List of Lithuanian rulers
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The following is a list of Lithuanian rulers — kings, grand dukes, and presidents — when Lithuania was a sovereign state or was regarded as a separate entity (i.e. Lithuanian SSR). The incumbents and officeholders are listed by names most commonly used in English language sources. Where appropriate, the alternations in Lithuanian, Ruthenian (later Belarusian) and Polish languages are included.
The state of Lithuania formed in 1230's, when threatened by the Livonian Order in the north and the Teutonic Knights in the west, Baltic tribes united under Mindaugas leadership. He became the only crowned king of Lithuania. His state became know as Grand Duchy of Lithuania. After Grand Duke Jogaila became also king of Poland in 1386, the two states became closer connected and since 1440 both were ruled by a common ruler. In 1569 Union of Lublin was signed and a new entity — Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth — emerged. The commonwealth was partitioned in 1795 and Lithuania became part of the Russian Empire till February 16, 1918. The Council of Lithuania was able to establish the sovereignty only in 1919, after Germany lost the World War I. The first republic of Lithuania existed till 1940 when it was occupied by the Soviet Union. During the Soviet-German War, Lithuania was occupied by Nazi Germany. In 1944, as Germany was losing the war, Russia re-occupied Lithuania and established the Lithuanian SSR. On 11 March 1991, Lithuania became the first soviet republic to declare independence. The second Republic of Lithuania is a democratic republic, member of both European Union and NATO.
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[edit] The Grand Duchy of Lithuania (1236-1569)
Title: Grand Duke (Lithuanian: didysis kunigaikštis; Belarusian: vialiki kniaź; Polish: wielki książę) except for Mindaugas, who became king of Lithuania (Lithuanian: Lietuvos karalius).
[edit] Early Grand Dukes (1236–1291)
Dates are approximate because of scant written sources.
| Term | Incumbent | Lithuanian name | Ruthenian name | Polish name | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1236-1263 | Mindaugas | Mindaugas | Mindouh | Mendog | Initially Grand Duke, since 1253 King of Lithuania. After he was killed by his nephew Treniota, a war between nobles for power errupted. |
| 1263-1264 | Treniota | Son of Skirmantas | |||
| 1264-1267 | Vaišvilkas | Vaišvilkas | Vojszalak | Woyszwiłk | Son of Mindaugas, died heirless |
| 1267-1269 | Švarnas | Švarnas | Shvarno | Szwarno | |
| 1269-1282 | Traidenis | Traidenis | Trajdzien | Trojden | |
| 1282-1285 | Daumantas | Daumantas | Dowmont | Dowmont | |
| 1285-1291 | Butegeidis | Butegeidis alias Butigeidis | Budzikid | Budzikid | Ancestor of the later Gediminid dynasty |
[edit] House of Gediminaičiai (1291-1440)
Some dates are approximate.
| Term | Incumbent | Lithuanian name | Ruthenian name | Polish name | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1291-1295 | Butvydas | Butvydas alias Budvydas | Lutavier | Budwid | Brother of Butigeidis, father of Vytenis and Gediminas |
| 1295-1316 | Vytenis | Vytenis | Witenes | Son of Butvydas | |
| 1316-1341 | Gediminas | Gediminas | Giedymin, Hedymin | Giedymin | Son of Butvydas. After his death the domain divided between his 7 sons |
| 1341-1345 | Jaunutis | Jaunutis | Jewnut | Jewnuta | Son of Gediminas. Overlord and Grand Duke, deposed by his brothers Algirdas and Kęstutis |
| 1345-1377 | Algirdas | Algirdas | Olgierd | Olgierd | Son of Gediminas. His co-ruler was Kęstutis, who was active in the west. Algirdas was mostly active in the east. |
| 1377-1381 | Jogaila | Jogaila | Jahajla | Władysław II Jagiełło | Son of Algirdas. Crowned the King of Poland in 1386 and established the personal union of Lithuania and Poland. Founder of the House of Jogailaičiai. |
| 1381-1382 | Kęstutis | Kęstutis | Kiejstut | Kiejstut | Son of Gediminas, co-ruler with Algirdas. Kęstutis ruled the western Lithuania (with capital in Trakai). Deposed Jogaila in 1381 and took control of the whole Lithuania, only to be captured and killed by him next year. |
| 1382-1392 | Jogaila | Jogaila | Jahajla | Władysław II Jagiełło | Also King of Poland 1386-1434. His governor in Lithuania was Skirgaila (1387-1392). |
| 1392-1430 | Vytautas the Great | Vytautas Didysis | Vitaut | Witold | Son of Kęstutis. Joined his father in fight against Jogaila, then changed sides and became Grand Duke of Lithuana in 1392. Was to be crowned King of Lithuania in 1429, but the crown was stopped by the Poles. Died before the second crown arrived. |
| 1430-1432 | Švitrigaila | Švitrigaila | Svidryhajla | Świdrygiełło | Son of Algirdas, brother of Jogaila. Deposed by followers of Žygimantas, son of Kęstutis |
| 1432-1440 | Sigismund Kestutaitis | Žygimantas Kęstutatis | Zygimont I Kejstutavicz | Zygmunt Kiejstutowicz | Son of Kęstutis, brother of Vytautas. Killed by Švitrigaila supporters |
[edit] Personal Union with Poland under House of Jogailaičiai (1440–1572)
The act of personal union with Poland was signed as early as 1385, however, continuous line of common rulers of the two countries started only with Casimir IV (even then Polish and Lithuanians twice selected different rulers following earlier common monarch's death, but the Lithuanian one always eventually assumed Polish throne). The monarchs retained separate titles for both parts of the state, and their numbering was kept separately. The Jogailaičiai house was direct continuation of the Gediminaičiai.
| Term | Incumbent | Lithuanian name | Ruthenian name | Polish name | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1440-1492 | Casimir IV | Kazimieras I Jogailaitis | Kazimir Jahelonczyk | Kazimierz IV Jagiellończyk | Son of Jogaila. Elected and crowned King of Poland in 1447 after the death of king Władysław |
| 1492-1506 | Alexander I | Aleksandras I | Alaksandr | Aleksander I | Son of Casimir IV. Elected and crowned King of Poland in 1501 after the death of king Jan I Olbracht |
| 1506-1548 | Sigismund I the Old | Žygimantas Senasis | Žygimont II Stary | Zygmunt I Stary | Son of Casimir IV. |
| 1548-1572 | Sigismund II Augustus | Žygimantas Augustas | Žygimont III August | Zygmunt II August | Son of Sigismund I the Old. Factual ruler since 1529. |
[edit] Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795)
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was established by Union of Lublin in 1569. The elected King of Poland was automatically made the Grand Duke of Lithuania (until then Lithuanian dukedom was hereditary). The first ruler of the common country was Sigismund II Augustus. Following the partitions in 1772, 1793, and 1795, the commonwealth ceased to exist and Lithuania became part of the Russian Empire for 123 years. There are some gaps in the timeline as it took a while to elect a new king.
Title: King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania (Lithuanian: Lenkijos karalius ir Lietuvos didysis kunigaikštis; Belarusian: karol Polščy, vialiki kniaź litoŭski; Polish: Król Polski, wielki książę litewski).
| Term | Incumbent | Lithuanian name | Ruthenian name | Polish name | House | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1573-1575 | Henry III de Valois | Henrikas Valua | Anry Valua | Henryk Walezy | de Valois | He abandoned the throne and fled to France where he was crowned as Henri III |
| 1576-1586 | Stephen Bathory | Steponas Batoras | Stiapan Batura | Stefan Batory | Báthory | |
| 1588-1632 | Sigismund III Vasa | Zigmantas IV Vaza | Žyhimont III Vaza | Zygmunt III Waza | Vasa | Proponent of a personal union between The Republic and Sweden, King of Sweden between 1592 and 1599 |
| 1632-1648 | Ladislaus IV Vasa | Vladislovas II Vaza | Uladzislaǔ I Vaza | Władysław IV Waza | Vasa | |
| 1648-1668 | John II Casimir Vasa | Jonas I Kazimieras Vaza | Jan Kazimier Vaza | Jan Kazimierz | Vasa | Abdicated and became a monk, last of the Vasa dynasty in Poland-Lithuania |
| 1669-1673 | Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki | Mykolas I Kaributas Vošnioveckis | Michał Karybut Wišniaviecki | Michał Korybut Wiśniowiecki | Polish szlachta | |
| 1674-1696 | John III Sobieski | Jonas II Sobieskis | Jan III Sobieski | Polish szlachta | ||
| 1697-1706 | Augustus II the Strong | Augustas II Saksas | Aǔhust II Mocny | August II Mocny | Wettin | also Elector of Saxony as Frederick Augustus I |
| 1706-1709 | Stanisław Leszczyński | Stanislovas I Leščinskis | Stanisław Leszczyński | Polish szlachta | War of Polish Succession | |
| 1709-1733 | Augustus II the Strong | Augustas II Saksas | Aǔhust II Mocny | August II Mocny | Wettin | also Elector of Saxony as Frederick Augustus I |
| 1733-1736 | Stanisław Leszczyński | Stanislovas I Leščinskis | Stanisław Leszczyński | Polish szlachta | War of Polish Succession | |
| 1733-1763 | August III Wettin | Augustas III Saksas | August III Sas | August III Saski | Wettin | |
| 1764-1795 | Stanisław August Poniatowski | Stanislovas II Augustas Poniatovskis | Stanisław August Poniatowski | Polish szlachta | During his reign the merger of the Grand Duchy with the Kingdom of Poland was passed in 1791; abdicated following the Partitions of Poland; died in exile in Russia |
[edit] Republic of Lithuania (1918-1940)
The Council of Lithuania declared independence on February 16, 1918 when Lithuania was occupied by Wehrmacht. On July 9, 1918 the council declared that Duke of Urach is to become king of Lithuania, Mindaugas II. However, on November 2 the council renounced this decision and declared that Lithuania is to be a democratic republic. The president institution was created on April 4, 1919.
Title: President (Lithuanian: Prezidentas)
| Term | Officeholder | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| April 4, 1919-June 19, 1920 | Antanas Smetona | Ellected by the Council of Lithuania |
| June 19, 1920-June 7, 1926 | Aleksandras Stulginskis | Acting President (as the leader of the Constituent Assembly). Reelected by the Seimas on December 21, 1922 and in June, 1923. |
| June 7, 1926-December 19, 1926 | Kazys Grinius | Elected by the parliament, but overthrown by a military coup d'etat |
| December 18, 1926-December 19, 1926 | Jonas Staugaitis | Formally, for one day, as the head of Seimas (renounced the office after the coup d'etat) |
| December 19, 1926 | Aleksandras Stulginskis | Formally, as the new head of Seimas, only for several hours |
| December 19, 1926-June 15, 1940 | Antanas Smetona | Second term, elected president after a military coup d'etat; after the Soviet ultimatum of 1940 he defected to Germany and then to the USA |
| June 15, 1940-June 17, 1940 | Antanas Merkys | The Prime Minister, de facto acting president after Smetona's defection. Not recognised by Lithuanian diplomats abroad; he assumed the role of president illegally, as Antanas Smetona neither resigned nor died. |
| June 17, 1940-July 21, 1940 | Justas Paleckis | Chosen unconstitutionally by leaders of Lithuanian communists under pressure from the Soviet Union, not recognized internationally nor by the Lithuanian diplomatic service |
[edit] Lithuanian SSR (1940-1941 and 1944-1990)
The Soviet Union occupied Lithuania and established Lithuanian SSR in July 1940. As Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union, Lithuania was occupied by the Germans. As the Nazi Germany retreated, the Soviet Union reoccupied the country and reestablished Lithuanian SSR in 1944.
Title: The First Secretary of the Central Committee of Communist Party of Lithuania (Lithuanian: Lietuvos komunistų partijos Centro komiteto pirmasis sekretorius; Russian: Первый секретарь Центрального Комитета Коммунистической партии Литвы).
| Term | Officeholder | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| July 21, 1940-June 24, 1941 July 13, 1944-January 22, 1974 | Antanas Sniečkus | |
| February 18, 1974-November 14, 1987 | Petras Griškevičius | |
| December 1, 1987-October 19, 1988 | Ringaudas Bronislovas Songaila | First leader of the party to be deposed of his power (all previous held office until their death). |
| October 19, 1988-March 11, 1990 | Algirdas Brazauskas | Lost the power as the Independence was declared. |
[edit] Republic of Lithuania (from 1990)
The leader of the Supreme Council was the official head of state from declaration of Independence on March 11, 1990 until the new Constitution came into effect in 1992 thus establishing the office of President and institution of Seimas. The state and its leadership were not recognized internationally until September 1991.
Title from 1990 to 1992: Chairman of the Supreme Council (Parliament) (Lithuanian: Aukščiausiosios Tarybos pirmininkas).
Title from 1992 onwards: President (Lithuanian: Prezidentas).
| Term | Officeholder | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| March 11, 1990-November 25, 1992 | Vytautas Landsbergis | As leader of the Supreme Council. |
| November 25, 1992-February 25, 1998 | Algirdas Brazauskas | First post-Soviet President. Acting President (as leader of the Seimas) until February 25, 1993, when he won the first President elections. Didn't run for second term. |
| February 26, 1998-February 25, 2003 | Valdas Adamkus | Wasn't reelected for the second term. |
| February 26, 2003-April 6, 2004 | Rolandas Paksas | Impeached and removed from office. |
| April 6, 2004-July 12, 2004 | Artūras Paulauskas | As the leader of Seimas, temporarily performed the duties of the President until next election. |
| July 12, 2004- | Valdas Adamkus |
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- History, Office of the President of the Republic of Lithuania. Accessed August 26, 2006.
- (Lithuanian) Vytautas Spečiūnas (ed.), Lietuvos valdovai (XIII-XVIII a.) (Rulers of Lithuania (13-18th centuries)), Mokslo ir enicklopedijų leidybos institutas, Vilnius 2004. ISBN 5-420-01535-8
[edit] External links
fr:Liste des grands-ducs de Lituanie lt:Lietuvos Prezidentų sąrašas nl:Lijst van staatshoofden van Litouwen no:Litauens statsledere pl:Władcy Litwy pt:Lista de governantes da Lituânia ru:Список правителей Литвы uk:Список президентів Литви zh:立陶宛总统

