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Names and titles of Władysław II Jagiełło

Jogaila, later Władysław II Jagiełło[1] (ca.1351/1361–1434), was a Grand Duke of Lithuania and from 1386 King Jadwiga's husband and jure uxoris King of Poland. In Lithuania, he held the title Didysis Kunigaikštis, translated as Grand Duke or Grand Prince (kunigaikštis is a cognate of König and king, and didysis magnifies it).[2]

Jogaila in 1386
Royal seal of Władysław II Jagiełło

He is known under a number of names: Lithuanian: Jogaila Algirdaitis; Polish: Władysław II Jagiełło; Belarusian: Jahajła (Ягайла). As a monarch who ruled two states under different names and who used a number of titles, particularly in Lithuania, Jogaila has been accorded a variety of designations in history books. The study of his names and titles sheds light on the nature of sovereignty in both Lithuania and Poland and on the balance of power between the two states in the early days of the Polish-Lithuanian unions.

Ruler of Lithuania edit

Jogaila's father Algirdas was supreme ruler of Lithuania and ruled the country with his brother, Kęstutis, the Duke of Trakai; after Algirdas's death in 1377, his son Jogaila ruled in the same way with Kęstutis, but this arrangement between the two relatives soon came under strain.[3]

Jogaila began his reign in the eastern part of Lithuania, the duchy where his father had ruled, which bordered on territories of former Kievan Rus, and he left the government of the western duchy to his uncle Kęstutis, who ruled from his castle at Trakai. Jogaila ruled many more Russian subjects than Lithuanian, and his titles often reflected this. The tradition of coregency among Lithuanian rulers enabled them to simultaneously pursue a western policy towards Poland and the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights and an eastern one towards the Russian powers, for example the Principality of Moscow, the Novgorod Republic, and the Pskov Republic. The Principality of Moscow, especially after Prince Dmitri's defeat of the Golden Horde at the Battle of Kulikovo in 1380, posed a particular threat to Lithuania and Jogaila's rule. Though Jogaila was much younger than Kęstutis, he inherited the title "Grand Duke", while Kęstutis continued to hold the title "Duke of Trakai". But then, in 1380, Kęstutis overthrew Jogaila and assumed the title of Grand Duke for himself.[3] Kęstutis seized Vilnius, the seat of the grand dukes. A year later, Jogaila raised an army from his father's vassals and won back the title, the aging Kęstutis dying soon afterwards in the Kreva Castle under mysterious circumstances, leaving his son Vytautas to continue the power struggle against Jogaila.

The tradition of dual rule had become established among the Lithuanian dukes, enabling them to contain the Teutonic Knights in the west while pursuing expansionism in the east. There had been previous joint reigns between Dausprungas and Mindaugas, Pukuveras and Butigeidis, Vytenis and Gediminas, Jaunutis and Kęstutis, as well as between Algirdas and Kęstutis.[4] The nature of this Lithuanian dual rule, as also practised between Jogaila and Kęstutis and later between Jogaila and Vytautas, is difficult to define precisely. According to the historian S.C.Rowell, it "reflects political expediency; it certainly does not meet the formal definition of diarchy as 'rule by two independent authorities'...those two leaders were not equal: the grand duke in Vilnius was supreme".[4]

From Algirdas, Jogaila inherited a mixed array of styles, as recorded in different Catholic documents, to indicate his status as supreme ruler: the titles furst, herczog, rex, and dux are preceded by the adjectives gross, obirster, supremus, and magnus.[5] The Lithuanian rulers' various titles are all attempts to convey both supremacy over lower rulers, and independence of any higher ruler. The term kunigas is cognate with German König.[4] Algirdas, who had married Uliana, daughter of Alexander I, grand prince of Tver, had been the first Lithuanian ruler to style himself velikii kniaz, a Rus'ian equivalent of his Lithuanian title, perhaps also signifying his rule in the Rus' lands under his control. He also called himself magnus rex and supremus princeps.[4] Rather than didysis kunigaikštis, many of Jogaila's subjects would have called him hospodar, the title used, for example, by the rulers of Moldavia.[6]

The medieval Lithuanian grand dukes ruled in a similar way to the Russian grand princes (the title didysis kunigaikštis is equivalent to the Russian velikii kniaz, the Slavic kniaz being like the Baltic kunigaikštis a cognate of König). They headed a loose confederation whose constituent parts were ruled by lesser leaders. In effect, the grand duke acted as primus inter pares within a dynasty, with other members of the dynasty ruling constituent parts of the state. Whichever way the lesser Lithuanian princes styled themselves, they always acknowledged the supremacy of the grand-ducal office.[7] Although a special place was reserved in the hierarchy for the two princes who ruled the Lithuanian duchies, other princes would collaborate in state matters such as the negotiation of treaties.[4]

Supremacy edit

 
The reconstructed Trakai Island Castle, from where Kęstutis and Skirgaila governed as first dukes under Jogaila.

When Jogaila became the king of Poland in 1386, he reserved his position as the supreme duke of Lithuania. At first he appointed his brother Skirgaila as the duke of Trakai, (dux Trocensis), effectively his regent in Lithuania; but Vytautas, the son of the former duke of Trakai, Kęstutis, challenged Skirgaila with the backing of the Teutonic Order, besieged Vilnius, and reduced the outer city to ruins. In response, Władysław, as Jogaila was called after ascending the Polish throne, was forced to come to terms with Vytautas. Skirgaila stepped down as duke of Trakai and became prince of Kiev,[8] while Vytautas not only replaced him as de facto ruler of Lithuania but was confirmed in the title of magnus dux or grand duke by the terms of the Treaty of Ostrów. However, Władysław reserved overlordship as supreme duke or prince, with the higher title of dux supremus. While conceding control of the active government of Lithuania, the Polish monarchy by this treaty positioned itself as the overlord of the Lithuanian monarchy.[9]

Vytautas himself had other intentions: though he accepted the title, he continued to demand Lithuania's complete separation from Poland.[10][11] He also pursued an ambitious expansionist policy to the east, hoping to conquer Novgorod and Pskov, and he is known to have styled himself velikii kniaz or grand prince, a term borrowed from Kievan Rus'.[12] Vytautas even had himself crowned a king by local nobles in 1398. But in 1399, his forces and those of his ally, Khan Tokhtamysh of the White Horde, were crushed by the Timurids at the Battle of the Vorskla River. The defeat left him with no choice but to submit to Władysław's overlordship once more.[10]

Vytautas's distrust of Polish sovereignty over Lithuania may have been well founded, since Władysław had in principle signed Lithuania's independence away in 1385 in the formal act of union, by which he agreed to incorporate Lithuania into Poland.[13] The Union of Vilnius and Radom of 1401 reaffirmed Vytautas's tenure as grand duke under Władysław's overlordship, but it assured the title of grand duke to Władysław's heirs rather than to those of Vytautas: if Władysław died without heirs, the Lithuanian boyars were to elect a new monarch.[14][15] Since neither Władysław nor Vytautas had yet produced an heir, the implications of the act were unforeseeable.

Władysław had to wait until Vytautas finally died without an heir in 1430 to exercise his power over the Lithuanian succession, when he made the mistake of choosing his troublesome brother Švitrigaila as the new grand duke of Lithuania. Within two years Švitrigaila rebelled and, like Vytautas before him, sought to break away from Polish overlordship and reign as an independent grand duke of Lithuania. Władysław was obliged to replace him with Vytautas's brother Žygimantas, whom he ordered to restore the union by force. The struggle over the Lithuanian succession was to continue long after Władysław's death[16] culminating with the Battle of Wiłkomierz.

King of Poland edit

As King of Poland, Jogaila assumed the Slavic name Władysław, which roughly translates as "glorious ruler" and is often Latinised as either Wladislaus or Ladislaus. The choice evoked both Władysław I Łokietek, the Elbow-high, who unified the kingdom a century before, and Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary, a king who had sided with the pope against the empire and Christianised Transylvania.[3][6]

The Polish monarchy, unlike that of Lithuania, was not hereditary, though in practice the nobles, who possessed the right to elect the monarch, were happy to observe the principles of heredity in return for concessions and privileges. Władysław at first ruled as a co-monarch with Queen Jadwiga, who had been crowned not as a queen but as a king (Rex Poloniae) because the Polish political system made no provision for a queen regnant.[17] Jadwiga's death in 1399 jeopardised Władysław's position on the throne, so he married Anna of Celje, a granddaughter of Casimir III of Poland from the Piast dynasty, a political marriage that confirmed his tenure of the Polish crown.

Titles edit

 
Seal of Jogaila as Rex in Lettow (King in Lithuania)

Versions in various languages:

Lithuanian title in Latin: Breviary excerpts from a Latin document in 1383: Nos Jagalo divina deliberacione magnus Rex vel dux litwanorum, Russieque dominus et here.[18] (His grandfather Gediminas had added rex, princeps et dux Semigallie to his style).[4]

From a German document, 1380: Wir Jagel obirster kung der Littouwen.[19]

From a German document, 1382, with his brother Skirgaila: Wir Jagal von gotis gnaden grosir konig czu lyttauwen und wir Skirgal Hertzog zcu Tracken, gebrudere.[20]

From a Latin seal, 1382: Iagal Dey Gracia Rex in Lettow.[21]

Polish title in Latin: Wladislaus Dei gracia rex Polonie necnon terrarum Cracovie, Sandomirie, Syradia, Lancicie, Cuiavie, Lithuanie princeps supremus, Pomoranie Russieque dominus et heres etc. [22]

  • English translation: Vladislaus by God's grace king of Poland, and lands of Kraków, Sandomierz, Sieradz, Łęczyca, Kuyavia, supreme-prince of Lithuania, lord and heir of Pomerania and Ruthenia, etc..
  • Polish translation: Władysław, z Bożej łaski król Polski, ziemi krakowskiej, sandomierskiej, sieradzkiej, łęczyckiej, kujawskiej, Wielki Książe Litewski, pan i dziedzic Pomorza i Rusi, etc.
  • Lithuanian translation: Vladislovas, Dievo valia karalius Lenkijos ir žemių Krokuvos, Sandomiro, Sieradžo, Lenčycos, Kujavijos, Lietuvos didysis kunigaikštis, Pomeranijos ir Rusios valdovas ir paveldėtojas, etc..
  • Belarusian translation: Уладзіслаў, з Божай ласкі кароль польскі, зямлі кракаўскай, сандамерскай, серадзкай, лучыцкай, куяўскай, князь літоўскі, пан і дзедзіч паморскі і рускі, etc.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For the sake of simplicity, this article uses the Lithuanian form Jogaila for the early period of his life and the Polish form Władysław for the period following his accession to the Polish throne.
  2. ^ See Rowell, 65-69, for the nature of didysis kunigaikštis in practice.
  3. ^ a b c McKitterick, Rosamond; Fouracre, Paul; Jones, Michael; Reuter, Timothy; Abulafia, David; Luscombe, David Edward; Jones, Michael C. E.; Jones, Michael K.; Allmand, C. T.; Riley-Smith, Jonathan (2000-04-27). The New Cambridge Medieval History, p 709-712. ISBN 9780521362900. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Rowell, S. C.; Rowell, Stephen Christopher (5 May 1994). Rowell, p 64-69. ISBN 9780521450119. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  5. ^ In Greek, Algirdas even used the imperial title basileus, although Byzantine scribes referred to him as reks or megas rex, terms they applied to Catholic princes. Rowell, 66.
  6. ^ a b Lukowski, Jerzy; Zawadzki, Hubert (2001-09-20). Lukowski and Zawadzki, p 33-45. ISBN 9780521559171. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  7. ^ "We shall follow Giedroyc in defining as dukes rulers 'of an independent polity... with an allegiance to a higher regnal power' and call prince 'any person related by blood to a ruler'. The head of this hierarchy is the grand duke (in Lithuanian didysis kunigaikštis and in Russian velikii kniaz)." Rowell, p 50,
  8. ^ Dvornik, p 224
  9. ^ McKitterick, Rosamond; Fouracre, Paul; Jones, Michael; Reuter, Timothy; Abulafia, David; Luscombe, David Edward; Jones, Michael C. E.; Jones, Michael K.; Allmand, C. T.; Riley-Smith, Jonathan (2000-04-27). The New Cambridge Medieval History, p 732. ISBN 9780521362900. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  10. ^ a b Dvornik, Francis (1962). Dvornik, p 222-225. ISBN 9780813507996. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  11. ^ Jasienica, Pawel, p 80-146
  12. ^ Stone, p 11
  13. ^ "The term used for 'incorporate' in 1385—applicare—has given rise to much acrimonious discussion between Polish and Lithuanian historians, but the Poles had no doubt of what it meant at the time." Lukowski and Zawadzki, p 34
  14. ^ Paweł Jasienica, p 103-105
  15. ^ Stone, Daniel (2001). Stone, p 11. ISBN 9780295980935. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  16. ^ Stone, p 11; Plokhy, p 98
  17. ^ Stone, p 8
  18. ^ Benediktas Vytenis Mačiuika, Lituanistikos instituto 1975 metų suvažiavimo darbai, 1976, Lituanistikos institutas (U.S.)
  19. ^ Emil Ebering, Historische Studien, 1965, Matthiesen.
  20. ^ Raczyński, Edward (1845). Edward Raczyński (ed), Kodex dyplomatyczny Litwy, 1845, nakładem Zygmunta Schlettera, p 57. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  21. ^ "Lietuvos karaliai arba Lietuvos valstybės statusas XIII-XIV a." (PDF). LR Krašto apsaugos ministerija. 2013.
  22. ^ Leon Koczy, University of Cracow: Documents Concerning Its Origins, 1966, General Sikorski Historical Institute.

References edit

  • Bojtár, Endre (2000). Foreword to the Past: A Cultural History of the Baltic People. Budapest: Central European University Press. ISBN 963-9116-42-4.
  • Dvornik, Francis (1992). The Slavs in European History and Civilization. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-0799-5.
  • Jasienica, Paweł (1988). Polska Jagiellonów (in Polish). Warsaw: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy. ISBN 83-06-01796-X.
  • Lukowski, Jerzy and Hubert Zawadzki (2001). A Concise History of Poland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-55917-0.
  • (in Lithuanian) Mačiuika, Benediktas Vytenis, Lituanistikos instituto 1975 metų suvažiavimo darbai, 1976, Lituanistikos institutas (U.S.)
  • (in Polish) Raczyński, Edward (ed), Kodex dyplomatyczny Litwy, 1845, nakładem Zygmunta Schlettera.
  • Rowell, S.C. (2000), Baltic Europe, in The New Cambridge Medieval History, ed. Michael Jones, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-36290-3
  • Rowell, S.C. (1994), Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire Within East-central Europe, 1295-1345, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-45011-X
  • Stone, Daniel.Z. (2001). The Polish-Lithuanian State, 1386-1795. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-98093-1.

names, titles, władysław, jagiełło, jogaila, later, władysław, jagiełło, 1351, 1361, 1434, grand, duke, lithuania, from, 1386, king, jadwiga, husband, jure, uxoris, king, poland, lithuania, held, title, didysis, kunigaikštis, translated, grand, duke, grand, pr. Jogaila later Wladyslaw II Jagiello 1 ca 1351 1361 1434 was a Grand Duke of Lithuania and from 1386 King Jadwiga s husband and jure uxoris King of Poland In Lithuania he held the title Didysis Kunigaikstis translated as Grand Duke or Grand Prince kunigaikstis is a cognate of Konig and king and didysis magnifies it 2 Jogaila in 1386 Royal seal of Wladyslaw II Jagiello He is known under a number of names Lithuanian Jogaila Algirdaitis Polish Wladyslaw II Jagiello Belarusian Jahajla Yagajla As a monarch who ruled two states under different names and who used a number of titles particularly in Lithuania Jogaila has been accorded a variety of designations in history books The study of his names and titles sheds light on the nature of sovereignty in both Lithuania and Poland and on the balance of power between the two states in the early days of the Polish Lithuanian unions Contents 1 Ruler of Lithuania 2 Supremacy 3 King of Poland 4 Titles 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesRuler of Lithuania editJogaila s father Algirdas was supreme ruler of Lithuania and ruled the country with his brother Kestutis the Duke of Trakai after Algirdas s death in 1377 his son Jogaila ruled in the same way with Kestutis but this arrangement between the two relatives soon came under strain 3 Jogaila began his reign in the eastern part of Lithuania the duchy where his father had ruled which bordered on territories of former Kievan Rus and he left the government of the western duchy to his uncle Kestutis who ruled from his castle at Trakai Jogaila ruled many more Russian subjects than Lithuanian and his titles often reflected this The tradition of coregency among Lithuanian rulers enabled them to simultaneously pursue a western policy towards Poland and the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights and an eastern one towards the Russian powers for example the Principality of Moscow the Novgorod Republic and the Pskov Republic The Principality of Moscow especially after Prince Dmitri s defeat of the Golden Horde at the Battle of Kulikovo in 1380 posed a particular threat to Lithuania and Jogaila s rule Though Jogaila was much younger than Kestutis he inherited the title Grand Duke while Kestutis continued to hold the title Duke of Trakai But then in 1380 Kestutis overthrew Jogaila and assumed the title of Grand Duke for himself 3 Kestutis seized Vilnius the seat of the grand dukes A year later Jogaila raised an army from his father s vassals and won back the title the aging Kestutis dying soon afterwards in the Kreva Castle under mysterious circumstances leaving his son Vytautas to continue the power struggle against Jogaila The tradition of dual rule had become established among the Lithuanian dukes enabling them to contain the Teutonic Knights in the west while pursuing expansionism in the east There had been previous joint reigns between Dausprungas and Mindaugas Pukuveras and Butigeidis Vytenis and Gediminas Jaunutis and Kestutis as well as between Algirdas and Kestutis 4 The nature of this Lithuanian dual rule as also practised between Jogaila and Kestutis and later between Jogaila and Vytautas is difficult to define precisely According to the historian S C Rowell it reflects political expediency it certainly does not meet the formal definition of diarchy as rule by two independent authorities those two leaders were not equal the grand duke in Vilnius was supreme 4 From Algirdas Jogaila inherited a mixed array of styles as recorded in different Catholic documents to indicate his status as supreme ruler the titles furst herczog rex and dux are preceded by the adjectives gross obirster supremus and magnus 5 The Lithuanian rulers various titles are all attempts to convey both supremacy over lower rulers and independence of any higher ruler The term kunigas is cognate with German Konig 4 Algirdas who had married Uliana daughter of Alexander I grand prince of Tver had been the first Lithuanian ruler to style himself velikii kniaz a Rus ian equivalent of his Lithuanian title perhaps also signifying his rule in the Rus lands under his control He also called himself magnus rex and supremus princeps 4 Rather than didysis kunigaikstis many of Jogaila s subjects would have called him hospodar the title used for example by the rulers of Moldavia 6 The medieval Lithuanian grand dukes ruled in a similar way to the Russian grand princes the title didysis kunigaikstis is equivalent to the Russian velikii kniaz the Slavic kniaz being like the Baltic kunigaikstis a cognate of Konig They headed a loose confederation whose constituent parts were ruled by lesser leaders In effect the grand duke acted as primus inter pares within a dynasty with other members of the dynasty ruling constituent parts of the state Whichever way the lesser Lithuanian princes styled themselves they always acknowledged the supremacy of the grand ducal office 7 Although a special place was reserved in the hierarchy for the two princes who ruled the Lithuanian duchies other princes would collaborate in state matters such as the negotiation of treaties 4 Supremacy edit nbsp The reconstructed Trakai Island Castle from where Kestutis and Skirgaila governed as first dukes under Jogaila When Jogaila became the king of Poland in 1386 he reserved his position as the supreme duke of Lithuania At first he appointed his brother Skirgaila as the duke of Trakai dux Trocensis effectively his regent in Lithuania but Vytautas the son of the former duke of Trakai Kestutis challenged Skirgaila with the backing of the Teutonic Order besieged Vilnius and reduced the outer city to ruins In response Wladyslaw as Jogaila was called after ascending the Polish throne was forced to come to terms with Vytautas Skirgaila stepped down as duke of Trakai and became prince of Kiev 8 while Vytautas not only replaced him as de facto ruler of Lithuania but was confirmed in the title of magnus dux or grand duke by the terms of the Treaty of Ostrow However Wladyslaw reserved overlordship as supreme duke or prince with the higher title of dux supremus While conceding control of the active government of Lithuania the Polish monarchy by this treaty positioned itself as the overlord of the Lithuanian monarchy 9 Vytautas himself had other intentions though he accepted the title he continued to demand Lithuania s complete separation from Poland 10 11 He also pursued an ambitious expansionist policy to the east hoping to conquer Novgorod and Pskov and he is known to have styled himself velikii kniaz or grand prince a term borrowed from Kievan Rus 12 Vytautas even had himself crowned a king by local nobles in 1398 But in 1399 his forces and those of his ally Khan Tokhtamysh of the White Horde were crushed by the Timurids at the Battle of the Vorskla River The defeat left him with no choice but to submit to Wladyslaw s overlordship once more 10 Vytautas s distrust of Polish sovereignty over Lithuania may have been well founded since Wladyslaw had in principle signed Lithuania s independence away in 1385 in the formal act of union by which he agreed to incorporate Lithuania into Poland 13 The Union of Vilnius and Radom of 1401 reaffirmed Vytautas s tenure as grand duke under Wladyslaw s overlordship but it assured the title of grand duke to Wladyslaw s heirs rather than to those of Vytautas if Wladyslaw died without heirs the Lithuanian boyars were to elect a new monarch 14 15 Since neither Wladyslaw nor Vytautas had yet produced an heir the implications of the act were unforeseeable Wladyslaw had to wait until Vytautas finally died without an heir in 1430 to exercise his power over the Lithuanian succession when he made the mistake of choosing his troublesome brother Svitrigaila as the new grand duke of Lithuania Within two years Svitrigaila rebelled and like Vytautas before him sought to break away from Polish overlordship and reign as an independent grand duke of Lithuania Wladyslaw was obliged to replace him with Vytautas s brother Zygimantas whom he ordered to restore the union by force The struggle over the Lithuanian succession was to continue long after Wladyslaw s death 16 culminating with the Battle of Wilkomierz King of Poland editAs King of Poland Jogaila assumed the Slavic name Wladyslaw which roughly translates as glorious ruler and is often Latinised as either Wladislaus or Ladislaus The choice evoked both Wladyslaw I Lokietek the Elbow high who unified the kingdom a century before and Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary a king who had sided with the pope against the empire and Christianised Transylvania 3 6 The Polish monarchy unlike that of Lithuania was not hereditary though in practice the nobles who possessed the right to elect the monarch were happy to observe the principles of heredity in return for concessions and privileges Wladyslaw at first ruled as a co monarch with Queen Jadwiga who had been crowned not as a queen but as a king Rex Poloniae because the Polish political system made no provision for a queen regnant 17 Jadwiga s death in 1399 jeopardised Wladyslaw s position on the throne so he married Anna of Celje a granddaughter of Casimir III of Poland from the Piast dynasty a political marriage that confirmed his tenure of the Polish crown Titles edit nbsp Seal of Jogaila as Rex in Lettow King in Lithuania Versions in various languages Lithuanian title in Latin Breviary excerpts from a Latin document in 1383 Nos Jagalo divina deliberacione magnus Rex vel dux litwanorum Russieque dominus et here 18 His grandfather Gediminas had added rex princeps et dux Semigallie to his style 4 From a German document 1380 Wir Jagel obirster kung der Littouwen 19 From a German document 1382 with his brother Skirgaila Wir Jagal von gotis gnaden grosir konig czu lyttauwen und wir Skirgal Hertzog zcu Tracken gebrudere 20 From a Latin seal 1382 Iagal Dey Gracia Rex in Lettow 21 Polish title in Latin Wladislaus Dei gracia rex Polonie necnon terrarum Cracovie Sandomirie Syradia Lancicie Cuiavie Lithuanie princeps supremus Pomoranie Russieque dominus et heres etc 22 English translation Vladislaus by God s grace king of Poland and lands of Krakow Sandomierz Sieradz Leczyca Kuyavia supreme prince of Lithuania lord and heir of Pomerania and Ruthenia etc Polish translation Wladyslaw z Bozej laski krol Polski ziemi krakowskiej sandomierskiej sieradzkiej leczyckiej kujawskiej Wielki Ksiaze Litewski pan i dziedzic Pomorza i Rusi etc Lithuanian translation Vladislovas Dievo valia karalius Lenkijos ir zemiu Krokuvos Sandomiro Sieradzo Lencycos Kujavijos Lietuvos didysis kunigaikstis Pomeranijos ir Rusios valdovas ir paveldetojas etc Belarusian translation Uladzislay z Bozhaj laski karol polski zyamli krakayskaj sandamerskaj seradzkaj luchyckaj kuyayskaj knyaz litoyski pan i dzedzich pamorski i ruski etc See also editCoregency Diarchy Grand Prince Grand Duke Hospodar Polish monarchs Skirgaila Vytautas the GreatNotes edit For the sake of simplicity this article uses the Lithuanian form Jogaila for the early period of his life and the Polish form Wladyslaw for the period following his accession to the Polish throne See Rowell 65 69 for the nature of didysis kunigaikstis in practice a b c McKitterick Rosamond Fouracre Paul Jones Michael Reuter Timothy Abulafia David Luscombe David Edward Jones Michael C E Jones Michael K Allmand C T Riley Smith Jonathan 2000 04 27 The New Cambridge Medieval History p 709 712 ISBN 9780521362900 Retrieved 2012 08 23 a b c d e f Rowell S C Rowell Stephen Christopher 5 May 1994 Rowell p 64 69 ISBN 9780521450119 Retrieved 2012 08 23 In Greek Algirdas even used the imperial title basileus although Byzantine scribes referred to him as reks or megas rex terms they applied to Catholic princes Rowell 66 a b Lukowski Jerzy Zawadzki Hubert 2001 09 20 Lukowski and Zawadzki p 33 45 ISBN 9780521559171 Retrieved 2012 08 23 We shall follow Giedroyc in defining as dukes rulers of an independent polity with an allegiance to a higher regnal power and call prince any person related by blood to a ruler The head of this hierarchy is the grand duke in Lithuanian didysis kunigaikstis and in Russian velikii kniaz Rowell p 50 Dvornik p 224 McKitterick Rosamond Fouracre Paul Jones Michael Reuter Timothy Abulafia David Luscombe David Edward Jones Michael C E Jones Michael K Allmand C T Riley Smith Jonathan 2000 04 27 The New Cambridge Medieval History p 732 ISBN 9780521362900 Retrieved 2012 08 23 a b Dvornik Francis 1962 Dvornik p 222 225 ISBN 9780813507996 Retrieved 2012 08 23 Jasienica Pawel p 80 146 Stone p 11 The term used for incorporate in 1385 applicare has given rise to much acrimonious discussion between Polish and Lithuanian historians but the Poles had no doubt of what it meant at the time Lukowski and Zawadzki p 34 Pawel Jasienica p 103 105 Stone Daniel 2001 Stone p 11 ISBN 9780295980935 Retrieved 2012 08 23 Stone p 11 Plokhy p 98 Stone p 8 Benediktas Vytenis Maciuika Lituanistikos instituto 1975 metu suvaziavimo darbai 1976 Lituanistikos institutas U S Emil Ebering Historische Studien 1965 Matthiesen Raczynski Edward 1845 Edward Raczynski ed Kodex dyplomatyczny Litwy 1845 nakladem Zygmunta Schlettera p 57 Retrieved 2012 08 23 Lietuvos karaliai arba Lietuvos valstybes statusas XIII XIV a PDF LR Krasto apsaugos ministerija 2013 Leon Koczy University of Cracow Documents Concerning Its Origins 1966 General Sikorski Historical Institute References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wladislaus II of Poland Bojtar Endre 2000 Foreword to the Past A Cultural History of the Baltic People Budapest Central European University Press ISBN 963 9116 42 4 Dvornik Francis 1992 The Slavs in European History and Civilization Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 0799 5 Jasienica Pawel 1988 Polska Jagiellonow in Polish Warsaw Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczy ISBN 83 06 01796 X Lukowski Jerzy and Hubert Zawadzki 2001 A Concise History of Poland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55917 0 in Lithuanian Maciuika Benediktas Vytenis Lituanistikos instituto 1975 metu suvaziavimo darbai 1976 Lituanistikos institutas U S in Polish Raczynski Edward ed Kodex dyplomatyczny Litwy 1845 nakladem Zygmunta Schlettera Rowell S C 2000 Baltic Europe in The New Cambridge Medieval History ed Michael Jones Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 36290 3 Rowell S C 1994 Lithuania Ascending A Pagan Empire Within East central Europe 1295 1345 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 45011 X Stone Daniel Z 2001 The Polish Lithuanian State 1386 1795 Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 0 295 98093 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Names and titles of Wladyslaw II Jagiello amp oldid 1169581698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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