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Principality of Navahrudak

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Principality of Navahrudak
Навагрудскае княства (Belarusian)
late 12th century–1300s
  Navahrudak in the 1260s, when it became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Ruthenia.
Status

(late 12th century–1220s)

  • Autonomous/independent principality

(1220s–1260s)

(1260s–1300s)

CapitalNavahrudak
Common languagesOld East Slavic, Ruthenian
Religion
Eastern Orthodoxy
GovernmentPrincipality
Prince of Navahrudak 
• 1237
Iziaslav of Navahrudak
LegislatureVeche
History 
• Established
late 12th century
• Secession from Horoden
1220s
1237–1240
• Incorporation into Lithuania
1390s
• Disestablished
1390s
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Kievan Rus' Kievan Rus'
Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Today part ofBelarus

The Principality of Navahrudak[1] or Novogrudok[a] was one of the appanage principalities of Black Ruthenia, emerging just before the end of Kievan Rus'. Its capital was Navahrudak, one of the centres of the region of Poniemnie or Panyamonne (in modern western Belarus). It was formed some time before the 1220s. For some time in the 13th and 14th centuries, it was the subject of struggle between the Gediminid Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Romanovychi Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia (Ruthenia). In the 1390s, the principality was abolished and incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

History

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Origins

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The exact date of the foundation of the appanage of Navahrudak is unknown. Navahrudak was part of the appanage principality of Turaŭ-Pinsk, and later of the Principality of Volhynia (centred in Volodymyr). It became part of the Principality of Horoden (Goroden) around 1141. The first prince of Navahrudak was one of the sons (Boris/Barys or Gleb/Hleb) of prince Usevalad (Vsevolod) of Horoden, who died that year. The Boris and Gleb Church was built during their reign.[citation needed]

13th century

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Navahrudak emerged as a separate principality in the 1220s, seceding from the Principality of Horoden.[citation needed] In 1237, Prince Iziaslav of Navahrudak, who is considered a descendant of Usevalad of Horoden, is mentioned in the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle under the year 1237 (or 1236). This entry states that the King of Ruthenia, Danylo Romanovych sent the Lithuanians under Duke Mindaugas (Mindovg/Mendovg) and Prince Iziaslav of Navahrudak (Novhorod[ok]) against Duke Konrad (Kondrat) of Mazovia:

  • "по том же лѣтѣ Данилъ же возведе на Кондрата Литвоу Минъдога Изѧслава Нов̑городьского."[2]
  • "А по тім році Данило-таки навів на Кондрата литву — [князя] Миндовга [та] Ізяслава [Микулича] Новгород[ок]ського."[3]
  • "The following year Danilo sent the Lithuanians, under [Prince] Mendovg, and [Prince] Izjaslav of Novgorod against Kondrat."[4]

Based on this record, it is believed that Iziaslav of Navahrudak, who was in alliance or vassalage with Danylo Romanovych, took part in the struggle against the Mazovian duke together with Mindaugas.[citation needed]


In 1254, under an agreement between Vaišvilkas and King Danylo Romanovych, the Principality of Navahrudak was transferred to Prince Roman Danylovich. In 1268, during the war between the Kingdom of Ruthenia and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, it was captured by the latter until 1280. For some time, Navahrudak was owned by Prince Skyrmunt (Скирмунт). From that time until the 1340s, the history of the principality is unknown. It was probably transferred as an appanage to younger sons or other representatives of the ruling dynasty of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. There is a hypothesis that it belonged to the princely house of Alšėniškiai (Halshansky).[citation needed]

14th century

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Around the 1330s or 1340s (probably at the death of Gediminas in 1341[5]), the Principality of Navahrudak was transferred to his son Karijotas, who reigned over it until c. 1360.[6]

Modern reconstruction of Navahrudak Castle

As early as 1352, there are mentions of activities of the sons of Karijotas in Volhynia.[7] The Tale about Podolia narrates in detail how they conquered Podolia in the 1350s and 1360s.[8] The Karijotas sons thus used Navahrudak as their base for expansion into what is now Western Ukraine.[7] One of the motives seems to have been that their clan was growing too large to properly divide Navahrudak into ever smaller pieces.[7] Thus, it seems that in the late 1350s or 1360s, the sons of Karijotas moved into Volhynia and Podolia, and out of Navahrudak, where the sons of Kęstutis (Keystut; Duke of Trakai) moved in.[6]

Karijotas' date of death is uncertain; he is last mentioned in writing in the 1358 treaty between the dukes of Mazovia and Kęstutis and his brothers, but not anymore in 1366, where that would have been expected.[6] It is therefore likely that Karijotas died between 1358 and 1366.[6] An undated document provides for the division of Navahrudak between Vaidotas (Voydat) and Tautvilas, sons of Kęstutis, probably between 1358 and 1362.[6] The reason is that Vaidotas was captured by the Teutonic Knights in his unsuccessful defence of Kaunas Castle in 1362.[6] Nicolas Jorga identified a "captured pagan king from Lecto[nia]" (most probably meaning "Lithuania") who according to the Eulogium historiarum sive temporis visited the English royal court in London in 1363, as this Vaidotas Kęstutaitis.[5] It is therefore neither likely nor necessary that he ever returned to Lithuania.[6]

  The Principality of Navahrudak (21.) in the year 1385, just before its abolition

Karijotas' son Theodor, Prince of Podolia, was also a prince of Navahrudak.[citation needed] After the death of Prince Yuri Voydatovich in the 1390s, the Principality of Navahrudak was abolished, and its lands were incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Ruthenia, where the Grand Duke's governors were appointed.[citation needed] Another son of Vaidotas (Voydat), Ivan, became the founder of the Principality of Kroshen.[citation needed]

List of princes

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Notes

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  1. ^ Belarusian: Навагрудскае княства, romanizedNavahrudskaye knyastva. Ukrainian: Новогрудське князівство, romanizedNovohrudsjke knjazistvo.

References

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  1. ^ Raffensperger & Ostrowski 2023, pp. 167–168.
  2. ^ Shakhmatov 1908, л.262об..
  3. ^ Makhnovets 1989, p. 392.
  4. ^ Perfecky 1973, p. 44.
  5. ^ a b c Jankauskas 2024, p. 206.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Jankauskas 2024, p. 207.
  7. ^ a b c Jankauskas 2024, pp. 206–207.
  8. ^ Slipushko 2022, p. 23.

Bibliography

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Primary sources

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  • Galician–Volhynian Chronicle (c. 1292)
    • * Shakhmatov, Aleksey Aleksandrovich, ed. (1908). Галицко-Волынскій сводъ [The Galician–Volhynian Codex]. Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles (PSRL) (in Church Slavic). Vol. 2 (3rd ed.). Saint Petersburg: Typography of M. A. Aleksandrov / Izbornyk. pp. 715–938. Retrieved 9 December 2024. – critical edition of the Hypatian Codex.
    • Perfecky, George A. (1973). The Hypatian Codex Part Two: The Galician–Volynian Chronicle. An annotated translation by George A. Perfecky (PDF). Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag. OCLC 902306.
    • Makhnovets, Leonid (1989). Літопис Руський за Іпатським списком : Галицько-Волинський літопис [Rus' Chronicle according to the Hypatian Codex : Galician–Volhynian Chronicle] (in Ukrainian). Kyiv: Dnipro. p. 591. ISBN 5-308-00052-2. Retrieved 18 July 2024. — A modern annotated Ukrainian translation of the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle, based on the Hypatian Codex with comments from the Khlebnikov Codex.

Literature

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