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Statutes of Lithuania

The Statutes of Lithuania, originally known as the Statutes of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, were a 16th-century codification of all the legislation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and its successor, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Statutes consist of three legal codes (1529, 1566 and 1588), all written in Ruthenian language, translated into Latin and later Polish. They formed the basis of the legal system of the Grand Duchy and were "the first full code of laws written in Europe since Roman Law".[1] The main sources of the statutes were Old Russian Law, in particular Old Slavic customary law, as well as international treaties and royal charters and proclamations of the 12th – 14th centuries.[1][2][3]

First and Second Statutes

The main purpose of the First Statute was to standardise and collect various tribal and customary laws in order to codify them as a single document.[citation needed]

The First Statute was drafted in 1522 and came into force in 1529 by the initiative of the Lithuanian Council of Lords. It has been proposed that the codification was initiated by Grand Chancellor of Lithuania Mikołaj Radziwiłł as a reworking and expansion of the Casimir Code.[4] The First Statute consisted of 13 Chapters and was divided into 282 Articles.[1] The first edition was redrafted and completed by his successor Albertas Goštautas, who assumed the position of the Grand Chancellor of Lithuania in 1522.[citation needed]

The First Statute was hand-written and survived in several copies.[1] Statutes of Lithuania were translated to Latin because of its superior terminology and to avoid ambiguity. Augustinus Rotundus was the most active proponent of Latin usage in the GDL.

The second statute came into effect in 1566 by the order of the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, Sigismund II Augustus, and was larger and more advanced. The Grand Duke did this because of pressure from the Lithuanian nobility, as the expansion of nobles' rights since the publication of the first statute had made it redundant. The second statute was prepared by a special commission, consisting of ten members, appointed by the Grand Duke and the Council of Lords.[citation needed]

This Second Statute made the rights of Orthodox Christians and Catholics equal. It consisted of 14 Chapters and contained 367 Articles.[1]

Third Statute

 
The Third Statute, 1588
 
Polish translation of the Third Statute

The Third Statute, described as an "outstanding monument of the legal, literary and linguistic culture",[5] was accepted in 1588 in response to the Union of Lublin, which created the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The main author and editor of this statute was the great Chancellor of Lithuania Lew Sapieha of Ruthenian origin. The statute was the first one to be printed (in contrast to the handwritten statutes before) in Ruthenian language using Cyrillic alphabet. Translations of the statute were printed in Muscovia and also in Poland, where at that time laws were not thoroughly codified and the Lithuanian statute was consulted in some cases where the corresponding or comparably similar Polish laws were unclear or missing.

The statute reorganized and modified existing law, and also included new laws. Novel features included a tendency toward severe penalties, including capital punishment, which was in line with the general reactionary retributive trend in contemporary European law (cf. Malleus Maleficarum). The statute also provided that crimes committed by or against people from different social ranks were punished alike, following the idea of equal worth of human life. Yet the hurdles for a peasant to have a noble tried and convicted were higher than the other way around. The statute was supported by Lithuanian magnates, as it granted them special powers and privileges allowing them to keep the lesser Lithuanian nobility[citation needed] and peasants in check. As a token for being acknowledged as Grand Duke of Lithuania, Sigismund III Vasa revised the Union of Lublin and approved the Third Lithuanian Statute.

Many features of the statute were not in line with the provisions of the Union of Lublin, which is not at all mentioned in the statute. The third article of the Statute provided that all lands of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania will be eternally within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and never become part of other states.[1] In this category fall e.g. the provisions about distributing local offices only to native people (or to people who had bought that status). So, too, do the many, detailed provisions about the Lithuanian estates' assemblies which eventually were abolished by the Lublin union treaty. Thus, in everyday legal practice, the statute trumped and even usurped the union treaty.

A group often opposing the statute was the Polish nobility, which viewed such inconsistencies as unconstitutional, particularly since the Union of Lublin stipulated that no law could conflict with the law of the Union. The statute, however, in turn, declared the laws that conflicted with itself to be unconstitutional. Statutes of Lithuania were also used in territories of Lithuania annexed by Poland shortly before the Union of Lublin. These conflicts between statutory schemes in Lithuania and Poland persisted for many years.

The third variant of the Statute had particularly many humane features, such as: double compensations for killing or hurting a woman; prohibition to enslave a free man for any crime; freedom of religion; and a recommendation to acquit the accused when there is a lack of evidence, instead of punishing the innocent. It was in force in the territory of Lithuania until 1840 when it was replaced by the Russian laws.[6] Until then, many Russian peasants and even nobles (e.g., Andrey Kurbsky) were fleeing from despotism in the neighboring Tsardom of Russia to Lithuania.[7]

The Third Statute consisted of 14 chapters:[1]

  • Chapter 1. "O parsune nasshoj gospodarskoj" (On the status of Grand Duke of Grand Duchy of Lithuania).
  • Chapter 2. "O oborone zemskoj" (On advocacy).
  • Chapter 3. "O volnostyah shlyahetskih i o rozmnozhen'yu Velikogo Knyazstva Litovskogo" (On noble privileges and on the development of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania).
  • Chapter 4. "O sud'yah i sudeh" (On the judges and courts of law).
  • Chapter 5. "O oprave posagu i o vene" (On inheritance).
  • Chapter 6. "O opekah" (On trustees)
  • Chapter 7. "O zapiseh i prodazheh" (On the conduct of business and taxes).
  • Chapter 8. "O testamentah"(On testaments).
  • Chapter 9. "O podkomoryh v poveteh i o pravah zemlenyh o granicah i mezhah" (On the local government and land ownership).
  • Chapter 10. "O puschu, o lovy, o derevo bortnoe, o ozera i senozhaty" (On the use of land resources: hunting, fishing, honey hunting, etc.).
  • Chapter 11. "O kgvalteh, o boeh, o golovschinah shlyahetskih" (On violations, fights and punishments of Szlachta)
  • Chapter 12. "O golovschineh i o navezkah lyudej prostyh i o takih lyudeh i chelyadi, kotoraya ot panov svoih othodit, takzhe o slugah prikaznyh" (On the rights and punishments of servants and non-aristocracy).
  • Chapter 13. "O grabezhah i navezkah" (On theft and robberies).
  • Chapter 14. "O zlodejstve vsyakogo stanu" (On various frauds and wrong doings).

Implications and developments

Copies of the statutes used to be kept in each powiat (district) so they could be used and seen by each person desiring to do so.[citation needed]

Attempts by the Lithuanian nobility to limit the power of Lithuanian magnates led to the equalization of laws movement, culminating in the reforms of the election sejm of 1697 (May–June),[8] confirmed in the coronation sejm of September 1697 in the document Porządek sądzenia spraw w Trybunale Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskego.[9] These reforms limited the jurisdiction and competency of several Lithuanian offices, such as those of the hetman, kanclerz (chancellor), marszałek (marshal) and podskarbi (under-treasurer), to equate them with those of the corresponding offices in the Polish crown. Many of these offices at the time were held by members of the Sapieha family, and the changes were at least partly made with a view to reducing their power. The reforms also instituted Polish as the administrative language, replacing Ruthenian, in written documents and court proceedings, contradicting the wording of the Third Statute.[10][11]

The Statutes of Lithuania were a sign of the progressive European legal tradition, and were cited as precedent in Polish and Livonian courts. Furthermore, they had a major influence on the 1649 encoding of the Russian legal code, Sobornoye Ulozheniye. After forming an association with Poland—including both the dynastic union (1385–1569) and the confederated Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569–1795)—the Lithuanian Statutes were the Grand Duchy's greatest expression of independence.[citation needed]

In 1791, efforts were made to change the system and do away with the privileges of the nobility, creating a constitutional monarchy with a modern citizenry (see Constitution of 3 May). However, these plans came to naught when Russia, abetted by Austria and Prussia, partitioned the Commonwealth, although leaving the Lithuanian Statutes in effect in Lithuania until 1840.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania". www.belarusguide.com. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  2. ^ Я. Юхо. Крыніцы беларуска-літоўскага права [The Sources of Belarusian-Lithuanian Law, by Jazep Jucho], Minsk, 1991, pp. 8 et al (in Belarusian)
  3. ^ Т.І.Доўнар, У.М.Сатолін, Я.А.Юхо. Статут Вялікага Княства Літоўскага 1566 года [The Statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania of 1566, by Taisija Doŭnar, Uladzimir Satolin and Jazep Jucho], Minsk, 2003, pp. 8 et al. (in Belarusian)
  4. ^ (in Lithuanian) E. Gudavičius, Stages of the Lithuanian Statute 27 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "The 1588 Statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania". National Library of the Republic of Belarus. Retrieved 21 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Antrasis ir Trečiasis Lietuvos Statutai". www.ldkistorija.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  7. ^ ""Istorijos detektyvai": kodėl Rusija siekia perrašyti Lietuvos istoriją?". LRT (in Lithuanian). 6 September 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  8. ^ Volumina Legum Vol. 5, pg. 417 - 421.
  9. ^ Jerzy Malec, Szkice z dziejów federalizmu i myśli federalistycznych w czasach nowożytnych, Wydawnictwo UJ, 1999, Kraków, ISBN 83-233-1278-8, Part II, Chapter I Koekwacja praw. Volumina Legum Vol. 6, pg. 12.
  10. ^ Paweł Jasienica Polska anarchia.
  11. ^ Paweł Jasienica, Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów. Cz. 3. Dzieje Agonii. Prószynski i S-ka. 2007. Pg. 34

External links

  • 1529 Statute Original (Polish)
  • 1588 Statute Original (Ruthenian) 5 Jul 2018

statutes, lithuania, originally, known, statutes, grand, duchy, lithuania, were, 16th, century, codification, legislation, grand, duchy, lithuania, successor, polish, lithuanian, commonwealth, statutes, consist, three, legal, codes, 1529, 1566, 1588, written, . The Statutes of Lithuania originally known as the Statutes of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were a 16th century codification of all the legislation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and its successor the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Statutes consist of three legal codes 1529 1566 and 1588 all written in Ruthenian language translated into Latin and later Polish They formed the basis of the legal system of the Grand Duchy and were the first full code of laws written in Europe since Roman Law 1 The main sources of the statutes were Old Russian Law in particular Old Slavic customary law as well as international treaties and royal charters and proclamations of the 12th 14th centuries 1 2 3 Contents 1 First and Second Statutes 2 Third Statute 3 Implications and developments 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFirst and Second Statutes Edit The First Statute 1529 First page of the Latin copy of Laurentius 1531 of the First Statute Page from the Second Statute 1588 Page from the Second Statute 1588The main purpose of the First Statute was to standardise and collect various tribal and customary laws in order to codify them as a single document citation needed The First Statute was drafted in 1522 and came into force in 1529 by the initiative of the Lithuanian Council of Lords It has been proposed that the codification was initiated by Grand Chancellor of Lithuania Mikolaj Radziwill as a reworking and expansion of the Casimir Code 4 The First Statute consisted of 13 Chapters and was divided into 282 Articles 1 The first edition was redrafted and completed by his successor Albertas Gostautas who assumed the position of the Grand Chancellor of Lithuania in 1522 citation needed The First Statute was hand written and survived in several copies 1 Statutes of Lithuania were translated to Latin because of its superior terminology and to avoid ambiguity Augustinus Rotundus was the most active proponent of Latin usage in the GDL The second statute came into effect in 1566 by the order of the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Sigismund II Augustus and was larger and more advanced The Grand Duke did this because of pressure from the Lithuanian nobility as the expansion of nobles rights since the publication of the first statute had made it redundant The second statute was prepared by a special commission consisting of ten members appointed by the Grand Duke and the Council of Lords citation needed This Second Statute made the rights of Orthodox Christians and Catholics equal It consisted of 14 Chapters and contained 367 Articles 1 Third Statute Edit The Third Statute 1588 Polish translation of the Third Statute The Third Statute described as an outstanding monument of the legal literary and linguistic culture 5 was accepted in 1588 in response to the Union of Lublin which created the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The main author and editor of this statute was the great Chancellor of Lithuania Lew Sapieha of Ruthenian origin The statute was the first one to be printed in contrast to the handwritten statutes before in Ruthenian language using Cyrillic alphabet Translations of the statute were printed in Muscovia and also in Poland where at that time laws were not thoroughly codified and the Lithuanian statute was consulted in some cases where the corresponding or comparably similar Polish laws were unclear or missing The statute reorganized and modified existing law and also included new laws Novel features included a tendency toward severe penalties including capital punishment which was in line with the general reactionary retributive trend in contemporary European law cf Malleus Maleficarum The statute also provided that crimes committed by or against people from different social ranks were punished alike following the idea of equal worth of human life Yet the hurdles for a peasant to have a noble tried and convicted were higher than the other way around The statute was supported by Lithuanian magnates as it granted them special powers and privileges allowing them to keep the lesser Lithuanian nobility citation needed and peasants in check As a token for being acknowledged as Grand Duke of Lithuania Sigismund III Vasa revised the Union of Lublin and approved the Third Lithuanian Statute Many features of the statute were not in line with the provisions of the Union of Lublin which is not at all mentioned in the statute The third article of the Statute provided that all lands of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania will be eternally within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and never become part of other states 1 In this category fall e g the provisions about distributing local offices only to native people or to people who had bought that status So too do the many detailed provisions about the Lithuanian estates assemblies which eventually were abolished by the Lublin union treaty Thus in everyday legal practice the statute trumped and even usurped the union treaty A group often opposing the statute was the Polish nobility which viewed such inconsistencies as unconstitutional particularly since the Union of Lublin stipulated that no law could conflict with the law of the Union The statute however in turn declared the laws that conflicted with itself to be unconstitutional Statutes of Lithuania were also used in territories of Lithuania annexed by Poland shortly before the Union of Lublin These conflicts between statutory schemes in Lithuania and Poland persisted for many years The third variant of the Statute had particularly many humane features such as double compensations for killing or hurting a woman prohibition to enslave a free man for any crime freedom of religion and a recommendation to acquit the accused when there is a lack of evidence instead of punishing the innocent It was in force in the territory of Lithuania until 1840 when it was replaced by the Russian laws 6 Until then many Russian peasants and even nobles e g Andrey Kurbsky were fleeing from despotism in the neighboring Tsardom of Russia to Lithuania 7 The Third Statute consisted of 14 chapters 1 Chapter 1 O parsune nasshoj gospodarskoj On the status of Grand Duke of Grand Duchy of Lithuania Chapter 2 O oborone zemskoj On advocacy Chapter 3 O volnostyah shlyahetskih i o rozmnozhen yu Velikogo Knyazstva Litovskogo On noble privileges and on the development of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Chapter 4 O sud yah i sudeh On the judges and courts of law Chapter 5 O oprave posagu i o vene On inheritance Chapter 6 O opekah On trustees Chapter 7 O zapiseh i prodazheh On the conduct of business and taxes Chapter 8 O testamentah On testaments Chapter 9 O podkomoryh v poveteh i o pravah zemlenyh o granicah i mezhah On the local government and land ownership Chapter 10 O puschu o lovy o derevo bortnoe o ozera i senozhaty On the use of land resources hunting fishing honey hunting etc Chapter 11 O kgvalteh o boeh o golovschinah shlyahetskih On violations fights and punishments of Szlachta Chapter 12 O golovschineh i o navezkah lyudej prostyh i o takih lyudeh i chelyadi kotoraya ot panov svoih othodit takzhe o slugah prikaznyh On the rights and punishments of servants and non aristocracy Chapter 13 O grabezhah i navezkah On theft and robberies Chapter 14 O zlodejstve vsyakogo stanu On various frauds and wrong doings Implications and developments EditCopies of the statutes used to be kept in each powiat district so they could be used and seen by each person desiring to do so citation needed Attempts by the Lithuanian nobility to limit the power of Lithuanian magnates led to the equalization of laws movement culminating in the reforms of the election sejm of 1697 May June 8 confirmed in the coronation sejm of September 1697 in the document Porzadek sadzenia spraw w Trybunale Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskego 9 These reforms limited the jurisdiction and competency of several Lithuanian offices such as those of the hetman kanclerz chancellor marszalek marshal and podskarbi under treasurer to equate them with those of the corresponding offices in the Polish crown Many of these offices at the time were held by members of the Sapieha family and the changes were at least partly made with a view to reducing their power The reforms also instituted Polish as the administrative language replacing Ruthenian in written documents and court proceedings contradicting the wording of the Third Statute 10 11 The Statutes of Lithuania were a sign of the progressive European legal tradition and were cited as precedent in Polish and Livonian courts Furthermore they had a major influence on the 1649 encoding of the Russian legal code Sobornoye Ulozheniye After forming an association with Poland including both the dynastic union 1385 1569 and the confederated Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569 1795 the Lithuanian Statutes were the Grand Duchy s greatest expression of independence citation needed In 1791 efforts were made to change the system and do away with the privileges of the nobility creating a constitutional monarchy with a modern citizenry see Constitution of 3 May However these plans came to naught when Russia abetted by Austria and Prussia partitioned the Commonwealth although leaving the Lithuanian Statutes in effect in Lithuania until 1840 See also EditLaw of Lithuania Old Russian LawReferences Edit a b c d e f g Statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania www belarusguide com Retrieved 21 June 2021 Ya Yuho Krynicy belaruska litoyskaga prava The Sources of Belarusian Lithuanian Law by Jazep Jucho Minsk 1991 pp 8 et al in Belarusian T I Doynar U M Satolin Ya A Yuho Statut Vyalikaga Knyastva Litoyskaga 1566 goda The Statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania of 1566 by Taisija Doŭnar Uladzimir Satolin and Jazep Jucho Minsk 2003 pp 8 et al in Belarusian in Lithuanian E Gudavicius Stages of the Lithuanian Statute Archived 27 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine The 1588 Statute of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania National Library of the Republic of Belarus Retrieved 21 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Antrasis ir Treciasis Lietuvos Statutai www ldkistorija lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 17 February 2018 Istorijos detektyvai kodel Rusija siekia perrasyti Lietuvos istorija LRT in Lithuanian 6 September 2017 Retrieved 6 September 2017 Volumina Legum Vol 5 pg 417 421 Jerzy Malec Szkice z dziejow federalizmu i mysli federalistycznych w czasach nowozytnych Wydawnictwo UJ 1999 Krakow ISBN 83 233 1278 8 Part II Chapter I Koekwacja praw Volumina Legum Vol 6 pg 12 Pawel Jasienica Polska anarchia Pawel Jasienica Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodow Cz 3 Dzieje Agonii Proszynski i S ka 2007 Pg 34External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Statutes of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1529 Statute Original Polish 1588 Statute Original Ruthenian Archived 5 Jul 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Statutes of Lithuania amp oldid 1136367591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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