请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Liubartas
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Family

  3. See also

  4. References

{{Infobox royalty
| name = Demetrius of Liubar
| title =
| image = Liubartas King Galicia-Volhynia.jpg
| image_size = 200px
| caption = Modern illustration
| succession = Grand Prince of Volhynia
| reign = 1340–1383
| predecessor = George II Boleslav (as King of Rus)
| successor = {{illm|Theodore of Volhynia|uk|Федір Любартович}}
| spouse = 1. Euphemia of Volhynia;
2. Daughter of Konstantin of Rostov
| issue =
| house = Gediminids
| father = Gediminas
| mother =
| birth_date =
| birth_place =
| death_date = {{circa|1383}}
| death_place =
}}

Demetrius of Liubar or Liubartas (also Lubart, Lubko, Lubardus, baptized Dmitry; died {{circa|1383}}) was Prince of Lutsk and Liubar (Volhynia) (1323–1383), Prince of Zhytomyr (1363–1374), Grand Prince of Volhynia (1340–1383), Grand Prince of Galicia and Volhynia (1340–1349).

Biography

Liubartas was the youngest son of Gediminas, Grand Duke of Lithuania. In the early 1320s he married a daughter of Andrew of Galicia and ruled Lutsk with Liubar (today town in Zhytomyr Oblast) in eastern Volhynia.[1] After Andrew and his brother Leo II died around 1322, Galicia–Volhynia did not have a male successor. Instead of promoting Liubartas and causing a war with Poland, Gediminas compromised with Władysław I of Poland. Both parties agreed to install Boleslaw-Yuri II, nephew of Leo and Andrew.

Boleslaw-Yuri was a son of Trojden I of Masovia from the Piast dynasty, a cousin of Władysław I, and nephew of Gediminas' son-in-law Wacław of Płock.[1] At the time Boleslaw was fourteen years old and was betrothed to Eufemija, daughter of Gediminas. Liubartas continued to rule Lutsk and Volodymyr-Volynskyi. That way the Galicia–Volhynia Wars were postponed until after Boleslaw's poisoning in 1340.[1] He was poisoned by rebellious nobles, who invited Liubartas to become the ruler for both Galicia and Volhynia.[2] Sources are too scarce to fully reconstruct events between 1341–1349.[3]

Despite the support from his brothers Algirdas and Kęstutis, Liubartas lost all territories except for eastern Volhynia with Lutsk to Casimir III of Poland in 1349. In 1351 he was even taken prisoner during a battle, and Kęstutis had to rescue him. In 1366 a treaty was signed: Liubartas retained eastern Volhynia with Lutsk, while Poland got western Volhynia and Galicia. However the matter was settled only in 1370: Liubartas took advantage of Casimir's death and captured all of Volhynia.[2] The territories changed again only in 1569, when Volhynia, including Lutsk, was transferred to Poland by the Union of Lublin.

In 1382, after death of Louis I of Hungary, Liubartas captured Kremenets, Przemyshl, and other cities from Hungary.[4] He supported his brother Kęstutis against nephew Jogaila during the succession fights. He built a castle in Lutsk, known as the Lubart's Castle, that survives to this day. Liubartas died ca. 1385, having ruled Volhynia for roughly sixty years. He married for the second time ca. 1350 to an unnamed daughter of Konstantin of Rostov, a relative of Simeon of Moscow.[4]

Family

  • 1321/23 married Hanna-Buch (Euphemia), princess of Volhynia, daughter of Andrew of Galicia
  • 1350 married daughter of {{illm|Konstantin of Rostov II|ru|Константин Васильевич (князь ростовский)}}
    • Fedor/{{illm|Theodore of Volhynia|uk|Федір Любартович}} (~1351–1431)
    • Lazar (died after 1386)
    • Semen (died after 1386)
    • Demetrius, presumably ancestor of the House of Sanguszko

See also

  • Family of Gediminas – family tree of Liubartas
  • List of Ukrainian rulers

References

1. ^{{cite book | title=Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire Within East-Central Europe, 1295–1345 | first=C. S. | last=Rowell | year=1994 | publisher=Cambridge University Press | series=Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series| isbn=978-0-521-45011-9 | page=224}}
2. ^{{cite encyclopedia | editor-first=Simas |editor-last=Sužiedėlis | encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Lituanica | title=Liubartas | year=1970–1978 | publisher=Juozas Kapočius | volume=III | location=Boston, Massachusetts | id={{LCC | 74-114275}} | pages=411–412}}
3. ^Rowell, C. S. Lithuania Ascending, pp. 268–269
4. ^{{cite encyclopedia | first=Rimantas | last=Jasas | editor-first=Vytautas |editor-last=Spečiūnas | encyclopedia=Lietuvos valdovai (XIII-XVIII a.): enciklopedinis žinynas | title=Liubartas | year=2004 | publisher=Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos institutas | location=Vilnius | isbn=5-420-01535-8 | page=44|language=lt}}
{{s-start}}{{s-hou|Gediminids||c.1300|December|c.1383}}{{s-reg|}}{{s-bef|rows=2|before=Leo II of Galicia (as King of Rus)}}{{s-ttl|title=Prince of Liubar|years=1323–1340}}{{s-aft|after=Grand Prince of Rus}}{{s-ttl|title=Prince of Lutsk|years=1323–1324}}{{s-aft|after=George II Boleslav (as King of Rus)}}{{s-bef|before=George II Boleslav (as King of Rus)}}{{s-ttl|rows=3|title=Grand Prince of Volhynia|years=1340–1383}}{{s-aft|after=Alexander of Podilia (as Prince of Volodymyr)}}{{s-bef|before=Alexander of Podilia (as Prince of Volodymyr)}}{{s-aft|after=Theodore of Volhynia}}{{s-end}}

5 : 14th-century births|1384 deaths|People from Galicia–Volhynia|Princes of Halych|Gediminids

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/11 9:12:53