215 as a subject of the Holy See 5 After the completion of the crusade the Teutonic and Danish occupied territory was divided into six feudal principalities by William of Modena Contents 1 Wars against Livs and Latgalians 1198 1209 2 Wars against Estonians 1208 27 2 1 Conquest of the Estonian hinterland 2 2 War against Saaremaa 1206 61 3 Wars against Curonians 1242 67 4 Wars against Semigallians 1219 90 5 Aftermath 6 Battles 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksWars against Livs and Latgalians 1198 1209 editBy the time the first Low German speaking Saxon merchants began to arrive in the eastern Baltics in the second half of the 12th century to trade along the ancient trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks some of the natives had already been baptized Meinhard of Segeberg arrived in Ikskile Uxkull in 1184 with the mission of converting the pagan Livonians and was consecrated as Bishop of Uxkull in 1186 In those days the riverside fortified settlement of Uxkull was the center of the missionary activities in the Livonian area The indigenous Livonians had often been under attack 6 by their southern neighbours the Semigallians who at first had considered the Saxons Germans to be useful allies The first prominent Livonian to be converted was their leader Caupo of Turaida who was baptized around 1189 Pope Celestine III had called for a crusade against pagans in Northern Europe in 1193 When peaceful means of conversion failed to produce results the impatient Meinhard plotted to convert Livonians forcibly but was thwarted He died in 1196 having failed in his mission His appointed replacement bishop Berthold of Hanover a Cistercian abbot of Loccum arrived with a large contingent of crusaders in 1198 Shortly afterwards Berthold was killed and his forces were defeated in a battle by Livonians To avenge Berthold s defeat Pope Innocent III issued a bull declaring a crusade against the Livonians Albert von Buxthoeven consecrated as a bishop in 1199 arrived the following year with a large force and established Riga as the seat of his Bishopric of Riga in 1201 In 1202 he formed the Livonian Brothers of the Sword to aid in the conversion of the pagans to Christianity and more importantly to protect German trade and secure German control over commerce As the German grip tightened the Livonians and their christened chief rebelled against the crusaders Caupo s forces were defeated at Turaida in 1206 and the Livonians were declared to be converted Caupo subsequently remained an ally of the crusaders until his death in the Battle of St Matthew s Day in 1217 By 1208 the important Daugava trading posts of Salaspils Holme Koknese Kokenhusen and Selpils Castle Selburg had been taken over as a result of Albert s energetic campaigning In the same year the rulers of the Latgalian counties Talava Satekle and Autine established military alliances with the Order and construction began on both Cesis Castle and a stone Koknese Castle where the Daugava and Perse rivers meet replacing the wooden castle of Latgalians In 1209 Albert leading the forces of the Order captured the capital of the Latgalian Principality of Jersika and took the wife of the ruler Visvaldis captive Visvaldis was forced to submit his kingdom to Albert as a grant to the Archbishopric of Riga and received back a portion of it as a fief Talava by then already weakened in wars with its Finnic and East Slavic neighbours became a vassal state of the Archbishopric of Riga in 1214 and was completely divided up between the Archbishopric and the Order in 1224 nbsp Baltic tribes c 1200 nbsp Lands of Talava nbsp Lands of LotigolaWars against Estonians 1208 27 editConquest of the Estonian hinterland edit By 1208 the Crusaders were strong enough to begin operations against the Estonians who were at that time divided into eight major and seven smaller Counties led by elders with limited co operation between them With the help of the newly converted local tribes of Livs and Latgalians the crusaders initiated raids into Sakala and Ugaunia in what is now southern Estonia The Estonian tribes resisted the attacks from Riga and occasionally sacked territories controlled by the crusaders In 1208 27 war parties of the different sides rampaged through Livonia Latgalia and northern Estonian counties with the Livs Latgalians and troops from the East Slavic Republic of Novgorod serving variously as allies of both crusaders and Estonians Hill forts which were the key centers of Estonian counties were besieged captured and re captured a number of times A truce between the war weary sides was established for three years 1213 1215 It proved generally more favourable to the Germanic crusaders who consolidated their political position while the Estonians were unable to develop their system of loose alliances into a centralised state They were led by Lembitu of Lehola the elder of Sackalia who by 1211 had come to the attention of Teutonic chroniclers as the central figure of the Estonian resistance The Livonian leader Caupo was killed in the Battle of St Matthew s Day near Viljandi Fellin on 21 September 1217 but Lembitu was also killed and the battle was a crushing defeat for the Estonians The Christian kingdoms of Denmark and Sweden were also eager for expansion on the eastern shores of the Baltic In 1218 Albert asked King Valdemar II of Denmark for assistance but Valdemar instead arranged a deal with the Order The king was victorious in the Battle of Lindanise in Revelia in 1219 He subsequently founded the fortress Castrum Danorum in Tallinn Reval which was unsuccessfully besieged by the Estonians in 1220 and 1223 King John I of Sweden tried to establish a Swedish presence in the province of Wiek but his troops were defeated by the Oeselians in the Battle of Lihula in 1220 By that time the entire northern Estonia came under the control of the king of Denmark During the uprising of 1223 all Christian strongholds in Estonia save Tallinn Reval fell into Estonian hands with their defenders killed By 1224 all of the larger fortresses were reconquered by the crusaders except for Tartu Dorpat which was defended by a garrison of local troops and about 200 mercenaries from Novgorod The leader of the mercenaries was Vetseke to whom the Novgorod Republic had promised the fortress and its surrounding lands if he could conquer them for himself 7 Tartu was finally captured by the crusaders in August 1224 and all its defenders were killed Early in 1224 Emperor Frederick II had announced at Catania that Livonia Prussia Sambia and a number of neighboring provinces would henceforth be considered reichsfrei that is subordinate directly to the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire only as opposed to being under the jurisdiction of local rulers At the end of the year Pope Honorius III announced the appointment of Bishop William of Modena as papal legate for Livonia Prussia and other countries In 1224 the Livonian Brothers of the Sword established their headquarters at Fellin Viljandi in Sackalia where the walls of the Master s castle are still standing Other strongholds included Wenden Cesis Segewold Sigulda and Ascheraden Aizkraukle The Chronicle of Henry of Livonia one of the greatest medieval narratives was written probably as a report for William of Modena giving him the history of the Church in Livonia up to his time It relates how in 1226 in the stronghold Tarwanpe William of Modena successfully mediated a peace between the Germans the Danes and the Vironians nbsp Counties of Ancient Estonia nbsp Dannebrog falling from the sky during the Battle of Lindanise 1219 War against Saaremaa 1206 61 edit See also Oeselians nbsp German conquests nbsp The 1241 Treaty between Livonian Order Bishopric of Osel Wiek and Oeselians at National Archives of Sweden The last Estonian county to hold out against the invaders was the island country of Saaremaa Osel whose war fleets had continued to raid Denmark and Sweden during the years of fighting against the German crusaders In 1206 a Danish army led by the king Valdemar II and Andreas the Bishop of Lund landed on Saaremaa and attempted to establish a stronghold without success In 1216 the Livonian Brothers of the Sword and the bishop Theodorich joined forces and invaded Saaremaa over the frozen sea The Oeselians retaliated by raiding German held territories in Latvia the following spring In 1220 a Swedish army led by the king John I of Sweden and the bishop Karl of Linkoping captured Lihula in Rotalia in Western Estonia The Oeselians attacked the Swedish stronghold later the same year and killed the entire garrison including the Bishop of Linkoping In 1222 the Danish king Valdemar II attempted the second conquest of Saaremaa this time establishing a stone fortress housing a strong garrison The stronghold was besieged and surrendered within five days the Danish garrison returning to Revel while leaving Bishop Albert of Riga s brother Theodoric and others behind as hostages for peace The castle was leveled by the Oeselians 8 In 1227 the Livonian Brothers of the Sword the town of Riga and the Bishop of Riga organized a combined attack against Saaremaa After the destruction of Muhu Stronghold and the surrender of Valjala Stronghold the Oeselians formally accepted Christianity After the defeat of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword in the Battle of Saule in 1236 fighting again broke out on Saaremaa In 1241 the Oeselians once again accepted Christianity by signing treaties with the Livonian Order s Master Andreas de Velven and the Bishopric of Osel Wiek This was followed by a treaty signed in 1255 by the Master of the Order Anno Sangerhausenn and on behalf of the Oeselians elders whose names were phonetically transcribed by Latin scribes as Ylle Culle Enu Muntelene Tappete Yalde Melete and Cake 9 The treaty granted the Oeselians several distinctive rights regarding the ownership and inheritance of land the social order and the practice of religion Warfare erupted in 1261 as the Oeselians once more renounced Christianity and killed all the Germans on the island A peace treaty was signed after the united forces of the Livonian Order the Bishopric of Osel Wiek and Danish Estonia including mainland Estonians and Latvians defeated the Oeselians by capturing their stronghold at Kaarma Soon thereafter the Livonian Order established a stone fort at Poide On 24 July 1343 the Oeselians arose yet again killing all the Germans on the island drowning all the clerics and besieging the Livonian Order s castle at Poide After the garrison surrendered the Oeselians massacred the defenders and destroyed the castle In February 1344 Burchard von Dreileben led a campaign over the frozen sea to Saaremaa The Oeselians stronghold was conquered and their leader Vesse was hanged In the early spring of 1345 the next campaign of the Livonian Order ended with a treaty mentioned in the Chronicle of Hermann von Wartberge and the Novgorod First Chronicle Saaremaa remained the vassal of the master of the Livonian Order and the Bishopric of Osel Wiek until 1559 Wars against Curonians 1242 67 edit nbsp Couronian lands Following the defeat of the Estonians the crusade moved against Curonians and Semigallians Baltic tribes living to the south and west of the Daugava river and closely allied with Samogitians In July 1210 Curonians attacked Riga 10 After a day of fighting the Curonians were unable to break through the city walls They crossed to the other bank of the Daugava to burn their dead and mourn for three days 11 In 1228 Curonians together with Semigallians again attacked Riga Although they were again unsuccessful in storming the city they destroyed a monastery in Daugavgriva and killed all the monks After the defeat of Estonians and Osilians in 1227 the Curonians were confronted by Lithuanian enemies in the east and south and harassed by the Livonian Brothers of the Sword from the north in the west on the sea shore their arch enemies the Danes and Swedes were lurking waiting for an opportunity In this hopeless situation further aggravated by famine the Curonians preferred to try to make peace with the Christian conquerors inviting the monks into their country thereby escaping attacks by the Scandinavian nations 12 In 1230 the Curonians in the northern part of Courland under their ruler rex Lammekinus lv lt signed a peace treaty with the Germans and the lands they inhabited thus became known as Vredecuronia or Peace Courland The southern Curonians however continued to resist the invaders In 1260 the Curonians were involved in the Battle of Durbe one of the biggest battles in Livonia in the 13th century They were forced to fight on the crusader side When the battle started the Curonians abandoned the knights Peter von Dusburg alleged that the Curonians even attacked the Knights from the rear The Estonians and other local people soon followed the Curonians and abandoned the Knights and that allowed the Samogitians to gain victory over the Livonian Order It was a heavy defeat for the Order and uprisings against the crusaders soon afterwards broke out in the Curonian and Prussian lands Curonian resistance was finally subdued in 1266 when the whole of Courland was partitioned between the Livonian Order and the Archbishop of Riga The Curonian nobles among them 40 clans of the descendants of the Curonian Kings who lived in the town of Kuldiga preserved personal freedom and some of their privileges 12 13 Wars against Semigallians 1219 90 edit nbsp Tervete hillfort main Semigallian centre in 13th century According to the Livonian Chronicle of Henry Semigallians formed an alliance with bishop Albert of Riga against rebellious Livonians before 1203 and received military support to hold back Lithuanian attacks in 1205 In 1207 the Semigallian duke Viestards Latin dux Semigallorum helped the christened Livonian chief Caupo conquer back his Turaida Castle from pagan rebels In 1219 the Semigallian German alliance was cancelled after a crusader invasion in Semigallia Duke Viestards promptly formed an alliance with Lithuanians and Curonians In 1228 Semigallians and Curonians attacked the Daugavgriva monastery the main crusader stronghold at the Daugava river delta The crusaders took revenge and invaded Semigallia The Semigallians in turn pillaged land around the Aizkraukle hillfort In 1236 Semigallians attacked crusaders retreating to Riga after the Battle of Saule killing many of them After regular attacks the Livonian Order partly subdued the Semigallians in 1254 In 1270 the Lithuanian Grand Duke Traidenis together with Semigallians attacked Livonia and Saaremaa During the Battle of Karuse on the frozen Gulf of Riga the Livonian Order was defeated and its master Otto von Lutterberg was killed In 1287 around 1400 Semigallians attacked a crusader stronghold in Ikskile and plundered nearby lands As they returned to Semigallia they were caught by the Order s forces and the great Battle of Garoza began near the Garoza river The crusader forces were besieged and badly defeated More than 40 knights were killed including the master of the Livonian Order Willekin von Endorp and an unknown number of crusader allies It was the last Semigallian victory over the growing forces of the Livonian Order In 1279 after the Battle of Aizkraukle Grand Duke Traidenis of Lithuania supported a Semigallian revolt against the Livonian Order led by Duke Nameisis In the 1280s the Livonian Order started a massive campaign against the Semigallians which included burning their fields and thus causing famine Semigallians continued their resistance until 1290 when they burned their last castle in Sidabre lt lv and moved southwards The Rhymed Chronicle claims that 100 000 migrated to Lithuania and once there continued to fight against the Germans The unconquered southern parts of Curonian and Semigallian territories Sidabre Rakte Ceklis Meguva etc were united under the rule of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Aftermath edit nbsp Terra Mariana in 1260 nbsp Territories controlled by the Teutonic Order in 1410 In 1227 the Livonian Brothers of the Sword conquered all Danish territories in Northern Estonia After the Battle of Saule the surviving members of the Brothers of the Sword merged into the Teutonic Order of Prussia in 1237 and became known as Livonian Order On 7 June 1238 by the Treaty of Stensby the Teutonic knights returned the Duchy of Estonia to Valdemar II until in 1346 after St George s Night Uprising the lands were sold back to the order and became part of the Ordensstaat After the conquest all of the remaining local population were ostensibly Christianized In 1535 the first extant native language book was printed a Lutheran catechism 14 The conquerors upheld military control through their network of castles throughout Estonia and Latvia 15 The land was divided into six feudal principalities by Papal Legate William of Modena Archbishopric of Riga Bishopric of Courland Bishopric of Dorpat Bishopric of Osel Wiek the lands ruled by the Livonian Brothers of the Sword and Dominum directum of King of Denmark the Duchy of Estonia 16 17 Battles editBattle of Riga 1203 Battle of Koknese 1205 Battle of Salaspils 1206 Battle of Turaida 1206 Battle of Saaremaa 1206 Battle of Koknese 1208 Battle of Otepaa 1208 Battle of Jersika 1209 Battle of Otepaa 1210 Battle of Cesis 1210 Battle of Umera 1210 Battle of Turaida 1211 Battle of Viljandi 1211 Battle of Lehola 1215 Battle of Riga 1215 Battle of Soontagana 1215 Battle of Otepaa 1217 Battle of Soontagana 1217 Battle of St Matthew s Day 1217 Battle of Lindanise 1219 Siege of Mezotne 1219 Battle of Lihula 1220 Siege of Tallinn 1221 Battle of Soela 1223 Battle of the Umera River Bridge 1223 Battle of Viljandi 1223 Siege of Tallinn 1223 Siege of Tartu 1224 Battle of Muhu 1227 Siege of Aizkraukle 1229 Battle of Saule 1236 Battle on the Ice 1242 Battle of Durbe 1260 Siege of Tervete 1259 Battle of Tervete 1270 Battle of Aizkraukle Siege of Dobele 1279 Siege of Kernave 1279 18 Battle of Tervete 1280 Siege of Dobele 1281 Battle of Riga 1281 Battle of Tervete 1281 Battle of Garoza 1287 Battle of Dobele 1290 See also editLivonian Chronicle of Henry Wendish Crusade Baltic paganismReferences edit Urban William 1981 Livonian Crusade University Press of America ISBN 0 8191 1683 1 Riley Smith Jonathan 2005 The Crusades A History Continuum International Publishing Group p 161 ISBN 0 8264 7269 9 Bilmanis Alfreds 1944 Latvian Russian Relations Documents The Latvian legation Herbermann Charles George 1907 The Catholic Encyclopedia Robert Appleton Company Bilmanis Alfreds 1945 The Church in Latvia Drauga vests 1215 proclaimed it the Terra Mariana subject directly Blomkvist Nils The Discovery of the Baltic The Reception of a Catholic World system in the European North AD 1075 1225 Leiden 2005 p 508 Tarvel Enn ed 1982 Henriku Liivimaa kroonika Heinrici Chronicon Livoniae p 246 Tallinn Eesti Raamat Urban William L October 20 1994 The Baltic Crusade Lithuanian Research and Studies Center via Google Books Hildebrand Hermann Schwartz Philipp Arbusow Leonid Bulmerincq August Michael von 24 May 1970 Liv est und kurlandisches Urkundenbuch Bd 1 1093 1300 Bd 2 1301 1367 Bd 3 1368 1393 mit Nachtragen zu Bd 1 und 2 Bd 4 1394 1413 Bd 5 1414 Mai 1423 Bd 6 Nachtrage zu Bd 1 5 Bd 7 Mai 1423 Mai 1429 Bd 8 Mai 1429 1435 Bd 9 1436 1443 Bd 10 1444 1449 Bd 11 1450 1459 Bd 12 1461 1472 Sachregister zu Abt 1 Bd 7 9 Scientia Verlag via Google Books Euratlas Euratlas Periodis Web Map of Livonia in Year 1500 www euratlas net Chronicle of Henry of Livonia a b Edgar V Saks Aestii 1960 p 244 F Balodis Lettland och letterna Ha de ratt at leva Stockholm 1943 p 212 Estonian Language Archived 2016 04 07 at the Wayback Machine from Estonia eu retrieved 12 March 2016 Harrison Dick 2005 Gud vill det Nordiska korsfarare under medeltid in Swedish Ordfront p 573 ISBN 978 91 7441 373 1 Christiansen Eric 1997 The Northern Crusades Penguin ISBN 0 14 026653 4 Knut Helle 2003 The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Prehistory to 1520 Cambridge University Press p 269 ISBN 0 521 47299 7 Kernave in English www kernave org External links editSaaremaa 1100 1227 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Livonian Crusade amp oldid 1220218523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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