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{{Campaignbox Lithuanian Crusade}} |
{{Campaignbox Lithuanian Crusade}} |
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The '''Lithuanian Crusade''' was a series of |
The '''Lithuanian Crusade''' was a series of campaigns by the [[Teutonic Order]] and the [[Livonian Order]] under the pretext of forcibly [[Christianization|Christianizing]] the pagan [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]]. The Livonian Order occupied [[Riga]] in 1202 and in the 1230s they settled in [[Chełmno Land]], a [[fief]] of Poland. They first conquered other neighboring [[Baltic tribes]]—[[Curonians]], [[Semigallians]], [[Latgalians]], [[Selonians]], and [[Old Prussians]]—in the [[Livonian Crusade]] and [[Prussian Crusade]]. |
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The first raid against the [[Lithuanians]] and [[Samogitia]]ns was in 1208. From then on, the orders played a key role in Lithuanian politics, but they were not a direct threat until the 1280s. By that time, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was already a centralized state and could mount defenses. For the next century, the order organized annual [[colonialism|colonialist]] {{lang|lt|reise}} (raids) into Samogitian and Lithuanian lands, without great success but at immense human cost. Border regions in Samogitia and [[Suvalkija]] became sparsely inhabited wilderness due to [[ethnic cleansing]], although the order gained very little territory. The resulting wars between the Teutonic Order and Lithuania were one of the longest conflicts in the history of Europe. |
The first raid against the [[Lithuanians]] and [[Samogitia]]ns was in 1208. From then on, the orders played a key role in Lithuanian politics, but they were not a direct threat until the 1280s. By that time, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was already a centralized state and could mount defenses. For the next century, the order organized annual [[colonialism|colonialist]] {{lang|lt|reise}} (raids) into Samogitian and Lithuanian lands, without great success but at immense human cost. Border regions in Samogitia and [[Suvalkija]] became sparsely inhabited wilderness due to [[ethnic cleansing]], although the order gained very little territory. The resulting wars between the Teutonic Order and Lithuania were one of the longest conflicts in the history of Europe. |
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Crusaders claimed to wage war to convert non-Christian "infidels" to Christianity by force. In the 12th century, [[Bernard of Clairvaux|St. Bernard of Clairvaux]] wrote that the killing of pagans was also justified: "The Christian glories in the death of the pagan, because Christ is glorified."<ref>{{Cite web |title=The death of the pagan {{!}} InContext |url=https://christianhistoryinstitute.org/incontext/article/bernard/ |access-date=21 April 2021 |website=Christian History Institute |language=en}}</ref> Only in the 15th century, with the [[Council of Constance]], would that view be contested and a discussion on the rights of pagans begun.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Christiansen |first=Eric |title=The northern Crusades |date=1997 |publisher=Penguin |isbn=0-14-026653-4 |edition=2nd, new |location=London, England |page=231}}</ref> Lithuania itself accepted various religions—during the reign of kings [[Mindaugas]] and [[Gediminas]], Franciscan and Dominican monasteries had already been established in Lithuania with Lithuanian monks. In his letters to the pope, Gediminas complained that crusaders destroyed Christian churches to have a pretext for war. |
Crusaders claimed to wage war to convert non-Christian "infidels" to Christianity by force. In the 12th century, [[Bernard of Clairvaux|St. Bernard of Clairvaux]] wrote that the killing of pagans was also justified: "The Christian glories in the death of the pagan, because Christ is glorified."<ref>{{Cite web |title=The death of the pagan {{!}} InContext |url=https://christianhistoryinstitute.org/incontext/article/bernard/ |access-date=21 April 2021 |website=Christian History Institute |language=en}}</ref> Only in the 15th century, with the [[Council of Constance]], would that view be contested and a discussion on the rights of pagans begun.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Christiansen |first=Eric |title=The northern Crusades |date=1997 |publisher=Penguin |isbn=0-14-026653-4 |edition=2nd, new |location=London, England |page=231}}</ref> Lithuania itself accepted various religions—during the reign of kings [[Mindaugas]] and [[Gediminas]], Franciscan and Dominican monasteries had already been established in Lithuania with Lithuanian monks. In his letters to the pope, Gediminas complained that crusaders destroyed Christian churches to have a pretext for war. |
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The [[Northern Crusades|Baltic Crusade]] started in 1197. The first encounters of militant Christian missionaries with the Lithuanians occurred in 1185, when [[Saint Meinhard]] was attacked by the Lithuanians.{{r|Turnbull2}} Lithuanian troops were also supporting the local resistance of [[Semigallians]] and [[Latgalians]]. The [[Teutonic Order]] was given land near [[Toruń]] in the 1220s by [[Konrad I of Masovia]], bringing the crusaders closer to Lithuanian lands.{{r|Murray2|p=415}} With the arrival of the first Teutonic crusaders, led by [[Hermann Balk]], in [[Chełmno |
The [[Northern Crusades|Baltic Crusade]] started in 1197. The first encounters of militant Christian missionaries with the Lithuanians occurred in 1185, when [[Saint Meinhard]] was attacked by the Lithuanians.{{r|Turnbull2}} Lithuanian troops were also supporting the local resistance of [[Semigallians]] and [[Latgalians]]. The [[Teutonic Order]] was given land near [[Toruń]] in the 1220s by [[Konrad I of Masovia]], bringing the crusaders closer to Lithuanian lands.{{r|Murray2|p=415}} With the arrival of the first Teutonic crusaders, led by [[Hermann Balk]], in [[Chełmno Land]] in 1230, the religious traditions of modern-day [[Estonia]] and [[Latvia]] began to slowly turn towards Catholicism.{{r|Christiansen|p=17}} There had already been shared religious beliefs between the Germanic and Lithuanian peoples, like the veneration of the god [[Perkūnas]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jaskievicz |first=Walter C. |title=A Study in Lithuanian Mythology: Jan XX Lasicki's Samogitian Gods |date=1952 |publisher=University of Indiana |page=92 |oclc=903668447}}</ref> |
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In the 1230s, there were military clashes between the Christians and the Lithuanians near the northern borders of what was then part of [[Livonia]]. The [[Livonian Brothers of the Sword]], founded in 1202, began campaigns to expand into the area. Through the [[Livonian Crusade]], they conquered the [[Terra Mariana]] that bordered Lithuanian [[Samogitia]], which increased conflicts.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Pennick |first=Nigel |title=Pagan magic of the northern tradition : customs, rites, and ceremonies |date=2015 |isbn=978-16-20-55390-9 |location=Rochester |page=15}}</ref> Those conflicts reached their apex in 1236 with the [[Battle of Saule]] near [[Šiauliai]]—the Livonian Brothers of the Sword suffered a disastrous defeat. Only 10% of their army survived and more than 48 of their knights were killed.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Heath |first=Ian |title=Armies of Feudal Europe 1066-1300 |date=2016 |isbn=9781326256524 |page=128}}</ref>{{r|Carpini|p=181}} In light of their defeat and outstanding debts, the order was forced to become a branch of the Teutonic Order called the [[Livonian Order]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bain |first=Carolyn |title=Estonia Lettonia e Lituania |date=2009 |publisher=EDT |isbn=978-88-6040-463-3 |edition=3 |
In the 1230s, there were military clashes between the Christians and the Lithuanians near the northern borders of what was then part of [[Livonia]]. The [[Livonian Brothers of the Sword]], founded in 1202, began campaigns to expand into the area. Through the [[Livonian Crusade]], they conquered the [[Terra Mariana]] that bordered Lithuanian [[Samogitia]], which increased conflicts.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Pennick |first=Nigel |title=Pagan magic of the northern tradition : customs, rites, and ceremonies |date=2015 |isbn=978-16-20-55390-9 |location=Rochester |page=15}}</ref> Those conflicts reached their apex in 1236 with the [[Battle of Saule]] near [[Šiauliai]]—the Livonian Brothers of the Sword suffered a disastrous defeat. Only 10% of their army survived and more than 48 of their knights were killed.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Heath |first=Ian |title=Armies of Feudal Europe 1066-1300 |date=2016 |isbn=9781326256524 |page=128|publisher=Lulu.com }}</ref>{{r|Carpini|p=181}} In light of their defeat and outstanding debts, the order was forced to become a branch of the Teutonic Order called the [[Livonian Order]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bain |first=Carolyn |title=Estonia Lettonia e Lituania |date=2009 |publisher=EDT |isbn=978-88-6040-463-3 |edition=3 |location=Torino |page=24 |language=IT}}</ref> |
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The military campaigns of the reformed Livonian Order against Lithuanians were still unsuccessful. Even with support from the Teutonic Order, the Christian Livonians suffered major defeats in the battles of [[Battle of Durbe|Durbe]] (1260),<ref name="Jurgėla">{{Cite book |last=Jurgėla |first=Constantine Rudyard |title=History of the Lithuanian Nation |date=1948 |publisher=Institute of Lithuanian Culture |page=158}}</ref> [[Battle of Karuse|Karuse]] (1270), and [[Battle of Aizkraukle|Aizkraukle]] (1279). These losses weakened the Teutonic Order, allowing for the [[Prussian uprisings#The Great Prussian Uprising (1260–1274)|Great Prussian Uprising]].{{r|Christiansen|p=18}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Paliepa |first=Janis |title=Origin Of The Baltic And Vedic Languages : Baltic Mythology. |date=2011 |publisher=Authorhouse |isbn=978-14-56-72901-1}}</ref> When the converted king of Lithuania, Mindaugas, was assassinated in 1263, the region entered an era of instability.{{r|Carpini|p=181}} Lithuanians supported the Prussian uprisings and arranged military raids together with Prussians and Yotvingians |
The military campaigns of the reformed Livonian Order against Lithuanians were still unsuccessful. Even with support from the Teutonic Order, the Christian Livonians suffered major defeats in the battles of [[Battle of Durbe|Durbe]] (1260),<ref name="Jurgėla">{{Cite book |last=Jurgėla |first=Constantine Rudyard |title=History of the Lithuanian Nation |date=1948 |publisher=Institute of Lithuanian Culture |page=158}}</ref> [[Battle of Karuse|Karuse]] (1270), and [[Battle of Aizkraukle|Aizkraukle]] (1279). These losses weakened the Teutonic Order, allowing for the [[Prussian uprisings#The Great Prussian Uprising (1260–1274)|Great Prussian Uprising]].{{r|Christiansen|p=18}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Paliepa |first=Janis |title=Origin Of The Baltic And Vedic Languages : Baltic Mythology. |date=2011 |publisher=Authorhouse |isbn=978-14-56-72901-1}}</ref> When the converted king of Lithuania, Mindaugas, was assassinated in 1263, the region entered an era of instability.{{r|Carpini|p=181}} Lithuanians supported the Prussian uprisings and arranged military raids together with Prussians and Yotvingians. These included the 1264 siege of Vėluva (Wehlau) castle in [[Sambia Peninsula|Sambia]] during the reign of [[Treniota]] and the revenge taken against Poland for the Yotvingians, led by [[Vaišvilkas]] and [[Shvarn|Švarnas]]. |
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Only in 1283, after the reconquest of the Prussians, did the Teutonic Order focus its campaigns on the fragile, [[History of Lithuania (1219–95)#Kingdom of Lithuania|newly formed Kingdom of Lithuania]].{{r|Carpini|p=26}} |
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==Objectives== |
==Objectives== |
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[[File:Teutonic Order 1260.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Teutonic State borders in 1226 and 1260, showing how Samogitia divided the order's territories]] |
[[File:Teutonic Order 1260.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Teutonic State borders in 1226 and 1260, showing how Samogitia divided the order's territories]] |
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The Teutonic Order initially planned to incorporate all of Lithuania into the [[Teutonic State]], as it had with Prussia, but those plans faced strong Lithuanian resistance.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Norkus |first=Zenonas |title=An unproclaimed empire : the Grand Duchy of Lithuania : from the viewpoint of comparative historical sociology of empires |date=2017 |isbn=978-13-51-66905-4 |location=Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon |page=284}}</ref> The Teutonic Order's principal objective was to conquer the Lithuanian lowland region, Samogitia, and build fortresses there to solidify their control. Like a wedge, Samogitia separated the territories conquered by the Teutonic Order and those conquered by the Livonian Order. By subjecting |
The Teutonic Order initially planned to incorporate all of Lithuania into the [[Teutonic State]], as it had with Prussia, but those plans faced strong Lithuanian resistance.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Norkus |first=Zenonas |title=An unproclaimed empire : the Grand Duchy of Lithuania : from the viewpoint of comparative historical sociology of empires |date=2017 |isbn=978-13-51-66905-4 |location=Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon |page=284}}</ref> The Teutonic Order's principal objective was to conquer the Lithuanian lowland region, Samogitia, and build fortresses there to solidify their control. Like a wedge, Samogitia separated the territories conquered by the Teutonic Order and those conquered by the Livonian Order. By subjecting Samogitia, the order would be able to unify its administration of both territories.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Mänd |first1=Anu |title=Making Livonia : actors and networks in the medieval and early modern Baltic Sea Region |last2=Tamm |first2=Marek |date=2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-10-00-07693-6 |location=Abingdon, Oxon |page=117}}</ref> Starting with the reign of Gediminas, Lithuania also began rapidly expanding eastward, conquering [[Ruthenians|Ruthenian]] lands and gaining more resources for its long-lasting wars. |
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For the order, the promotion of Christianity had a strong ideological impetus. When the battles around Jerusalem ceased after the [[Siege of Acre (1291)|Siege of Acre]] in 1291, Christian religious groups turned their military efforts toward eastern Europe and the [[Iberian Peninsula]], intent on conquest or reconquest.{{r|Cardini|p=117}} The Lithuanian rulers vehemently disputed the concept of baptism and regularly carried out raids and conquests on Germanic lands. As a result, the order became focused on suppressing them as a potent, pagan enemy.{{r|Carpini|p=45}} However, the Teutonic argument for the conversion of Lithuanian pagans became, by the end, mostly a pretext for expansion.{{r|Murray|p=21}}{{r|Kirby|p=26}} |
For the order, the promotion of Christianity had a strong ideological impetus. When the battles around Jerusalem ceased after the [[Siege of Acre (1291)|Siege of Acre]] in 1291, Christian religious groups turned their military efforts toward eastern Europe and the [[Iberian Peninsula]], intent on conquest or reconquest.{{r|Cardini|p=117}} The Lithuanian rulers vehemently disputed the concept of baptism and regularly carried out raids and conquests on Germanic lands. As a result, the order became focused on suppressing them as a potent, pagan enemy.{{r|Carpini|p=45}} However, the Teutonic argument for the conversion of Lithuanian pagans became, by the end, mostly a pretext for expansion.{{r|Murray|p=21}}{{r|Kirby|p=26}} |
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==Phases of the conflict== |
==Phases of the conflict== |
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===Beginnings and Vytenis's rule (1283–1315)=== |
===Beginnings and Vytenis's rule (1283–1315)=== |
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[[File:Lithuanian Military History. Lithuanian swords, 13th century, VDKM.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Lithuanian swords, dating to the 13th century]] |
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In 1283, chronicler [[Peter of Dusburg]] noted that the Teutonic Order finalized its [[Prussian Crusade|conquest of Prussia]] and of the [[Yotvingians]]. Some Yotvingians retreated to Lithuania, and some the crusaders deported to Sambia. The Lithuanian Crusade began in the winter of 1283.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Baranauskas |first=Tomas |title=Vėlyvieji viduramžiai I dalis (1283–1386 m.) |url=http://viduramziu.istorija.net/c1283.htm |access-date=28 June 2020 |language=LT}}</ref> |
In 1283, chronicler [[Peter of Dusburg]] noted that the Teutonic Order finalized its [[Prussian Crusade|conquest of Prussia]] and of the [[Yotvingians]]. Some Yotvingians retreated to Lithuania, and some the crusaders deported to Sambia. The Lithuanian Crusade began in the winter of 1283.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Baranauskas |first=Tomas |title=Vėlyvieji viduramžiai I dalis (1283–1386 m.) |url=http://viduramziu.istorija.net/c1283.htm |access-date=28 June 2020 |language=LT}}</ref> |
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The first target of the Teutons was [[Bisenė]] on the western Lithuanian border.<ref name=lad/> Teutonic soldiers commanded by Prussian Landmeister Konrad von Thierberg crossed the frozen [[Neman River]] and attacked the Lithuanian fortress in the morning. It fell in the afternoon and was burned to the ground. After the burning of [[Kolainiai (fortress)|Kolainiai]] in 1291 and Bisenė in 1316, Junigeda (now called [[Veliuona]]) became the westernmost Lithuanian fortress along the river.<ref name=baran/> In 1298, Lithuanian leader Vytenis attacked the Livonian crusaders in [[Courland]], a part of the [[Archdiocese of Riga]].{{r|Christiansen|p=29}} After initial successes by the crusaders, the two sides fought in the [[Battle of Turaida]] after Vytenis forged an alliance with the citizens of [[Riga]], a city ostensibly under the control of the Livonian Order.{{r|Rowell|p=55–59}} |
The first target of the Teutons was [[Bisenė]] on the western Lithuanian border.<ref name=lad/> Teutonic soldiers commanded by Prussian Landmeister Konrad von Thierberg crossed the frozen [[Neman River]] and attacked the Lithuanian fortress in the morning. It fell in the afternoon and was burned to the ground. After the burning of [[Kolainiai (fortress)|Kolainiai]] in 1291 and Bisenė in 1316, Junigeda (now called [[Veliuona]]) became the westernmost Lithuanian fortress along the river.<ref name=baran/> In 1298, Lithuanian leader Vytenis attacked the Livonian crusaders in [[Courland]], a part of the [[Archdiocese of Riga]].{{r|Christiansen|p=29}} After initial successes by the crusaders, the two sides fought in the [[Battle of Turaida]] after Vytenis forged an alliance with the citizens of [[Riga]], a city ostensibly under the control of the Livonian Order.{{r|Rowell|p=55–59}} |
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The conflicts resumed with the coronation of [[Vytenis|Grand Duke Vytenis]] of Lithuania in 1303. Vytenis wanted to confront Lithuania's northern and eastern neighbors. He sent 2,000 armed knights to his borders{{r|Christiansen|p=23}} while isolated Lithuanian troops raided Prussia. More stable after suppressing the Prussian revolts of 1283, the Teutonic Order sent military units to [[Semigallia]] and [[Skalvia]], then under Lithuanian control. Several years of relative calm followed until the Teutonic Order decided to strike at Samogitia.{{r|Urban|p=52}} |
The conflicts resumed with the coronation of [[Vytenis|Grand Duke Vytenis]] of Lithuania in 1303. Vytenis wanted to confront Lithuania's northern and eastern neighbors. He sent 2,000 armed knights to his borders{{r|Christiansen|p=23}}, while isolated Lithuanian troops raided Prussia. More stable after suppressing the Prussian revolts of 1283, the Teutonic Order sent military units to [[Semigallia]] and [[Skalvia]], then under Lithuanian control. Several years of relative calm followed until the Teutonic Order decided to strike at Samogitia.{{r|Urban|p=52}} |
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The Teutonic Knights organized around 20 raids into the region.<ref name=el/> Vytenis took measures to undermine the influence of local Samogitian nobles, evidenced by an increasing number of traitors and refugees.<ref name= kiaupa/> The Livonian Order consolidated its control over Semigallia, where Lithuanians had garrisons since the Battle of Aizkraukle. In 1313, the Livonian Order captured [[Daugavpils|Dynaburg]] Castle, which the Lithuanians had controlled since 1281.<ref name=lv/> |
The Teutonic Knights organized around 20 raids into the region.<ref name=el/> Vytenis took measures to undermine the influence of local Samogitian nobles, evidenced by an increasing number of traitors and refugees.<ref name= kiaupa/> The Livonian Order consolidated its control over Semigallia, where Lithuanians had garrisons since the Battle of Aizkraukle. In 1313, the Livonian Order captured [[Daugavpils|Dynaburg]] Castle, which the Lithuanians had controlled since 1281.<ref name=lv/> |
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[[File:Ruine der Ordensburg Ragnit.jpg|thumb|Ruin of a Teutonic fortification in Neman]] |
[[File:Ruine der Ordensburg Ragnit.jpg|thumb|Ruin of a Teutonic fortification in Neman]] |
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To better demarcate and defend its eastern border against the Lithuanian advances, the Teutonic Order took to erecting small fortresses and fortified |
To better demarcate and defend its eastern border against the Lithuanian advances, the Teutonic Order took to erecting small fortresses and [[fortified house]]s.{{r|Turnbull}} The garrisons often contained a few knights with more soldiers and squires. The defenders left only to raid Lithuanian lands. The forts were menacing just because of their strategic location. Some of the most imposing were in [[Neman, Russia|Neman]], [[Sovetsk, Kaliningrad Oblast|Sovetsk]], and [[Mayovka, Kaliningrad Oblast|Mayovka]].{{r|Urban|p=90–91}} |
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Vytenis reacted to the movements of the order in 1311 by directing his best cavalry toward [[Masuria]] and unreinforced areas of the Prussian border. Despite 4,000 Lithuanian cavalry, they were surprised and expelled by forces led by Landmarschall Heinrich von Plötzke.{{r|Urban|p=53–54}} But the Christian population's general fear of the "savage pagans" did not change with the victory, especially not among German colonists in rural areas of the order's territory.{{r|Urban|p=53–54}} Vytenis's last great attack came in October 1315, shortly before his death.{{r|Rowell|p=55}} |
Vytenis reacted to the movements of the order in 1311 by directing his best cavalry toward [[Masuria]] and unreinforced areas of the Prussian border. Despite 4,000 Lithuanian cavalry, they were surprised and expelled by forces led by Landmarschall Heinrich von Plötzke.{{r|Urban|p=53–54}} But the Christian population's general fear of the "savage pagans" did not change with the victory, especially not among German colonists in rural areas of the order's territory.{{r|Urban|p=53–54}} Vytenis's last great attack came in October 1315, shortly before his death.{{r|Rowell|p=55}} |
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===Reign of Gediminas (1316–1345)=== |
===Reign of Gediminas (1316–1345)=== |
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During Gediminas's rule as grand duke of Lithuania, the war intensified on the northern and western borders with the Teutonic Order. Gediminas allied himself with the king of Poland, [[Władysław I Łokietek]], |
During Gediminas's rule as grand duke of Lithuania, the war intensified on the northern and western borders with the Teutonic Order. Gediminas allied himself with the king of Poland, [[Władysław I Łokietek]], through a series of marriages in 1325–1328.{{r|Christiansen|p=34}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Baltrušienė |first=Doloresa |title=Acquaintance with Lithuania : book of the millennium |date=1999 |publisher=Kraštotvarka |isbn=978-99-86-89228-1 |location=Kaunas |page=20}}</ref> Poland became more hostile toward the Teutonic Order due to their dispute over the dominion of [[Pomerania]]. As a result, Łokietek stipulated an anti-Teutonic defensive military pact with Gediminas in 1330–1331. |
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In the winter of 1329, King [[John of Bohemia]] formed an army to participate in the crusade.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hinson |first=E. Glenn |title=The church triumphant : a history of Christianity up to 1300 |date=1995 |publisher=Mercer University Press |isbn=978-08-65-54436-9 |location=Macon, GA, USA |page=438}}</ref> Strengthened by this support, the knights of the order were able to capture several important fortresses in Samogitia. Conflicts with the king of Poland and limited contributions from John of Bohemia delayed the conquest of further territories.<ref |
In the winter of 1329, King [[John of Bohemia]] formed an army to participate in the crusade.<ref name="auto">{{Cite book |last=Hinson |first=E. Glenn |title=The church triumphant : a history of Christianity up to 1300 |date=1995 |publisher=Mercer University Press |isbn=978-08-65-54436-9 |location=Macon, GA, USA |page=438}}</ref> Strengthened by this support, the knights of the order were able to capture several important fortresses in Samogitia. Conflicts with the king of Poland and limited contributions from John of Bohemia delayed the conquest of further territories.<ref name="auto"/> |
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[[File:Duke Margiris defending Pilėnai against Teutonic Knights 1336.PNG|thumb|''Duke [[Margiris]] defending Pilėnai against Teutonic Knights'', Władysław Majeranowski, 19th century]] |
[[File:Duke Margiris defending Pilėnai against Teutonic Knights 1336.PNG|thumb|''Duke [[Margiris]] defending Pilėnai against Teutonic Knights'', Władysław Majeranowski, 19th century]] |
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Because the conflict between the Teutonic State and Poland |
Because the conflict between the Teutonic State and Poland had resumed in 1330, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania experienced a respite. The crusaders prevailed against the Polish in [[Kuyavia]] in 1331.{{r|Christiansen|p=36}} In 1336, a large army supported by John of Bohemia and his son-in-law, [[Henry XIV, Duke of Bavaria|Henry XIV]], crossed the [[Neman]] in Samogitia and attacked the castle of [[Pilėnai]].<ref name="Zigmantas">{{Cite book |last=Kiaupa |first=Zigmantas |title=The history of Lithuania before 1795 |date=2000 |publisher=Lithuanian Institute of History |isbn=978-99-86-81013-1 |location=Vilnius |page=102}}</ref> Seeing their defeat, the defenders burned the fortress's goods and killed themselves. Once the fortress was conquered, the Teutonic Knights replaced it with a new fortification they baptized [[Bayernburg]] ({{lang|lt|Raudonpilis}}) in honor of Henry XIV. They hoped the fort would serve as a foothold for further campaigns into the region.{{r|Urban|p=100}} After the withdrawal of most of the order's army, Bayernburg was stormed and destroyed by Lithuanian troops led by Gediminas in person. According to local tradition, he was shot by an arrow under an oak tree that still exists outside the fortifications. He more likely died in 1341, a year in which the fighting temporarily subsided.{{r|Rowell|p=270}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bazan |first=Lubov |title=A history of Belarus : a non-literary essay that explains the ethnogenesis of the Belarusians |date=2014 |publisher=Glagoslav Publications |isbn=978-19-09-15661-6 |location=London |page=74}}</ref> |
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===The brothers Algirdas and Kęstutis (1345–1382)=== |
===The brothers Algirdas and Kęstutis (1345–1382)=== |
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[[File:Malbork - Winrich von Kniprode.JPG|thumb|Sculpture of Teutonic commander [[Winrich von Kniprode]]]] |
[[File:Malbork - Winrich von Kniprode.JPG|thumb|Sculpture of Teutonic commander [[Winrich von Kniprode]]]] |
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In 1352, led by von Kniprode, now [[Grand Master of the Teutonic Order|grand master of the Teutonic Order]], the Teutonic State began a period of quiet growth |
In 1352, led by von Kniprode, now [[Grand Master of the Teutonic Order|grand master of the Teutonic Order]], the Teutonic State began a period of quiet growth and avoided disagreements with the Kingdom of Poland.<ref name="Milliman">{{Cite book |last=Milliman |first=Paul |title="The slippery memory of men" : the place of Pomerania in the medieval Kingdom of Poland |date=2013 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-18274-5 |location=Leiden |page=255}}</ref> In 1358, Holy Roman Emperor [[Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles IV]] expressed a desire for peace if the Lithuanian sovereign would accept Christianity.{{r|Urban|p=144}}{{r|Carpini|p=37}} Algirdas stipulated the complete withdrawal of the Teutonic Order from the Baltic region, which Charles IV rejected because he needed support from the order.<ref>Algirdas did make other requests. He asked for the return of all the lands recently conquered by the order, and for the order to direct its aggressions toward the Tartars to aid the Lithuanians in conquering [[Ruthenia]]. Norkis, p. 340</ref> The war only ended in 1361 when a marshal of the order, [[Henning Schindekopf]], and [[Louis I of Hungary]] succeeded in capturing Kęstutis.{{r|Carpini|p=183}} The poet and herald [[Peter Suchenwirt]] wrote a poem to commemorate the capture, when Kęstutis apparently swore an oath to convert to Christianity.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Alssen |first=Liuda |date=1978 |title=Peter Suchenwirt and the "Drang nach Osten" - Liuda Alssen |url=http://www.lituanus.org/1978/78_4_01.htm |journal=Lituanus: Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences |volume=24 |issue=4 |issn=0024-5089}}</ref> Kęstutis successfully escaped from his imprisonment in [[Malbork Castle]] in 1362.{{r|Carpini|p=183}} |
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That April, a Teutonic army destroyed the [[Kaunas Castle]], which was situated well within the borders of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.{{r|Zigmantas|p=123}} That success marked the beginning of a period of mutual devastation<ref>{{Cite book |last=Arnaszus |first=Helmut |title=Reiseführer durch Litauen und ehemaliges Ostpreussen |date=1990 |work=Mokslas |isbn=978-54-20-01025-9 |location=Vilnius |page=161 |language=German}}</ref> that only ended when both adversaries were significantly weakened. Between 1362 and 1370, the crusaders made 20 "punitive expeditions" into Lithuania. (They would complete 52 by 1382.){{r|Zigmantas|p=55}} In response, Kęstutis and Algirdas gathered military contingents from all of Lithuania, from Russian feudal lords faithful to the grand duchy, and from the [[Tatars]] who were disposed to help because they shared a border with the Teutonic State near [[Königsberg]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jučas |first=M. |title=The battle of Grünwald |date=2009 |publisher=National Museum |isbn=978-60-99-50745-3 |location=Vilnius |page=27}}</ref> |
That April, a Teutonic army destroyed the [[Kaunas Castle]], which was situated well within the borders of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.{{r|Zigmantas|p=123}} That success marked the beginning of a period of mutual devastation<ref>{{Cite book |last=Arnaszus |first=Helmut |title=Reiseführer durch Litauen und ehemaliges Ostpreussen |date=1990 |work=Mokslas |isbn=978-54-20-01025-9 |location=Vilnius |page=161 |language=German}}</ref> that only ended when both adversaries were significantly weakened. Between 1362 and 1370, the crusaders made 20 "punitive expeditions" into Lithuania. (They would complete 52 by 1382.){{r|Zigmantas|p=55}} In response, Kęstutis and Algirdas gathered military contingents from all of Lithuania, from Russian feudal lords faithful to the grand duchy, and from the [[Tatars]] who were disposed to help because they shared a border with the Teutonic State near [[Königsberg]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jučas |first=M. |title=The battle of Grünwald |date=2009 |publisher=National Museum |isbn=978-60-99-50745-3 |location=Vilnius |page=27}}</ref> |
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A new phase began in 1377 with the death of Algirdas.{{r|Cardini|p=75}} In Lithuania, a power struggle erupted between Algirdas's sons, Kęstutis, and Kęstutis's son [[Vytautas]]. Alternating alliances were forged with former opponents to the north and west since the question of Christian conversion had lost energy in the preceding century. |
A new phase began in 1377 with the death of Algirdas.{{r|Cardini|p=75}} In Lithuania, a power struggle erupted between Algirdas's sons, Kęstutis, and Kęstutis's son [[Vytautas]]. Alternating alliances were forged with former opponents to the north and west since the question of Christian conversion had lost energy in the preceding century. |
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In 1380, with the secret [[Treaty of Dovydiškės]], the Teutonic Order supported Algirdas's heir, [[Jogaila]], against Kęstutis in exchange for various concessions.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Koncius |first=Joseph B. |title=Vytautas the Great: Grand Duke of Lithuania |date=1964 |publisher=Franklin Press |page=22}}</ref> While Kęstutis remained a prisoner of Jogaila through 1382, Vytautas escaped and fled to his cousin in the Teutonic State, trusting in their help to depose Jogaila and his allies.{{r|Cardini|p=76}} |
In 1380, with the secret [[Treaty of Dovydiškės]], the Teutonic Order supported Algirdas's heir, [[Jogaila]], against Kęstutis in exchange for various concessions.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Koncius |first=Joseph B. |title=Vytautas the Great: Grand Duke of Lithuania |date=1964 |publisher=Franklin Press |page=22}}</ref> While Kęstutis remained a prisoner of Jogaila through 1382, Vytautas escaped and fled to his cousin in the Teutonic State, trusting in their help to depose Jogaila and his allies.{{r|Cardini|p=76}} There, he converted to Christianity. |
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This power struggle ended in the summer of 1384, leading to a pause as the [[Christianization of Lithuania]] progressed.{{r|Christiansen|p=70}} Jogaila went to the Polish nobility, the ''[[szlachta]]'', to ask to marry Queen [[Jadwiga of Poland]].{{r|Cardini|p=78}} Their conversations about the marriage and Jogaila's converting to Christianity created a more stable relationship between Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Frost |first=Robert I. |title=The Oxford History of Poland-Lithuania: Volume I: The Making of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, 1385-1569 |date=2018 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-01-92-56814-4 |page=30}}</ref> The treaty of the agreement, the [[Union of Krewo]], set the two countries on a path of increasing closeness, eventually leading to the [[Polish–Lithuanian union]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mistrini |first=Vincenzo |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4WO7DQAAQBAJ&q=unione+di+krewo+lituania&pg=PT60 |title=Le guerre polacco-ottomane (1593-1699), vol. 1: Le forze in campo |date=2016 |publisher=Soldiershop Publishing |isbn=978-88-93-27175-2 |page=60 |language=IT}}</ref> Jogaila was also forced to enter an understanding with his cousin Vytautas to accept Vytautas's claims and return his possessions. Jogaila (now given the name Władysław II Jagiełło) was elected king of Poland after being baptized and marrying Jadwiga in 1386.{{r|Cardini|p=78}} Lithuania, the last pagan state in Europe, embraced Christianity.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Vardys |first=Vytas Stanley |title=Lithuania : the rebel nation |date=2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-04-29-96771-9 |location=New York |page=12}}</ref> |
This power struggle ended in the summer of 1384, leading to a pause as the [[Christianization of Lithuania]] progressed.{{r|Christiansen|p=70}} Jogaila went to the Polish nobility, the ''[[szlachta]]'', to ask to marry Queen [[Jadwiga of Poland]].{{r|Cardini|p=78}} Their conversations about the marriage and Jogaila's converting to Christianity created a more stable relationship between Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Frost |first=Robert I. |title=The Oxford History of Poland-Lithuania: Volume I: The Making of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, 1385-1569 |date=2018 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-01-92-56814-4 |page=30}}</ref> The treaty of the agreement, the [[Union of Krewo]], set the two countries on a path of increasing closeness, eventually leading to the [[Polish–Lithuanian union]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mistrini |first=Vincenzo |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4WO7DQAAQBAJ&q=unione+di+krewo+lituania&pg=PT60 |title=Le guerre polacco-ottomane (1593-1699), vol. 1: Le forze in campo |date=2016 |publisher=Soldiershop Publishing |isbn=978-88-93-27175-2 |page=60 |language=IT}}</ref> Jogaila was also forced to enter an understanding with his cousin Vytautas to accept Vytautas's claims and return his possessions. Jogaila (now given the name Władysław II Jagiełło) was elected king of Poland after being baptized and marrying Jadwiga in 1386.{{r|Cardini|p=78}} Lithuania, the last pagan state in Europe, embraced Christianity.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Vardys |first=Vytas Stanley |title=Lithuania : the rebel nation |date=2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-04-29-96771-9 |location=New York |page=12}}</ref> |
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The [[Lithuanian nobility]] were skeptical about assimilating into Polish culture, so Jagiełło had to concede more rights to Vytautas, who |
The [[Lithuanian nobility]] were skeptical about assimilating into Polish culture, so Jagiełło had to concede more rights to Vytautas, who wanted to expand east into the [[Grand Duchy of Moscow]] and needed more freedom for military action. Vytautas transferred his rights to Samogitia to the Teutonic Order in the [[Treaty of Salynas]] of 1398.{{r|Carpini|p=56}} The act was also ratified by Jagiełło as king of Poland in 1404.{{r|Carpini|p=56–57}} |
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{{gallery |
{{gallery |
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|File:Ulrich von Jungingen1.PNG |
|File:Ulrich von Jungingen1.PNG |
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|[[Ulrich von Jungingen]], [[Grand Master of the Teutonic Order]] from 1407 to 1410 in a 17th century woodcut |
|[[Ulrich von Jungingen]], [[Grand Master of the Teutonic Order|grand master of the Teutonic Order]] from 1407 to 1410 in a 17th century woodcut |
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|File:Vitaut grav xvi.jpg |
|File:Vitaut grav xvi.jpg |
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|Lithuanian duke [[Vytautas the Great]] in 17th century woodcut |
|Lithuanian duke [[Vytautas the Great]] in 17th century woodcut |
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The Teutonic Order was worried by the response. The Kingdom of Poland, situated to the south, sheltered the monastic state and allowed it to grow throughout the unstable 15th century.{{r|Milliman}} After the order's annexation of Pomerania in 1309 and the [[Polish–Teutonic War (1326–1332)|Polish–Teutonic War]] of 1326–1332, Polish nobility grew hostile to the order.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mallia-Milanes |first=Victor |title=The Military Orders Volume III : History and Heritage |date=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-13-51-54252-4 |edition=1st |page=34}}</ref> Their rejection compounded with the enduring hostility of the Lithuanians, creating tension on the order's southern and eastern borders. |
The Teutonic Order was worried by the response. The Kingdom of Poland, situated to the south, sheltered the monastic state and allowed it to grow throughout the unstable 15th century.{{r|Milliman}} After the order's annexation of Pomerania in 1309 and the [[Polish–Teutonic War (1326–1332)|Polish–Teutonic War]] of 1326–1332, Polish nobility grew hostile to the order.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mallia-Milanes |first=Victor |title=The Military Orders Volume III : History and Heritage |date=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-13-51-54252-4 |edition=1st |page=34}}</ref> Their rejection compounded with the enduring hostility of the Lithuanians, creating tension on the order's southern and eastern borders. |
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The [[Golden Horde]]'s defeat of Vytautas in the 1399 [[Battle of the Vorskla River]] completely changed Lithuanian foreign politics. |
The [[Golden Horde]]'s defeat of Vytautas in the 1399 [[Battle of the Vorskla River]] completely changed Lithuanian foreign politics.{{fact|date=April 2023}} Before then, the Lithuanians focused on eastward expansion. Now they changed their objectives and again concentrated on Samogitia. Given the local discontent against the Teutonic Order, Vytautas considered resuming hostilities. |
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Although the papal bull of 1403 ordered concessions to the feudal lords of Lithuanian regions, the order was not charitable.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Urban |first=William L. |title=The last years of the Teutonic Knights Lithuania, Poland and the Teutonic Order |date=2019 |publisher=Greenhill Books |isbn=978-17-84-38360-2 |location=Barnsley, S. |
Although the papal bull of 1403 ordered concessions to the feudal lords of Lithuanian regions, the order was not charitable.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Urban |first=William L. |title=The last years of the Teutonic Knights Lithuania, Poland and the Teutonic Order |date=2019 |publisher=Greenhill Books |isbn=978-17-84-38360-2 |location=Barnsley, S. Yorkshire |page=82}}</ref> In order-controlled territories, Lithuanian discontent grew due to the ecclesiastical tithes and the restrictive regime imposed by the merchants of the Teutonic State. When it imposed a new round of tributes on the populus, the threat of a popular uprising became concrete.{{r|Christiansen|p=85}} |
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===Battle of Grunwald and peace treaties (1410–1422)=== |
===Battle of Grunwald and peace treaties (1410–1422)=== |
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Carefully timed letters of protest from the people of Samogitia reached the |
Carefully timed letters of protest from the people of Samogitia reached the [[Roman Curia]] at the same time as those of numerous European courts and guilds of cities in eastern Europe.{{r|Christiansen|p=82}} Fomented by Grand Duke Vytautas, the first [[Samogitian uprising]] seized the region from 1401 to 1404 and ceased when a peace treaty was signed that recognized the crusaders' authority over the region.{{r|Cardini|p=79}} In 1409, Vytautas argued for a second insurrection. With open support for rebellion in Teutonic Order territory, Grand Master [[Ulrich von Jungingen]] called for war.{{r|Cristini|p=35-36}} On August 6, 1409, von Jungingen's herald brought a formal challenge from the order to the king of Poland.{{r|Cristini|p=35-36}} This signaled the beginning of the {{lang|de|Grossen Streythe}} (Great Quarrel), as the Teutonic Knights called the [[Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War]]. |
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[[File:Jan Matejko - Battle of Grunwald - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|upright=2| |
[[File:Jan Matejko - Battle of Grunwald - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|upright=2|1410 ''Battle of Grunwald'' depicting Ulrich von Jungingen and Vytautas at center]] |
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The order began by invading [[Greater Poland]] and seizing many castles. In the fall of 1409, a brief armistice was negotiated with the mediation of [[Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rawson |first=Andrew |title=A clash of thrones : the power-crazed medieval kings, Popes and emperors of Europe |date=2015 |isbn=978-07-50-96678-8 |location=Stroud, Gloucestershire |page=132}}</ref> On July 15, 1410, the combatants met in the historic [[Battle of Grunwald]].{{r|Cardini|p=79}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=D'Amato |first=Giuseppe |title=Viaggio nell'hansa baltica : l'Unione europea e l'allargamento ad Est |date=2004 |publisher=Greco & Greco |isbn=978-88-79-80355-7 |location=Milano |page=120 |language=IT}}</ref> The Teutonic Order was soundly defeated and entered a period of crisis. Despite his advantage after his victory, Polish king Jagiełło did not pursue a decisive, swift coup against the |
The order began by invading [[Greater Poland]] and seizing many castles. In the fall of 1409, a brief armistice was negotiated with the mediation of [[Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rawson |first=Andrew |title=A clash of thrones : the power-crazed medieval kings, Popes and emperors of Europe |date=2015 |isbn=978-07-50-96678-8 |location=Stroud, Gloucestershire |page=132}}</ref> On July 15, 1410, the combatants met in the historic [[Battle of Grunwald]].{{r|Cardini|p=79}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=D'Amato |first=Giuseppe |title=Viaggio nell'hansa baltica : l'Unione europea e l'allargamento ad Est |date=2004 |publisher=Greco & Greco |isbn=978-88-79-80355-7 |location=Milano |page=120 |language=IT}}</ref> The Teutonic Order was soundly defeated and entered a period of crisis. Despite his advantage after his victory, Polish king Jagiełło did not pursue a decisive, swift coup against the Teutonic Order, which gave the order time to defend their remaining positions.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Jučas |first=M. |title=The battle of Grünwald |date=2009 |publisher=National Museum |isbn=978-60-99-50745-3 |location=Vilnius |page=89}}</ref> |
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With the [[Peace of Thorn (1411)|Peace of Thorn]] of 1411, the Teutonic Order agreed to release Samogitia and make reparations for razed fortifications. The order stopped making incursions against the Lithuanians, who had by then mostly converted to Christianity due to Polish influence. But the order succeeded in negotiating for lighter sanctions overall thanks to the intervention of [[Sigismund of Luxembourg]], the Holy Roman Emperor.{{r|Cardini|p=60}}{{r|Christiansen|p=98}} Some authors{{who |date=May 2021}} consider the Peace of Thorn the conclusion of the Lithuanian crusades.{{r|Christiansen|p=101}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Nørgaard |first=Ole |title=The Baltic States After Independence |date=1999 |publisher=Edward Elgar Publishing |isbn=978-17-82-54344-2 |page=47}}</ref> |
With the [[Peace of Thorn (1411)|Peace of Thorn]] of 1411, the Teutonic Order agreed to release Samogitia and make reparations for razed fortifications. The order stopped making incursions against the Lithuanians, who had by then mostly converted to Christianity due to Polish influence. But the order succeeded in negotiating for lighter sanctions overall thanks to the intervention of [[Sigismund of Luxembourg]], the Holy Roman Emperor.{{r|Cardini|p=60}}{{r|Christiansen|p=98}} Some authors{{who |date=May 2021}} consider the Peace of Thorn the conclusion of the Lithuanian crusades.{{r|Christiansen|p=101}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Nørgaard |first=Ole |title=The Baltic States After Independence |date=1999 |publisher=Edward Elgar Publishing |isbn=978-17-82-54344-2 |page=47}}</ref> |
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In 1413, the new Teutonic grand master, [[Heinrich von Plauen]], opposed the arbitration of an imperial envoy, Benedikt Makrai, who had assigned the |
In 1413, the new Teutonic grand master, [[Heinrich von Plauen]], opposed the arbitration of an imperial envoy, Benedikt Makrai, who had assigned the Neman's east riverbank to the Lithuanians.<ref>{{Cite journal |date=1975 |title=Blätter für deutsche Landesgeschichte |language=DE |volume=111 |page=181}}</ref> Because of his opposition, he was deposed by [[Michael Küchmeister von Sternberg]]. Understanding the fragility of the order at that moment, von Sternberg sought peace with Poland. However, when he also refuted Makrai's decision, the Polish invaded [[Varmia]] to begin the [[Hunger War]] of 1414. Defeated, the order renounced their claim.{{r|Cristini|p=72}} There was an extended period of truce-making and negotiations, which were extremely costly for a Teutonic Order already weakened by wars and reparations.{{r|Cardini|p=81}} |
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At the Council of Constance, the order had to justify its military actions.{{r|Cardini|p=81}} The situation became so financially precarious for the order that it had to cut military spending, a drastic shift compared to previous centuries.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kubon |first=Sebastian |date=2 October 2016 |title=Wielki mistrz Michael Küchmeister a konfl ikty państwa zakonu krzyżackiego z Polską i Litwą w latach 1414–1422. Kryzysy bez końca czy okres konsolidacji? Rozważania nad średniowieczną polityką zewnętrzną |journal=Biuletyn Polskiej Misji Historycznej |volume=11 |pages=359–380 |doi=10.12775/BPMH.2016.011 |issn=2083-7755 |doi-access=free}}</ref> The Lithuanian borders were only stabilized after the brief [[Gollub War]] in 1422, with the [[Treaty of Melno]]. The demarcations of the treaty would remain unchanged for nearly 500 years and end with the Lithuanian occupation of the [[Klaipėda Region|Klaipėda region]] in 1923.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Neil |title=Baltic cities |date=2008 |publisher=Bradt Travel Guides |isbn=978-18-41-62247-7 |location=Chalfont St. Peter |page=231}}</ref> |
At the Council of Constance, the order had to justify its military actions.{{r|Cardini|p=81}} The situation became so financially precarious for the order that it had to cut military spending, a drastic shift compared to previous centuries.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kubon |first=Sebastian |date=2 October 2016 |title=Wielki mistrz Michael Küchmeister a konfl ikty państwa zakonu krzyżackiego z Polską i Litwą w latach 1414–1422. Kryzysy bez końca czy okres konsolidacji? Rozważania nad średniowieczną polityką zewnętrzną |journal=Biuletyn Polskiej Misji Historycznej |volume=11 |pages=359–380 |doi=10.12775/BPMH.2016.011 |issn=2083-7755 |doi-access=free}}</ref> The Lithuanian borders were only stabilized after the brief [[Gollub War]] in 1422, with the [[Treaty of Melno]]. The demarcations of the treaty would remain unchanged for nearly 500 years and end with the Lithuanian occupation of the [[Klaipėda Region|Klaipėda region]] in 1923.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Neil |title=Baltic cities |date=2008 |publisher=Bradt Travel Guides |isbn=978-18-41-62247-7 |location=Chalfont St. Peter |page=231}}</ref> |
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==Military strategy== |
==Military strategy== |
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The Teutonic Order was eager to install itself in Samogitia, and the Lithuanians sought to dissuade them, but both failed. Not only did both lack long-term planning, but the Lithuanians also lacked support among the other feudal lords of eastern Europe.<ref name="Turnbull">{{Cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen |title=Tannenberg 1410 : Disaster for the Teutonic Knights. |date=2013 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-14-72-80009-1 |pages=30–32}}</ref> The average number of men fielded by the order ranged from 3,000 to 8,000.{{r|Turnbull}} Neither party planned campaigns for precise goals,{{r|Turnbull}}{{r|Christiansen|p=226}} except for the Teutonic campaign of 1336 that ended with the construction of |
The Teutonic Order was eager to install itself in Samogitia, and the Lithuanians sought to dissuade them, but both failed. Not only did both lack long-term planning, but the Lithuanians also lacked support among the other feudal lords of eastern Europe.<ref name="Turnbull">{{Cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen |title=Tannenberg 1410 : Disaster for the Teutonic Knights. |date=2013 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-14-72-80009-1 |pages=30–32}}</ref> Only particularly energetic grand princes, such as [[Vytenis]] around 1311, succeeded in uniting the regionally fragmented Lithuanian forces under one banner for attack. Nevertheless, a combined army of regional sub-units remained only nominally united, which made a combined offensive action difficult in the event of a vigorous counterattack. The average number of men fielded by the order ranged from 3,000 to 8,000.{{r|Turnbull}} Neither party planned campaigns for precise goals,{{r|Turnbull}}{{r|Christiansen|p=226}} except for the Teutonic campaign of 1336 that ended with the construction of Bayernburg. The Lithuanians tried to create a precise campaign in 1370, but this fell apart after their decisive defeat at Rudau.{{r|Turnbull}} |
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The wars were marked by small skirmishes, raids, sieges, and ferocious reprisals aimed at slaughtering |
The wars were marked by small skirmishes, raids, sieges, and ferocious reprisals aimed at slaughtering farmers.{{r|Christiansen|p=226}} Both the Lithuanian light cavalry and the armies of the order preferred to raid unprotected settlements before engaging in large-scale battles.{{r|Turnbull}} The Lithuanian raiders sometimes tortured their captives,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Seward |first=Desmond |title=The monks of war : the military religious orders |date=1995 |publisher=Penguin Books |isbn=0140195017 |location=London |page=100}}</ref> and the Teutonic disdain for the Lithuanians was famously exemplified by their "gift" of the [[Grunwald Swords]] before their disastrous loss at the Battle of Grunwald. Major battles were the exceptions in the conflict. The Teutonic Order undertook around 300 military campaigns between 1305 and 1409. The Lithuanians made only 45 incursions into the Teutonic State.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen R. |title=Crusader castles of the Teutonic Knights. Red-brick castles of Prussia 1230-1466 |date=2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-18-49-08010-1 |location=Oxford |page=14}}</ref> |
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==Historiography== |
==Historiography== |
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{{see also|Historiography of the Crusades|History of Lithuania#Historiography}} |
{{see also|Historiography of the Crusades|History of Lithuania#Historiography}} |
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[[File:Piotr Dusburg chronicle.png|thumb|Title page and |
[[File:Piotr Dusburg chronicle.png|thumb|Title page and frontispiece of the ''[[Chronicon terrae Prussiae]]'']] |
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The oldest historiography around the Lithuanian crusades is divided between German, Lithuanian, and Polish sources and is usually dedicated to recording political events.{{r|Bonda|pp=39,76}} Primary source material is difficult to interpret because of biased descriptions each side used of the other to petition for foreign support.{{r|Rowell2|p=74}} These propagandistic accounts are exemplified in [[Peter of Dusburg]]'s 14th century writings like the ''[[Chronicon terrae Prussiae]]'', which confused historical research on the crusades for centuries.{{r|Mažeika|p=290}} For similar reasons, many coeval crusading accounts mistakenly refer to the Lithuanians as "[[Saracens]]".{{r|Murray2|p=415}} The order itself described the Lithuanians as "heathens", but French- or English-speaking crusaders often used the term even after the Lithuanians had mostly converted to Christianity.{{r|Murray2|pp=415,419}} This probably contributed to the crusaders' confusion and served as a justification to continue crusades.{{r|Murray2|p=425}} |
The oldest historiography around the Lithuanian crusades is divided between German, Lithuanian, and Polish sources and is usually dedicated to recording political events.{{r|Bonda|pp=39,76}} Primary source material is difficult to interpret because of biased descriptions each side used of the other to petition for foreign support.{{r|Rowell2|p=74}} These propagandistic accounts are exemplified in [[Peter of Dusburg]]'s 14th century writings like the ''[[Chronicon terrae Prussiae]]'', which confused historical research on the crusades for centuries.{{r|Mažeika|p=290}} For similar reasons, many coeval crusading accounts mistakenly refer to the Lithuanians as "[[Saracens]]".{{r|Murray2|p=415}} The order itself described the Lithuanians as "heathens", but French- or English-speaking crusaders often used the term even after the Lithuanians had mostly converted to Christianity.{{r|Murray2|pp=415,419}} This probably contributed to the crusaders' confusion and served as a justification to continue crusades.{{r|Murray2|p=425}} |
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In Germany, the conflicts were largely forgotten or limited to the dispute between the Teutonic Order and the Kingdom of Poland that ended with the Peace of Thorn. Annalists like [[Wigand of Marburg]] often combined facts and oral recounts with |
In Germany, the conflicts were largely forgotten or limited to the dispute between the Teutonic Order and the Kingdom of Poland that ended with the Peace of Thorn. Annalists like [[Wigand of Marburg]] often combined facts and oral recounts with folklore and myths.{{r|Bonda|p=43}} In the 18th century, Prussian scholars questioned the sincerity of Gediminas's diplomatic efforts and implied promises of conversion.{{r|Rowell2|p=76}} In history books printed from the 1800s on, the Lithuanian crusade was minimized or recounted in single favorable episodes, such as the Battle of Rudau or the construction of settlements by German colonists.{{r|Jurgėla|p=60}} |
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The conflict is represented in the opposite way in Lithuania today.{{r|Rowell|p=229}} Through the Middle Ages, Lithuanian historians like [[Jan Długosz]] based their work on the [[Lithuanian Chronicles]] |
The conflict is represented in the opposite way in Lithuania today.{{r|Rowell|p=229}} Through the Middle Ages, Lithuanian historians like [[Jan Długosz]] based their work on the [[Lithuanian Chronicles]]. The chronicles comprise combinations of documents (known as [[redaction]]s) that reflect official state interpretations of Lithuanian history.{{r|Bonda|p=49}} The chronicles made arguments for Lithuanian nationalism by connecting the Lithuanian [[Palemonids]] dynasty to the rule of [[Ancient Rome]]. The historiographic record also includes the personal letters of the Lithuanian rulers Gediminas, Algirdas, and Vytautas, which were often written in Old Church Slavonic, German, or Greek.{{r|Bonda|p=59}} These political accounts are supplemented by cultural records like those of [[Michalo Lituanus]] and [[Simonas Daukantas]].{{r|Bonda|p=81}} Samogitian writers have exalted local deeds of heroism because the region was the central Teutonic aim in the crusades.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Vaišvilaite |first=Irena |title=Chiese Lignee in Samogizia |date=2013 |publisher=Gangemi Editore spa |isbn=978-88-49-29761-4 |page=4 |language=IT}}</ref> Poland, present throughout the conflict, is not often mentioned, although [[Stanisław Sarnicki]]'s chronicle includes discussion of the crusades.{{r|Bonda|p=68}} |
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[[File:Nikzentaitis02.jpg|thumb|Lithuanian historian [[Alvydas Nikžentaitis]]]] |
[[File:Nikzentaitis02.jpg|thumb|Lithuanian historian [[Alvydas Nikžentaitis]]]] |
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==Timeline== |
==Timeline== |
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===Background=== |
===Background=== |
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* 1230 — Seven Teutonic knights and their nearly 750 followers arrive at the mouth of the [[Vistula]] in the south of [[Chełmno |
* 1230 — Seven Teutonic knights and their nearly 750 followers arrive at the mouth of the [[Vistula]] in the south of [[Chełmno Land]] under the command of Prussian [[Hermann Balk]]. |
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* 1236 — [[Battle of Saule]] on September 22, with a crushing defeat for the [[Livonian Brothers of the Sword]] |
* 1236 — [[Battle of Saule]] on September 22, with a crushing defeat for the [[Livonian Brothers of the Sword]] |
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* 1237 — |
* 1237 — Assimilation of the indebted Livonian Brothers into the [[Teutonic Order]] |
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* 1242 — Defeat of a Teutonic contingent on [[Lake Peipus]] by [[Alexander Nevsky]]; the first [[Prussian uprisings]] after the attacks of [[Batu Khan]] in the region |
* 1242 — Defeat of a Teutonic contingent on [[Lake Peipus]] by [[Alexander Nevsky]]; the first [[Prussian uprisings]] after the attacks of [[Batu Khan]] in the region |
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* 1244 — Battle of Embūte |
* 1244 — Battle of Embūte |
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* 1251 — Lithuanian duke [[Mindaugas]] converts to Christianity, although he re-adopts Lithuanian beliefs around 1260. |
* 1251 — Lithuanian duke [[Mindaugas]] converts to Christianity, although he re-adopts Lithuanian beliefs around 1260. |
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* 1259 — [[Battle of Skuodas]] on August 5, with a victory by the [[Livonian Order]] under [[Burchard von Hornhausen]] |
* 1259 — [[Battle of Skuodas (1259)|Battle of Skuodas]] on August 5, with a victory by the [[Livonian Order]] under [[Burchard von Hornhausen]] |
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* 1260 — [[Battle of Durbe]] on July 13; second wave of Prussian uprisings |
* 1260 — [[Battle of Durbe]] on July 13; second wave of Prussian uprisings |
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* 1270 — [[Battle of Karuse]] |
* 1270 — [[Battle of Karuse]] |
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* 1348 — [[Battle of Strėva]] on February 2, with Lithuanian defeat |
* 1348 — [[Battle of Strėva]] on February 2, with Lithuanian defeat |
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* 1361 — Kęstutis is captured by the order for the first time, but escapes the following year. |
* 1361 — Kęstutis is captured by the order for the first time, but escapes the following year. |
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* 1362 — [[Siege of Kaunas]], after which the castle is razed by the order |
* 1362 — [[Siege of Kaunas (1362)|Siege of Kaunas]], after which the castle is razed by the order |
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* 1365 — Siege of [[Kernavė]] |
* 1365 — Siege of [[Kernavė]] |
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* 1370 — [[Battle of Rudau|Battle of Rūdava]] on February 17, with victory for the order |
* 1370 — [[Battle of Rudau|Battle of Rūdava]] on February 17, with victory for the order |
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* 1377 — Death of Algirdas on May 24 |
* 1377 — Death of Algirdas on May 24 |
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* 1382 — Kęstutis dies, imprisoned, in August. |
* 1382 — Kęstutis dies, imprisoned, in August. |
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* 1384 — Siege of Marienwerder (Kaunas)<ref name="Turnbull2">{{Cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TauHCwAAQBAJ&q=Marienwerder+kaunas&pg=PT45 |title=Crusader Castles of the Teutonic Knights |date=20 December 2011 |isbn=9781780962177 |access-date=26 May 2019}}</ref> |
* 1384 — Siege of Marienwerder (Kaunas)<ref name="Turnbull2">{{Cite book |last=Turnbull |first=Stephen |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TauHCwAAQBAJ&q=Marienwerder+kaunas&pg=PT45 |title=Crusader Castles of the Teutonic Knights |date=20 December 2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury |isbn=9781780962177 |access-date=26 May 2019}}</ref> |
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* 1386 — The son of Algirdas, [[Jogaila]], accedes to the throne of Poland. His cousin [[Vytautas]] is proclaimed grand duke of Lithuania. |
* 1386 — The son of Algirdas, [[Jogaila]], accedes to the throne of Poland. His cousin [[Vytautas]] is proclaimed grand duke of Lithuania. |
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* 1387 — The [[Christianization of Lithuania]] begins, imposed by Jogaila. |
* 1387 — The [[Christianization of Lithuania]] begins, imposed by Jogaila. |
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* 1398 — Through the [[Treaty of Salynas]] on October 12, Vytautas transfers Samogitia to the order. |
* 1398 — Through the [[Treaty of Salynas]] on October 12, Vytautas transfers Samogitia to the order. |
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* 1399 — [[Battle of the Vorskla River]] was fought on August |
* 1399 — [[Battle of the Vorskla River]] was fought on August 12. The Lithuanians were weakened after their loss to the Golden Horde. |
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* 1390 — Siege of Vilnius |
* 1390 — Siege of Vilnius |
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* 1401–1404 and 1409 — [[Samogitian uprisings]] |
* 1401–1404 and 1409 — [[Samogitian uprisings]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist |
{{reflist|refs= |
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<ref name="baran">{{Cite journal |last=Baranauskas |first=Tomas |year=2003 |title=Lietuvos medinės pilys rašytinių šaltinių duomenimis |url=http://talpykla.istorija.lt/bitstream/handle/99999/1524/LA_24_57-106.pdf |url-status=dead |journal=Lietuvos archeologija |language=lt |volume=24 |page=65 |issn=0207-8694 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151129150331/http://talpykla.istorija.lt/bitstream/handle/99999/1524/LA_24_57-106.pdf |archive-date=2015-11-29 |access-date=2016-07-02}}</ref> |
<ref name="baran">{{Cite journal |last=Baranauskas |first=Tomas |year=2003 |title=Lietuvos medinės pilys rašytinių šaltinių duomenimis |url=http://talpykla.istorija.lt/bitstream/handle/99999/1524/LA_24_57-106.pdf |url-status=dead |journal=Lietuvos archeologija |language=lt |volume=24 |page=65 |issn=0207-8694 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151129150331/http://talpykla.istorija.lt/bitstream/handle/99999/1524/LA_24_57-106.pdf |archive-date=2015-11-29 |access-date=2016-07-02}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Bonda">{{Cite book |last=Bonda |first=Moreno |url=http://www.esparama.lt/es_parama_pletra/failai/ESFproduktai/2013_metodine_priemone_Lithuanian_Historiography.pdf |title=History of Lithuanian Historiography |date=2013 |publisher=Vytautas Magnus University |isbn=978-9955-21-363-5 |location=Kaunas |access-date=31 March 2021}}</ref> |
<ref name="Bonda">{{Cite book |last=Bonda |first=Moreno |url=http://www.esparama.lt/es_parama_pletra/failai/ESFproduktai/2013_metodine_priemone_Lithuanian_Historiography.pdf |title=History of Lithuanian Historiography |date=2013 |publisher=Vytautas Magnus University |isbn=978-9955-21-363-5 |location=Kaunas |access-date=31 March 2021}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Christiansen">{{Cite book |last=Christiansen |first=Eric |title=Le crociate del Nord : il Baltico e la frontiera cattolica : 1100-1525 |date=2016 |publisher=Il mulino |isbn=978-88-15-26604-0 |location=Bologna |language=IT}}</ref> |
<ref name="Christiansen">{{Cite book |last=Christiansen |first=Eric |title=Le crociate del Nord : il Baltico e la frontiera cattolica : 1100-1525 |date=2016 |publisher=Il mulino |isbn=978-88-15-26604-0 |location=Bologna |language=IT}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Cristini">{{Cite book |last=Cristini |first=Luca Stefano |title=La battaglia di Tannenberg 1410 |date=2016 |publisher=Soldiershop Publishing |isbn=978-88-93-27027-4 |language=IT}}</ref> |
<ref name="Cristini">{{Cite book |last=Cristini |first=Luca Stefano |title=La battaglia di Tannenberg 1410 |date=2016 |publisher=Soldiershop Publishing |isbn=978-88-93-27027-4 |language=IT}}</ref> |
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<ref name="el">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=1970–1978 |title=Vytenis |encyclopedia=[[Encyclopedia Lituanica]] |publisher=Juozas Kapočius |location=Boston, Massachusetts |
<ref name="el">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=1970–1978 |title=Vytenis |encyclopedia=[[Encyclopedia Lituanica]] |publisher=Juozas Kapočius |location=Boston, Massachusetts |editor-last=Simas Sužiedėlis |volume=VI |pages=221–222|lccn=74-114275 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="kiaupa">{{Cite book | |
<ref name="kiaupa">{{Cite book |last1=Kiaupa |first1=Zigmantas |title=The History of Lithuania Before 1795 |last2=Jūratė Kiaupienė |last3=Albinas Kuncevičius |publisher=Lithuanian Institute of History |year=2000 |isbn=9986-810-13-2 |edition=English |location=Vilnius |pages=112–114 |orig-year=1995}}</ref> |
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<ref name="lad">{{Cite web |title=Bisenė |url=http://www.archeologijosdraugija.lt/itvirtinimai/piliakalnis.php?piliakalnis_id=15 |access-date=2016-07-01 |website=Gynybiniai įtvirtinimai (XIII-XVIII a.) |publisher=Society of the Lithuanian Archaeology |language=lt}}</ref> |
<ref name="lad">{{Cite web |title=Bisenė |url=http://www.archeologijosdraugija.lt/itvirtinimai/piliakalnis.php?piliakalnis_id=15 |access-date=2016-07-01 |website=Gynybiniai įtvirtinimai (XIII-XVIII a.) |publisher=Society of the Lithuanian Archaeology |language=lt}}</ref> |
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<ref name="lv">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2004 |title=Vytenis |encyclopedia=Lietuvos valdovai (XIII-XVIII a.): enciklopedinis žinynas |publisher=Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos institutas |location=Vilnius | |
<ref name="lv">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2004 |title=Vytenis |encyclopedia=Lietuvos valdovai (XIII-XVIII a.): enciklopedinis žinynas |publisher=Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos institutas |location=Vilnius |last1=Gudavičius |first1=Edvardas |author-link=Edvardas Gudavičius |editor-last=Vytautas Spečiūnas |pages=32–33 |language=lt |isbn=5-420-01535-8 |last2=Rokas Varakauskas}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Mažeika">{{Cite journal |last=Mažeika |first=Rasa |date=January 1995 |title=The Grand Duchy rejoins Europe: Post-Soviet developments in the historiography of pagan Lithuania |journal=Journal of Medieval History |volume=21 |issue=3 |pages=289–303 |doi=10.1016/0304-4181(95)00766-9}}</ref> |
<ref name="Mažeika">{{Cite journal |last=Mažeika |first=Rasa |date=January 1995 |title=The Grand Duchy rejoins Europe: Post-Soviet developments in the historiography of pagan Lithuania |journal=Journal of Medieval History |volume=21 |issue=3 |pages=289–303 |doi=10.1016/0304-4181(95)00766-9}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Murray2">{{Cite journal |last=Murray |first=Alan V. |date=December 2010 |title=The Saracens of the Baltic: Pagan and Christian Lithuanians in the Perception of English and French Crusaders to Late Medieval Prussia |journal=Journal of Baltic Studies |volume=41 |issue=4 |pages=413–429 |doi=10.1080/01629778.2010.527124 |s2cid=144547712}}</ref> |
<ref name="Murray2">{{Cite journal |last=Murray |first=Alan V. |date=December 2010 |title=The Saracens of the Baltic: Pagan and Christian Lithuanians in the Perception of English and French Crusaders to Late Medieval Prussia |journal=Journal of Baltic Studies |volume=41 |issue=4 |pages=413–429 |doi=10.1080/01629778.2010.527124 |s2cid=144547712}}</ref> |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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*{{Cite web |last=Baranauskas |first=Tomas |title=Veliuona and the Lithuanian crusade |url=https://www.academia.edu/3715937 |format=PDF}} |
*{{Cite web |last=Baranauskas |first=Tomas |title=Veliuona and the Lithuanian crusade |url=https://www.academia.edu/3715937 |publisher=Lietuvai pagražinti draugija |date= January 2007 |format=PDF |language=en}} |
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*{{Cite book |last=Batūra |first=Romas |url=http://www.lka.lt/download/7661/r.batura_ |title=Places of Fighting for Lithuania's Freedom In the Expanse of Nemunas, Vistula and Dauguva rivers |publisher=The General Jonas Žemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania |year=2010 |isbn=978-9955-423-91-1 | |
*{{Cite book |last=Batūra |first=Romas |url=http://www.lka.lt/download/7661/r.batura_ |title=Places of Fighting for Lithuania's Freedom In the Expanse of Nemunas, Vistula and Dauguva rivers |publisher=The General Jonas Žemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania |year=2010 |isbn=978-9955-423-91-1 |language=en |location=Vilnius |format=PDF |orig-year=2010}} |
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*{{Cite thesis |last=Brennan |first=Timothy M. |title=Just war, sovereignty, and canon law: Legal arguments over the Lithuanian Crusade and the rights of unbelievers at the Council of Constance (1414–1418) |date=2005 |degree=PhD |publisher=University of Kansas |url=https:// |
*{{Cite thesis |last=Brennan |first=Timothy M. |title=Just war, sovereignty, and canon law: Legal arguments over the Lithuanian Crusade and the rights of unbelievers at the Council of Constance (1414–1418) |date=2005 |degree=PhD |publisher=University of Kansas |url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/5738fb0b9f3dcb2d0bd0ed02b7e6c577/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y |language=en |access-date=3 May 2021}} |
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*{{Cite journal |last=Chollet |first=Loïc |date=10 May 2016 |title=Crusade or Christianization? The polemic against the Teutonic Knights in light of French travelers' accounts of the late Middle Ages |journal=Ordines Militares. Colloquia Torunensia Historica |volume=20 |pages=175 |doi=10.12775/OM.2015.008 |doi-access=free}} |
*{{Cite journal |last=Chollet |first=Loïc |date=10 May 2016 |title=Crusade or Christianization? The polemic against the Teutonic Knights in light of French travelers' accounts of the late Middle Ages |journal=Ordines Militares. Colloquia Torunensia Historica |volume=20 |pages=175 |doi=10.12775/OM.2015.008 |doi-access=free}} |
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*{{Cite thesis |last=Markman |first=Kristina |title=Between Two Worlds: A Comparative Study of the Representations of Pagan Lithuania in the Chronicles of the Teutonic Order and Rus' |date=2015 |degree=PhD |publisher=UCLA |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0g57z7kw |language=en |access-date=3 May 2021}} |
*{{Cite thesis |last=Markman |first=Kristina |title=Between Two Worlds: A Comparative Study of the Representations of Pagan Lithuania in the Chronicles of the Teutonic Order and Rus' |date=2015 |degree=PhD |publisher=UCLA |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0g57z7kw |language=en |access-date=3 May 2021}} |
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*{{Cite book |last=Norkus |first=Zenonas |title=An unproclaimed empire : the Grand Duchy of Lithuania : from the viewpoint of comparative historical sociology of empires |date=2017 |isbn=978-1138281547 |location=Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon}} |
*{{Cite book |last=Norkus |first=Zenonas |title=An unproclaimed empire : the Grand Duchy of Lithuania : from the viewpoint of comparative historical sociology of empires |date=2017 |isbn=978-1138281547 |location=Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon}} |
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{{Lithuanian wars and conflicts}} |
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{{Samogitian dispute}} |
{{Samogitian dispute}} |
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{{Lithuania topics}} |
{{Lithuania topics}} |
Latest revision as of 08:15, 6 July 2024
Lithuanian Crusade | |||||||
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Part of the Northern Crusades | |||||||
Lithuanians fighting Teutonic knights (14th-century bas-relief from Malbork Castle) | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Allies: | Allies: | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Grand Duke of Lithuania |
The Lithuanian Crusade was a series of campaigns by the Teutonic Order and the Livonian Order under the pretext of forcibly Christianizing the pagan Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The Livonian Order occupied Riga in 1202 and in the 1230s they settled in Chełmno Land, a fief of Poland. They first conquered other neighboring Baltic tribes—Curonians, Semigallians, Latgalians, Selonians, and Old Prussians—in the Livonian Crusade and Prussian Crusade.
The first raid against the Lithuanians and Samogitians was in 1208. From then on, the orders played a key role in Lithuanian politics, but they were not a direct threat until the 1280s. By that time, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was already a centralized state and could mount defenses. For the next century, the order organized annual colonialist reise (raids) into Samogitian and Lithuanian lands, without great success but at immense human cost. Border regions in Samogitia and Suvalkija became sparsely inhabited wilderness due to ethnic cleansing, although the order gained very little territory. The resulting wars between the Teutonic Order and Lithuania were one of the longest conflicts in the history of Europe.
The grand duchy finally converted to Christianity in 1386, when Grand Duke Jogaila accepted baptism from Poland before his wedding to reigning Queen Jadwiga and coronation as king of Poland. However, the baptism did not stop the crusade, as the order publicly challenged the sincerity of the conversion at the papal court. Lithuania and its new ally, Poland, defeated the order in the decisive Battle of Grunwald in 1410, which is often cited as the end of the Lithuanian Crusade and the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War. The final peace was reached by the Treaty of Melno (1422), ending 225 years of warfare.
Background
[edit]Crusaders claimed to wage war to convert non-Christian "infidels" to Christianity by force. In the 12th century, St. Bernard of Clairvaux wrote that the killing of pagans was also justified: "The Christian glories in the death of the pagan, because Christ is glorified."[1] Only in the 15th century, with the Council of Constance, would that view be contested and a discussion on the rights of pagans begun.[2] Lithuania itself accepted various religions—during the reign of kings Mindaugas and Gediminas, Franciscan and Dominican monasteries had already been established in Lithuania with Lithuanian monks. In his letters to the pope, Gediminas complained that crusaders destroyed Christian churches to have a pretext for war.
The Baltic Crusade started in 1197. The first encounters of militant Christian missionaries with the Lithuanians occurred in 1185, when Saint Meinhard was attacked by the Lithuanians.[3] Lithuanian troops were also supporting the local resistance of Semigallians and Latgalians. The Teutonic Order was given land near Toruń in the 1220s by Konrad I of Masovia, bringing the crusaders closer to Lithuanian lands.[4]: 415 With the arrival of the first Teutonic crusaders, led by Hermann Balk, in Chełmno Land in 1230, the religious traditions of modern-day Estonia and Latvia began to slowly turn towards Catholicism.[5]: 17 There had already been shared religious beliefs between the Germanic and Lithuanian peoples, like the veneration of the god Perkūnas.[6]
In the 1230s, there were military clashes between the Christians and the Lithuanians near the northern borders of what was then part of Livonia. The Livonian Brothers of the Sword, founded in 1202, began campaigns to expand into the area. Through the Livonian Crusade, they conquered the Terra Mariana that bordered Lithuanian Samogitia, which increased conflicts.[7] Those conflicts reached their apex in 1236 with the Battle of Saule near Šiauliai—the Livonian Brothers of the Sword suffered a disastrous defeat. Only 10% of their army survived and more than 48 of their knights were killed.[8][9]: 181 In light of their defeat and outstanding debts, the order was forced to become a branch of the Teutonic Order called the Livonian Order.[10]
The military campaigns of the reformed Livonian Order against Lithuanians were still unsuccessful. Even with support from the Teutonic Order, the Christian Livonians suffered major defeats in the battles of Durbe (1260),[11] Karuse (1270), and Aizkraukle (1279). These losses weakened the Teutonic Order, allowing for the Great Prussian Uprising.[5]: 18 [12] When the converted king of Lithuania, Mindaugas, was assassinated in 1263, the region entered an era of instability.[9]: 181 Lithuanians supported the Prussian uprisings and arranged military raids together with Prussians and Yotvingians. These included the 1264 siege of Vėluva (Wehlau) castle in Sambia during the reign of Treniota and the revenge taken against Poland for the Yotvingians, led by Vaišvilkas and Švarnas.
Only in 1283, after the reconquest of the Prussians, did the Teutonic Order focus its campaigns on the fragile, newly formed Kingdom of Lithuania.[9]: 26
Objectives
[edit]The Teutonic Order initially planned to incorporate all of Lithuania into the Teutonic State, as it had with Prussia, but those plans faced strong Lithuanian resistance.[13] The Teutonic Order's principal objective was to conquer the Lithuanian lowland region, Samogitia, and build fortresses there to solidify their control. Like a wedge, Samogitia separated the territories conquered by the Teutonic Order and those conquered by the Livonian Order. By subjecting Samogitia, the order would be able to unify its administration of both territories.[14] Starting with the reign of Gediminas, Lithuania also began rapidly expanding eastward, conquering Ruthenian lands and gaining more resources for its long-lasting wars.
For the order, the promotion of Christianity had a strong ideological impetus. When the battles around Jerusalem ceased after the Siege of Acre in 1291, Christian religious groups turned their military efforts toward eastern Europe and the Iberian Peninsula, intent on conquest or reconquest.[15]: 117 The Lithuanian rulers vehemently disputed the concept of baptism and regularly carried out raids and conquests on Germanic lands. As a result, the order became focused on suppressing them as a potent, pagan enemy.[9]: 45 However, the Teutonic argument for the conversion of Lithuanian pagans became, by the end, mostly a pretext for expansion.[16]: 21 [17]: 26
Although they had concentrated their efforts toward the unstable principalities of Belarus and Ukraine, the Lithuanians could not ignore the aggression of the Christian crusaders. Nor could they reach any peaceful agreement with the Teutonic Order, which demanded mass baptisms as a condition for peace. From then on, the defense of Samogitia and other vulnerable regions became a priority for the Lithuanians.[5]: 13–14 The prospect of loot from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the State of the Teutonic Order exacerbated the conflict, and the conquests of both sides were often short-lived or haphazard.[18]: 53
Phases of the conflict
[edit]Beginnings and Vytenis's rule (1283–1315)
[edit]In 1283, chronicler Peter of Dusburg noted that the Teutonic Order finalized its conquest of Prussia and of the Yotvingians. Some Yotvingians retreated to Lithuania, and some the crusaders deported to Sambia. The Lithuanian Crusade began in the winter of 1283.[19]
The first target of the Teutons was Bisenė on the western Lithuanian border.[20] Teutonic soldiers commanded by Prussian Landmeister Konrad von Thierberg crossed the frozen Neman River and attacked the Lithuanian fortress in the morning. It fell in the afternoon and was burned to the ground. After the burning of Kolainiai in 1291 and Bisenė in 1316, Junigeda (now called Veliuona) became the westernmost Lithuanian fortress along the river.[21] In 1298, Lithuanian leader Vytenis attacked the Livonian crusaders in Courland, a part of the Archdiocese of Riga.[5]: 29 After initial successes by the crusaders, the two sides fought in the Battle of Turaida after Vytenis forged an alliance with the citizens of Riga, a city ostensibly under the control of the Livonian Order.[22]: 55–59
The conflicts resumed with the coronation of Grand Duke Vytenis of Lithuania in 1303. Vytenis wanted to confront Lithuania's northern and eastern neighbors. He sent 2,000 armed knights to his borders[5]: 23 , while isolated Lithuanian troops raided Prussia. More stable after suppressing the Prussian revolts of 1283, the Teutonic Order sent military units to Semigallia and Skalvia, then under Lithuanian control. Several years of relative calm followed until the Teutonic Order decided to strike at Samogitia.[18]: 52
The Teutonic Knights organized around 20 raids into the region.[23] Vytenis took measures to undermine the influence of local Samogitian nobles, evidenced by an increasing number of traitors and refugees.[24] The Livonian Order consolidated its control over Semigallia, where Lithuanians had garrisons since the Battle of Aizkraukle. In 1313, the Livonian Order captured Dynaburg Castle, which the Lithuanians had controlled since 1281.[25]
To better demarcate and defend its eastern border against the Lithuanian advances, the Teutonic Order took to erecting small fortresses and fortified houses.[26] The garrisons often contained a few knights with more soldiers and squires. The defenders left only to raid Lithuanian lands. The forts were menacing just because of their strategic location. Some of the most imposing were in Neman, Sovetsk, and Mayovka.[18]: 90–91
Vytenis reacted to the movements of the order in 1311 by directing his best cavalry toward Masuria and unreinforced areas of the Prussian border. Despite 4,000 Lithuanian cavalry, they were surprised and expelled by forces led by Landmarschall Heinrich von Plötzke.[18]: 53–54 But the Christian population's general fear of the "savage pagans" did not change with the victory, especially not among German colonists in rural areas of the order's territory.[18]: 53–54 Vytenis's last great attack came in October 1315, shortly before his death.[22]: 55
Reign of Gediminas (1316–1345)
[edit]During Gediminas's rule as grand duke of Lithuania, the war intensified on the northern and western borders with the Teutonic Order. Gediminas allied himself with the king of Poland, Władysław I Łokietek, through a series of marriages in 1325–1328.[5]: 34 [27] Poland became more hostile toward the Teutonic Order due to their dispute over the dominion of Pomerania. As a result, Łokietek stipulated an anti-Teutonic defensive military pact with Gediminas in 1330–1331.
In the winter of 1329, King John of Bohemia formed an army to participate in the crusade.[28] Strengthened by this support, the knights of the order were able to capture several important fortresses in Samogitia. Conflicts with the king of Poland and limited contributions from John of Bohemia delayed the conquest of further territories.[28]
Because the conflict between the Teutonic State and Poland had resumed in 1330, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania experienced a respite. The crusaders prevailed against the Polish in Kuyavia in 1331.[5]: 36 In 1336, a large army supported by John of Bohemia and his son-in-law, Henry XIV, crossed the Neman in Samogitia and attacked the castle of Pilėnai.[29] Seeing their defeat, the defenders burned the fortress's goods and killed themselves. Once the fortress was conquered, the Teutonic Knights replaced it with a new fortification they baptized Bayernburg (Raudonpilis) in honor of Henry XIV. They hoped the fort would serve as a foothold for further campaigns into the region.[18]: 100 After the withdrawal of most of the order's army, Bayernburg was stormed and destroyed by Lithuanian troops led by Gediminas in person. According to local tradition, he was shot by an arrow under an oak tree that still exists outside the fortifications. He more likely died in 1341, a year in which the fighting temporarily subsided.[22]: 270 [30]
The brothers Algirdas and Kęstutis (1345–1382)
[edit]The conflict intensified again in 1345 after two sons of Gediminas, Algirdas and Kęstutis, assumed power by ousting their brother, Jaunutis, who had been Gediminas's heir.[15]: 75 The two shared control of the territory as a duumvirate: the land to the southeast was controlled by Algirdas and the land to the west (including Samogitia) was administered by Kęstutis.[15]: 75 As a result, Kęstutis led most of the fight against the Teutonic Order, with mixed results. In 1349, Teutonic commander Winrich von Kniprode seized a victory against the Lithuanians in the Battle of Strėva, which was held in an open field.[22]: 243
In 1352, led by von Kniprode, now grand master of the Teutonic Order, the Teutonic State began a period of quiet growth and avoided disagreements with the Kingdom of Poland.[31] In 1358, Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV expressed a desire for peace if the Lithuanian sovereign would accept Christianity.[18]: 144 [9]: 37 Algirdas stipulated the complete withdrawal of the Teutonic Order from the Baltic region, which Charles IV rejected because he needed support from the order.[32] The war only ended in 1361 when a marshal of the order, Henning Schindekopf, and Louis I of Hungary succeeded in capturing Kęstutis.[9]: 183 The poet and herald Peter Suchenwirt wrote a poem to commemorate the capture, when Kęstutis apparently swore an oath to convert to Christianity.[33] Kęstutis successfully escaped from his imprisonment in Malbork Castle in 1362.[9]: 183
That April, a Teutonic army destroyed the Kaunas Castle, which was situated well within the borders of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[29]: 123 That success marked the beginning of a period of mutual devastation[34] that only ended when both adversaries were significantly weakened. Between 1362 and 1370, the crusaders made 20 "punitive expeditions" into Lithuania. (They would complete 52 by 1382.)[29]: 55 In response, Kęstutis and Algirdas gathered military contingents from all of Lithuania, from Russian feudal lords faithful to the grand duchy, and from the Tatars who were disposed to help because they shared a border with the Teutonic State near Königsberg.[35]
By February 1370, conditions were right for the large Battle of Rudau. The Teutonic army seized victory despite their inferior numbers because they were more comfortable in open-field combat.[22]: 243 Through these advancements, the still well-manned Teutonic Order raided the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, and populous Trakai.[5]: 62-63 The Lithuanians retaliated with sporadic raids.
Lithuanian and Polish power struggles (1386–1409)
[edit]A new phase began in 1377 with the death of Algirdas.[15]: 75 In Lithuania, a power struggle erupted between Algirdas's sons, Kęstutis, and Kęstutis's son Vytautas. Alternating alliances were forged with former opponents to the north and west since the question of Christian conversion had lost energy in the preceding century.
In 1380, with the secret Treaty of Dovydiškės, the Teutonic Order supported Algirdas's heir, Jogaila, against Kęstutis in exchange for various concessions.[36] While Kęstutis remained a prisoner of Jogaila through 1382, Vytautas escaped and fled to his cousin in the Teutonic State, trusting in their help to depose Jogaila and his allies.[15]: 76 There, he converted to Christianity.
This power struggle ended in the summer of 1384, leading to a pause as the Christianization of Lithuania progressed.[5]: 70 Jogaila went to the Polish nobility, the szlachta, to ask to marry Queen Jadwiga of Poland.[15]: 78 Their conversations about the marriage and Jogaila's converting to Christianity created a more stable relationship between Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[37] The treaty of the agreement, the Union of Krewo, set the two countries on a path of increasing closeness, eventually leading to the Polish–Lithuanian union.[38] Jogaila was also forced to enter an understanding with his cousin Vytautas to accept Vytautas's claims and return his possessions. Jogaila (now given the name Władysław II Jagiełło) was elected king of Poland after being baptized and marrying Jadwiga in 1386.[15]: 78 Lithuania, the last pagan state in Europe, embraced Christianity.[39]
The Lithuanian nobility were skeptical about assimilating into Polish culture, so Jagiełło had to concede more rights to Vytautas, who wanted to expand east into the Grand Duchy of Moscow and needed more freedom for military action. Vytautas transferred his rights to Samogitia to the Teutonic Order in the Treaty of Salynas of 1398.[9]: 56 The act was also ratified by Jagiełło as king of Poland in 1404.[9]: 56–57
-
Ulrich von Jungingen, grand master of the Teutonic Order from 1407 to 1410 in a 17th century woodcut
-
Lithuanian duke Vytautas the Great in 17th century woodcut
-
Polish king Władysław II Jagiełło in a 1475–1480 painting
Growing instability of the Teutonic Order (1409–1410)
[edit]The leaders of the Teutonic Order were skeptical and uncertain about their future in the region after Jogaila accepted the Polish crown and Christianity while maintaining close ties to Lithuania.[16][17] These doubts created ideological and military problems for the order. Lithuanian conversion challenged the order's status as fighting against paganism, which it had heralded so much in the preceding decades. The order argued that the Lithuanian baptisms had been only for political goals and that the majority of Lithuanians held on to their traditional beliefs.[15]: 74 Denying the possibility of mass baptisms, Vytautas and Jagiełło asked Pope Boniface IX to intervene. The Pope's response arrived in 1403, a papal bull forbidding the Teutonic Knights from declaring war on Lithuania.[40]
The Teutonic Order was worried by the response. The Kingdom of Poland, situated to the south, sheltered the monastic state and allowed it to grow throughout the unstable 15th century.[31] After the order's annexation of Pomerania in 1309 and the Polish–Teutonic War of 1326–1332, Polish nobility grew hostile to the order.[41] Their rejection compounded with the enduring hostility of the Lithuanians, creating tension on the order's southern and eastern borders.
The Golden Horde's defeat of Vytautas in the 1399 Battle of the Vorskla River completely changed Lithuanian foreign politics.[citation needed] Before then, the Lithuanians focused on eastward expansion. Now they changed their objectives and again concentrated on Samogitia. Given the local discontent against the Teutonic Order, Vytautas considered resuming hostilities.
Although the papal bull of 1403 ordered concessions to the feudal lords of Lithuanian regions, the order was not charitable.[42] In order-controlled territories, Lithuanian discontent grew due to the ecclesiastical tithes and the restrictive regime imposed by the merchants of the Teutonic State. When it imposed a new round of tributes on the populus, the threat of a popular uprising became concrete.[5]: 85
Battle of Grunwald and peace treaties (1410–1422)
[edit]Carefully timed letters of protest from the people of Samogitia reached the Roman Curia at the same time as those of numerous European courts and guilds of cities in eastern Europe.[5]: 82 Fomented by Grand Duke Vytautas, the first Samogitian uprising seized the region from 1401 to 1404 and ceased when a peace treaty was signed that recognized the crusaders' authority over the region.[15]: 79 In 1409, Vytautas argued for a second insurrection. With open support for rebellion in Teutonic Order territory, Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen called for war.[43]: 35-36 On August 6, 1409, von Jungingen's herald brought a formal challenge from the order to the king of Poland.[43]: 35-36 This signaled the beginning of the Grossen Streythe (Great Quarrel), as the Teutonic Knights called the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War.
The order began by invading Greater Poland and seizing many castles. In the fall of 1409, a brief armistice was negotiated with the mediation of Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia.[44] On July 15, 1410, the combatants met in the historic Battle of Grunwald.[15]: 79 [45] The Teutonic Order was soundly defeated and entered a period of crisis. Despite his advantage after his victory, Polish king Jagiełło did not pursue a decisive, swift coup against the Teutonic Order, which gave the order time to defend their remaining positions.[46]
With the Peace of Thorn of 1411, the Teutonic Order agreed to release Samogitia and make reparations for razed fortifications. The order stopped making incursions against the Lithuanians, who had by then mostly converted to Christianity due to Polish influence. But the order succeeded in negotiating for lighter sanctions overall thanks to the intervention of Sigismund of Luxembourg, the Holy Roman Emperor.[15]: 60 [5]: 98 Some authors[who?] consider the Peace of Thorn the conclusion of the Lithuanian crusades.[5]: 101 [47]
In 1413, the new Teutonic grand master, Heinrich von Plauen, opposed the arbitration of an imperial envoy, Benedikt Makrai, who had assigned the Neman's east riverbank to the Lithuanians.[48] Because of his opposition, he was deposed by Michael Küchmeister von Sternberg. Understanding the fragility of the order at that moment, von Sternberg sought peace with Poland. However, when he also refuted Makrai's decision, the Polish invaded Varmia to begin the Hunger War of 1414. Defeated, the order renounced their claim.[43]: 72 There was an extended period of truce-making and negotiations, which were extremely costly for a Teutonic Order already weakened by wars and reparations.[15]: 81
At the Council of Constance, the order had to justify its military actions.[15]: 81 The situation became so financially precarious for the order that it had to cut military spending, a drastic shift compared to previous centuries.[49] The Lithuanian borders were only stabilized after the brief Gollub War in 1422, with the Treaty of Melno. The demarcations of the treaty would remain unchanged for nearly 500 years and end with the Lithuanian occupation of the Klaipėda region in 1923.[50]
Military strategy
[edit]The Teutonic Order was eager to install itself in Samogitia, and the Lithuanians sought to dissuade them, but both failed. Not only did both lack long-term planning, but the Lithuanians also lacked support among the other feudal lords of eastern Europe.[26] Only particularly energetic grand princes, such as Vytenis around 1311, succeeded in uniting the regionally fragmented Lithuanian forces under one banner for attack. Nevertheless, a combined army of regional sub-units remained only nominally united, which made a combined offensive action difficult in the event of a vigorous counterattack. The average number of men fielded by the order ranged from 3,000 to 8,000.[26] Neither party planned campaigns for precise goals,[26][5]: 226 except for the Teutonic campaign of 1336 that ended with the construction of Bayernburg. The Lithuanians tried to create a precise campaign in 1370, but this fell apart after their decisive defeat at Rudau.[26]
The wars were marked by small skirmishes, raids, sieges, and ferocious reprisals aimed at slaughtering farmers.[5]: 226 Both the Lithuanian light cavalry and the armies of the order preferred to raid unprotected settlements before engaging in large-scale battles.[26] The Lithuanian raiders sometimes tortured their captives,[51] and the Teutonic disdain for the Lithuanians was famously exemplified by their "gift" of the Grunwald Swords before their disastrous loss at the Battle of Grunwald. Major battles were the exceptions in the conflict. The Teutonic Order undertook around 300 military campaigns between 1305 and 1409. The Lithuanians made only 45 incursions into the Teutonic State.[52]
Historiography
[edit]The oldest historiography around the Lithuanian crusades is divided between German, Lithuanian, and Polish sources and is usually dedicated to recording political events.[53]: 39, 76 Primary source material is difficult to interpret because of biased descriptions each side used of the other to petition for foreign support.[54]: 74 These propagandistic accounts are exemplified in Peter of Dusburg's 14th century writings like the Chronicon terrae Prussiae, which confused historical research on the crusades for centuries.[55]: 290 For similar reasons, many coeval crusading accounts mistakenly refer to the Lithuanians as "Saracens".[4]: 415 The order itself described the Lithuanians as "heathens", but French- or English-speaking crusaders often used the term even after the Lithuanians had mostly converted to Christianity.[4]: 415, 419 This probably contributed to the crusaders' confusion and served as a justification to continue crusades.[4]: 425
In Germany, the conflicts were largely forgotten or limited to the dispute between the Teutonic Order and the Kingdom of Poland that ended with the Peace of Thorn. Annalists like Wigand of Marburg often combined facts and oral recounts with folklore and myths.[53]: 43 In the 18th century, Prussian scholars questioned the sincerity of Gediminas's diplomatic efforts and implied promises of conversion.[54]: 76 In history books printed from the 1800s on, the Lithuanian crusade was minimized or recounted in single favorable episodes, such as the Battle of Rudau or the construction of settlements by German colonists.[11]: 60
The conflict is represented in the opposite way in Lithuania today.[22]: 229 Through the Middle Ages, Lithuanian historians like Jan Długosz based their work on the Lithuanian Chronicles. The chronicles comprise combinations of documents (known as redactions) that reflect official state interpretations of Lithuanian history.[53]: 49 The chronicles made arguments for Lithuanian nationalism by connecting the Lithuanian Palemonids dynasty to the rule of Ancient Rome. The historiographic record also includes the personal letters of the Lithuanian rulers Gediminas, Algirdas, and Vytautas, which were often written in Old Church Slavonic, German, or Greek.[53]: 59 These political accounts are supplemented by cultural records like those of Michalo Lituanus and Simonas Daukantas.[53]: 81 Samogitian writers have exalted local deeds of heroism because the region was the central Teutonic aim in the crusades.[56] Poland, present throughout the conflict, is not often mentioned, although Stanisław Sarnicki's chronicle includes discussion of the crusades.[53]: 68
Modern Lithuanian historical research was heavily influenced by Soviet culture and strictures until only recently. A well-regarded Lithuanian study by Edvardas Gudavičius, "Kryžiaus karai Pabaltijyje", was written to avoid Soviet censorship, leading Gudavičius to downplay Lithuanian independence and overstate the role of medieval popes in directing the Lithuanian crusades.[55]: 293 Similarly, Soviet historians often held that the Lithuanian coat of arms and governmental structure were all borrowed from Russian culture.[55]: 300 Gudavičius later proposed that the shared rule of Algirdas and Kęstutis should be seen as part of a Lithuanian tradition of "submonarchs" with Algirdas leading, rather than the historical belief that the two brothers ruled as equals.[55]: 294 Soviet researchers avoided writing about Algirdas.[55]: 301 The 1986 theory of Gudavičius's student Alvydas Nikžentaitis, that Gediminas was poisoned, challenged the accepted Soviet view of Lithuanian history. Perception of Lithuanian military strategy has changed as well, as historians discovered that the Lithuanians did occasionally use cavalry and make intentional tactical retreats to confuse their enemies, as they did at the Battle of Grunwald.[55]: 296, 300
Medievalist study of the Lithuanian crusades has been limited in English but increased with the fall of the Iron Curtain.[55]: 289 The 1993 research of S. C. Rowell in Lithuania Ascending made it easy for other historians to examine the political and cultural context of the Lithuanian crusades.[55]: 289–290 Rowell argues for the adoption of 16th century Russian sources which, though corrupted, contain information about the Lithuanian crusades.[55]: 290 These newer sources see the uses of religious conversion by Lithuanian rulers like Gediminas as a strategy for gaining political clout and conducting diplomacy; they do not describe the conversions as deceitful.
Timeline
[edit]Background
[edit]- 1230 — Seven Teutonic knights and their nearly 750 followers arrive at the mouth of the Vistula in the south of Chełmno Land under the command of Prussian Hermann Balk.
- 1236 — Battle of Saule on September 22, with a crushing defeat for the Livonian Brothers of the Sword
- 1237 — Assimilation of the indebted Livonian Brothers into the Teutonic Order
- 1242 — Defeat of a Teutonic contingent on Lake Peipus by Alexander Nevsky; the first Prussian uprisings after the attacks of Batu Khan in the region
- 1244 — Battle of Embūte
- 1251 — Lithuanian duke Mindaugas converts to Christianity, although he re-adopts Lithuanian beliefs around 1260.
- 1259 — Battle of Skuodas on August 5, with a victory by the Livonian Order under Burchard von Hornhausen
- 1260 — Battle of Durbe on July 13; second wave of Prussian uprisings
- 1270 — Battle of Karuse
- 1275–1299 — Irregular Lithuanian military campaigns, partly on behalf of the Archbishopric of Riga, in Semigallia
- 1279 — Battle of Aizkraukle on March 5, between the Livonian knights and the Samogitians, with victory going to the latter
- 1287 — Battle of Garoza
- 1298 — Battle of Turaida
The crusades
[edit]- 1303 — First Lithuanian incursions into Skalvia
- 1311 — Battle of Voplaukis
- 1315 — Siege of Christmemel
- 1320 — Battle of Medininkai
- 1323 — Battle of Memel
- 1324 — Alliance between Lithuanian duke Gediminas and the Polish king Władysław I Łokietek
- 1326 — Raid on Brandenburg
- 1329 — John of Bohemia joins the crusades against Lithuania.
- 1329 — Hill fortresses seized by the order and John of Bohemia after the Siege of Medvėgalis
- 1336 — Large campaign by the order that leads to the Siege of Pilėnai
- 1344 — The duumvirate between Algirdas and Kęstutis forms.
- 1348 — Battle of Strėva on February 2, with Lithuanian defeat
- 1361 — Kęstutis is captured by the order for the first time, but escapes the following year.
- 1362 — Siege of Kaunas, after which the castle is razed by the order
- 1365 — Siege of Kernavė
- 1370 — Battle of Rūdava on February 17, with victory for the order
- 1372 — End of the Lithuanian–Muscovite War
- 1377 — Death of Algirdas on May 24
- 1382 — Kęstutis dies, imprisoned, in August.
- 1384 — Siege of Marienwerder (Kaunas)[3]
- 1386 — The son of Algirdas, Jogaila, accedes to the throne of Poland. His cousin Vytautas is proclaimed grand duke of Lithuania.
- 1387 — The Christianization of Lithuania begins, imposed by Jogaila.
- 1398 — Through the Treaty of Salynas on October 12, Vytautas transfers Samogitia to the order.
- 1399 — Battle of the Vorskla River was fought on August 12. The Lithuanians were weakened after their loss to the Golden Horde.
- 1390 — Siege of Vilnius
- 1401–1404 and 1409 — Samogitian uprisings
- 1402 — Siege of Vilnius
Aftermath
[edit]- 1410 — Battle of Grunwald on July 15, with a great Polish–Lithuanian victory over the order
- 1410 — Unsuccessful Polish–Lithuanian Siege of Marienburg from July 26 to September 19
- 1411 — The Peace of Thorn, in which the order renounced its conquered Lithuanian territories
- 1422 — The Treaty of Melno, in which the order renounced its claims on Samogitia forever
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The death of the pagan | InContext". Christian History Institute. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
- ^ Christiansen, Eric (1997). The northern Crusades (2nd, new ed.). London, England: Penguin. p. 231. ISBN 0-14-026653-4.
- ^ a b Turnbull, Stephen (20 December 2011). Crusader Castles of the Teutonic Knights. Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781780962177. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
- ^ a b c d Murray, Alan V. (December 2010). "The Saracens of the Baltic: Pagan and Christian Lithuanians in the Perception of English and French Crusaders to Late Medieval Prussia". Journal of Baltic Studies. 41 (4): 413–429. doi:10.1080/01629778.2010.527124. S2CID 144547712.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Christiansen, Eric (2016). Le crociate del Nord : il Baltico e la frontiera cattolica : 1100-1525 (in Italian). Bologna: Il mulino. ISBN 978-88-15-26604-0.
- ^ Jaskievicz, Walter C. (1952). A Study in Lithuanian Mythology: Jan XX Lasicki's Samogitian Gods. University of Indiana. p. 92. OCLC 903668447.
- ^ Pennick, Nigel (2015). Pagan magic of the northern tradition : customs, rites, and ceremonies. Rochester. p. 15. ISBN 978-16-20-55390-9.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Heath, Ian (2016). Armies of Feudal Europe 1066-1300. Lulu.com. p. 128. ISBN 9781326256524.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Carpini, Claudio (2007). Storia della Lituania : identità europea e cristiana di un popolo (in Italian). Roma: Città Nuova. ISBN 978-88-31-10341-1.
- ^ Bain, Carolyn (2009). Estonia Lettonia e Lituania (in Italian) (3 ed.). Torino: EDT. p. 24. ISBN 978-88-6040-463-3.
- ^ a b Jurgėla, Constantine Rudyard (1948). History of the Lithuanian Nation. Institute of Lithuanian Culture. p. 158.
- ^ Paliepa, Janis (2011). Origin Of The Baltic And Vedic Languages : Baltic Mythology. Authorhouse. ISBN 978-14-56-72901-1.
- ^ Norkus, Zenonas (2017). An unproclaimed empire : the Grand Duchy of Lithuania : from the viewpoint of comparative historical sociology of empires. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon. p. 284. ISBN 978-13-51-66905-4.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Mänd, Anu; Tamm, Marek (2020). Making Livonia : actors and networks in the medieval and early modern Baltic Sea Region. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 117. ISBN 978-10-00-07693-6.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cardini, Franco (2010). Come l'orco della fiaba : studi per Franco Cardini (in Italian). Firenze: SISMEL edizioni del Galluzzo. ISBN 978-88-84-50375-6.
- ^ a b Murray, Alan V. (2017). Crusade and conversion on the Baltic frontier, 1150-1500. London: Taylor & Francis. p. 21. ISBN 978-13-51-94715-2.
- ^ a b Kirby, D. G. (1990). Northern Europe in the early modern period : the Baltic world, 1492-1772. London: Routledge. p. 26. ISBN 978-13-17-90214-0.
- ^ a b c d e f g Urban, William L. (1989). The Samogitian Crusade. Chicago: Lithuanian Research and Studies Center. ISBN 978-09-29-70003-8.
- ^ Baranauskas, Tomas. "Vėlyvieji viduramžiai I dalis (1283–1386 m.)" (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 28 June 2020.
- ^ "Bisenė". Gynybiniai įtvirtinimai (XIII-XVIII a.) (in Lithuanian). Society of the Lithuanian Archaeology. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
- ^ Baranauskas, Tomas (2003). "Lietuvos medinės pilys rašytinių šaltinių duomenimis" (PDF). Lietuvos archeologija (in Lithuanian). 24: 65. ISSN 0207-8694. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-11-29. Retrieved 2016-07-02.
- ^ a b c d e f Rowell, S. C. (2014). Lithuania ascending : a pagan empire within east-central Europe, 1295-1345. Cambridge. ISBN 978-1107658769.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Simas Sužiedėlis, ed. (1970–1978). "Vytenis". Encyclopedia Lituanica. Vol. VI. Boston, Massachusetts: Juozas Kapočius. pp. 221–222. LCCN 74-114275.
- ^ Kiaupa, Zigmantas; Jūratė Kiaupienė; Albinas Kuncevičius (2000) [1995]. The History of Lithuania Before 1795 (English ed.). Vilnius: Lithuanian Institute of History. pp. 112–114. ISBN 9986-810-13-2.
- ^ Gudavičius, Edvardas; Rokas Varakauskas (2004). "Vytenis". In Vytautas Spečiūnas (ed.). Lietuvos valdovai (XIII-XVIII a.): enciklopedinis žinynas (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos institutas. pp. 32–33. ISBN 5-420-01535-8.
- ^ a b c d e f Turnbull, Stephen (2013). Tannenberg 1410 : Disaster for the Teutonic Knights. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 30–32. ISBN 978-14-72-80009-1.
- ^ Baltrušienė, Doloresa (1999). Acquaintance with Lithuania : book of the millennium. Kaunas: Kraštotvarka. p. 20. ISBN 978-99-86-89228-1.
- ^ a b Hinson, E. Glenn (1995). The church triumphant : a history of Christianity up to 1300. Macon, GA, USA: Mercer University Press. p. 438. ISBN 978-08-65-54436-9.
- ^ a b c Kiaupa, Zigmantas (2000). The history of Lithuania before 1795. Vilnius: Lithuanian Institute of History. p. 102. ISBN 978-99-86-81013-1.
- ^ Bazan, Lubov (2014). A history of Belarus : a non-literary essay that explains the ethnogenesis of the Belarusians. London: Glagoslav Publications. p. 74. ISBN 978-19-09-15661-6.
- ^ a b Milliman, Paul (2013). "The slippery memory of men" : the place of Pomerania in the medieval Kingdom of Poland. Leiden: Brill. p. 255. ISBN 978-90-04-18274-5.
- ^ Algirdas did make other requests. He asked for the return of all the lands recently conquered by the order, and for the order to direct its aggressions toward the Tartars to aid the Lithuanians in conquering Ruthenia. Norkis, p. 340
- ^ Alssen, Liuda (1978). "Peter Suchenwirt and the "Drang nach Osten" - Liuda Alssen". Lituanus: Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences. 24 (4). ISSN 0024-5089.
- ^ Arnaszus, Helmut (1990). Reiseführer durch Litauen und ehemaliges Ostpreussen (in German). Vilnius. p. 161. ISBN 978-54-20-01025-9.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Jučas, M. (2009). The battle of Grünwald. Vilnius: National Museum. p. 27. ISBN 978-60-99-50745-3.
- ^ Koncius, Joseph B. (1964). Vytautas the Great: Grand Duke of Lithuania. Franklin Press. p. 22.
- ^ Frost, Robert I. (2018). The Oxford History of Poland-Lithuania: Volume I: The Making of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, 1385-1569. Oxford University Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-01-92-56814-4.
- ^ Mistrini, Vincenzo (2016). Le guerre polacco-ottomane (1593-1699), vol. 1: Le forze in campo (in Italian). Soldiershop Publishing. p. 60. ISBN 978-88-93-27175-2.
- ^ Vardys, Vytas Stanley (2018). Lithuania : the rebel nation. New York: Routledge. p. 12. ISBN 978-04-29-96771-9.
- ^ Belch, Stanislaus F. (2018). Paulus Vladimiri and his doctrine concerning international law and politics. Volume 1 Paulus Vladimiri and his doctrine concerning international law and politics (Reprint 2018 ed.). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 124. ISBN 978-31-11-69646-1.
- ^ Mallia-Milanes, Victor (2017). The Military Orders Volume III : History and Heritage (1st ed.). Routledge. p. 34. ISBN 978-13-51-54252-4.
- ^ Urban, William L. (2019). The last years of the Teutonic Knights Lithuania, Poland and the Teutonic Order. Barnsley, S. Yorkshire: Greenhill Books. p. 82. ISBN 978-17-84-38360-2.
- ^ a b c Cristini, Luca Stefano (2016). La battaglia di Tannenberg 1410 (in Italian). Soldiershop Publishing. ISBN 978-88-93-27027-4.
- ^ Rawson, Andrew (2015). A clash of thrones : the power-crazed medieval kings, Popes and emperors of Europe. Stroud, Gloucestershire. p. 132. ISBN 978-07-50-96678-8.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ D'Amato, Giuseppe (2004). Viaggio nell'hansa baltica : l'Unione europea e l'allargamento ad Est (in Italian). Milano: Greco & Greco. p. 120. ISBN 978-88-79-80355-7.
- ^ Jučas, M. (2009). The battle of Grünwald. Vilnius: National Museum. p. 89. ISBN 978-60-99-50745-3.
- ^ Nørgaard, Ole (1999). The Baltic States After Independence. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 47. ISBN 978-17-82-54344-2.
- ^ "Blätter für deutsche Landesgeschichte" (in German). 111. 1975: 181.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Kubon, Sebastian (2 October 2016). "Wielki mistrz Michael Küchmeister a konfl ikty państwa zakonu krzyżackiego z Polską i Litwą w latach 1414–1422. Kryzysy bez końca czy okres konsolidacji? Rozważania nad średniowieczną polityką zewnętrzną". Biuletyn Polskiej Misji Historycznej. 11: 359–380. doi:10.12775/BPMH.2016.011. ISSN 2083-7755.
- ^ Taylor, Neil (2008). Baltic cities. Chalfont St. Peter: Bradt Travel Guides. p. 231. ISBN 978-18-41-62247-7.
- ^ Seward, Desmond (1995). The monks of war : the military religious orders. London: Penguin Books. p. 100. ISBN 0140195017.
- ^ Turnbull, Stephen R. (2011). Crusader castles of the Teutonic Knights. Red-brick castles of Prussia 1230-1466. Oxford: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 14. ISBN 978-18-49-08010-1.
- ^ a b c d e f Bonda, Moreno (2013). History of Lithuanian Historiography (PDF). Kaunas: Vytautas Magnus University. ISBN 978-9955-21-363-5. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
- ^ a b Rowell, S. C. (1993). "Of Men and Monsters: Sources for the History of Lithuania in the time of Gediminas (ca. 1315-1342)". Journal of Baltic Studies. 24 (1): 73–112. doi:10.1080/01629779200000261. ISSN 0162-9778. JSTOR 43211787. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Mažeika, Rasa (January 1995). "The Grand Duchy rejoins Europe: Post-Soviet developments in the historiography of pagan Lithuania". Journal of Medieval History. 21 (3): 289–303. doi:10.1016/0304-4181(95)00766-9.
- ^ Vaišvilaite, Irena (2013). Chiese Lignee in Samogizia (in Italian). Gangemi Editore spa. p. 4. ISBN 978-88-49-29761-4.
Further reading
[edit]- Baranauskas, Tomas (January 2007). "Veliuona and the Lithuanian crusade" (PDF). Lietuvai pagražinti draugija.
- Batūra, Romas (2010) [2010]. Places of Fighting for Lithuania's Freedom In the Expanse of Nemunas, Vistula and Dauguva rivers (PDF). Vilnius: The General Jonas Žemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania. ISBN 978-9955-423-91-1.
- Brennan, Timothy M. (2005). Just war, sovereignty, and canon law: Legal arguments over the Lithuanian Crusade and the rights of unbelievers at the Council of Constance (1414–1418) (PhD thesis). University of Kansas. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
- Chollet, Loïc (10 May 2016). "Crusade or Christianization? The polemic against the Teutonic Knights in light of French travelers' accounts of the late Middle Ages". Ordines Militares. Colloquia Torunensia Historica. 20: 175. doi:10.12775/OM.2015.008.
- Markman, Kristina (2015). Between Two Worlds: A Comparative Study of the Representations of Pagan Lithuania in the Chronicles of the Teutonic Order and Rus' (PhD thesis). UCLA. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
- Murray, Alan V., ed. (5 December 2016). The Clash of Cultures on the Medieval Baltic Frontier. Routledge. ISBN 978-0754664833.
- Norkus, Zenonas (2017). An unproclaimed empire : the Grand Duchy of Lithuania : from the viewpoint of comparative historical sociology of empires. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon. ISBN 978-1138281547.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)