Podlaskie Voivodeship (1513–1795)
The Podlaskie Voivodeship was formed in 1513 by Sigismund I the Old as a voivodeship in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, from a split off part of the Trakai Voivodeship. After Lithuania's union with the Poland |Kingdom of Poland] in 1569 and formation of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the voivodeship was transferred to the Polish Crown, where it belonged to the Lesser Poland Province, [Crown of the Kingdom of Poland|Lesser Poland Province].
History
In ca. 1274, the historical Podlachia region was added to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In 1391, the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Jogaila attempted to transfer the region to Duke Vytautas' brother-in-law, Janusz I of Warsaw, Duke of Masovia, but from 1413 on Podlaskie was managed as part of Lithuania's Trakai Voivodeship.Formation
After the administrative reform of 1514, Podlaskie was isolated from Trakai Voivodeship as a separate voivodeship, with the capital at the town of Drohiczyn. King of Poland Sigismund gave a privilege to to form a government of Podlaskie Voivodeship on 29 August 1513. It originally consisted of the following former Trakai lands: Drohiczyn, Mielnik, Bielsk, and Brest Litovsk. In 1566 based on Brest Litovsk lands, the separate Brest Litovsk Voivodeship was formed.In 1569, Podlachia was returned to the Kingdom of Poland by the Privilege of restoration of Podlasie land to the Polish Crown.
Knyszyn was the favorite residence of King Sigismund II Augustus, who died there in 1572, ending the reign of the Jagiellonian dynasty in Poland. Polish Renaissance writer Łukasz Górnicki, after his appointment as starost of Tykocin in 1572, resided and wrote many of his works in Lipniki.
Podlaskie Voivodeship was subtracted by extensive royal estates, numerous small estates of the nobility and a dense network of small towns. Petty nobility often cultivated their land on their own, and there were many places where the nobility had no serfs, making certain parts of the voivodeship, according to Polish historian, geographer and ethnographer Zygmunt Gloger, the place with the highest percentage of free agricultural population in Europe in the feudal era. Polish nobles in Podlachia became so numerous that from the 16th century some migrated to other regions, including Lesser Poland and Lithuania, where they often made significant fortunes.
In the 17th and early 18th century, the chief regional royal residence in Podlaskie Voivodeship was Tykocin. In December 1630, King Sigismund III Vasa and his family took shelter there from an epidemic, and in 1633 Władysław IV Vasa also stopped there. In 1653, Podlachia itself was hit by an epidemic. The region was invaded by Sweden during the Deluge, but in 1657, Poles recaptured Tykocin. In 1661, renowned Polish military commander Stefan Czarniecki was granted the Tykocin starostwo with the towns of Tykocin and Białystok as a reward for his military service during the Swedish invasion of Poland of 1655–1660. Two Polish Protestant synods were held in Podlachia, a Calvinist one in Orla in 1644 and a Lutheran one in Węgrów in 1780. Tykocin, whose Old Town is now designated a Historic Monument of Poland, was the place where the Order of the White Eagle, Poland's oldest and highest order, was established.
During the Swedish [invasion of Poland |Swedish invasion of Poland of 1701–1706], in 1702, Tykocin was the place of talks between delegates of Poland and Sweden. In 1704, Podlaskie protested against the election of Stanisław Leszczyński as King of Poland. Swedish and Russian troops often passed through the region during the war.
By the 18th century the private town of Białystok became the main center of the region, thanks to the patronage of the Branicki family. Due to the city's palace, parks and edifices, Białystok was dubbed the "Versailles of Podlachia". At that time, Polish kings traveling through Podlachia mainly resided in Białystok, i.e. Augustus II the Strong in 1726 and 1729 and Augustus III of Poland in 1744, 1752 and 1755. The School of Civil and Military Engineering, Poland's first military technical college, and Komedialnia, one of the oldest theaters in Poland, were founded in Białystok in 1745 and 1748, respectively. Białystok was a regional brewing center with 33 breweries as of 1771, with the Podlachian Beer now listed as a protected traditional beverage by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland.
In 1733, during the War of the Polish Succession, supporters of Augustus III retreated from Warsaw to Węgrów in Podlaskie Voivodeship. In 1767, Jan Klemens Branicki and Wacław Rzewuski protested against the Radom Confederation in Brańsk.
Aftermath
In the Third Partition of Poland in 1795, most of the voivodeship was taken over by the Kingdom of Prussia as part of New East Prussia, with southern outskirts annexed by Austria, with the Bug forming the border between them. From 1807, these lands were part of the Duchy of Warsaw. Then, parts of it belonged to Congress Poland or the Russian Empire until 1915.Administrative Subdivisions
The Voivodeship consisted of the following ziemias:- Bielsk Land, Bielsk). Local sejmiks took place in Bielsk, where the szlachta elected two deputies of the Sejm,
- Drohiczyn Land, Drohiczyn). Local sejmiks took place in Drohiczyn, electing two deputies of parliament,
- Mielnik Land, Mielnik). Local sejmik took place in Mielnik, where two deputies were elected.
Heraldry
Cities and towns
Cities and towns of the voivodeship after 1566:Bielsk County
- Augustów
- Białystok
- Bielsk
- Boćki
- Brańsk
- Goniądz
- Jasionówka
- Kleszczele
- Knyszyn
- Narew
- Orla
- Rajgród
- Suraż
- Trzcianne
- Tykocin
- Wysokie Mazowieckie County|Waniewo]
Drohiczyn County
- Ciechanowiec
- Drohiczyn
- Kosów Lacki
- Miedzna
- Mokobody
- Mordy
- Siemiatycze
- Sokołów County|Skrzeszew]
- Sokołów
- Sterdyń
- Węgrów
- Wysokie
Mielnik County
- Łosice
- Mielnik
- Sarnaki
Voivodes
Voivodes included
- Ioanness Sapieha 1513 – 1517
- 1520 – 1527
- Ioannes Sapieha 1529 – 1541
- 1543 – 1551
- Mikołaj Narbutt 1551 – 1555
- 1555 – 1558, also the Voivode of Smoleńsk
- 1558 – 1569, also the Voivode of Smoleńsk
- 1569 – 1587
- 1588 – 1591
- 1591 – 1604, also the Voivode of Volhynia
- 1605 – 1605, also the Voivode of Masovia
- Jan Zbigniew Ossoliński 1605 – 1613, also the Voivode of Sandomierz
- 1613 – 1616
- 1616 – 1617
- Wojciech Niemira 1617 – 1625
- 1625 – 1631
- 1633 – 1634
- Stanisław Niemira 1634 – 1648
- 1649 – 1652, also the Voivode of Masovia
- 1652 – 1653
- 1653 – 1661, also the Voivode of Kalisz
- 1665 – 1673
- 1673 – 1688
- 1688 – 1698
- 1699 – 1709
- Stanisław Mateusz Rzewuski 1710 – 1728, also the Voivode of Bełz, hetman polny koronny
- 1728 – 1738
- 1738 – 1745, also podskarbi wielki koronny
- 1746 – 1752, also podkanclerzy litewski
- 1752 – 1762
- Bernard Stanisław Gozdzki 1762 – 1771
- 1771 – 1774
- 1774 – 1790
- (ur. 1735, zm. 1794 1790 – 1794