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.[2][3] After Lithuania's union with the Kingdom of Poland in 1569 and formation of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the voivodeship was transferred to the Polish Crown,[4][5] where it belonged to the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown.
Podlaskie Voivodeship | |||||||||||||
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Voivodeship of Lithuania (1513–1569) and then Poland (1569–1795) | |||||||||||||
1513–1795 | |||||||||||||
The Podlaskie Voivodeship in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1619. | |||||||||||||
Capital | Drohiczyn | ||||||||||||
Government | |||||||||||||
• Motto | Par putat esse nihil (Latin for 'Par thinks there is nothing')[1] | ||||||||||||
History | |||||||||||||
• Established | 1513 | ||||||||||||
24 October 1795 | |||||||||||||
Political subdivisions | 3 lands, which were equivalent to counties | ||||||||||||
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Today part of | Poland Belarus¹ | ||||||||||||
¹ South-eastern part of the pre-1566 territory of the voivodeship. |
History
editIn 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
editAfter 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 Ioannes Sapieha to form a government of Podlaskie Voivodeship on 29 August 1513.[3] It originally consisted of the following former Trakai lands: Drohiczyn, Mielnik, Bielsk, and Brest Litovsk.[3] In 1566 based on Brest Litovsk lands, the separate Brest Litovsk Voivodeship was formed.[3]
In 1569, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Sigismund II Augustus transferred Podlaskie voivodeship, together with the Kiev, Volhynian and Bracław Voivodeships to the Polish Crown. Podlaskie remained part of Poland until the Partitions of Poland.
Zygmunt Gloger gives the following description of Podlasie Voivodeship:
"Historic Podlasie stretched from north to south for some 30 miles, and was located between Mazovia and Rus principalities of Brześć and Grodno (...) It was a sparsely populated province, covered by dense forests, with four major rivers: the Biebrza, the Narew, the Bug and the Krzna. Due to population growth in Mazovia and Rus, Podlasie became a settlement area - Mazovians settled near Tykocin, Rajgród and Goniądz, while Ruthenians settled near Bielsk Podlaski. In northern districts of Podlasie, near Augustów, the Yotvingians resided (...) After the 1241 Mongol invasion of Poland, Podlasie turned into a desert, with population decimated by Asiatic hordes. Poles did not return here until the late 13th century, despite the fact that the province was already controlled by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (...)
King Sigismund I the Old created Podlasie Voivodeship, which was part of Lithuania, but in 1569 was transferred to Poland, after the Union of Lublin (...) After the third partition of Poland, most of the voivodeship was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia. When in 1815, Congress Poland was divided into new provinces, the Podlasie Voivodeship was re-created, but it covered only a small part of Podlasie itself, together with areas belonging to historic Mazovia, Polesie and Lesser Poland. As a result, boundaries of Podlasie proper changed.
In the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the voivodeship had two senators, who were the voivode and the castellan of Podlasie. It was divided into three lands, those of Drohiczyn, Bielsko and Mielnik. Each land had its own regional government, and elected two envoys to the Sejm. Furthermore, the voivodeship sent two deputies to the Lesser Poland Tribunal at Lublin or Radom".
Aftermath
editIn 1795, most of it was taken over by the Kingdom of Prussia as part of New East Prussia, but these lands were later part of the Duchy of Warsaw. Then, parts of it belonged to Congress Poland or the Russian Empire until 1915.
Administrative Subdivisions
editThe Voivodeship consisted of the following ziemias:
- Bielsk Land (Polish: ziemia bielska), Bielsk). Local sejmiks took place in Bielsk, where the szlachta elected two deputies of the Sejm,
- Drohiczyn Land (Polish: ziemia drohicka), Drohiczyn). Local sejmiks took place in Drohiczyn, electing two deputies of parliament,
- Mielnik Land (Polish: ziemia mielnicka), Mielnik). Local sejmik took place in Mielnik, where two deputies were elected.
Heraldry
editThe emblem of the region is connected by two arms of Polish and Lithuanian – the Polish Piast Eagle without a crown on a red field, and the Pogoń, depicting a Lithuanian knight.
Cities and towns
editCities and towns of the voivodeship after 1566:[6]
Bielsk County
editDrohiczyn County
editMielnik County
editVoivodes
editThe governor of the Podlaskie Voivodeship was first located in Bielsk Podlaski, but later moved to Drohiczyn.
Voivodes included
- Iwan Sapieha[3] (ur. ok. 1450, zm. 1517) 1513 – 1517
- Janusz Kostewicz (ur. 1468, zm. 1527) 1520 – 1527
- Iwan Sapieha (ur. 1486, zm. 1546) 1529 – 1541
- Mikołaj Pac (ur. 1497, zm. 1551) 1543 – 1551
- Mikołaj Narbutt (zm.1555) 1551 – 1555
- Paweł Sapieha (zm. 1579) 1555 – 1558,also the Voivode of smoleński
- Bazyli Tyszkiewicz (ur. 1492, zm. 1571) 1558 – 1569, also the Voivode of smoleński
- Mikołaj Kiszka (ur. 1524, zm. 1587) 1569 – 1587
- Stanisław Radzymiński (ur. 1552, zm. 1591) 1588 – 1591
- Janusz Zasławski (ur. 1561, zm. 1629) 1591 – 1604, also the Voivode of wołyński
- Tomasz Gostomski (ur. 1569, zm. 1623) 1605 – 1605, also the Voivode of mazowiecki
- Jan Zbigniew Ossoliński (ur. 1555, zm. 1623) 1605 – 1613, also the Voivode of sandomierski
- Jan Wodyński ( zm. 1616) 1613 – 1616
- Stanisław Warszycki (ur. 1577, zm. 1617) 1616 – 1617
- Wojciech Niemira (zm. 1625) 1617 – 1625
- Andrzej Chądzyński (ur. 1561, zm. 1631) 1625 – 1631
- Paweł Szczawiński (zm. 1634) 1633 – 1634
- Stanisław Niemira (ur. 1597, zm. 1642/48) 1634 – 1648
- Paweł Warszycki (zm. 1660) 1649 – 1652, also the Voivode of mazowiecki
- Prokop Leśniowolski (ur. 1588, zm. 1653) 1652 – 1653
- Jan Piotr Opaliński (ur. 1601, zm. 1665) 1653 – 1661, also the Voivode of kaliski
- Wojciech Emeryk Mleczko (ur. ok. 1625, zm. 1673) 1665 – 1673
- Wacław Leszczyński (ur. 1626, zm. 1688) 1673 – 1688
- Marcin Oborski 1688 – 1698
- Stefan Mikołaj Branicki (ur. 1643, zm. 1709) 1699 – 1709
- Stanisław Mateusz Rzewuski (ur. 1660, zm. 1728) 1710 – 1728, also the Voivode of bełski, hetman polny koronny
- Michał Józef Sapieha 1728 – 1738
- Karol Józef Hiacynt Sedlnicki 1738 – 1745, also podskarbi wielki koronny
- Michał Antoni Sapieha (ur. 1711, zm. 1760) 1746 – 1752, also podkanclerzy litewski
- Michał Józef Rzewuski (ur. 1699, zm. 1770) 1752 – 1762
- Bernard Stanisław Gozdzki (ur. 1704, zm. 1771) 1762 – 1771
- Antoni Miączyński (ur. 1691, zm. 1774) 1771 – 1774
- Józef Salezy Ossoliński (ur. 1744, zm. 1797) 1774 – 1790
- Tomasz Aleksandrowicz (ur. 1735, zm. 1794 1790 – 1794
References
edit- ^ Stefan Krzysztof Kuczyński, Polskie herby ziemskie. Geneza, treści, funkcje, Warszawa 1993, s. 215.
- ^ Volumina Legum T. II s. 77
- ^ a b c d e Mykhailovskyi, V. Podlaskie Voivodeship (ПІДЛЯСЬКЕ ВОЄВОДСТВО). Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine
- ^ Lukowski, Jerzy; Zawadzki, Hubert (20 September 2001). A Concise History of Poland. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521559171.
- ^ Riasanovsky, Nicholas Valentine (2000). A History of Russia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-512179-7.
- ^ Atlas historyczny Polski. Województwo podlaskie w drugiej połowie XVI wieku. Część I. Mapy, plany (in Polish). Warszawa: Instytut Historii Polskiej Akademii Nauk. 2021. p. 1.