Lithuanian Chronicles
The Lithuanian Chronicles or Belarusian-Lithuanian Chronicles are three redactions of chronicles compiled in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. All redactions were written in the Ruthenian language and served the needs of Lithuanian patriotism. The first edition, compiled in the 1420s, glorified Vytautas the Great and supported his side in power struggles. The second redaction, prepared in the first half of the 16th century, started the myth of Lithuanian Roman origin: it gave a fanciful genealogy of Palemon, a noble from the Roman Empire who founded the Grand Duchy. This noble origin of Lithuanians was important in cultural rivalry with the Kingdom of Poland. The third redaction, known as the Bychowiec Chronicle, elaborated even further on the legend, but also provided some useful information about the second half of the 15th century. The three redactions, the first known historical accounts produced within the Grand Duchy, gave rise to the historiography of Lithuania. All medieval historians used these accounts, that survived in over 30 known manuscripts, as basis for their publications. Some of the myths created in the chronicles persisted even to the beginning of the 20th century.
First or short redaction
The first or the short redaction was compiled sometime in the 1420s in Smolensk, when Vytautas the Great hoped to be crowned as King of Lithuania. The first redaction survived only from later manuscripts and compilations. The earliest known compilation was prepared in Smolensk around 1446 by bishop Gerasim and his clerk Timofei.Structure
The compilation included:- Dis ist Witoldes sache wedir Jagalan und Skargalan, the earliest known historical account produced in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in Middle Low German. It is a complaint and memorial written by Vytautas in 1390 during the Lithuanian Civil War. It detailed his power struggles against cousins Jogaila and Skirgaila in 1379–1390 and supported his claims to his patrimony in Trakai and title of Grand Duke of Lithuania. Two translations of this document survive:
- The , written in 1428 by Timofey, scribe of bishop Gerasim of Smolensk;
- The Tale about Podolia, written in 1431–1435 to support the Lithuanian claims to Podolia against Poland in the Lithuanian Civil War;
- A description of power struggles between Švitrigaila and Sigismund Kęstutaitis during the Lithuanian Civil War ;
- A short summary of Moscow's chronicles ; and
- The latest events in Smolensk.
Manuscripts
- Supraśl Manuscript, preserved in a 1519 copy found in the Supraśl Orthodox Monastery; the chronicle texts in it are believed to have been written in the middle of the 15th century
- Chronicle of Avraamka or Vilnius Manuscript, written by a Smolensk monk named Avraamka in 1495, found in Polotsk in 1866, and kept in the Wroblewski Library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in Vilnius.
- Slutsk Chronicle or Uvarov Manuscript, dated to the 16th century, probably originated in the region of Slutsk
- Academic Manuscript, written in the first half of the 16th century, found in Vologda, and published in 1903, is incomplete
- Nikifor Manuscript or Chronicle, belonged to the Holy Spirit Cathedral in Minsk and was published by in 1898, is incomplete
Second redaction
While many modern historians discount the text as useless, it can still provide useful bits and pieces of Lithuanian history as it incorporates many garbled fragments of earlier, now lost, documents and chronicles. Also, the mythical Palemon is a good evidence of political tensions and cultural ideology of the Lithuanian nobles in the 16th century. This myth served Lithuanian interests in conflicts with Poland and Muscovy. Poland, then in personal union with Lithuania, claimed that it brought civilization to this barbaric pagan land. By creating fanciful genealogies, linking Lithuanians with noble Romans, the Lithuanian nobility could counter these claims and demand political independence.
This redaction rarely included dates and contained several independent stories that were cherished by 19th century nationalists: legends how Gediminas founded Vilnius because of his dreams of Iron Wolf, how Kęstutis took pagan priestess Birutė for his wife, how Vytautas lavishly treated his guests at the Conference of Lutsk in 1429, etc. Among them were some factual stories, including Algirdas' three sieges of Moscow. This format differed significantly from other Slavic chronicles that tended to list inter-related events year-by-year. The second redaction also considerably trimmed and fragmented parts about Ruthenia and the Principality of Moscow; thus the text became primarily about Lithuania. The chronicle was popular and often copied. It shaped the political mentality of the Lithuanian nobility, formed the basis for the Lithuanian historiography until the dawn of the 20th century, and inspired many literary works.
Several manuscripts are known:
- , written in the early 16th century, found in a collection of the Krasiński family in Warsaw, destroyed in 1944 during World War II. Before its destruction, several scholarly studies of the manuscript were published, and several critical editions of its text had been published, including by A. F. Bychkov, and PSRL vol. 17.
- , written in the early 16th century.
- Olszew/, written in 1550 by a likely native Lithuanian speaker, found in a Chomiński library in
- or Poznań Manuscript, written around 1580, gifted by Edward Raczyński to the Raczyński Library in Poznań
- , written in mid-16th century
- , written in the second half of the 17th century; contains entries until the year 1567, first published by the Rumyantsev Museum in 1902.
Third or broad redaction
The patriotic themes were even more prevalent than in the second redaction. It continued to elaborate on the Palemon legend: to improve chronology Palemon was moved to the 5th century Rome, devastated by Attila the Hun, and Mindaugas and other historical dukes were incorporated into the legend. It also concentrated more on the Catholic Church than earlier revisions, which paid closer attention to Eastern Orthodoxy. It is an important source for the late 15th century events, especially years of Alexander Jagiellon.