Revision as of 16:28, 23 August 2021 view source+JMJ+ (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users20,690 editsm →Foundation: Following WP:TLDR, brevity is key.Tag: Visual edit← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 17:30, 19 January 2025 view source Altenmann (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers219,834 edits →In Lithuania: no need to repeat ignorant claims by a non-historian | ||
(545 intermediate revisions by 41 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Pseudohistorical theory according to which Belarusians founded the Grand Duchy of Lithuania}} | |||
{{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}} | {{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}} | ||
{{Short description|Idea and theory in Belarus connecting Belarusians to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2021}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2021}} | ||
], the main foundation of the Litvin identity, at its greatest extent |
], the main foundation of the Litvin identity, at its greatest extent from the 13th to 15th centuries.]] | ||
'''Litvinism''' ({{Langx|be| Літвінізм|translit=Litvinizm}}; {{Langx|ru|Литвинизм|translit=Litvinizm}}) is a ] branch of ], ] and ] in ], which bases the history of its state on the heritage of the ] and emphasizes the Baltic component of the ].{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} According to this branch of ], the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a ] or Belarusian state, the medieval Lithuanians were Belarusians, and modern ] is a consequence of a falsification of history.<ref name=":2">{{cite news|last=Venckūnas|first=V.|date=29 September 2012|title=Tomas Baranauskas: Litvinistams svarbiausia turėti gražią istoriją, kuri galėtų sutelkti tautą|language=lt|newspaper=]|url=https://www.bernardinai.lt/2012-09-29-tomas-baranauskas-litvinistams-svarbiausia-tureti-grazia-istorija-kuri-galetu-sutelkti-tauta/}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Sąlygaitė |first1=Jonė |last2=Baranauskas |first2=Tomas |last3=Laužikas |first3=Rimvydas |title=Kaip užkirsti kelią litvinizmo apraiškoms? |url=https://www.ziniuradijas.lt/laidos/ziniu-radijo-contribee/kaip-uzkirsti-kelia-litvinizmo-apraiskoms?video=1 |website=Žinių radijas |access-date=15 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Bružas |first1=Rimas |last2=Baranauskas |first2=Tomas |title=Istorijos perimetrai. Litvinizmas - istorinė fikcija ar hibridinio karo dalis? |url=https://www.lrt.lt/mediateka/irasas/2000292335/istorijos-perimetrai-litvinizmas-istorine-fikcija-ar-hibridinio-karo-dalis |website=] |access-date=15 October 2023 |language=lt |date=6 September 2023}}</ref> On the other hand, some ] Litvinists refer to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a Slavic ]n state.<ref name=":2"/><ref name="Savukynas2017"/><ref name="Savukynas2023"/> | |||
'''Litvinism''' ({{lang-be|Ліцвінства}}, {{lang|be|ліцвінізм}}, {{lang|be|літвінства}} or {{lang|be|літвінізм}}; {{lang-lt|litvinizmas}}; {{lang-ru|литвинство}} or {{lang|ru|литвинизм}}) is a fringe ] theory, which claims that the real founders of the ] were ].<ref name=":3" /><ref>{{Cite web|last=Baranauskas|first=Tomas|last2=Ramanauskas|first2=Algis|date=16 July 2015|title="Greiti Pietūs": Algis Ramanauskas ir Tomas Baranauskas|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm08Vsa--v8|url-status=live|access-date=23 August 2021|website=]|publisher=Žinių radijas|language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Baranauskas|first=Tomas|last2=Baranauskienė|first2=Inga|last3=Ramanauskas|first3=Algis|date=11 October 2019|title=B&R Pristato: Istorikai Inga ir Tomas Baranauskai. LICVINIZMAS 20191010|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrAPFh_fiQ8|url-status=live|access-date=23 August 2021|website=]|publisher=Bačiulis ir Ramanauskas}}</ref> | |||
The ideas of Litvinism claiming that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a "Belarusian state" and that the Belarusians have "historical rights" to the Lithuanian capital ] were expressed by ] Belarusians,{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=520–521, 524}} ],<ref name="VilniusNovychas"/><ref name="Arlou"/> long-term Belarusian President ],<ref name="Stuburas"/><ref name="Gurevicius"/> members of the ] to Lukashenko,<ref name="Repeckaite"/><ref name="PazniakVilnius"/><ref name="Tsepkalo"/><ref name="DELFI-11-7"/> and some modern Belarusian scientists.{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=521–522}}<ref name="Belsat2021"/><ref name="Sanko"/><ref name="Arlou2010"/><ref name="Marzaliuk"/> Some Belarusians appropriate the Lithuanians ] by claiming that they are the "real Litvins (Lithuanians)", while according to them modern Lithuanians are ''lietuvisai'' or ''Žmudins'' (]) who never before had their own state because ] never was a state and because the current Lithuanian nation has nothing in common with "historical Litva (Lithuania)".<ref name="Tinteris"/><ref name="Salyne"/> Furthermore, according to Litvinist theories ], including Vilnius, are "historical Litvins, that is Belarusians, lands".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Strikulienė |first1=Olava |title=Litvinizmas: sunerimti ar juoktis? |url=https://www.respublika.lt/lt/naujienos/lietuva/kitos-lietuvos-zinios/litvinizmas-sunerimti-ar-juoktis/ |website=] |date=16 April 2024 |lang=lt}}</ref> Moreover, some Belarusians claim that the history of "{{langx|be|Летува |label=none}}" is based on the "twisted real history of Belarus (historical Litva)",<ref name="Pozniak2016"/> and demand to use separate terms to denote "historical Litva" as "{{langx|be|Літва, ліцьвіны |label=none}}" and modern Lithuania as "{{langx|be|Летува, летувісы |label=none}}".<ref name="Kravtsevich2020"/> | |||
Some Litvinists reject their Belarusian ]<ref name=":0" /> and affiliation with the ]<ref name=":0" />, in favor of a reconstructed ] Catholic<ref name=":0" /> ] ("Lithuanian") identity, basing on the history and legacy of the ]. According to national censuses, only a few dozens residents of Belarus state their ethnic identity as ] instead of ].<ref name=":1" /> | |||
Opponents of Litvinism consider it a fringe ] theory.<ref name=":33">{{cite news|last=Bakaitė|first=Jurga|date=27 December 2011|title=LRT FAKTAI. Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusių nacionalinio atgimimo?|language=lt|publisher=Lithuanian National Radio and Television|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/1128520/lrt-faktai-ar-lietuviams-reikia-bijoti-baltarusiu-nacionalinio-atgimimo}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last1=Baranauskas|first1=Tomas|last2=Ramanauskas|first2=Algis|date=16 July 2015|title="Greiti Pietūs": Algis Ramanauskas ir Tomas Baranauskas|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm08Vsa--v8|access-date=23 August 2021|website=]|publisher=Žinių radijas|language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last1=Baranauskas|first1=Tomas|last2=Baranauskienė|first2=Inga|last3=Ramanauskas|first3=Algis|date=11 October 2019|title=B&R Pristato: Istorikai Inga ir Tomas Baranauskai. LICVINIZMAS 20191010|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrAPFh_fiQ8|access-date=23 August 2021|website=]|publisher=Bačiulis ir Ramanauskas}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Pancerovas|first1=Dovydas|title=Ar perrašinėjamos istorijos pasakų įkvėpta Baltarusija gali kėsintis į Rytų Lietuvą?|trans-title=Can Belarus, inspired by the fairy tales of rewritten history, invade Eastern Lithuania?|url=https://www.15min.lt/naujiena/aktualu/istorija/ar-perrasinejamos-istorijos-pasaku-ikvepta-baltarusija-gali-kesintis-i-rytu-lietuva-582-456877|access-date=1 October 2014|website=]|language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://lithuaniatribune.com/opinion-why-are-our-neighbours-poaching-our-history/|title= Opinion: Why are our neighbours poaching our history?|date= 17 July 2014|website=]}}</ref> The usage of the word "Letuva" when referring to modern Lithuania in Belarusian language was also criticized among Belarusians themselves who deemed it "unacceptable" and "monstrous" and stressed that in the early 1990s there was an agreement between Belarusian and Lithuanian intellectuals to stop using terms {{langx|be|Лету́ва|translit=Letuva|label=none}} and {{langx|be|летувíсы|translit=letuvísy|label=none}} in Belarusian publications.<ref name="ViacorkaShupa"/> Belarusian political activist ] described Litvinism as "] cases" which seek to artificially set at variance Lithuanians and Belarusians, and claimed that Belarusians respect the integrity and heritage of Lithuania.<ref name="Tsikhanouskaya"/><ref name="Valkauskas"/> Litvinism was also described as a form of ] with ] territorial claims to neighboring countries of Belarus.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gudijos fašistai atidarė filialą Vilniuj |url=https://alkas.lt/2023/08/28/gudijos-fasistai-atidare-filiala-vilniuj/ |website=Alkas.lt |language=lt |date=28 August 2023}}</ref> In 2024, a dozen of Belarusian organizations in Lithuania signed a declaration with which they distanced themselves from the ideology of Litvinism and denied any territorial claims to Lithuania.<ref name="Venckunas"/> | |||
== Foundation == | |||
The motivation behind some Belarusian cultural activists adopting the Litvin identity is a rejection of ], the ]-imposed ] and simultaneously the Belarusian national identity which the Litvin activists claim to be Soviet-related.<ref name=":0"/> The Litvins underline their closeness to ] and ], viewing the ] as a common heritage of the nations that live on its former territory.<ref name=":0"/> Previously an idea exclusive to some intellectuals, after the ] in 1990s, "Litvinism" gained popularity among some Belarusians.<ref name=":0">{{cite news|url=https://kresy.pl/wydarzenia/litwinizm-nowe-zjawisko-na-bialorusi-1/|title=Litwinizm – nowe zjawisko na Białorusi |newspaper=Kresy.pl|date=24 July 2008|language=pl}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite news|url=https://novychas.by/kultura/jaszcze-ne-pozna-vjarnuc-kraine-sapraudnae-imja|title="Яшчэ не позна вярнуць краіне сапраўднае імя — Літва" |first=Ales|last=Kirkevich|newspaper=]|date=29 January 2017|language=be}}</ref> | |||
Some Litvinists reject their Belarusian ]<ref name=":0">{{cite news|date=24 July 2008|title=Litwinizm – nowe zjawisko na Białorusi |language=pl|newspaper=Kresy.pl|url=https://kresy.pl/wydarzenia/litwinizm-nowe-zjawisko-na-bialorusi-1/}}</ref> and affiliation with the ],<ref name=":0" /> in favor of a reconstructed ] Catholic<ref name=":0" /> ] ("Lithuanian") identity, based on the history and legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. According to national censuses, only a few dozen residents of Belarus state their ethnic identity as Litvin rather than Belarusian.<ref name=":1">{{cite news|last=Kirkevich|first=Ales|date=29 January 2017|title="Яшчэ не позна вярнуць краіне сапраўднае імя — Літва" |language=be|newspaper=]|url=https://novychas.by/kultura/jaszcze-ne-pozna-vjarnuc-kraine-sapraudnae-imja}}</ref> | |||
Litvins consider the ] as being a joint Baltic and Eastern Slavic state.{{Citation needed|date=August 2021}} Litvins claim this duality due to the significant ] influence on the state.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Grand duchy of Lithuania|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/grand-duchy-of-Lithuania|url-status=live|website=]|quote=Influenced greatly by their Russian subjects, the Lithuanians not only reorganized their army, government administration, and legal and financial systems on Russian models but also allowed the Russian nobility to retain its Orthodox religion, its privileges, and its local authority.}}</ref> | |||
== History == | |||
Belarusians are ] ].<ref name=":1" /> The Balts once inhabited ] and ], extending as far as into ] and ].<ref name=":1" /> ] speaking, the inhabitants of ] are ] ], as, according to the German ] {{Interlanguage link|Michael Hesch|lt=Michael Hesch|de}}:<blockquote>"The western Belarusian area was inhabited by Lithuanians. The western Belarusians are certainly largely ] Lithuanians."{{Sfn|Hesch|1933|p=4}}{{Sfn|Budreckis|1967}}</blockquote>The Belarusian historian Jan Lyalevich, who identifies as Litvin, cited medieval ] sources referring to the ] as the "Lithuanian language".<ref name=":1" /> He also describes the medieval Litvins as a "proto-nation that existed approximately since the 14th century to the late 19th century, when its remainders, represented by mostly Catholic ] and ], disappeared".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
], the founder of Litvinism]] | |||
According to the Lithuanian author ], who claims to have coined the term,<ref name=":2" /> "Litvinism" is the synthesis of two different historiographies: the ], which claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Russian state, and the ] historiography, which deemed the ] Lithuanians of eastern ] as "]" (i.e. "real Lithuanians"), in contrast to the "Lietuvisy" of the ].<ref name=":2" /> | |||
Litvinism began following the ], due to the Russian Empire's needs to change the old Grand Ducal Lithuanian identity into a new one that would better suit the Empire's interests.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} Professor ] from ], originally from the ], collaborated with the Tsarist administration and developed the theory that the Lithuanian state's origin was Slavic and that it was allegedly created by the ] who had moved westwards due to ].{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kurdiukov |first1=Oleg |title=Mūsų rusų gatvė. Litvinizmo įtaka baltarusių ir lietuvių santykiams bei "Caritas" parama Ukrainai |url=https://www.lrt.lt/mediateka/irasas/2000295416/musu-rusu-gatve-litvinizmo-itaka-baltarusiu-ir-lietuviu-santykiams-bei-caritas-parama-ukrainai |website=Lithuanian National Television and Radio |access-date=18 October 2023 |language=ru, lt |date=30 September 2023}}</ref> Furthermore, his contemporary, the Polish-speaking pseudo-historian, poet {{ill|Ignacy Kołakowski|pl}}{{efn|The article of Darius Sutkus spells his name as I. Kulakovskis, i.e., Ignacijus Kulakovskis.}} propagated the thesis that Lithuania was Slavic before the creation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} | |||
Some Litvin activists are reported to teach their children altered forms of the ] considered more traditional and de-], or asking that their ] states their ] ethnicity.<ref name=":0" /> This may also extend to the ], one example of this being the Belarusian historian Jan Lyalevich, who stated in 2017: ''"Personally, I am still convinced that it is not too late for returning to our state its real name: Lithuania"'' ({{lang|be|Літва}} in Belarusian).<ref name=":1" /> | |||
] following the military ] of Vilnius from the Lithuanians (Balts) in 1920]] | |||
== Assessment in Belarus == | |||
After the ], ]'s plans to restore ] were shattered by Lithuanian desires for an independent state, manifested in an independent Lithuanian republic.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} For propaganda purposes, theories about how the inhabitants of the Republic of Lithuania are ''lietuvisai'', who were unrelated to the "right" and "historical" Lithuanians, the ]s, appeared.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} The Polish historian ] used the terms ''letuwskije'', ''Letuwa'' and ''letuwini'' to describe the "fake Lithuanians" in his book {{Langx|pl|Polska między Wschodem i Zachodem|lit=Poland between East and West|label=none}}, and other works.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} He also wrote about how Vilnius should belong to the Litvins and thus be a Polish-owned city, instead of a ''lietuvisai'' one.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} General ], who supported ] and commanded the Polish forces which captured Vilnius from the Lithuanians during the ] in 1920, claimed that "Lithuania was the heart of the ]" and strongly opposed to what he considered to be a "German ploy for ] Lithuania".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Люциан Желиговский и его "Zapomniane prawdy (Забытые истины)" |url=https://history-belarus.com/pages/figures/zeligowski.php |access-date=2 November 2023 |website=History-belarus.by |language=ru}}</ref> Żeligowski in his youth only spoke in the ], which is a ] ], and identified himself as a Litvin, not a Belarusian, but was very positive towards the Belarusian movements.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Бычкоўскі |first1=Валер |title=Люцыян Жалігоўскі: літвін, паляк ці беларус? |url=https://novychas.online/asoba/ljucyjan-zalihouski-litvin-paljak-belarus |website=Новы Час |date=17 October 2017 |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=be}}</ref> In contrary, Żeligowski referred to the Baltic-Lithuanians only as Samogitians and personally staunchly denied their right to use the ] "Lithuanians".<ref name="Palieski">{{cite web |last1=Палескі |first1=Іван |title=Сярэдняя Літва. Мара Люцыяна Жалігоўскага |url=https://novychas.online/poviaz/sjarednjaja-litva-mara-ljucyjana-zalihouskaha |website=Новы Час |date=6 August 2022 |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=}}</ref> Subsequently, being in exile in 1943 following the ], Żeligowski wrote: "Why did we, the eternal inhabitants of Lithuania, have to avoid that dear name for us, and other people who have nothing in common with Lithuania shamelessly call themselves Lithuanians?" and criticized the world-wide politicians and scientists whose point of view did not match with his.<ref name="Palieski"/> | |||
Litvinism does not have a relevant impact on ], with its supporters focusing more on areas such as education.<ref name=":0" /> It is opposed by the pro-Russian official ideology of the ] regime and the pro-European Belarusian opposition.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
] | |||
== Assessment by Lithuanians == | |||
The ] led to these ideas being taken over by some Belarusian nationalists seeking a national identity.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} The amateur Belarusian historian ] stated that Lithuania began in the territory between ] and ], i.e. in modern Belarusian lands, which allegedly occupied parts of modern Lithuania.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} M. Yermalovich considers ] as the country's sole ] territory, while ] is an artificially conceived ] occupying a part of the Belarusian lands.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} Litvinism's theories were developed even earlier by {{ill|Paviel Urban|be|Павал Урбан}} in the ], who presented his pseudo-scientific theories in his writings "On the National Nature of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Historical Term of Lithuania" (1964), "In the Light of Historical Facts" (1972), "Ethnic belongings of Ancient Litvins" (1994) and "Ancient Litvins. Language, origin, ethnicity".{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} By the end of the 20th century, there were more disseminators of Litvinism's ideas: Vitovt Charopko popularized the concept of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania being a Belarusian state with Belarusian leaders, while Alexander Kravtsevich tried proving that the Lithuanian state's old capital and that the city where King ] had been crowned was ], Belarus.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} | |||
Numerous Lithuanian authors view "Litvinism" as potentially dangerous or harmful for the modern Lithuanian state.<ref name=":3">{{cite news|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/1128520/lrt-faktai-ar-lietuviams-reikia-bijoti-baltarusiu-nacionalinio-atgimimo|title=LRT FAKTAI. Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusių nacionalinio atgimimo?|first=Jurga|last=Bakaitė|publisher=]|date=27 December 2011|language=lt}}</ref> | |||
In recent years, the number of followers of Litvinism in Belarus has been growing, and there is a division into even smaller, often marginal historical and ideological directions.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} | |||
According to the Lithuanian author ] who claims to have coined the term,<ref name=":2">{{cite news|last=Venckūnas|first=V.|date=29 September 2012|title=Tomas Baranauskas: Litvinistams svarbiausia turėti gražią istoriją, kuri galėtų sutelkti tautą|language=lt|newspaper=]|url=https://www.bernardinai.lt/2012-09-29-tomas-baranauskas-litvinistams-svarbiausia-tureti-grazia-istorija-kuri-galetu-sutelkti-tauta/}}</ref> "Litvinism" is synthesis of two different historiographies: the ], which claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Russian state, and the ] historiography, which deemed the ] Lithuanians of eastern ] as "]" (i.e. "real Lithuanians"), in contrast to the "Lietuvisy" of the ].<ref name=":2" /> | |||
Litvinism is mostly espoused in books published in Belarus and on the Internet, as well as in English, which target a foreign audience in an attempt to disseminate M. Yermalovich's "discoveries" and the "real" history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref>{{Cite web|date=10 January 2010|title=Pramanytos Lietuvos Šmėkla|url=http://www.voruta.lt/pramanytos-lietuvos-smekla/|website=Voruta.lt}}</ref> However, experts say that Litvinism is not widespread as it is marginal and sometimes associated with ] ideas.<ref name=":3" /> The Belarusian academia is dominated by a variety of ideas, e.g. ancient historians guided by Soviet guidelines and methodology, although there certainly is a number of Litvinist scholars.{{Sfn|Sutkus|2020a}} | |||
== Assesment in Russia == | |||
] claims that Litvinism also has some supporters in ], although it is much less popular than in Belarus. Some Russian Litvinists refer to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a Russian state.<ref name=":2" /> Lev Krishtapovich claims that:<blockquote>In fact, under the guise of ], or the so-called Litvinism, a ] clique stands aimed at transforming Belarus into ]'s eastern frontiers.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Krishtapovich|first=Lev|date=21 November 2016|title=Общерусская культура как основа белорусской идентичности|language=ru|trans-title=All-Russian culture as the basis of Belarusian identity|work=Regnum.ru|url=https://regnum.ru/news/society/2207768.html}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Yeliseyeu|first=Andrei|last2=Laputska|first2=Veranika|date=2016|title=Anti-Belarus disinformation in Russian media: Trends, features, countermeasures|url=https://east-center.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/EAST-Media-Review.pdf|journal=EAST Media Review|issue=1|page=11}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
== Assessment by international sources == | |||
== Identity == | |||
Litvinism is not supported by notable information sources such as ], which states that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was exclusively created by ],<ref>{{cite web |title=Lithuania - History |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Lithuania/History#ref37336 |website=] |access-date=3 July 2021 |language=en}}</ref> that Lithuania in the past ruled territories of present-day Belarus<ref>{{cite web |title=Belarus - Lithuanian and Polish rule |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Belarus/History#ref33453 |website=] |access-date=3 July 2021 |language=en}}</ref> and that the Belarusians had no state and no national symbols until 1918.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Smith |first1=Whitney |authorlink=Whitney Smith |title=Flag of Belarus |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/flag-of-Belarus |website=] |access-date=3 July 2021 |language=en}}</ref> Notable historians such as ] also support the approach that the Lithuanians conquered ]n territories.<ref name="Toynbee">{{cite book |last1=Toynbee |first1=Arnold Joseph |authorlink=Arnold J. Toynbee |title=A Study Of History (Volume II) |date=1948 |publisher=] |location=] |page=172 |edition=Fourth impression |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.499044/page/n181/mode/2up |access-date=4 July 2021}}</ref> | |||
] of the ] in ] (1576), claiming that the ] are of ]]] | |||
The motivation behind some Belarusian cultural activists adopting the Litvin identity is a rejection of the ], the ]-imposed ] and simultaneously the Belarusian national identity which the Litvin activists claim to be Soviet-related.<ref name=":0"/>{{Unreliable source?|date=July 2024}} The Litvinists underline their closeness to ], ] and ] (]) viewing the ] as a common heritage of the nations that live on its former territory.<ref name=":0"/>{{Unreliable source?|date=July 2024}} Previously an idea exclusive to some intellectuals, after the ] in the 1990s, "Litvinism" gained popularity among some Belarusian civilians.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> | |||
Litvinists consider the ] as being a joint Baltic and Eastern Slavic state.{{Citation needed|date=August 2021}} Litvinists claim this duality due to the significant ] influence on the state.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Grand duchy of Lithuania|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/grand-duchy-of-Lithuania|website=]|date=21 September 2023 }}</ref> | |||
=== Language === | |||
The Belarusian historian Jan Lyalevich, who self-identifies as Litvin, cited medieval ] sources referring to the ] as the "Lithuanian language".<ref name=":1" /> He also describes the medieval Litvins as a "proto-nation that existed approximately since the 14th century to the late 19th century, when its remainders, represented by mostly Catholic ] and ], disappeared".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
The theory of Jan Lyalevich coincides with the opinion of some historians of the 19th and 20th century.{{cn|date=August 2024}} | |||
In 1988, Polish literary historian and linguist ] emphasized that "when later described the Rusyns, they spoke "Lithuanian" (i.m, Belarusian; Litvin was always only Belarusian for him, never Ukrainian)".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brückner |first1=Aleksander |title=Mikołaj Rej |date=1988 |publisher=Państwowe Wydawn. Nauk. |isbn=978-83-01-08023-5 |page=14 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SKTqAAAAMAAJ&q=Miko%C5%82aj+Rej+litwin |access-date=11 November 2023 |language=pl}}</ref>{{Relevance inline|date=November 2023}} | |||
Some Litvin activists are reported to teach their children altered forms of the ] considered more traditional and de-], or asking that their ] states their ] ethnicity.<ref name=":0" />{{Unreliable source?|date=July 2024}} This may also extend to the ], one example of this being the Belarusian historian Jan Lyalevich, who stated in 2017: ''"Personally, I am still convinced that it is not too late for returning to our state its real name: Lithuania"'' ({{lang|be|Літва}} in Belarusian).<ref name=":1" /> | |||
Nevertheless, 19th-century poet ], who titled himself as "Litwin", whose writings were mainly dedicated to the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania and who wrote his publications in the Polish (mostly) and Belarusian languages, in his own texts was clearly disappointed by his inability to speak the ]: "{{langx|pl|z powodu nieznajomości Litewskiéj wymowy, ducha Litewskiego schwycić mi było niepodobna|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|Due to my ignorance of Lithuanian pronunciation, it was impossible for me to capture the Lithuanian spirit}}).<ref name="Griskaite">{{cite journal |last1=Griškaitė |first1=Reda |title=Zalučės ir Bareikiškių šeimininko Vladislovo Sirokomlės istorikos |journal=Archivum Lithuanicum |date=2018 |volume=20 |page=49 |url=https://www.istorija.lt/data/public/uploads/2020/12/2018-archivum-lithuanicum-t.-20-1-reda-griskaite-sirokomles_istorikos-p.-9-82.pdf |access-date=23 October 2023 |language=lt, pl}}</ref> Moreover, Syrokomla described his experience talking with a Lithuanian villager near ] as follows: "{{langx|pl|tu kiedym się chciał wieśniaka o cóś rozpytać, niezrozumiał mię i zbył jedném słowem|label=none}} {{langx|lt|ne suprantu|label=none}}. {{langx|pl|Litwin, na ziemi czysto Litewskiéj, nie mogłem się rozmówić z Litwinem!|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|Here, when I wanted to ask the villager something, he didn't understand me and answered me with one word "{{langx|lt|ne suprantu|label=none}}" . I, a Lithuanian on purely Lithuanian soil, couldn't talk to a Lithuanian!}}).<ref name="Griskaite"/> | |||
== Assessment == | |||
=== In Belarus === | |||
Litvinism does not have a relevant impact on ], with its supporters focusing more on areas such as education. It has been at times both tolerated and opposed by the state narrative of the ],<ref name=":0" /> and has found some support among the ] as a part of broader effort to express pre-Russian Belarusian culture.<ref name="Repeckaite">{{Cite news |last=Repečkaitė |first=Daiva |date=26 July 2022 |title=Medieval history powers a crisis of identity in Lithuania and Belarus |work=Coda |url=https://www.codastory.com/rewriting-history/lithuania-belarus-shared-history/ |access-date=7 August 2023}}</ref> According to the Belarusian Litvinists, the Republic of Lithuania without the ] is ] and according to them the name of Lithuania was historically used for the entire state or exclusively Belarusian territories by clearly separating ] Samogitia during the existence of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania until 1795 when it was ] and subsequently ] by the ].<ref name="LitvinBy">{{cite web |last1=Литвин |first1=Игорь |title=Где находилась летописная Литва. |url=http://litvin.by/zm/glavy/8.html |website=Litvin.by |language=ru |access-date=18 October 2023 |archive-date=22 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210422182628/http://litvin.by/zm/glavy/8.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Belarusian Litvinists claim that the Belarusian lands were the core and the main part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref name="LitvinBy"/> Nevertheless, some of patriotic Belarusians criticize the idea of Litvinism considering it as a form of national separatism.<ref name="Kirkievic">{{cite web |last1=Кіркевіч |first1=Алесь |title="Ліцвіны": патрыёты, секта або агенты ФСБ? |url=https://belsat.eu/opinions/litsviny-patryyoty-sekta-abo-agenty-fsb/ |website=Belsat.eu |language=be |access-date=22 February 2020 |archive-date=22 February 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200222113128/https://belsat.eu/opinions/litsviny-patryyoty-sekta-abo-agenty-fsb/ |url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
] in 1918, which includes Vilnius, ], ], ], ], etc.]] | |||
On 20 February 1918, the ] formed a government, announced the ] in 9 March 1918, and on 25 March 1918 declared its independence, but these were mostly symbolic acts, as the state's development was restricted by the ], ], and later Poles.<ref>{{cite web |title=Baltarusijos istorija |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/baltarusijos-istorija/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=15 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In 1918, the Republic of Lithuania was one of the first countries to recognize the independence of the Belarusian Democratic Republic; however, the Belarusian territories were captured by the ] in December 1918 and the Belarusian ] moved to the Lithuanian temporary capital ], while ] became a minister of the ].<ref name="Santykiai"/> The Belarusians and Lithuanians agreed to attach ] to the Republic of Lithuania and to form Belarusian military units there (e.g. ]).<ref name="Santykiai"/> In November 1920, the Government of the Belarusian Democratic Republic and the Government of Lithuania signed mutual recognition treaties.<ref name="RadaVle">{{cite web |title=Baltarusijos rada |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/baltarusijos-rada/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=15 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> During the ] in 1922 ], a Prime Minister of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, and ], a Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, recognized the Republic of Lithuania's rights to the Vilnius Region, but this was evaluated negatively by other members of the Belarusian Rada and Vaclau Lastouski resigned.<ref name="RadaVle"/> In November 1923, the leadership of the Belarusian Rada departed to ] due to the worsened relationships with the Government of Lithuania.<ref name="RadaVle"/> In October 1926, Vaclau Lastouski presented to the Soviet Embassy in Kaunas a concept where he argued that the Lithuanians are "living with a foreign passport" because the Republic of Lithuania "illegally appropriated Belarusian state legacy" and that the "real {{langx|lt|Lietuviai|label=none}}" are ].{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=524}} | |||
According to Polish historian {{ill|Daniel Boćkowski|pl|Daniel Boćkowski}}, ], a Minister of Education of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, wrote in 1919 that if the Bolsheviks will "restore real borders" and will create a united Belarus (according to Smolič such Belarus must include Vilnius, ], ]), then "we " should join the defenders of such an order and to "fight even with the entire world", despite the fact that Smolič also acknowledged that the Bolsheviks do more harm to Belarus than they bring benefits.<ref name="Luksas">{{cite web |last1=Lukšas |first1=Aras |title=Kaip Vilnius netapo Baltarusijos miestu |url=https://www.aidas.lt/lt/istorija/article/22805-11-09-kaip-vilnius-netapo-baltarusijos-miestu |website=] |access-date=17 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
According to Belarusian historian ], in the early years of the ], national Belarusians mainly supported Lastouski's ideas that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was "their own", were explaining incorporation of Belarusian territories into it as "voluntary" and valued it positively, while ] was then evaluated as "alien" to the Belarusians, therefore such national Belarusians faced ].<ref name="Sahanovic">{{cite book |last1=Sahanovič |first1=Hienadź |title=The Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a mirror of Belarusian historiography |location=] |date=2008 |pages=244–273 |url=https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/50834 |publisher=Fundacja Pogranicze |access-date=3 November 2023}}</ref> Subsequently, according to Sahanovič, there was a major shift in the 1930s and 1940s when historians in the Byelorussian SSR presented Russia positively, while the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was then described as "predatory" and "alien" country for the Belarusian statehood.<ref name="Sahanovic"/> | |||
In 1938, {{ill|Mikalaj Škialionak|be|Мікалай Восіпавіч Шкялёнак}}, a Belarusian historian, military and political figure, published an article "{{lang|be-Latn|Padzieł historyi Biełarusi na peryjady}}" ({{langx|be|Падзел гiсторыi Беларусi на перыяды|links=no||Partition of the History of Belarus into Periods}}) in which he claimed that the Lithuanian King ]' ] was Belarusian from its formation, as it consisted of ], Grodno, ], and ] lands, while the Lithuanian regions ] and Samogitia were only later "conquered" by the Belarusians from these lands, and then other Belarusian territories (e.g. ], ], ], ]) voluntarily and willingly joined the newly established state – the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=520–521}} | |||
]'' newspaper (10 October 1939 edition) with a photo of the rally in Vilnius' Lukiškės Square supporting the attachment of the Vilnius Region to the Byelorussian SSR in 1939]] | |||
In September 1939, ] by the Red Army and the ] (e.g. ]) publicly welcomed the accession of the Vilnius Region to the Byelorussian SSR, while the ] (e.g. ]) in ] also were positive about the possible attachment of ] to the Byelorussian SSR.<ref name="VilniusNovychas">{{cite web |last1=Pazniak |first1=Kiryla |title=80 гадоў без Вільні |url=https://novychas.online/poviaz/80-hadou-bez-vilni |website=] |date=10 October 2019 |language=be |access-date=15 October 2023}}</ref><ref name="Arlou2010"/><ref name="Luksas"/> The CPB considered the Vilnius Region as a part of ] and the ] of the Byelorussian SSR also claimed that the Vilnius Region should be annexed by the Byelorussian SSR.<ref name="Arlou">{{cite news |last1=Arloŭ |first1=Uladzimir |last2=Navumčyk |first2=Siarhiej |last3=Katkoŭski |first3=Uladzimir |title=Вільня, Вялікае Княства і Беларусь — поўны тэкст онлайнавай канфэрэнцыі з Уладзімерам Арловым |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/792180.html |website=Radio Liberty |date=11 December 2007 |access-date=20 October 2023 |language=be |quote=Questions: "07/02/2005 14:24", "08/02/2005 09:39", "08/02/2005 12:10" and answers to them}}</ref><ref name="Luksas"/> Provisionally, the Vilnius Region was administrated by envoys from Minsk, while the chairman of the provisional administration was the Belarusian {{ill|Jakim Žylianin|be|Якім Аляксандравіч Жылянін}}.<ref name="VilniusNovychas"/><ref name="Arlou"/><ref name="BelBorders1939">{{cite web |title=Як Сталін і Гітлер малявалі беларускія межы ў 1939-м |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/30123298.html |website=Radio Liberty |access-date=21 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> On 24 September 1939, an official ceremony was organized in the ] to commemorate the accession of Vilnius to the Byelorussian SSR "forever and ever".<ref name="Arlou2010"/> On 7 October 1939, a rally was held in the ] which demanded to attach the Vilnius Region to the Byelorussian SSR, whose numbers of attendees the Soviet propaganda had inflated to 75,000 people.<ref name="VilniusNovychas"/><ref name="Arlou"/><ref name="Arlou2010"/> Furthermore, pro-attachment rallies were also held in other towns of the Vilnius Region during which its participants also demanded to attach the region to the Byelorussian SSR.<ref name="Arlou"/> Moreover, Byelorussian SSR central newspapers proclaimed that "Vilnius is Byelorussian again", additionally arguing that it was a "historical justice" and discussing plans for ] of the Vilnius Region.<ref name="VilniusNovychas"/><ref name="Arlou"/> Articles in Soviet publications (in the Byelorussian SSR and outside of it) narrated that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a "Belarusian state", therefore according to them the Belarusians had "historical rights" to the Vilnius Region.<ref name="Arlou"/> The publishing of the {{ill|Vilienskaja praŭda|be|Віленская праўда}} ({{langx|en|Vilnius' Truth}}) newspaper was started in the Vilnius Region and other regional centres of the Byelorussian SSR which regularly promoted ideas about the Belarusians' "historical rights" to the Vilnius Region.<ref name="Arlou"/><ref name="BelBorders1939"/> ], a First Secretary of the Communist Party of Byelorussia, issued authorizations to Ivan Klimov to declare Vilnius as the capital of Western Belorussia.<ref name="Luksas"/> The preparations for the ] were started in the Vilnius Region and there even were ideas to move the Byelorussian SSR capital from Minsk to Vilnius.<ref name="Arlou"/><ref name="BelBorders1939"/><ref name="Arlou2010"/> Nevertheless, none of the Soviet Union's documents in 1939 officially stated that Vilnius belongs to the Byelorussian SSR.<ref name="Luksas"/> | |||
The Byelorussian administration of the entire Vilnius Region lasted for only 40 days and subsequently, according to the ] of 10 October 1939, a part of the Vilnius Region, including the city of Vilnius, was attached to the Republic of Lithuania, which was soon converted into the ].<ref name="VilniusNovychas"/><ref name="Arlou"/> The Soviets blackmailed the Lithuanians that if they will not accept the Mutual Assistance Treaty, Vilnius will be attached to the Byelorussian SSR.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sovietų kariuomenė Vilniaus krašte 1939–1940 m. (iki Lietuvos okupacijos) |url=https://www.kgbveikla.lt/lt/sovietu-kariuomene-vilniaus-kraste-1939-1940-m-iki-lietuvos-okupacijos |website=KGBveikla.lt |access-date=11 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> The Byelorussian SSR also transferred to the Lithuanian SSR cities and surroundings of ], ], ] that were mostly inhabited by Lithuanians.<ref name="Santykiai"/> According to ], a Belarusian historian and politician, the 1939 transfer of the Vilnius Region to "Letuvy" ({{lang|be|Летувы}}) was a "criminal conspiracy" of ]'s Soviet Union and ], while Arłou refers to the Vilnius Region and the city of Vilnius as "ethnic Belarusian territory".<ref name="Arlou"/> Arłou claims that the Vilnius Region was historically and ethnically Belarusian since the early ] and that for centuries the Belarusians-Lićviny ({{lang|be|Беларусы-ліцьвіны}}) composed the majority of its population.<ref name="Arlou2010">{{cite news |last1=Арлоў |first1=Уладзімер |title=Ці належала Вільня БССР? |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/2182959.html |website=Радыё Свабода |date=7 October 2010 |access-date=21 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
In the early 1960s, {{ill|Paval Urban|be|Павал Урбан}}, a historian of ], claimed that from the beginning the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Slavic–Belarusian state and completely rejected the possibility of other conclusions and concepts, thus he denied that modern Lithuania ("{{langx|be|Летува |label=none}}") and Lithuanians ("{{langx|be|Летувісы |label=none}}") has any exclusive connection to the national character of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and blamed Soviet historians for such conclusions.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Урбан |first1=Паўла |title=Пра нацыянальны характар Вялікага Княства Літоўскага й гістарычны тэрмін "Літва" |url=https://knihi.com/Paula_Urban/Pra_nacyjanalny_charaktar_Vialikaha_Kniastva_Litouskaha_j_histarycny_termin_Litva.html |website=Knihi.com |date=1960–1964 |access-date=26 November 2023 |language=be |quote=Mainly the last paragraph below "* * *" symbols}}</ref> In 1972, Urban published a book ''In the light of historical facts'' ({{langx|be|У сьвятле гістарычных фактаў|label=none}}) where he equated Lithuania ("Litva") and Litvins ("{{langx|be|ліцьвіны |label=none}}") to Western Baltic Slavs.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Урбан |first1=Паўла |title=У сьвятле гістарычных фактаў |url=https://knihi.com/Paula_Urban/U_sviatle_histarycnych_faktau.html |website=Knihi.com |date=1972 |access-date=26 November 2023 |language=be |quote=Section "Літва-ліцьвіны - заходнепрыбалтыцкія славяне"}}</ref> | |||
The theories of Škialionak were further developed in the late 20th century by ], who also denied the Baltic origin of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=521}} Subsequently, {{ill|Alexander Kravtsevich|be|Аляксандр Канстанцінавіч Краўцэвіч}} also argued that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was from the beginning a "Baltic–Eastern Slavic state" in which the Slavs "dominated", followed by the assimilation of Balts by the Slavs; a new Belarusian ] appeared in the 13th century.{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=521}} According to Kravtsevich, the Samogitians (who he also describes as "Letuvisy", not equal to "Litviny") have appropriated the name of Lithuania during the ] and in 1918 attached it to the Republic of Lithuania (which he calls "Lituva").{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=522}} | |||
] on 19 September 1991, one of the posters has the inscription: "Return to the people its old symbols: the coat of arms of Pahonia and the white-red-white flag, as well as the name of the country – Litva, the capital – Minsk!"]] | |||
In 1990, following the adoption of the ] by the ], the Presidium of the ] on 29 March 1990 adopted an official statement, signed by chairman ], which claimed that upon the withdrawal of the Lithuanian SSR from the Union with the Byelorussian SSR, the Byelorussian SSR will not consider itself bound by all laws, decrees and other acts regarding the transfer of part of the Belarusian lands to Lithuania.<ref name="VilniusNovychas"/> On 24 October 1991 ] and ] in Vilnius signed a declaration regarding the principles of good neighborly relations between the Republic of Lithuania and the Republic of Belarus.<ref name="Sasiuviniai17">{{cite journal |last1=Kuzmickas |first1=Bronislovas |last2=Plečkaitis |first2=Vytautas Petras |title=Nelengva geros kaimynystės pradžia. Baltarusija |journal=Nepriklausomybės sąsiuviniai |date=2016 |volume=3 |issue=17 |pages=15–16, 78 |url=https://alkas.lt/uploads/Nepriklausomybes-sasiuviniai/Nepriklausomybes-sasiuviniai_17.pdf |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> However, in 1992 ], the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belarus, told the ] correspondent that the ] should belong to Belarus (the ministry later apologized for these words), while ], the founder and leader of the ], spoke about possible Belarusian claims to the territories of the Republic of Lithuania during his visit to the ] in Vilnius.<ref name="Sasiuviniai17"/><ref>{{cite web |title=Belarus Official Lays Claim To Lithuanian Border Lands |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/02/25/world/belarus-official-lays-claim-to-lithuanian-border-lands.html |website=] |access-date=8 October 2023 |date=25 February 1992}}</ref> Moreover, in the early 1990s, ] (e.g. '']'' on 25 August 1990, '']'' in 1992) considered the issue of the transfer of Vilnius to Belarus or granting an ] status to Vilnius, while an assembly named ''Slavic Sobor'' on 20 February 1992 adopted a statement that Belarus had legal and historical rights to inherit the Vilnius Region.<ref name="RysiaiVMU">{{cite book |last1=Leonavičiūtė-Gecevičienė |first1=Rasa |last2=Šadauskas |first2=Vilius |title=Lietuvos ir Baltarusijos kultūriniai ir istoriniai ryšiai |date=2023 |publisher=] |location=Kaunas |isbn=978-609-467-564-5 |page=48 |url=https://hmf.vdu.lt/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/2023-BALTARUSIJA-LIETUVA-INTERNRT_.pdf |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In June 2024, Viktoras Baublys, the first Lithuanian ambassador to independent Belarus, recalled that in the early 1990s the narratives that the heritage and history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were mostly Belarusian were very popular among Belarusian cultural representatives and oppositionists to Lukashenko.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Jonkus |first1=Artūras |title=V. Baublys: "Pretenzijos į LDK istoriją buvo būdingos vadinamajai A. Lukašenkos opozicijai" |url=https://iq.lt/iq-video/v-baublys-pretenzijos-i-ldk-istorija-buvo-budingos-vadinamajai-a-lukasenkos-opozicijai/334399 |website=IQ.lt |date=13 June 2024 |lang=lt}}</ref> According to ], the former adviser for foreign affairs of Lithuanian President ], ], the first head of state of independent Belarus, publicly demonstrated in the early 1990s that he do not recognize the ] when during his visit to Lithuania he refused to be welcomed near the border (which was common at the time).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Jonkus |first1=Artūras |title=J. V. Paleckis: A. Lukašenka iš pradžių atmetė litvinizmo idėjas, bet po to ėmė jas skatinti |url=https://iq.lt/politika/j-v-paleckis-a-lukasenka-is-pradziu-atmete-litvinizmo-idejas-bet-po-to-eme-jas-skatinti/333526 |website=IQ.lt |date=6 June 2024 |lang=lt}}</ref> Consequently, the agreement between the Republic of Lithuania and the Republic of Belarus on good neighborliness and cooperation was signed only on 6 February 1995.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lietuvos Respublikos ir Baltarusijos Respublikos sutartis dėl geros kaimynystės ir bendradarbiavimo |url=https://e-seimas.lrs.lt/portal/legalAct/lt/TAD/TAIS.27321?jfwid=-g0zrzinq9 |website=Official website of ] |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="RysiaiVMU"/> | |||
When ] was elected president in 1994, he altered government historiography to be closer to Soviet historiography, claiming that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Lithuanian state while Belarus was created during the ]. This marked a change from the Belarusian position before 1994, which regarded the Grand Duchy as jointly Belarusian and Lithuanian. In 2005, the state narrative returned to this position. According to Lithuanian historian Rūstis Kamuntavičius, this could have possibly been caused by a rapproachment between Lukashenko and the opposition or an effort by the former to distance Belarus from Russia. After the ], Lukashenko began persecuting historians and changed textbooks and university curricula to remove references to Belarusian involvement in the Grand Duchy.<ref name=":22">{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/en/news-in-english/19/1748115/lukashenko-and-the-grand-duchy-of-lithuania-appropriation-of-history-or-taking-distance-from-moscow|title=Lukashenko and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania – appropriation of history or taking distance from Moscow?|website=]|date=30 July 2022}}</ref> | |||
The Belarusian regime does not follow a coherent historical narrative and juggles conflicting facts to pursue unclear goals. Kamuntavičius states that "There is complete chaos. They write textbooks for schools, and before publishing, they rewrite them in a different way. History is taught according to one logic in the earlier grades, and according to another logic in the older grades." and argues that "Belarusian authorities don't have the intellectual capacity to control the narrative."<ref name=":22" /> | |||
On 20 May 2000, a group of mostly Belarusian Litvinists in ] signed the Act of Proclamation of the Litvin nation, while its members consider that in 1900-1922 the Old Lithuania died and the name "Lithuanians" was assigned to the Samogitians.<ref>{{cite web |title=ЛИТВИНЫ - ИСТОРИЧЕСКАЯ ЕВРОПЕЙСКАЯ НАЦИЯ НА ТЕРРИТОРИИ БЕЛАРУСИ |url=http://www.litvania.org/ |website=Litvania.org |language=ru |archive-date=8 October 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131008013901/http://www.litvania.org/ |url-status=dead}}</ref> Subsequently, the leaders of the Congress of the Litvin League ("{{langx|be|Ліцвінскай лігі|translit=Licvinskaj lihi|label=none}}") and the authors of the Act of Proclamation of the Litvin nation were arrested in Poland as agents of ].<ref name="Kirkievic"/> | |||
In February 2005, {{ill|Viačaslaŭ Rakicki|be|Вячаслаў Антонавіч Ракіцкі}}, a Belarusian writer and journalist, publicly discussed with {{ill|Alieh Trusaŭ|be|Алег Анатолевіч Трусаў}}, a Belarusian archaeologist and publicist, and mutually agreed that the "ancient Belarusian state" – Grand Duchy of Lithuania had two ]: the ] and the ] (both of which were primarily presented as the former "Belarusian colonies" near the ]).<ref>{{cite news |last1=Rakicki |first1=Viačaslaŭ |last2=Trusaŭ |first2=Alieh |title=Беларускія калёніі на беразе Балтыйскага мора – Інфляндзкае княства і Курляндыя |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/792734.html |newspaper=Радыё Свабода |access-date=26 October 2023 |date=22 February 2005 |language=be}}</ref> According to Trusaŭ, the Belarusian nation and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were created from ],<ref>{{cite web |last1=Trusaŭ |first1=Alieh |title=Алег Трусаў: Хай маладзейшыя бяруць уладу! |url=https://novychas.online/kultura/aleh-trusau-haj-maladzejszyja-bjaruc-uladu |website=Novy Chas |access-date=26 October 2023 |date=2 October 2016 |language=be}}</ref> thus the Grand Duchy of Lithuania since the Middle Ages was a predominantly Belarusian state with Lithuanian ("{{langx|be| / litoŭskija|label=none}}") and Ukrainian elements.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Skobla |first1=Michas |last2=Trusaŭ |first2=Alieh |title=Алег Трусаў выдаў "Гісторыю сярэднявечнай Еўропы" — гутарка |url=https://nashaniva.com/?c=ar&i=178832 |website=Nasha Niva |access-date=26 October 2023 |date=13 October 2016 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
Following his departure from Belarus in fear of repressions, Belarusian nationalist Zianon Pazniak complained in the June 2004 edition of the newsletter {{ill|Belarusian News|be|Беларускія ведамасці (часопіс)}} that ], but instead of territorial gains like other ] it "lost its territories and even its historical capital".<ref name="Arlou"/> In February 2005, Arłou expressed his agreement to such Pazniak's statements about World War II.<ref name="Arlou"/> In 2005, Pazniak wrote that the task of the Belarusian intelligentsia, education, educational and national literature is to "return the historical consciousness of the people to their native home – to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania" and in the next stage "return the official name of the state" which according to him should be named in the ] as the Grand Duchy of Lithuanian Belarus ({{langx|be|Вялікае Княства Літоўскае Беларусь}}) and abbreviated as Belarus to solve political and historical-ethnic questions.<ref name="Pozniak2005">{{cite web |last1=Pazniak |first1=Zianon |title=(Разьдзел з артыкула "Прамаскоўскі рэжым") |url=https://www.bielarus.net/archives/2005/10/29/369 |website=Bielarus.net |date=15 September 2005 |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Pazniak's suggestion to change the name of Belarus to the Grand Duchy of Lithuanian Belarus received only partial support among the Belarusians and also was criticized.<ref>{{cite web |title=Вялікае Княства Літоўскае Беларусь — пражэкцёрства ці візіянэрства? |url=https://nashaniva.com/?c=ar&i=100976 |website=] |date=11 November 2005 |language=be |access-date=15 October 2023}}</ref> According to Pazniak, the ], ] and other attributes were destroyed by the Russian occupation policy (] and ]), which instead tried to tie the historical consciousness of Belarusians to the ], while Lukashenko's government is a "pro-Muscovite regime".<ref name="Pozniak2005"/> The 2019 census demonstrated that the Belarusian language is perceived as a native language of Belarus by ~60% of its population, however only ~25% use it in their everyday life.<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Coakley |first1=Amanda |title=Inside the Fight To Preserve the Belarusian Language |url=https://time.com/6224762/fight-to-preserve-belarusian-language/ |magazine=] |access-date=7 October 2023 |date=28 October 2022}}</ref> | |||
{{multiple image | |||
| align = right | |||
| direction = horizontal | |||
| total_width = | |||
| header_align = left/right/center | |||
| footer = Belarusian ]s Voĺha Ipatava (left) and Alexander Kravtsevich (right), both expressed their support for claims that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania "arose in Belarusian lands" and that Belarus is its "main successor"<ref name="Euroradio"/> | |||
| footer_align = left/right/center | |||
| image1 = VolhaIpatava.jpg | |||
| width1 = 72 | |||
| image2 = Alyaksandr Kraucevich in Collegium Civitas, Warsaw 2.JPG | |||
| width2 = 250 | |||
}} | |||
On January 22, 2009, a public organizing committee Lithuania Millennium was formed to commemorate the first mentioning of the name of Lithuania in written sources in 1009 (its chairman was professor ] and it also included: writer {{ill|Voĺha Ipatava|be|Вольга Міхайлаўна Іпатава}}, historian Alexander Kravtsevich, professor {{ill|Alieś Astroŭski|be|Алесь Аляксандравіч Астроўскі}}, biologist {{ill|Aliaksiej Mikulič|be|Аляксей Ігнатавіч Мікуліч}}, archeologist {{ill|Edvard Zajkoŭski|be|Эдвард Міхайлавіч Зайкоўскі}}, painter {{ill|Aliaksiej Maračkin|be|Аляксей Антонавіч Марачкін}}, priest Lieanid Akalovič, writer {{ill|Zdzislaŭ Sićka|be|Здзіслаў Сіцька}}).<ref name="Euroradio">{{cite web |title=У Беларусі рыхтуецца святкаванне 1000-годдзя назвы Літва |url=https://euroradio.fm/u-belarusi-ryhtuecca-svyatkavanne-1000-goddzya-nazvy-litva |website=] |date=22 January 2009 |access-date=23 November 2023 |language=be}}</ref> According to members of the committee Lithuania Millennium, the name of Lithuania refers to the ancient territory of Belarus because the Grand Duchy of Lithuania "arose in our lands" and its first capital was in Novogrudok, while the current Belarusians called themselves Lithuanians ("{{langx|be|літвінамі |label=none}}") until the beginning of the 20th century, thus Belarus is the "main successor" of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref name="Euroradio"/> | |||
In September 2009, Belsat TV published a video where Belarusian historians, including Hienadź Sahanovič and Alexander Kravtsevich, narrated that under the reign of Grand Duke ] the "Belarusian state" became the largest in ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Sahanovič |first1=Hienadź |last2=Kravtsevich |first2=Alexander |title=Гісторыя пад знакам Пагоні. Вітаўт |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVvNs312oKg |website=БЕЛСАТ NEWS |date=31 August 2009 |access-date=30 December 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
In October 2009, Vadim Deruzhinskiy and {{ill|Anatoĺ Taras|be|Анатоль Яфімавіч Тарас}} (scientific editor) published a 560 pages book ''Secrets of Belarusian History'' ({{langx|be|Тайны белорусской истории|label=none}}) where in its ] it was stated that the Belarusians were previously called Litvins and Belarus did not exist in the Middle Ages, however instead there was Lithuania to which the Republic of Lithuania ("{{langx|be|Республика Летува |label=none}}") has no relation because in ~1220 Lithuania appeared in Western Belarus due to the migration of ].<ref>{{cite web |title=В Минске вышла книга Вадима Деружинского "Тайны белорусской истории" |url=https://budzma.org/news/v-minskye-vyshla-kniha-vadima-dyeruzhinskoho-tayny-byelorusskoy-istorii.html |website=Budzma.org |access-date=23 December 2023 |language=ru}}</ref> | |||
On 23 April 2017, it was stated in the official website of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was always considered as the previous embodiment of Belarusian statehood by the leadership of the Belarusian Democratic Republic.<ref>{{cite web |title=Беларусы прапануюць адраджэньне ВКЛ – 23.04.1918 |url=https://www.radabnr.org/adradzennie-vkl/ |website=Radabnr.org |date=13 November 2017 |access-date=22 December 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
In September 2015, Zianon Pazniak claimed that the Russian propaganda is trying to use some "Belarusian marginals" who dream about the revival of Greater Lithuania.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Пазняк |first1=Зянон |title=ГЭТА СЛОВА САКРАЛЬНАЕ. АБ НЕКАТОРЫХ АСПЭКТАХ БЕЛАРУСКАГА АДРАДЖЭНЬНЯ І ПАРАЗЫ РУСКАЙ ПАЛІТЫКІ |url=http://pazniak.info/page_geta_slova_sakralnae__ab_nekatoryih_aspektah_belaruskaga__adradjennya_ |website=Pazniak.info |access-date=9 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Later, in December 2016, Pazniak stated that "the state was called Grand Duchy of Lithuania (now Belarus), Ruthenia (now Ukraine) and Samogitia (now Letuva)" and that "fantastic history of Letuva is based on a twisted real history of Belarus (historical Litva)".<ref name="Pozniak2016">{{cite web |last1=Пазняк |first1=Зянон |title=БЕЛАРУСЬ-ЛІТВА |url=http://pazniak.info/page_belarus-litva |website=Pazniak.info |date=December 2016 |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> However, according to Pazniak the agenda of "returning to the name Літва " would be fruitless for Belarus because it is 150 years too late and a new Belarusian nation was created over this time.<ref name="Pozniak2016"/> Nevertheless, by describing etymological terms, he continued to claim that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ({{langx|be|Вялікае Княства Літоўскае}}) corresponds to today's Belarus (according to him, the term was also favorable for the ] for ] purposes, but was later banned by the ] in 1840 and the Belarusians were then treated as a "branch of the Russian tribe"), while the current Lithuania is ] ({{langx|be|Жамойцкае}}), and that in the 17th century the Belarusian language was noted in ] as "Litvinskaya" ({{langx|be|ліцьвінскай}}), "Lithuanian" ({{langx|be|літоўскай}}), "Lithuanian writing" ({{langx|be|літоўскае пісьмо}}).<ref name="Pozniak2016"/> Also, according to Pazniak, due to struggle in the ] during the ] in the 19th century, the Samogitians ({{langx|be|Жамойць}}), who according to him allegedly did not even have their own writing system, benefited by choosing the name "Літва " and built a fantastic state ideology.<ref name="Pozniak2016"/> | |||
] Misplaced Pages ] them as "Letuvisy" ] ] ] them primarily as "Litoŭcy" ({{lang|be|Літоўцы}}) and secondary as "Letuvisy" ({{lang|be|Летувісы}}), but without historically completely equating them to the Samogitians.]] | |||
In recent times, open declarations have been published in Belarus, stating that Vilnius is a "non-Lithuanian" city and should supposedly belong to the "historical Lithuanians" – Belarusians.<ref name="Karys2" /> For example, since 2013, during annual '']'' ({{langx|en|West}}) exercises in which the ] and ] jointly participate, the narrative that the Vilnius Region should supposedly belong to Belarus is openly repeated.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pankūnė |first1=Dainora |title=Kokiu tikslu Lukašenka svaidosi išgalvotais kaltinimais: ar baltarusių pajėgos ruošiasi naujiems iššūkiams |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/kokiu-tikslu-lukasenka-svaidosi-isgalvotais-kaltinimais-ar-baltarusiu-pajegos-ruosiasi-naujiems-issukiams.d?id=90661123 |website=DELFI |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In 2018, Alexander Lukashenko stated during an interview with the ] that "we are not the heirs of ], we are the heirs of Vilnius".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Rimkevičienė |first1=Liepa |last2=Jakilaitis |first2=Edmundas |title=Dekonstrukcijos. Rusija propagandos mašina taikosi ne tik į LDK, Vilnių, bet ir Žalgirio mūšį |url=https://www.delfi.lt/multimedija/dekontrukcijos/dekonstrukcijos-rusija-propagandos-masina-taikosi-ne-tik-i-ldk-vilniu-bet-ir-zalgirio-musi-80580319 |website=] |access-date=4 March 2023}}</ref><ref name="Gurevicius"/><ref>{{cite web |title=Редактор "Эха Москвы": Руководство России относится к Беларуси, как к Крыму |url=https://ex-press.live/rubrics/politika/2018/12/16/redaktor-exa-moskvy-rukovodstvo-rossii-otnositsya-k-belarusi-kak-k-krymu |website=Ex-press.live |date=16 December 2018 |access-date=18 November 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Russian right-wing politician ] also publicly called on Belarusians to "take back" Vilnius.<ref name="Dekonstrukcijos"/> | |||
On 1 March 2021, ] published a program in which Alexander Kravtsevich, a Belarusian professor, Doctor of History, argued that Vilnius was founded, built and named by the Belarusians and that history does not know cities built by ].<ref name="Belsat2021">{{cite web |last1=Grigaliūnaitė |first1=Violeta |title=Istorijos profesorius baltarusiškos televizijos BELSAT laidoje apie Vilnių: jį įkūrė baltarusiai |url=https://www.15min.lt/naujiena/aktualu/lietuva/istorijos-profesorius-baltarusiskos-televizijos-belsat-laidoje-apie-vilniu-ji-ikure-baltarusiai-56-1464704 |website=15min.lt |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> According to ], the director of ], this theory is not new, but has been known for a long time and has its fans and followers in Belarus; however, even some Belarusian historians regard Alexander Kravtsevich as a radical and refuse to cooperate with him.<ref name="Belsat2021"/> Nevertheless, Belsat TV actively promotes the Litvinist narrative in various programs it shows: movies, discussions of historians and scientists in the TV studio, and the main narrator of the Litvinist movies is Litvinism propagator Alexander Kravtsevich.<ref name="DiliusAlkas">{{cite web |last1=Dilius |first1=Rimgaudas |title=Kas ir kodėl skatina litvinizmą? |url=https://alkas.lt/2019/12/07/r-dilius-kas-ir-kodel-skatina-litvinizma/ |website=Alkas.lt |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt |date=7 December 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Kraucewicz |first1=Alaksandr |title=Вялікае Княства Літоўскае – Беларусь ці Летува? / Загадкі беларускай гісторыі |trans-title=Grand Duchy of Lithuania – Belarus or Lithuania? |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p06B19M7QQE |website=БЕЛСАТ NEWS |date=30 May 2017 |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=be}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Kraucewicz |first1=Alaksandr |title=Вільня як нашая сталіца / Загадкі беларускай гісторыі |trans-title=Vilnius as our capital / Riddles of the history of Belarus |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIjsg9xeSRA |website=БЕЛСАТ HISTORY |date=14 January 2019 |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Belsat TV show where historians gather and promote Litvinism is called '']'', which is named after ]'s post-] geopolitical plan of a future ] in ] and ] dominated by Poland.<ref name="DiliusAlkas"/><ref>{{cite web |title=Intermarium – гістарычнае ток-шоў |url=https://belsat.eu/program/intermarium/ |website=Belsat.eu |access-date=11 September 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Intermarium |url=https://naviny.belsat.eu/en/program/intermarium-en/ |website=Naviny.belsat.eu |access-date=11 September 2023}}</ref> Since June 2022 Belsat TV is being broadcast in Belarusian and Russian languages in Southeastern Lithuania.<ref>{{cite web |title=Pietryčių Lietuvoje pradėtos retransliuoti dvi naujos televizijos programos |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/1711267/pietryciu-lietuvoje-pradetos-retransliuoti-dvi-naujos-televizijos-programos |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt |date=3 June 2022}}</ref> On 19 November 2022, Belsat published an article where it was stated that Vilnius is "our lost capital" of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ад рэдакцыяў першых газетаў да ўлюбёнага бару Караткевіча: беларускія месцы Вільні |url=https://belsat.eu/news/19-11-2022-ad-redaktsyyau-pershyh-gazetau-da-ulyubyonaga-baru-karatkevicha-belaruskiya-mestsy-vilni |website=Belsat.eu |date=19 November 2022 |language=be}}</ref> In October 2023, Belsat TV published a show during which the events of ] were justified when, according to the host of this show, Vilnius was captured by the ], led by general ], who until his death "hated three things: the Bolsheviks, Germans and Lithuanians" and was separating Litvins from Lithuanians.<ref>{{cite web |title=Люцыян Жалігоўскі. Стваральнік самаабвешчанай дзяржавы Сярэдняя Літва |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCr6PArAtBA |website=БЕЛСАТ HISTORY |access-date=2 November 2023 |date=9 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
Moreover, Alexander Kravtsevich also seeks to segregate the terms "{{langx|lt|Lietuviai|label=none}}" (a word in the Lithuanian language meaning Lithuanians, but according to Kravtsevich "{{langx|lt|Lietuviai|label=none}}" were Catholic Samogitians ({{langx|be|жамойты|label=none}}) in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania), "{{langx|lt|Lietuva|label=none}}" (a word in the Lithuanian language meaning Lithuania) from "''Litovcy''" (a word in some ], including Belarusian, meaning Lithuanians), "''Litva''" (a word in the Slavic languages, including Belarusian, meaning Lithuania) and accuses Lithuanians ({{langx|lt|Lietuviai|label=none}}) that they assigned the whole history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania for themselves after ] in 1918 and ] it.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Краўцэвіч |first1=Аляксандар |title=Літва - ЯКАЯ сапраўдная і ДЗЕ яна? |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSmDftqyePI |website=YouTube.com |date=29 November 2022 |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> According to Kravtsevich, the usage of the words "Litva" ({{lang|be|Літва}}), "Lićviny" ({{lang|be|ліцьвіны}}) when describing a historical country and "Letuva" ({{lang|be|Летува}}), "Letuvisy" ({{lang|be|летувісы}}) when describing a modern country is "completely justified and even necessary", because according to him, the historical Lithuania was created in the middle of the 13th century in territories which mostly are "ethnically Belarusian" (], ], ], and western ]) and the "Letuvisy" ({{lang|be|летувісы}}) made up only a small percentage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania's population, but during the ] the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was attributed to the Lithuanians and now it is almost exclusive to a ] with the endonym of "Letuva".<ref name="Kravtsevich2020">{{cite news |last1=Краўцэвіч |first1=Аляксандар |title=Чаму трэба казаць і "Літва", і "Летува". Аргумэнты гісторыка Алеся Краўцэвіча |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/30448775.html |website=Радыё Свабода |access-date=14 October 2023 |language=be |date=20 July 2023}}</ref> | |||
According to {{ill|Źmicier Sańko|be|Зміцер Санько}}, a Belarusian linguist and publisher, the ancient history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was "changed" by manipulations of the 20th-century dictators and if Joseph Stalin had assigned Vilnius to Belarus, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania would have been "indisputably interpreted as a Belarusian state".<ref name="Sanko">{{cite news |last1=Sanko |first1=Zmicer |title=І ўсё ж — Літва ці Летува? |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/30464340.html/ |website=Радыё Свабода |date=2 March 2020 |access-date=14 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Sańko also stated that the Lithuanians want to preserve the equality between historical and modern Lithuania, therefore, according to him, there is an urgent requirement to terminologically demarcate historical Lithuania and modern Lithuania.<ref name="Sanko"/> Furthermore, according to Sańko, ] made two "expensive gifts" to Lithuania when it "gave Vilnius from us " in 1939 and "organized" the ] to change the national state symbols.<ref name="Sanko"/> | |||
{{quote box | |||
| quote = "The words "Litva", "Litvin", "Litoŭski" in the Old Belarusian language from the beginning meant the Baltic union of tribes, its representatives and their language. (...) For modern Belarusians, Lithuania is the name of today's neighboring country. (...) Every Belarusian should know that Lithuania is also his ancient country and "childish complexes" about it should be discarded." | |||
| author = — ], {{ill|Sergei Shupa|be|Сяргей Шупа}}<ref name="ViacorkaShupa"/> | |||
| align = right | |||
| width = 22em | |||
| bgcolor = Lavender | |||
| salign = right | |||
}} | |||
In February 2020, ] and {{ill|Sergei Šupa|be|Сяргей Шупа}} together wrote an article arguing that Lithuania should be called "Litva", rather than "Letuva".<ref name="ViacorkaShupa">{{cite news |last1=Viačorka |first1=Vincuk |last2=Šupa |first2=Siarhiei |title=Чаму Літва, а не "Летува" |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/30445716.html |website=Radio Liberty |access-date=14 October 2023 |language=be |date=20 February 2020}}</ref> Viačorka and Shupa argued that "Litva" is "our ancient word" and "Litva" as well as Baltic "{{langx|lt|Lietuva|label=none}}" are ] equivalents, while the usage of a word "Letuva" is unacceptable because it contradicts the nature of the Belarusian language and that such an approach was incompetent ].<ref name="ViacorkaShupa"/> Moreover, from the early periods the Old Belarusian language words "Litva", "Litvin", "Litoŭski" described ], their language and representatives, and this approach was continued by the ] linguists (e.g. {{ill|Valiancina Paškievič|be|Валянціна Мікалаеўна Пашкевіч}}).<ref name="ViacorkaShupa"/> According to Viačorka and Šupa, every Belarusian should know that Lithuania is also his ancient country and "childish complexes" about it should be discarded, while the imposition of a word "Letuva" is "monstrous" and instead there is a necessity of historical education.<ref name="ViacorkaShupa"/> Viačorka and Šupa also reminded that in the early 1990s there was an agreement between the Belarusian and Lithuanian intellectuals to stop using the terms "Letuva" and "Letuvísaŭ" in Belarusian publications.<ref name="ViacorkaShupa"/> | |||
On 23 April 2020, the official account in ] of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic stated that the political ideal of Belarusians was the revival of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a federation of Belarus and Lithuania ("|label=none}}").<ref>{{cite web |title=Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic via Twitter |url=https://twitter.com/radabnr/status/1253242428787699712 |website=Twitter |date=23 April 2020 |access-date=22 December 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
In December 2021, Belarusian politician ], one of the denied candidates of the ], stated online that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was created in the current Belarusian territory in the 13th–14th centuries and later expanded, while the spoken language in the state was the Ruthenian/Russian language ("Russkiy jazyk"), not the current Lithuanian language.<ref name="Tsepkalo">{{cite web |last1=Tsepkalo |first1=Valery |title=ВКЛ. Маяк ДЕМОКРАТИИ. Авторский фильм Валерия Цепкало. (related timelapse from 6:20) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wkBaSe_ZFU |website=YouTube.com |date=28 December 2021 |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=ru}}</ref><ref name="TV3Zinios"/> | |||
According to Aleś Čajčyc, the Information Secretary of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic,<ref>{{Cite web|title=Прэзыдыюм – Рада Беларускай Народнай Рэспублікі|trans-title=Presidium - the Council of the Belarusian People's Republic|url=http://www.radabnr.org/prezydyjum/|access-date=2021-09-06|language=be}}</ref> the Litvinism article on English Misplaced Pages was written by "Lithuanian marginals".<ref name=":32">{{Cite web|last=Čajčyc|first=Aleś|date=13 August 2021|title=Будзьма беларусамі! » Хобі для эрудытаў: абараняць "Пагоню" ў галоўнай сусветнай энцыклапедыі|trans-title=Hobbies for scholars: to defend the Pahonia in the world's major encyclopedia|url=https://budzma.by/news/khobi-dlya-erudyta-.html|access-date=|website=Будзтма беларусамі |language=Belarusian}}</ref> However, the same year after secretary's statement the official Twitter account of the exiled government tweeted that the coat of arms is "a symbol of centuries of friendship between Belarusians and Lithuanians".<ref>{{Cite web|title=Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic|url=https://twitter.com/radabnr/status/1441084114740809732|website= ]|date=23 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
In September 2021, Alexander Lukashenko claimed that the Lithuanian capital Vilnius and Polish city ] are Belarusian lands.<ref name="Lukashenko2019">{{cite web |title=A. Lukašenka: Balstogė ir Vilnius yra Baltarusijos miestai |url=https://www.lrytas.lt/pasaulis/ivykiai/2021/09/19/news/a-lukasenka-balstoge-ir-vilnius-yra-baltarusijos-miestai-20799171 |website=Lrytas.lt |date=19 September 2021 |access-date=11 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In January 2022, the official website of the ] published an explanation by Lukashenko which claims that "Lithuania and Poland deny the contribution of the Belarusian people to the development of historical forms of statehood on Belarusian soil" and that the "modern Lithuanians" (whose ancestors previously "lived in the darkness of paganism and led a primitive economy", while the "] and ] principalities thundered throughout Europe as centers of spirituality and enlightenment") privatized the heritage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, but according to Lukashenko historically the language of this state was "ours ", "the people are 80% ours – Slavs", the dominant faith was ] and the state mainly constituted of modern Belarusian, Ukrainian, and Russian territories.<ref>{{cite web |title=Лукашенко: необходима адекватная оценка времён ВКЛ и Речи Посполитой |url=https://soyuz.by/politika/lukashenko-neobhodima-adekvatnaya-ocenka-vremen-vkl-i-rechi-pospolitoy |website=Soyuz.by |date=6 January 2022 |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=ru}}</ref> In July 2022, during the ] celebration, Lukashenko claimed that the Belarusian ethnos was the "]" of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania which was "the first Belarusian country" and "a defensive alliance with the Baltic tribes, where the Slavs taught them to read, introduced them to the philosophy of Christianity".<ref name="Stuburas">{{cite news|title= Lukašenka pareiškė, kad baltarusiai buvo LDK stuburas|trans-title= Lukashenko stated that the Belarusians were the backbone of the GDL|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/pasaulyje/6/1732460/lukasenka-pareiske-kad-baltarusiai-buvo-ldk-stuburas|website= ]}}</ref> However, the same month the statues of Grand Dukes ] and ], who were called "Polish occupiers", were removed from the ].<ref name=":22" /> Furthermore, there were cases in 2022 when people in Belarus were arrested or even sentenced to multiple years in prison for the usage of ''{{lang|be-Latn|Pahonia}}'' (one of the historical names of the coat of arms of Lithuania, alternative unofficial coat of arms of Belarus with a horse rider closely resembles it and bears the same name) when they publicly painted it or left a sticker featuring it.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Romanenko |first1=Valentyna |title=Lukashenko regime deems "Long live Belarus!" to be Nazi slogan |url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2022/11/10/7375733/ |website=] |access-date=21 October 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=2022 Country Report on Human Rights Practices: Belarus |url=https://by.usembassy.gov/2022-country-reports-on-human-rights-practices-belarus/ |website=U.S. Embassy in Belarus |date=25 May 2023 |access-date=21 October 2023}}</ref> | |||
In March 2023, Zianon Pazniak stated that "in our history and our culture Vilnius is our head, the loss of Vilnius turned out to be very disadvantageous for us", and further claimed that the Lithuanians have no rights to Vilnius, provided propositions how Vilnius could be separated from Lithuania by granting Vilnius an "independent city" status, a "special status" or a "common city" status or making it "Belarusian", and used term "Letuvisy" when describing Lithuanians.<ref name="PazniakVilnius">{{cite web |last1=Pazniak |first1=Zianon |title=Вільня - наша. Пазняк пра тое, як падзяліць сталіцу з Літвой |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYh-QwORHzs |website=YouTube.com |date=26 March 2023 |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Baltarusų opozicionierius Zenon Pazniak teigia, kad LDK ir Vilnius yra baltarusų |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qar-3i9bRXk |website=YouTube.com | date=19 August 2023 |lang=be, lt}}</ref><ref name="PazniakVilnius2">{{cite web |last1=Pazniak |first1=Zianon |title=ПАЗНЯК: як беларусы стварылі краіну, Вільня – наша, Дзень Волі – галоўнае свята, БНР – 105 год (related timelapse: from 48:10 to 01:11:32) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dlx4jE9Wvlk |website=YouTube.com |date=25 March 2023 |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> While in one of his earlier published articles Pazniak wrote that "in 1939, 'Letuvisy' accepted Stalin's offer to take Vilnius (...) lost their independence (...) but historically (at least for today) they won. Vilnius remained in Letuva".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Пазняк |first1=Зянон |title=Ідэалы БНР у рэчышчы геапалітыкі |url=http://pazniak.info/page_idealy_bnr_u_rechyshchy_geapalityki_ |website=Pazniak.info |access-date=9 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
On 18 March 2023, {{ill|Íhar Marzaliúk|be|Ігар Аляксандравіч Марзалюк}}, a Belarusian historian, archaeologist and politician, known for his support of Lukashenko's policies,<ref>{{cite news |last1=Гурневіч |first1=Дзьмітры |title=Дэпутат Марзалюк 13 хвілінаў бараніў на СТВ "Пагоню". Але ёсьць нюанс |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/32141357.html |newspaper=Радыё Свабода |date=21 November 2022 |access-date=31 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> claimed in his television show that Vilnius was not established by Baltic-Lithuanians at all but by ], who he equated to "our ancestors" and stressed that despite Vilnius currently not being part of the Republic of Belarus, it must "remain in our historical memory and hearts".<ref name="Marzaliuk">{{cite web |last1=Марзалюк |first1=Ігар |title=Марзалюк: Вільня можа быць за межамі Беларусі, але заўсёды мусіць заставацца ў нашым сэрцы |url=https://belarus-news.by/project/marzalyuk-vilnya-mozha-byc-za-mezhami-belarusi-ale-zausyody-music-zastavacca-u-nashym-sercy |website=Belarus-news.by |date=18 March 2023 |access-date=31 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> In October 2023, Marzaliúk, acting as the Chairman of the Commission on Education, Culture and Science of the ], publicly presented in the premises of the ] his newly published book about the history of Belarus titled ''Symbols of the Belarusian Eternity: Historical Symbols of the Belarusian Eternity'' .<ref>{{cite web |title=Презентация книги "Сімвалы беларускай вечнасці: гісторыя сімвалаў беларускай дзяржаўнасці" состоялась в БГУ |url=https://bsu.by/news/prezentatsiya-knigi-simvaly-belaruskay-vechnastsi-gistoryya-simvala-belaruskay-dzyarzha-nastsi-sosto-d/ |website=Белару́скі дзяржа́ўны ўніверсітэ́т |access-date=31 October 2023 |language=ru}}</ref> This Marzaliúk's book was published by the {{ill|Belarus Publishing House|be|Беларусь (выдавецтва)}}, which is controlled by the {{ill|Ministry of Information of the Republic of Belarus|be|Міністэрства інфармацыі Рэспублікі Беларусь}}, while its content is based on Marzaliúk's television show ''Symbols of Belarusian Eternity'' , but is also supplemented with additional content.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Марзалюк |first1=Íhar |title=Сімвалы беларускай вечнасці: гісторыя сімвалаў беларускай дзяржаўнасці |url=https://izdatelstvo.by/company/news/i_marzalyuk_simvaly_belaruskay_vechnastsi_gistoryya_simvala_belaruskay_dzyarzha_nastsi/ |website=Izdatelstvo.by |access-date=31 October 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
{{quote box | |||
| quote = "This problem is artificially created, I am absolutely sure that 99 percent of Belarusians have never heard of Litvinism. This is created here now so that Lithuanians and Belarusians would be set against each other, just to provoke people and this discussion. This is only talked about in Lithuania, there are no such discussions in Belarus at all. We will never question the integrity of Lithuania. Vilnius is a Lithuanian city. I don't understand why people talk about it at all, because it is only intended to set Lithuanians and Belarusians against each other. (...) There is not even such an idea in Belarusian society. Call the historians and talk. Belarusians respect the integrity and heritage of Lithuania." | |||
| author = — ]<ref name="Tsikhanouskaya"/><ref name="Valkauskas"/> | |||
| align = right | |||
| width = 37em | |||
| bgcolor = Lavender | |||
| salign = right | |||
}} | |||
On 23 August 2023, Belarusian opposition leader ] stated that the theory of Litvinism was put forward in order to set at variance Lithuanians and Belarusians, that Belarus would never question the integrity of Lithuania, and that Vilnius was a city of Lithuania.<ref name="Tsikhanouskaya">{{cite web |last1=Gaučaitė-Znutienė |first1=Modesta |last2=Skėrytė |first2=Jūratė |title=Cichanouskaja apie litvinizmo apraiškas: tai kuriama dirbtinai, norint sukiršinti lietuvius ir baltarusius |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2061072/cichanouskaja-apie-litvinizmo-apraiskas-tai-kuriama-dirbtinai-norint-sukirsinti-lietuvius-ir-baltarusius |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television, ] |date=23 August 2023 |access-date=11 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Moreover, Tsikhanouskaya claimed that Belarusians generally do not talk about Litvinism and that these are isolated, marginal cases.<ref name="Valkauskas">{{cite web |last1=Valkauskas |first1=Tomas |title=Litvinizmo baimė: ar Lietuva labiau pripratusi prie Lukašenkos, o ne demokratinės Baltarusijos? |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/pasaulyje/6/2074228/litvinizmo-baime-ar-lietuva-labiau-pripratusi-prie-lukasenkos-o-ne-demokratines-baltarusijos |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=17 September 2023 |language=lt |date=12 September 2023}}</ref> On the other hand, according to Lithuanian military historian Karolis Zikaras, Litvinist attitude prevails in the society of Belarus, but there is an increase of Belarusian historians who look more objectively at the history of their country.<ref name="Gurevicius"/> | |||
According to Lithuanian scientist ], the ] of Belarusians is still in process and its community is divided into two unequal groups: pro-Moscow (larger) and pro-Western (smaller), however both of these groups seek to find or create historical ethno-cultural supports and the pro-Moscow ones also do not want to become Russians/Muscovites.<ref name="Salyne">{{cite web |last1=Salynė |first1=Roberta |title=Kai kurių baltarusių galvose lietuviai – tik lituvisai ar "žmudai": įrodinėjama, kad dabartinė mūsų tauta neturi nieko bendra su istorine Litva |url=https://www.15min.lt/naujiena/aktualu/lietuva/baltarusiu-litvinizmo-pasakos-kaip-ir-kodel-litva-isvaduojama-nuo-etninio-lietuviskumo-56-2101132 |website=15min.lt |access-date=13 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> During a poll conducted in 2021, 86% of Belarusians evaluated Russia positively, Russian President Vladimir Putin received 60% support and about two-thirds supported the development of the ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kojala |first1=Linas |title=Ką baltarusiai mano apie Rusiją ir Lietuvą |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/nuomones/3/1333979/linas-kojala-ka-baltarusiai-mano-apie-rusija-ir-lietuva |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=13 September 2023 |language=lt |date=1 February 2021}}</ref> | |||
] wishes glory to the great ] Belarusian–Lithuanian nation]] | |||
In April 2023, Belarusian oppositionist ] with others organized a ] near the Embassy of Lithuania in Warsaw, which by them was described as "Samogitian Embassy" ("|label=none}}"), and its participants narrated that the "Samogitian Government" ("|label=none}}") laws are discriminatory towards the "Belarusian–Lithuanians" ("|label=none}}") and suggested to do not use "our name" in the future.<ref>{{cite web |title=Mityng la ambasady Žmudzi suprać dyskryminacyji Biełarusaŭ - Licvinaŭ j kradziež spadčyny Litvy |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5mtOXoR7WM |website=YouTube.com | date=25 April 2023 |access-date=29 December 2023 |language=be}}</ref> | |||
On 14 August 2023, Vladislav Zhivitsa (who previously fled from Russia) and Yan Rudzik held a press conference where they announced that they are planning to recreate independent Smolensk statehood in a close union with Belarus and other countries whose territories were part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania because "Smolensk is a Belarusian land which is under Moscow occupation".<ref>{{cite web |title=Российский депутат заявил о создании движения за независимость Смоленской области от РФ |url=https://nv.ua/world/countries/vladislav-zhivica-sozdal-dvizhenie-za-nezavisimost-smolenskoy-oblasti-rossii-50346054.html |website=] |access-date=26 December 2023 |language=ru}}</ref> | |||
|label=none}}" in both cases)<ref name="Ales1"/>]] | |||
On 26 August 2023, Aleś Čajčyc, a Member of the Presidium at the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, claimed that "we " are the descendants of the historical Litvins ("{{langx|be|літвінаў |label=none}}") and Lithuanians ("{{langx|be|летувісы |label=none}}") are also their descendants.<ref name="Ales1">{{cite web |title=Aleś Čajčyc via Facebook |url=https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=10161169223981774 |website=Facebook.com |date=26 August 2023 |access-date=22 December 2023}}</ref> Also in August 2023 Čajčyc stated that the discussion on a topic of territorial claims of Belarusians to the Republic of Lithuania is "heating up more and more actively", as well that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the "golden age of Belarusian statehood" and that identifying modern Lithuanians with historical Lithuanians is an "unforgivable simplification".<ref>{{cite news |last1=Чайчыц |first1=Алесь |title=Бессэнсоўная, але непазьбежная спрэчка. Чаму настаў час дамовіцца, што ВКЛ — агульная спадчына |url=https://www.svaboda.org/a/32558403.html |newspaper=Радыё Свабода |date=22 August 2023 |access-date=26 December 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Furthermore, Čajčyc claimed that modern Lithuania ("{{langx|be|сучаснай Летувой |label=none}}") should be clearly linguistically separated from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ("{{langx|be|Вялікім княствам Літоўскім |label=none}}") and historical Lithuania ("{{langx|be|істарычнай Літвой |label=none}}") because according to him the usage of the same word "creates confusion" which is "useful for Lithuanian ("{{langx|be|летувіскага |label=none}}") nationalist historical myth".<ref name="Ales1"/> Nevertheless, according to Čajčyc, the term Samogitia ("{{langx|be|Жмудзь |label=none}}") is not suitable because the Republic of Lithuania is more than that .<ref name="Ales1"/> In the same post Čajčyc also stated by using a ] that he is a proud Litvinist.<ref name="Ales1"/> On 26 October 2023, Čajčyc criticized the usage of the name Vilnius ("{{langx|be|Вільнюс|label=none}}") when referring to the "ancient Lithuanian capital" ("{{langx|be|старадаўняй літоўскай сталіцы |label=none}}") in Belarusian because according to him such a name is a "word from the colonial Soviet dictionary".<ref>{{cite web |title=Aleś Čajčyc via Facebook |url=https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10161307366026774 |website=Facebook.com |date=26 October 2023 |access-date=22 December 2023 |language=be}}</ref> On 27 October 2023, Čajčyc suggested to make Belarusian, Lithuanian ("{{langx|be|летувіскую |label=none}}") and Polish as semi-official languages in the region compromising of Białystok, Vilnius, and Grodno.<ref>{{cite web |title=Aleś Čajčyc via Facebook |url=https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10161310246101774 |website=Facebook.com |date=27 October 2023 |access-date=22 December 2023}}</ref> | |||
In November 2023, a discussion of Belarusian opposition was held in ] during which Belarusian historian Cimoch Akudovič ({{langx|be|Цімох Акудовіч|label=none}}) narrated that for the Belarusians the concept that Vilnius is "theirs" is important and that the monoethnic Vilnius is "some kind of nonsense", therefore Belarusian elements in Vilnius should be "restored".<ref name="DELFI-11-7">{{cite web |title=Gluminantys baltarusių istoriko žodžiai: vientautis Vilnius yra nesąmonė |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/gluminantys-baltarusiu-istoriko-zodziai-vientautis-vilnius-yra-nesamone.d?id=94989185 |website=DELFI, LNK |access-date=11 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Вільня і Варшава нашы: чаму беларусы за іх б'юцца, але не будуць захопліваць {{!}} Ток-шоу Сугак |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vs1Rfg9kY0 |website=YouTube.com | date=5 November 2023 |access-date=11 November 2023 |language=be}}</ref> Soon afterwards, also in November 2023, Cimoch Akudovič sent a letter of apology to the Lithuanian news portal ] where he narrated that he said a "disappointing stupidity".<ref>{{cite web |title=Baltarusių istoriko žodžiai Lietuvoje sukėlė šoką |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/baltarusiu-istoriko-zodziai-lietuvoje-sukele-soka.d?id=95031387 |website=DELFI |access-date=26 November 2023 |language=lt |quote=pasakiau apmaudžią kvailystę}}</ref> | |||
On 19 November 2023, ], a Belarusian philosopher, journalist and political observer, stated that Vilnius is a "Belarusian city" and criticized emigrated Belarusian politicians who according to him "favor Lithuanian chauvinists" and do not defend Belarusians interests, thus he claimed that the ] must be organized and led by other leaders.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Дзермант |first1=Аляксей |title=Вильно – белорусский город |url=https://t.me/dzermant/6408 |website=] |access-date=1 December 2023 |language=ru}}</ref> On the other hand, Dzermant previously advocated the banning of the white-red-white flag in February 2021.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.ctv.by/aleksey-dzermant-o-bchb-simvolike-sovershenno-nesostoyatelny-argumenty-chto-pod-etim-flagom-ne |title=Алексей Дзермант о бчб-символике: "Совершенно несостоятельны аргументы, что под этим флагом не совершались преступления" |language=ru |archive-date=4 February 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210204082923/http://www.ctv.by/aleksey-dzermant-o-bchb-simvolike-sovershenno-nesostoyatelny-argumenty-chto-pod-etim-flagom-ne |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
On 15 March 2024, Belarusian online news outlet '']'' published an article where it claimed that the ] in 1236 near ] was won by the Belarusian Army, despite the fact that it was won by Samogitians commanded by Samogitian Duke ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Спаткай |first1=Леонид |title=Великие победы белорусов |url=https://charter97.org/ru/news/2024/3/15/587729/ |website=] |access-date=15 March 2024 |lang=ru}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Šiaulių mūšis |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/siauliu-musis/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |lang=lt}}</ref> | |||
On 24 March 2024, Pazniak congratulated the Belarusians with ] and claimed that factually in 1918 the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was restored but with a name Belarus, while in the territory of Samogitia appeared "Letuva".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pazniak |first1=Zenon |title=Дзень Волі 2024 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nHzJiVtDiQ |website=ВОЛЬНАЯ БЕЛАРУСЬ via YouTube.com |date=24 March 2024 |access-date=24 March 2024 |lang=be}}</ref> | |||
On 19 January 2025, Dzianis Kuchynski, a representative of Belarusian oppositionist Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, stated that the coat of arms of '']'' (horse rider) depicted on the ] is not the same symbol as Lithuanian {{langx|lt|Vytis|label=none}} (]), altthough they have a historical connection based on the shared past.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Datkūnas |first1=Dominykas |title=Į kritiką dėl pasų sureagavo Cichanouskajos atstovas: „Pagonia“ nėra lietuviškas Vytis |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2463773/i-kritika-del-pasu-sureagavo-cichanouskajos-atstovas-pagonia-nera-lietuviskas-vytis |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television, ] |date=19 January 2025}}</ref> Previously the New Belarus passport received criticism from Lithuanian politicians (e.g. ]) for "coveting other countries symbols" and because it featured a map of Belarus where the Lithuanian territory of ] eldership was allocated to Belarus.<ref name="Salygaite">{{cite web |last1=Sąlygaitė |first1=Jonė |title=Baltarusijos opozicijos užmojis įžiebė aštrias diskusijas: atskirkime, kas yra priešai, o kas – draugai |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/baltarusijos-opozicijos-uzmojis-iziebe-astrias-diskusijas-atskirkime-kas-yra-priesai-o-kas-draugai-120079623 |website=DELFI, Žinių radijas |date=18 January 2025 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Stanevičiūtė |first1=Deimantė |title=Baltarusijos opozicijos Lietuvoje sukurtas pasas kelia aistras: dalį Lietuvos priskyrė Baltarusijai, už klaidą atsiprašo |url=https://www.alfa.lt/aktualijos/lietuva/baltarusijos-opozicijos-lietuvoje-sukurtas-pasas-kelia-aistras-dali-lietuvos-priskyre-baltarusijai-uz-klaida-atsipraso/319848/ |date=16 February 2024 |website=Alfa.lt}}</ref> According to Ažubalis, it would be simple if the Belarusian democratic opposition wrote an statement from which we would see that they "are not a tool in the hands of Litvinists", however they "do not want to dispel doubts".<ref name="Salygaite"/> | |||
=== In Lithuania === | |||
] of ], 1321. The inscription reads: ''{{langx|la|Letvini pagani|label=none}}'' – pagan Lithuanians]] | |||
]'s Chronicle (1321), preserved in the ]]] | |||
{{multiple image | |||
| align = right | |||
| direction = horizontal | |||
| total_width = | |||
| header_align = left/right/center | |||
| footer = According to Lithuanian scientists, the ] was one of the ] languages of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (also with ], Polish), but they deny that it was a ], while Lithuanian was mostly a spoken language in ] until the 17th century (later partly).<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ragauskienė |first1=Raimonda |title=Kalbinė padėtis Lietuvos Didžiojoje Kunigaikštystėje (iki XVI a. vid.): interpretacijos istoriografijoje |journal=Lituanistica |date=2013 |volume=59 |issue=3(93) |publisher=] |pages=148–149 |doi=10.6001/lituanistica.v59i3.2730 |url=https://www.lmaleidykla.lt/ojs/index.php/lituanistica/article/download/2730/1562/ |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=lt|doi-access=free }}</ref>{{Sfn|Dubonis|2016||p=5–7, 24–25}} | |||
| footer_align = left/right/center | |||
| image1 = Lingwa Lietowia (Lithuanian language; lietuvių kalba), mentioned in Chronik des Konstanzer Konzils by Ulrich von Richental, 15th century.jpg | |||
| caption1 = Lithuanian (''{{Lang|la|Lingwa Lietowia}}'') was mentioned as one of the languages of the participants of the ] in a 15th century chronicle by ]. | |||
| width1 = 258 | |||
| image2 = Grammar of Lithuanian language; 1737.jpg | |||
| caption2 = '']'', Vilnius, 1737. | |||
| width2 = 100 | |||
}} | |||
] where ] is marked as "{{langx|la|Kiernow primum M. Duci Lith. domicilium|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|Kernavė, the first residence-capital of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania}}).<ref>{{cite journal |title=1613-ųjų Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunigaikštijos žemėlapis |date=2013 |url=https://www.lb.lt/uploads/documents/files/musu-veikla/grynieji-pinigai/kolekcines-progines-monetos/lankstinukai/Moneta%20skirta%20pirmojo%20Lietuvos%20Didziosios%20Kunigaikstystes%20zemelapio%20isleidimo%20400%20metu%20sukakciai.pdf |page=1 |publisher=] |access-date=23 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> This historical map denies the myth of Belarusian historiography which claims that Novogrudok was the first capital of Lithuania.<ref name="Dubonis"/>]] | |||
] in which ] (''{{lang|fr|Vraye Lithuanie}}''), which the Lithuanian scientists consider as a state founding ]-origin core of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania,<ref name="DidziojiLietuvaVle"/> is clearly separated with a green line from ] (''{{lang|fr|Samogitie}}'') and the Belarusian territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (''{{lang|fr|Russie Blanche ou Lituanique}}'') and includes the cities of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] ({{langx|lt|Ašmena|label=none}}), ] ({{langx|lt|Gardinas|label=none}}), ] ({{Langx|lt|Lyda|label=none}}), ] ({{Langx|lt|Breslauja|label=none}}), etc.<ref name="GardinasVle"/><ref name="LydaVle"/><ref name="BreslaujaVle"/>]] | |||
] | |||
]'s ] distributed during the ] in capital ] and further in Lithuania, referring to the state as {{langx|lt|Didelos Kunegaykſztites Letuwos|label=none}}, 1794]] | |||
], ], 1863. ] Lithuanians (marked in orange) are listed as Litvins.]] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Numerous Lithuanian authors view "Litvinism" as potentially dangerous or harmful for the modern Lithuanian state.<ref name=":3">{{cite news|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/1128520/lrt-faktai-ar-lietuviams-reikia-bijoti-baltarusiu-nacionalinio-atgimimo|title=LRT FAKTAI. Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusių nacionalinio atgimimo?|first=Jurga|last=Bakaitė|publisher=]|date=27 December 2011|language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Bružas |first1=Rimas |last2=Baranauskas |first2=Tomas |title=Istorijos perimetrai. Litvinizmas - istorinė fikcija ar hibridinio karo dalis? |url=https://www.lrt.lt/mediateka/irasas/2000292335/istorijos-perimetrai-litvinizmas-istorine-fikcija-ar-hibridinio-karo-dalis |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt |date=6 September 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Laurinkus |first1=Mečys |author-link1=Mečys Laurinkus |title=Litvinizmas ir jo pavojai: ką apie jį žino Lietuvoje ir Baltarusijoje? |url=https://www.lrytas.lt/lietuvosdiena/aktualijos/2023/08/27/news/mecys-laurinkus-litvinizmas-ir-jo-pavojai-ka-apie-ji-zino-lietuvoje-ir-baltarusijoje--28158936 |website=] |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Milašius |first1=Arūnas |last2=Rakutis |first2=Valdas |title=Tylusis istorijos pagrobimas. Litvinizmas - kas tai? |url=https://paninfo.lt/tylusis-istorijos-pagrobimas-litvinizmas-kas-tai/ |website=Paninfo.lt |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt |date=23 September 2023}}</ref> In 1952–1953, ] newspaper '']'' and ] journal ''Mūsų Lietuva'' published articles why the Belarusians are embezzling Lithuania and concluded that it is because their leaders for a long-time were and still are under the influence of ] which further developed the ] theory about Lithuania as "Russian land" which was "recovered" by ] in 1795.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Matusas |first1=Jonas |title=Dėlko baltgudžiai savinasi Lietuva? |journal=] |date=1952 |page=6 |url=https://www.draugas.org/archive/1952_reg/1952-12-20-PRIEDAS-DRAUGAS.pdf |access-date=28 December 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Dėlko baltgudžiai savinasi Lietuva? |journal=Mūsų Lietuva |date=1953 |volume=188 |issue=5 |page=4 |url=https://www.spauda2.org/musu_lietuva/archive/1953/1953-nr05-MUSU-LIETUVA.pdf |access-date=28 December 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In 1955, Lithuanian professor ] gave a lecture in ] during which he drew attention that some Belarusians have intensified propaganda where they claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, its rulers, coat of arms, culture, and language were Belarusian and criticized such Belarusians theories.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Biržiška |first1=Mykolas |title=Apie lietuvių ir gudų santykius |journal=Santarvė |date=1955 |volume=4 |issue=5 |pages=4-5 (158-159) |url=https://www.spauda2.org/dp/dpspaudinys_santarve/archive/1955-nr04-05-SANTARVE.pdf |lang=lt}}</ref> In 1996, Lithuanian historian ] criticized Mikola Yermalovich's theories by providing scientific counterarguments.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gudavičius |first1=Edvardas |title=Following the Tracks of a Myth |journal=Lithuanian Historical Studies |date=1996 |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=38–58 |doi=10.30965/25386565-00101003 |s2cid=231347582 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338076654 |access-date=17 September 2023|doi-access=free }}</ref> Furthermore, Lithuanian scientists deny that ] anytime in its history was the capital of Lithuania and tractate it is as a "parasitic myth" in Belarusian historiography.<ref name="Dubonis">{{cite web|last1=Dubonis|first1=Artūras|title=The Myth of Navahrudak {{!}} Orbis Lituaniae|url=https://www.ldkistorija.lt/the-myth-of-navahrudak/|access-date=20 October 2023|website=LDKistorija.lt|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
According to Lithuanian scientist ], some Belarusian nationalists present the Belarusians' historical affiliation with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in an anti-historical way because they claim that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was created by the Slavic Litvins (who according to them are the current Belarusians ancestors), while they describe the current Lithuanians as "lietuvisai" who according to them were previously called Samogitians (not "{{lang|be|lićviny}}") and did not participate in the creation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref name="Zinkevicius2006">{{cite journal |last1=Zinkevičius |first1=Zigmas |title=Lietuviu etnogenezė ir Gudija |journal=Acta Baltico-Slavica |date=2006 |volume=30 |pages=27–29 |location=Warsaw |url=https://etalpykla.lituanistika.lt/fedora/objects/LT-LDB-0001:B.03~2006~1367161601116/datastreams/DS.002.0.01.ARTIC/content |access-date=28 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Zinkevičius also explained that the most reliable theory how the name "]" was established is that the White Lands ("{{lang|ru|белая земля}}") or White Ruthenia ("{{lang|ru|Белая Русь}}") did not pay ] to the Lithuanian Dukes, unlike the Black Lands ("{{lang|ru|белая земля}}") or ] ("{{lang|ru|Черная Русь}}") which had to pay tribute, while the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was created by the Lithuanian-speakers.<ref name="Zinkevicius2006"/> Moreover, Zinkevičius pointed out that the Belarusian historian, professor {{ill|Jakaŭ Traščanok|be|Якаў Іванавіч Трашчанок}} in 2003 acknowledged that there was no large preponderance of Slavs over the Balts in the early years of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania's existence (compared to the contemporary times because Western Ruthenian principalities were very scarcely populated), territories inhabited by the Balts were previously vaster than are currently and the ethnic Lithuanian units formed the basis of Lithuanian military power, while the German chroniclers wrote by strictly distinguishing the Lithuanians from Slavs.<ref name="Zinkevicius2006"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Трашчанок |first1=Якаў |title=История Беларуси, часть 1, Досоветский период |date=2003 |publisher=Министерством образования Республики Беларусь |location=Могилев |page=45}}</ref> | |||
According to Lithuanian scientists, part of the ethnic eastern and southeastern Lithuanian territories, which historically used to be part of the ] (considered as a state founding ]-origin core of the ] by Lithuanian scientists), were ] in the 16th–19th centuries through ], ], and ], therefore they are no longer dominated by Lithuanians or Lithuanian-speakers (e.g. ], ], ], ], ], ]).<ref name="DidziojiLietuvaVle">{{cite web |last1=Spečiūnas |first1=Vytautas |title=Didžioji Lietuva |trans-title=Lithuania proper |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/didzioji-lietuva/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="BaltarusijosLietuviaiVle">{{cite web |title=Baltarusijos lietuviai |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/baltarusijos-lietuviai/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=10 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gaučas |first1=Petras |last2=Universitetas |first2=Vilniaus |title=Etnolingvistinė Rytų Lietuvos gyventojų raida XVII a. antrojoje pusėje - 1939 m: istorinė-geografinė analizė |journal=Lituanistika |date=1997 |url=https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/87514 |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Vidugiris |first1=Aloyzas |title=Dėl pietryčių Lietuvos ankstyvųjų slavėjimo tarpsnių |journal=Lietuvių kalbotyros klausimai |date=1994 |volume=XXXIV |pages=75–83 |url=https://journals.lki.lt/actalinguisticalithuanica/article/download/1464/1558 |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt, de}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Staliūnas |first1=Darius |title=Rusinimas |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/rusinimas/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In the 1338 Peace and Trade Agreement, concluded between Gediminids ], ], ] and the ], there is a clear distinction between the Lithuanians and the ] ] ] as well as Lithuania from ] ] ] as these were recorded as separate entities.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rowell |first1=Stephen Christopher |author-link=Stephen Christopher Rowell |title=Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans |date=2003 |publisher={{ill|Vaga (publisher)|lt=Vaga|lt|Vaga (leidykla)}} |location=Vilnius |isbn=5-415-01700-3 |pages=380–385 |url=https://www.europeana.eu/en/item/2021803/C1B0002960629 |access-date=3 November 2023 |language=de, lt}}</ref> Furthermore, a relevant historical source illustrating Lithuania in the 15th century is Lithuanian Grand Duke ]'s 11 March 1420 letter to ], in which he wrote that ] is the same land of Lithuania and that Lithuanians in ] and ] (who also call themselves only as Lithuanians) are the same people with one language.<ref>{{cite book |author1=] |author2=Valkūnas, Leonas (translation from ]) |title=Vytauto laiškai |publisher=], Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore |page=6 |url=http://www.šaltiniai.info/files/literatura/LC00/Vytauto_lai%C5%A1kai.LC2100.pdf |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt |quote=Juk pirmiausia Jūs padarėte ir paskelbėte sprendimą dėl Žemaičių žemės, kuri yra mūsų paveldėjimas ir mūsų tėvonija iš teisėtos prosenolių bei senolių įpėdinystės. Ją ir dabar nuosavybėje turime, ji dabar yra ir visada buvo viena ir ta pati Lietuvos žemė, nes yra viena kalba bei tie patys gyventojai. Bet kadangi Žemaičių žemė yra žemiau negu Lietuvos žemė, todėl ir vadinama Žemaitija, nes taip lietuviškai yra vadinama žemesnė žemė. O žemaičiai Lietuvą vadina Aukštaitija, t. y. iš Žemaičių žiūrint, aukštesne žeme. Taip pat Žemaitijos žmonės nuo senų laikų save vadino lietuviais ir niekada žemaičiais, ir dėl tokio tapatumo (sic) savo rašte mes nerašome apie Žemaitiją, nes viskas yra viena, vienas kraštas ir tie patys gyventojai.}}</ref><ref name="Gurevicius">{{cite web |last1=Gurevičius |first1=Ainis |title=Karininkas: jie kels ginklą prieš Lietuvą nuoširdžiai tikėdami, kad Vilnius priklauso jiems |url=https://www.alfa.lt/aktualijos/lietuva/karininkas-jie-kels-ginkla-pries-lietuva-nuosirdziai-tikedami-kad-vilnius-priklauso-jiems/303327/ |website=Alfa.lt |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In 1501, ], a priest of the ], explained to the ] that the Lithuanians preserve their language and ensure respect to it ({{langx|la|Linguam propriam observant|label=none}}), but they also use the ] for simplicity reasons because it is spoken by almost half of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.{{Sfn|Dubonis|2016||p=7}} The exact territory of Lithuania proper is known since the 1566 reform of the ] and it was constituted of the ] and ] (included ] County in 1413–]), however, the Lithuanians themselves also considered the ] as part of Lithuania proper, while other six voivodeships (out of nine voivodeships since 1569) of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were called "Lithuanian Ruthenia" (''{{langx|rsk|Litovskaja Rus|label=none}}'').<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gimžauskas |first1=Edmundas |title=LDK idėjos likimas XX a. Lietuvos bei Baltarusijos valstybingumų dirvoje |journal=Naujasis Židinys-Aidai |date=2005 |page=528 |url=https://etalpykla.lituanistika.lt/fedora/objects/LT-LDB-0001:J.04~2005~1367153642096/datastreams/DS.002.0.01.ARTIC/content |access-date=10 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="DidziojiLietuvaVle"/><ref name="GardinasVle">{{cite web |last1=Minkevičius |first1=Jonas |last2=Jasas |first2=Rimantas |last3=Vidugiris |first3=Aloyzas |title=Gardinas |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/gardinas/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="Santykiai">{{cite web |last1=Mockienė |first1=Jurgita |last2=Spečiūnas |first2=Vytautas |title=Baltarusijos santykiai su Lietuva |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/baltarusijos-santykiai-su-lietuva/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=17 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Moreover, the importance of ] for Lithuanian-speaking population within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth also remained in the later years as during the ] in 1794 ]'s appeals were written in Lithuanian and ]s.<ref name="Gurevicius"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Kuolys |first1=Darius |title=Tadas Kosciuška |url=http://www.xn--altiniai-4wb.info/index/details/971 |website=Šaltiniai.info |publisher= |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In the first half of the 20th century, despite the restoration of Lithuanian statehood in 1918, a part of historical Lithuania proper, including the cities of Grodno, Lida, Braslaw, Kreva, Ashmyany and their surroundings, became a part of ] and later a part of the ], and in the late 20th century (1989) only 7606 people in the Byelorussian SSR considered themselves Lithuanians.<ref name="GardinasVle"/><ref name="LydaVle">{{cite web |last1=Ereminas |first1=Gintautas |last2=Garšva |first2=Kazimieras |title=Lyda |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/lyda/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="BreslaujaVle">{{cite web |last1=Garšva |first1=Kazimieras |last2=Gaučas |first2=Petras |title=Breslauja |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/breslauja/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=1 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="BaltarusijosLietuviaiVle"/> | |||
According to Lithuanian publications, terms which start with the traditional Lithuanian ]s "Let" and "Liet" have a significant and historical usage.<ref name="LietuvosVardasVle"/> For example, in early German chronicles the ] was spelled '']en'' and in ] as {{langx|la|Lethovia|label=none}}, {{langx|la|Lettovia|label=none}}, {{langx|la|Lettavia|label=none}},<ref name="LietuvosVardasVle">{{cite web |last1=Zinkevičius |first1=Zigmas |title=Lietuvos vardas |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/lietuvos-vardas/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> ] ] in the 14th century titled himself in Latin ] to ] as "{{langx|la|Gedeminne, letwinorum et multorum ruthenorum rex|label=none}}" (which literally translates to English as "Gediminas, by the grace of God, King of the Lithuanians and many Ruthenians"), his ] ] after becoming the Lithuanian monarch appeared as "{{langx|la|rex Letwinorum|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|King of Lithuania}}) in the ]s, and Algirdas' son ], being a Lithuanian monarch since 1377, used a seal in 1377–1386 with a Latin ] "{{langx|la|* ia ‚ gal * - dey * gracia * r - ex - in * lettow|label=none}}" (which literally translates to English as "Jogaila, by the Grace of God, King in Lithuania"), while the name of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Lithuanian language publications even in the mid-17th century was still written "{{langx|lt|dides Kunigiſtes Lietuwos|label=none}}", etc.<ref name="Usiene">{{cite book |last1=Ūsienė |first1=Auksė |title=Lietuvos karaliai arba Lietuvos valstybės statusas XIII–XIV a. |publisher=] |page=7 |url=https://kam.lt/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/lietuvos-karaliai.pdf |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Baranauskas |first1=Tomas |title=Medieval Lithuania – Sources 1283–1386 |url=http://viduramziu.istorija.net/en/s1283.htm |website=Viduramziu.istorija.net |language=en, la |archive-date=8 April 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220408111626/http://viduramziu.istorija.net/en/s1283.htm |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Knyga nobažnystės krikščioniškos (1684) |url=http://web1.mab.lt/2018-02/liuteronybe-mazojoje-lietuvoje/attachment/12/ |website=] |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Furthermore, Lithuanian ({{langx|lt|Lietuviai|label=none}}) ] consists not only of Samogitians ({{langx|lt|Žemaičiai|label=none}}), but also of ]s (the largest Lithuanian ethnic group) and the region of ] is known in the written sources since the late 13th century when ] described it as "{{langx|la|Austechia, terra regis Lethowie|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|Aukštaitija, the land of Lithuanians King}}), while some German sources also titled Lithuanian monarch Gediminas as "{{langx|la|Rex de Owsteiten|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|King of Aukštaitija}}).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Milius |first1=Vacys |title=Aukštaičiai |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/aukstaiciai-1/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Tautavičius |first1=Adolfas |last2=Vyšniauskaitė |first2=Angelė |title=Aukštaitija |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/aukstaitija/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Rowell |first1=Stephen Christopher |authorlink1=Stephen Christopher Rowell |title=Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire Within East-Central Europe, 1295-1345 |date=1994 |publisher=] |location=] |isbn=978-1-107-65876-9 |page=50 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X1cHAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA50 |access-date=8 October 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Baranauskas |first1=Tomas |title=Aukštaitija XIII–XV amžiuje |journal=Aukštaičių tapatumo paieškos: Straipsnių rinkinys |date=2006 |location=Kaunas |publisher=Žiemgalos leidykla |page=32 |url=https://www.academia.edu/3715053 |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> The ] descendants of Gediminas from the ] dynasty had continuously ruled the Grand Duchy of Lithuania until the death of ] in 1572.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gediminaičiai |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/gediminaiciai/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=25 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
According to Lithuanian sources, the name of Vilnius is of Lithuanian-origin and it comes from a ] River which flows through the city and historically was an important element of the ]'s defensive system.<ref name="Bertuliene">{{cite web |last1=Bertulienė |first1=Sigita |title=Kaip vadinti sostinei vardą davusią upę? |url=https://vilnius.lt/lt/savivaldybe/saugus-miestas/valstybine-kalba/kaip-vadinti-sostinei-varda-davusia-upe/ |website=] |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="LTinworld">{{cite web |title=Vilnius Lietuva |url=https://www.lithuaniainworld.lt/lt/vilnius-lietuva.html |website=Lithuaniainworld.lt |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Gedimino kalnas keletą šimtmečių buvo "sala" |url=https://madeinvilnius.lt/vilniaus-istorija/neatrastas-vilnius/gedimino-kalnas-keleta-simtmeciu-buvo-sala/ |website=MadeinVilnius.lt |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt |date=24 January 2021}}</ref> The ] "Vilnia" is linked with the Lithuanian words "{{langx|lt|vilnia|label=none}}", "{{langx|lt|vilnis|label=none}}" ({{langx|en|a water mound or a wave}}), while the Lithuanian ] "{{langx|lt|vilnyti|label=none}}" in English means "to wave ".<ref name="Bertuliene"/><ref>{{cite web |title=Kas yra Vilnia? |url=https://www.zodynas.lt/terminu-zodynas/V/vilnia |website=Žodynas.lt |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Kas yra Vilnis? |url=https://www.zodynas.lt/terminu-zodynas/V/vilnis |website=Žodynas.lt |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Kas yra Vilnyti? |url=https://www.zodynas.lt/terminu-zodynas/v/vilnyti |website=Žodynas.lt |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> The name of the city "Vilnius" was established in the ~15th-century when in the Lithuanian language it replaced form "Vilnia" and form "Vilnius" is used in the 17th-century Lithuanian language written sources, however form "Vilna" remained in ] texts.<ref name="Bertuliene"/><ref name="LTinworld"/> The ruler of the ] (did not include ]), which is known since the second quarter of the 14th century, also was the Grand Duke of Lithuania, but in 1392 Vytautas the Great transformed it into the Vilnius Voivodeship.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Gudvičius |first1=Edvardas |title=Vilniaus kunigaikštystė |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/vilniaus-kunigaikstyste/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=2 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
The ], signed by the ] on February 16, 1918, proclaimed that "the Council of Lithuania, as the sole representative of the Lithuanian nation, based on the recognized right to ], and on the ]'s resolution of September 18–23, 1917, proclaims the restoration of the independent state of Lithuania, founded on democratic principles, with Vilnius as its capital, and declares the termination of all state ties which formerly bound this State to other nations".<ref>{{cite news |title=Act of 16 February |url=https://lrkt.lt/en/legal-information/lithuanias-independence-acts/act-of-16-february/365 |website=Official website of the ] |last1=Media |first1=Fresh }}</ref> In the ] of the most recent ], adopted during the ], the continuity of Lithuanian statehood is also stressed with the words "the Lithuanian Nation, having created the State of Lithuania many centuries ago, having based its legal foundations on the ] and the Constitutions of the Republic of Lithuania, having for centuries staunchly defended its freedom and independence, having preserved its spirit, native language, writing, and customs, embodying the innate right of the human being and the Nation to live and create freely in the land of their fathers and forefathers – in the independent State of Lithuania, fostering national concord in the land of Lithuania, striving for an open, just, and harmonious civil society and a State under the rule of law, by the will of the citizens of the reborn State of Lithuania, adopts and proclaims this Constitution".<ref>{{cite web |title=The Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania |url=https://www.lrs.lt/home/Konstitucija/Constitution.htm |website=Official website of the ]}}</ref> | |||
According to Lithuanian historian ], the theories of Mikola Yermalovich and Alexander Kravtsevich have nothing in common with the science of history, distort the past of the Lithuanian nation and are ] motivated to strengthen the Belarusians' self-awareness and their statehood.{{sfn|Dubonis|2005|p=524–525}} | |||
In 2013, ] stated that the Belarusians attempt to present ] as Belarusians in an ] part of Russian attempts to discredit Lithuania's efforts to restore its independence.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ministerija: Rusijos ir Baltarusijos taikiniai - Lietuvos viduramžių istorija |url=https://kauno.diena.lt/naujienos/lietuva/politika/ministerija-rusijos-ir-baltarusijos-taikiniai-lietuvos-viduramziu-istorija-607797 |website=KaunoDiena.lt |language=lt |date=30 December 2013}}</ref> | |||
In 2014, Lithuanian historian ] claimed that the relations with the Belarusians should be reconsidered (e.g. by establishing ] institutions) because the Belarusians spread heritage propaganda and have appropriated the history of Lithuania.<ref name="Bumblauskas2014">{{cite web |last1=Ignatavičius |first1=Tadas |last2=Bumblauskas |first2=Alfredas |title=A. Bumblauskas: "Baltarusiai seniai yra pasisavinę LDK istoriją" |url=https://www.lrytas.lt/kultura/istorija/2014/07/01/news/a-bumblauskas-baltarusiai-seniai-yra-pasisavine-ldk-istorija--3316466 |website=] |date=1 July 2014 |access-date=21 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Furthermore, Bumblauskas said that to him the ]-minded Belarusians remind ]'s aspirations in the ].<ref name="Bumblauskas2014"/> Moreover, Bumblauskas recalled that already 15 years ago there were messages in the internet claiming that Vilnius will see Belarusian tanks with the symbolism of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.<ref name="Bumblauskas2014"/> Bumblauskas stressed that historically Lithuanian monarch ] was the creator of the Lithuanian Empire who annexed through conquests and marriages large parts of the current ] and ].<ref name="Bumblauskas2014"/> | |||
In September 2022, public institution ''Litvinai'' was established in Lithuania.<ref name="ClubLitvinai">{{cite web |title=Lietuvoje gyvenantys baltarusiai įkūrė klubą: Šaulių sąjunga jau nutraukė bendradarbiavimą |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/lietuvoje-gyvenantys-baltarusiai-ikure-kluba-sauliu-sajunga-jau-nutrauke-bendradarbiavima.d?id=94643365 |website=DELFI, LNK.lt |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Litvinai, VšĮ |url=https://rekvizitai.vz.lt/imone/litvinai/ |website=Rekvizitai.lt |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Reportedly members of the club ''Litvinai'' (''Lićviny'') train militarily and strives to preserve internal relations and self-identification of ], however they train with ] weaponry as citizens of Russia and Belarus are prohibited to own combat weaponry in Lithuania since late 2022 and the ] terminated cooperation with them.<ref name="ClubLitvinai"/> According to Siarhei Shalyhin, leader of the club ''Litvinai'', they do not have plans to overthrow Lukashenko's government.<ref name="ClubLitvinai"/> | |||
In August 2023, Laurynas Kasčiūnas, the Chairman of the National Security and Defense Committee of Seimas, said that Litvinism is a threat to Lithuania because it is a concept where, on the one hand, Belarusians appropriate the tradition of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, on the other hand, they push us aside, saying that the national state of Lithuania is a Russian project.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Vasiliauskas |first1=Mindaugas |title=Lietuvai priekaištų pažėrę baltarusiai apie LDK šaknis: "Gal laimėsim, tada pasiaiškinsim" |url=https://www.tv3.lt/naujiena/video/lietuvai-priekaistu-pazere-baltarusiai-apie-ldk-saknis-gal-laimesim-tada-pasiaiskinsim-n1254236 |website=] |access-date=17 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> According to Kasčiūnas, Lithuania cannot tolerate an ideology of Litvinism that denies Lithuania's identity and memory and appealed to the ] regarding the issue.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lyberytė |first1=Augustė |title=Kasčiūnui neramu dėl baltarusių pretenzijų į Lietuvos tapatybei svarbius simbolius: turime nusibrėžti raudonas linijas |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/lithuania/kasciunui-neramu-del-baltarusiu-pretenziju-i-lietuvos-tapatybei-svarbius-simbolius-turime-nusibrezti-raudonas-linijas.d?id=94234731 |website=DELFI |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In November 2023, Kasčiūnas said that identical restrictions should be applied to the Belarusians like to the citizens of the Russian Federation.<ref name="DELFI-11-7"/> Another member of the National Security and Defense Committee of Seimas, Raimundas Lopata, urged Lithuanian institutions to create a strategy of Lithuania's policy towards hostile Belarus by including measures to completely close the ], strengthened border protection and measures to combat Litvinism which he described as ] hybrid warfare.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lopata ragina kurti nacionalinę strategiją Baltarusijos atžvilgiu: siūlo uždaryti sieną, kovoti su litvinizmu |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2056987/lopata-ragina-kurti-nacionaline-strategija-baltarusijos-atzvilgiu-siulo-uzdaryti-siena-kovoti-su-litvinizmu |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television, ELTA |access-date=17 September 2023 |language=lt |date=16 August 2023}}</ref> ], ], also named Litvinism as a hybrid warfare designed to antagonize nations, create mistrust and historical ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Miliūtė |first1=Rita |title=Europarlamentaras Auštrevičius: turime būti budrūs, bet nepradėti taikyti neprotingų apribojimų baltarusiams |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2063726/europarlamentaras-austrevicius-turime-buti-budrus-bet-nepradeti-taikyti-neprotingu-apribojimu-baltarusiams |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=17 September 2023 |language=lt |date=27 August 2023}}</ref> In November 2023, Lopata said that the Belarusians often deviates into the theories of Litvinism and seeks to deprive a part of history of Lithuania for themselves, however the Belarusians should concentrate to the independence of Belarus, not the conquests of Vilnius.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lopata |first1=Raimundas |title=Kodėl baltarusių emigracijai rūpi Vilnius, o ne kova už Baltarusijos laisvę? |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/ringas/politics/raimundas-lopata-kodel-baltarusiu-emigracijai-rupi-vilnius-o-ne-kova-uz-baltarusijos-laisve.d?id=95009781 |website=DELFI |access-date=11 November 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
The ] (VSD) stated in August 2023 that the supporters of the radical Belarusian nationalist ideology of Litvinism claims that modern-day Belarusians are the true heirs to the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, thus they are making territorial claims to other countries surrounding Belarus, including Lithuania and its capital city Vilnius; however, their activities do not pose a real threat to the sovereignty, constitutional order and territorial integrity of the Republic of Lithuania at the moment, but may increase inter-ethnic tensions and negative attitudes towards Belarusian community in Lithuania.<ref name="JakucionisVSD">{{cite web |last1=Jakučionis |first1=Saulius |title=Litvinism not a threat to Lithuania, but may stoke tensions – intelligence |url=https://www.lrt.lt/en/news-in-english/19/2062030/litvinism-not-a-threat-to-lithuania-but-may-stoke-tensions-intelligence |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television, Baltic News Service |access-date=17 September 2023 |date=24 August 2023}}</ref><ref name="LitvinizmasVSD">{{cite web |title=Litvinizmas |url=https://www.facebook.com/LietuvosVSD/posts/602748355365090/ |website=State Security Department of Lithuania via Facebook |access-date=17 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> The VSD also stated that the Litvinists are against the ] and ] and do not support narrative that Russians and Belarusians are "one people", thus part of the Litvinists departed to ] amid repressions against them.<ref name="JakucionisVSD"/><ref name="LitvinizmasVSD"/> Also, in August 2023, it was announced that 910 Belarusians and 254 Russians were recognized as a threat to the ] of Lithuania and all these 1164 foreigners were prohibited to arrive in Lithuania.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grėsme Lietuvos nacionaliniam saugumui pripažinti 910 baltarusių ir 254 rusai |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2050144/gresme-lietuvos-nacionaliniam-saugumui-pripazinti-910-baltarusiu-ir-254-rusai |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=8 October 2023 |language=lt |date=4 August 2023}}</ref> | |||
According to Lithuanian politician Vytautas Sinica, Litvinism is especially characteristic of the opponents of Alexander Lukashenko's rule and the denial of Lithuanian historical statehood by them is a serious issue, which is incompatible with the national security of Lithuania, therefore he suggested to inquire Belarusians, who want to live in Lithuania, who founded the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Vilnius.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Sinica |first1=Vytautas |title=Litvinizmas ir baltarusių problema |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/pozicija/679/2064722/vytautas-sinica-litvinizmas-ir-baltarusiu-problema |website=Lithuanian National Television and Radio |access-date=15 October 2023 |language=lt |date=30 August 2023}}</ref> According to Sinica, Belarus was highly ] during the Soviet period and currently it lacks ], thus attempting to solve this issue the theory of Litvinism is employed and is becoming more popular.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Sinica |first1=Vytautas |title=XFM Pokalbis: apie baltarusių imigraciją į Lietuvą ir litvinizmą (related timelapse from 5:00) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Thu37SmUO2s |website=XFM via YouTube.com |date=30 November 2023 |access-date=29 December 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
In September 2023, members of the ] unanimously voted for the proposed amendment to the Lithuanian Law on the State Flag and other flags which consist of the permission to raise the ] (with ''Vytis'') at ]s and encourages residents to raise it near their homes during historical ], while the initiator of the changes, Andrius Kupčinskas, pointed out Litvinism from the Belarusian side as one of the reasons for these changes.<ref>{{cite web |title=Amendments to the law: the historical flag of Lithuania can be hoisted at border checkpoints |url=https://madeinvilnius.lt/en/news/Lithuanian-news/amendments-to-the-law%2C-the-historical-flag-of-Lithuania-can-be-raised-at-border-control-points/ |website=MadeinVilnius.lt, ] |access-date=17 September 2023 |date=14 September 2023}}</ref> | |||
On 30 September 2023, {{ill|Dainius Gaižauskas|lt|Dainius Gaižauskas}}, a Deputy Chairman of the National Security and Defense Committee of the Seimas, said that a topic of Litvinism must be legally included in a questionnaire of the Lithuanian Migration Department to determine person's opinion about Litvinism, and drew parallels between Litvinism and Russian propaganda which justified the ] with "falsified facts".<ref name="Balceryte">{{cite web |last1=Balcerytė |first1=Emilija |title=Dėl litvinizmo susitarti nepavyksta: ekspertams tai pseudomokslas, NSGK atstovams – propagandos mašina |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2081038/del-litvinizmo-susitarti-nepavyksta-ekspertams-tai-pseudomokslas-nsgk-atstovams-propagandos-masina |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |access-date=26 November 2023 |language=lt |date=30 September 2023}}</ref> According to Justinas Dementavičius, a scientist of the Vilnius University Institute of International Relations and Political Science, Litvinism is a ] or ] form of Belarusian nationalism, which questions the fact that historically the Lithuanians created the State of Lithuania.<ref name="Balceryte"/> | |||
On 2 October 2023 a discussion was held in ] with Lithuanian, Polish, Belarusian scientists, writers and politicians about the origin of Litvinism, its influence and challenges in Belarusians and Lithuanians relations.<ref>{{cite web |title=2023-10-02 Diskusija "LITVINIZMAS": kilmė, įtaka ir iššūkiai baltarusių ir lietuvių santykiams |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P20NUXGFLFM |website=] via ] | date=2 October 2023 |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> One of the members of the Lithuanian ], ], announced that the purpose of the discussion in Seimas Palace was searching for ways to stop the radical Litvinism ideology.<ref>{{cite web |title=Seime ieškos būdo, kaip stabdyti radikaliojo litvinizmo ideologiją |url=https://liberalai.lt/naujienos/seime-ieskos-budo-kaip-stabdyti-radikaliojo-litvinizmo-ideologija/ |website=Liberalai.lt |access-date=2 October 2023 |language=lt |date=28 September 2023}}</ref> Soon afterwards, also in October 2023, a video was published online where three armed men standing in front of the Belarusian ]s issued threats to Lithuanian politicians, demanded to stop persecuting Belarusians and explained that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Belarusian, not a Lithuanian state.<ref name="TV3Zinios">{{cite web |title=TV3 Žinios. Siaubo diena Izraelyje; Litvinistai grasina Lietuvos politikams; Didmiesčiai griežtina automobilių stovėjimo kontrolę (related timelapse from 9:28) |url=https://www.tv3.lt/naujiena/lietuva/tv3-zinios-siaubo-diena-izraelyje-litvinistai-grasina-lietuvos-politikams-didmiesciai-grieztina-automobiliu-stovejimo-kontrole-n1263233 |website=TV3.lt |access-date=7 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
In April 2024 Auksė Ūsienė, a Lithuanian historian and analyst of the Department of Strategic Communication of the Lithuanian Armed Forces, drew parallels between the Litvinists' statements and Russia's denial of Ukrainian statehood and stated that the Belarusian Litvinists become the executors of the goal of the "]", she also pointed out to the fact that in Belarusian school history programs it is still claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Belarusian state with its initial capital in Novogrudok and later in Vilnius.<ref name="Tinteris">{{cite web |last1=Tinteris |first1=Andrius |last2=Ūsienė |first2=Auksė |title=Istorikė A. Ūsienė apie baltarusių litvinistus: jie tampa rusiško pasaulio tikslo įgyvendintojais |url=https://www.bernardinai.lt/istorike-a-usiene-apie-baltarusiu-litvinistus-jie-tampa-rusisko-pasaulio-tikslo-igyvendintojais/ |website=Bernardinai.lt |date=16 April 2024 |access-date=11 July 2024 |lang=lt}}</ref> | |||
In July 2024 a dozen of Belarusian organizations which are operating in Lithuania (e.g. public organization Dapamoga, Belarusian Council for Culture, public organization Litvinai, etc.) signed a declaration with which they distanced themselves from the ideology of Litvinism and denied any territorial claims to Lithuania.<ref name="Venckunas">{{cite web |last1=Venckūnas |first1=Vilmantas |title=Baltarusių visuomeninės organizacijos Lietuvoje atsiriboja nuo litvinizmo |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/lietuvoje/2/2316732/baltarusiu-visuomenines-organizacijos-lietuvoje-atsiriboja-nuo-litvinizmo |website=Lithuanian National Radio and Television |date=11 July 2024 |access-date=11 July 2024 |lang=lt}}</ref> | |||
=== In Russia === | |||
] in the ], which was unveiled in the early 20th century following the annexation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1795 and had inscription "separated to recover"<ref name="Savukynas2023"/>]] | |||
] claims that Litvinism also has some supporters in ], although it is much less popular than in Belarus. Some Russian Litvinists refer to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a Russian state.<ref name=":2" /> According to Belarusian historian {{ill|Alieś Biely|be|Алесь Белы}}, Litvinism is the frontier ideology of ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lopata |first1=Raimundas |title=Apie geopolitinį Baltarusijos pasirinkimą |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/ringas/politics/raimundas-lopata-apie-geopolitini-baltarusijos-pasirinkima.d?id=94738329 |website=DELFI |date=9 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> According to ], a Lithuanian historian and journalist, Litvinism is the Belarusian variant of the ideology of ] and the beginning of Litvinism lie in the ] when it annexed the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1795 and then Russian Empress ] claimed that she just "restored historical truth".<ref name="Savukynas2023">{{cite web |last1=Savukynas |first1=Virginijus|authorlink1=Virginijus Savukynas |title="Litvinizmo" šaknys slypi Rusijos imperinėje ideologijoje |url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/nuomones/3/2079312/virginijus-savukynas-litvinizmo-saknys-slypi-rusijos-imperineje-ideologijoje |website=Lithuanian National Television and Radio |access-date=15 October 2023 |language=lt |date=19 September 2023}}</ref> Moreover, Savukynas pointed out to the fact that in the early 20th century a monument was unveiled in Vilnius dedicated to the Russian Empress Catherine the Great with inscription "separated to recover".<ref name="Savukynas2023"/> | |||
In an interview held by '']'', the Belarusian journalist Alesis Mikas stated that the ] could be using the new phenomenon of Litvinism in Belarus as a form of ] against Lithuania.<ref>{{cite web|title=Paminklą lietuviui atidengę baltarusiai: "Į Lydą pagaliau grįžo šeimininkas"|language=lt|url=https://www.lrytas.lt/lietuvosdiena/aktualijos/2019/09/16/news/paminkla-lietuviui-atidenge-baltarusiai-i-lyda-pagaliau-grizo-seimininkas--11818195|newspaper=]|date=19 September 2019}}</ref> | |||
Lev Krishtapovich claims that:<blockquote>In fact, under the guise of ], or the so-called Litvinism, a ] clique stands aimed at transforming Belarus into ]'s eastern frontiers.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Krishtapovich|first=Lev|date=21 November 2016|title=Общерусская культура как основа белорусской идентичности|language=ru|trans-title=All-Russian culture as the basis of Belarusian identity|work=Regnum.ru|url=https://regnum.ru/news/society/2207768.html}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Yeliseyeu|first1=Andrei|last2=Laputska|first2=Veranika|date=2016|title=Anti-Belarus disinformation in Russian media: Trends, features, countermeasures|url=https://east-center.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/EAST-Media-Review.pdf|journal=EAST Media Review|issue=1|page=11}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
] in 1812, 1912, and 2006. Officials of the Russian Empire and the ] ], ] the city skyline and rebuilt or demolished historical religious buildings built during the period of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.]] | |||
In response to the Belarusian nationalism and unable to erase the importance of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (GDL) for the formation of the ], ] seek to ] GDL and its ].<ref name="Karys2">{{Cite journal|last=Sutkus|first=Darius|date=2020b|title=Litvinizmas II: Baltarusija – ideologinės kovos laukas|url=https://archive.org/details/zurnalas-karys-nr-2-2020|journal=]|language=Lithuanian|volume=2}}</ref> Additionally, Russia actively deny ] and tractate ] statehood of 1918 and 1990 as temporary and accidental formations resulting from crises in Russia.<ref name="LDKnaratyvai">{{cite book |last1=Bumblauskas |first1=Alfredas |last2=Jegelevic̆ius |first2=Sigitas |last3=Potašenko |first3=Grigorijus |last4=Pšibilskis |first4=Vygintas Bronius |title=Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunigaikštijos tradicija ir tautiniai naratyvai |date=2009 |publisher=Vilniaus universiteto leidykla |location=Vilnius |isbn=978-9955-33-500-9 |pages=19–21 |url=https://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/lietuvos-istorijos-studijos/article/download/8750/6422/ |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Since GDL, which has existed for more than 500 years, prevents such a narrative in relation to Lithuania, several strategies are used in Russia to rewrite GDL history.<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/> According to one of the strategies, it is aimed to present the GDL as a "historical misunderstanding" in the area of ] that allegedly gravitated towards Poland, and in some publications the entire ] is named as the historical area of Russia since the 10th–12th centuries.<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Платонов |first1=О. А. |title=Прибалтика // Большая энциклопедия русского народа / Институт Русской Цивилизации |url=http://www.rusinst.ru/articletext.asp?rzd=1&id=3032&tm=8 |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> According to another strategy, it is claimed that the GDL also supposedly was a Russian (]) state ("more democratic"), which has nothing to do nor with the 20th century "Samogitian" statehood of Lithuania, nor with ] and ] as historical entities.<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Широкорад |first1=А. Б |title=Русь и Литва. Рюриковичи против Гедеминовичей |date=2004 |location=Москва |language=ru}}</ref> Even in Russian sources that emphasize the subjectivity of the history of the GDL, the "Russian" aspects are treated as phenomena of the ], not ] or ].<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/> | |||
Russian ] political philosopher ] claims that after the ] there was not one Russia (''Rusj Moskovskaja'' – ]), but two – also a "Lithuanian Russia" (''Rusj Litovskaja'' – GDL), which had a majority population (80%) of ] ] who also were the elites of the state and at the same time deny the ] origin of the GDL and claim that the rulers of the GDL were ].<ref name="Dekonstrukcijos">{{cite web |last1=Rimkevičienė |first1=Liepa |last2=Jakilaitis |first2=Edmundas |title=Dekonstrukcijos. Rusija propagandos mašina taikosi ne tik į LDK, Vilnių, bet ir Žalgirio mūšį |url=https://www.delfi.lt/multimedija/dekontrukcijos/dekonstrukcijos-rusija-propagandos-masina-taikosi-ne-tik-i-ldk-vilniu-bet-ir-zalgirio-musi.d?id=80580319 |website=DELFI, Laisvės TV |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="Katinas">{{cite web |last1=Katinas |first1=Petras |title="Didysis brolis" peržengia visas ribas |url=https://www.xxiamzius.lt/archyvas/priedai/horizontai/20070110/1-3.html |website=Xxiamzius.lt |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="Savukynas2017">{{cite web |last1=Savukynas |first1=Virginijus |title="Istorijos detektyvai": kodėl Rusija siekia perrašyti Lietuvos istoriją? |url=https://www.15min.lt/naujiena/aktualu/lietuva/istorijos-detektyvai-kodel-rusija-siekia-perrasyti-lietuvos-istorija-56-849470 |website=15min.lt, Lrt.lt |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="Karys2"/> Other Russian historians (for example, Michail Kojalovich, Nikolai Ustrialov, Matvei Liubavskii) in their publications consider the GDL as a state of Western Russia, and the expansion of the GDL to the east and south was supposedly a process of unification of Russian lands in which Western Russia (GDL) and Eastern Russia (Muscovy) competed.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Norkus |first1=Zenonas |title=The Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Retrospective of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires |journal=World Political Science Review |date=2007 |volume=3 |issue=4 |page=3 |url=https://www.fsf.vu.lt/users/zennor/pub/NorkusWorldPoliticalScienceReview.pdf |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Also, Russian historians often call the vicegerents of the GDL rulers as Russian dukes because they supposedly spoke Russian and claims that the GDL was a Slavic state because its written language was Slavic.<ref name="Karys2"/> According to these Russian historians, precisely because of the majority of Orthodox Slavs in the population of the GDL, the GDL was supposedly a "non-Baltic" or "non-Lithuanian" state.<ref name="Karys2"/> These Russian paradigms are taken from the 19th century and are intended to justify the ].<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/> From such Russian points of view, the partitions of the ] and GDL were essentially a "restoration" of the separated Russian lands.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Jakštas |first1=Juozas |title=Russian historiography on the origin of the Lithuanian state: some critical remarks on V. T. Pashuto's Study |url=http://www.lituanus.org/1965/65_4_02_Jakstas.html |website=Lituanus.org |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220809101652/http://www.lituanus.org/1965/65_4_02_Jakstas.html |archive-date=9 August 2022 |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> These assumptions are also actively echoed by Litvinists, who claim that the Slavic (Litvin) origin of the GDL can be judged from the fact that its political elite allegedly spoke ] (Litvin language), however actually in the GDL it was only one of the written languages, not a spoken language.<ref name="Karys2"/> Moreover, historically only the Slavic ] (six out of nine) were referred to as "Lithuanian Ruthenia" (''Litovskaja Rus'').<ref name="Santykiai"/> | |||
A number of Russian historians consider ] to be a "Western dialect of ]" or "Western Russians language".<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/><ref>Курукин И. Вокруг cвета, Январь 2007. № 1 (2796).</ref> For propaganda purposes, the ancient Eastern Slavs are equated with Russian speakers or even modern Russians.<ref name="Karys2"/> However, actually during the time of the GDL there was no such nationality as Russian and there was no standardized Russian language as different Ruthenian dialects were spoken.<ref name="Karys2"/> Slavic-speakers of the GDL and Muscovites could understand each other, but letters received from the GDL, before being presented to the addressee, were translated into the Muscovite variant of the written language in the ] chancellery which proves their separateness.<ref name="Karys2"/> Moreover, the separateness of GDL Orthodox and Muscovite Orthodox is proved by the Orthodox ] which using the favor of the ] and seeking church power was liquidated by the ].<ref name="Karys2"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Laužikas |first1=Rimvydas |title=Lietuvos stačiatikių metropolija |url=http://www.aruodai.lt/paieska2/terminas.php?TeId=1773 |website=Aruodai.lt, Lietuvos istorijos institutas |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Mockus |first1=Vitalijus |title=Lietuvos Stačiatikių Bažnyčia |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/lietuvos-staciatikiu-baznycia/ |website=] |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> When the Muscovites took control of the ], Metropolitan Methodius of Kiev refused to swear an oath to Moscow, stating that "If a Muscovite Metropolitan is sent to us, we will shut ourselves up in monasteries, and let them drag us out of them by our necks and legs. We would rather die than accept a metropolitan from Moscow."<ref name="Karys2"/> Until then Orthodox Christians of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth massively switched to the ], and in the 18th century only ] and ] remained Orthodox in the territory of the Commonwealth.<ref name="Karys2"/> In 1790, Catholics of the "Latin" and "Greek" rites made up 77.8% of the total population of the GDL.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pusčius |first1=Šarūnas |title=LDK santvarka - liberali ar katalikiška? (I) |url=https://fsspx.lt/straipsniai/istorija/ldk-santvarka-liberali-ar-katalikiska-i |website=Fsspx.lt |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> | |||
{{multiple image | |||
| align = right | |||
| direction = horizontal | |||
| header = | |||
| header_align = left/right/center | |||
| header_background = | |||
| footer = Lithuanian monarchs ] (left) and ] (right) depicted in the ] Monument which was built in ] in 1862 | |||
| footer_align = left/right/center | |||
| footer_background = | |||
| width = | |||
| image1 = 1000 Gediminas.jpg | |||
| width1 = 152 | |||
| caption1 = | |||
| image2 = 1000 Algirdas.jpg | |||
| width2 = 142 | |||
| caption2 = | |||
}} | |||
A lot of anti-Lithuanian propaganda is directed at Grand Duke ] because he used war and diplomatic means to unite Ruthenian lands into the GDL.<ref name="Karys2"/> Also, many dukes of Slavic lands gave priority to their own positively evaluated GDL rather than the ] Golden Horde and their negatively evaluated money collectors ‒ the Muscovites.<ref name="Karys2"/> These circumstances destroy the authority of Moscow as the "unifier of all Russian lands", so the aim of such claims is to ] Grand Duke Algirdas or at least convert him to Orthodoxy.<ref name="Karys2"/> The first attempts to do this can be seen already in the 16th–17th centuries ] and ] which describe Algirdas supposedly Orthodox ] after his first or second marriage in an anti-Catholic context.<ref name="Karys2"/> Also already in the 16th century annals of the Moscow state it was stated that Algirdas was allegedly an Orthodox believer, this way aiming to undermine the rulers of Lithuania and show their subordination to the rulers of Moscow.<ref name="StaciatikisAlgirdas">{{cite web |last1=Baronas |first1=Darius |title=Algirdas – "stačiatikis" |url=https://ldkistorija.lt/istorijos/algirdas-staciatikis/ |website=LDKistorija.lt |date=30 April 2020 |access-date=9 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Later this narrative, which contradicts the Catholic ] in 1387 and the history of the ], was being repeated by the propagandists of the Russian Empire.<ref name="StaciatikisAlgirdas"/> For example, Russian historiographer and writer sentimentalist ] in the 18th century "discovered" another date of Algirdas alleged baptism and put into use, claiming that Algirdas, who was ordained as a monk on his deathbed, was buried according to Orthodox rites.<ref name="Karys2"/> However, German and old Ruthenian chronicles mention that Algirdas died as a "pagan fire-worshipper, an enemy of the cross and faith" and was burned.<ref name="Karys2"/> Some Litvinists claim that Lithuanian King ] also adopted Orthodoxy in ].<ref>{{cite web |title=The origins of the Grand Duchy of Litva (Lithuania) |url=http://www.belarusguide.com/as/history/jermal1.html |website=Belarusguide.com |access-date=9 September 2023}}</ref> | |||
In 2011, ] initiated the ] of the former Metropolitan of Vilnius ] who was the primary organizer of the Synod of ] in 1839 during which the 1596 ] was abolished.<ref name="Semaska">{{cite web |title=Metr. Josifas Semaška – ar "Vakarų Rusios" ideologijos simbolis bus paskelbtas Maskvos patriarchato šventuoju? |url=http://www.ortodoksas.lt/2022/09/metr-josifas-semaska-ar-vakaru-rusios.html |website=Ortodoksas.lt |access-date=10 September 2023 |language=lt |date=17 September 2022}}</ref> Consequently, Lithuanian and Belarusian Uniates became part of the ] and Joseph Semashko assisted to formulate ethnopolitical ideology of "Western Russia".<ref name="Semaska"/> Proponents of canonization identify this event as the "return" of the lands of Lithuania and Belarus to the sphere of influence of Eastern Christian civilization and the restoration of the self-awareness of the Russian Orthodox people of Belarus.<ref name="Semaska"/> In Belarus, the 1839 Synod of Polotsk is commemorated in celebrations.<ref>{{cite web |title=Belarusian Church celebrates anniversary of council that brought 1.5 million Uniates back to Orthodoxy |url=https://orthochristian.com/119602.html |website=OrthoChristian.Com |access-date=10 September 2023}}</ref> | |||
The Institute of Russian Civilization operating in Moscow has published the encyclopedia ''Holy Russia. The Great Encyclopedia of the Russian Nation'' (''{{lang-rus|Святая Русь. Большая энциклопедия русского народа}}'') which is full of historical forgeries as in it the GDL is called an artificial and unviable state that existed from the 13th to the 18th century.<ref name="Katinas"/> In this encyclopedia it is stated that already in the 10th–12th centuries the territories of the Baltic states were supposedly part of the Russian state.<ref name="Katinas"/> Also, in this encyclopedia the Baltic states are named as ]s, and their occupation in 1940 is seen as the collapse of pro-Western regimes allegedly ruled by German agents and political adventurers and a "legal return" to Russia.<ref name="Katinas"/> It also states that in 1991 the "puppet" Baltic states were led by representatives of the US ] and other Western special services, and in this way they allegedly became ] ].<ref name="Katinas"/> | |||
However, there is also an unofficial narrative in Russia that emphasizes the civilizational space determined by the GDL together with Poland, thus Lithuania is considered the main obstacle for Russia to implement the ] in the ].<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/> Every year on 4 November Russia celebrates a national holiday called the National Unity Day which marks the ] from the ] on 4 November 1612.<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Žalys |first1=Leonas |title=Paslaptinga šventė Rusijoje |url=https://kauno.diena.lt/dienrastis/pasaulis/paslaptinga-svente-rusijoje-32560 |website=Kauno.diena.lt |access-date=10 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref><ref name="Lapkricio4">{{cite web |last1=Iškauskas |first1=Česlovas |title=Tautos vienybės diena – paprasto putinizmo išraiška |url=https://www.delfi.lt/archive/c-iskauskas-tautos-vienybes-diena-paprasto-putinizmo-israiska.d?id=69506670 |website=DELFI |access-date=10 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> According to historians, Lithuania was the generalized symbol of an enemy or a foreign country in the consciousness of 17th-century Russians, and it became established in folklore as well (for example, about a stubborn person they said: "Fight him like with Lithuania", and an unfamiliar guest was asked: "What kind of horde are you? What kind of Lithuanian are you?").<ref name="Lapkricio4"/> Russian President ] explains the ] by the fact that ] and ] created a "divide and conquer" strategy in "historical Russian lands" in the 15th century and developed it in the 16th–18th centuries.<ref name="Saldziunas">{{cite web |last1=Saldžiūnas |first1=Vaidas |title=Skandalingas Putino laiškas – grėsmingas signalas ne tik Ukrainai: Lietuva paminėta neatsitiktinai |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/demaskuok/skandalingas-putino-laiskas-gresmingas-signalas-ne-tik-ukrainai-lietuva-pamineta-neatsitiktinai.d?id=87703437 |website=DELFI |access-date=10 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> According to Putin, both Lithuanian Russia and Muscovite Russia could have had united "Old Russia", but it happened that Moscow allegedly became the "center of unification" and after the partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth the Russian Empire allegedly "regained" the old lands of Western Russia (] and ], where supposedly only Russians lived).<ref name="Saldziunas"/> Putin has also publicly stated that "Russia's borders do not end anywhere".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Saldžiūnas |first1=Vaidas |title=Besišypsančio V. Putino perspėjimas pasauliui: Rusijos sienos niekur nesibaigia |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/world/besisypsancio-v-putino-perspejimas-pasauliui-rusijos-sienos-niekur-nesibaigia.d?id=72971226 |website=DELFI |access-date=10 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> In 2022, ] wrote on his ] account that "after liberating Kyiv and all the territories of Little Russia from the nationalist gangs, Russia will become united again" and that "We will embark on another campaign to restore the borders of our Motherland, which, as we know, do not end anywhere."<ref>{{cite web |title=Medvedevo paskyroje – skandalingas įrašas: leisimės į kitą žygį |url=https://www.delfi.lt/news/daily/world/medvedevo-paskyroje-skandalingas-irasas-leisimes-i-kita-zygi.d?id=90875819 |website=DELFI, ELTA |access-date=10 September 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Also, Russia seeks to escalate conflicts in ].<ref name="LDKnaratyvai"/> | |||
=== By international sources === | |||
] with an area (marked in greenish-yellow) where in 1827 the Lithuanian language was still dominant]] | |||
Litvinism is not supported by notable information sources such as ], which states that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was exclusively created by ],<ref>{{cite web |title=Lithuania - History |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Lithuania/History#ref37336 |website=] |access-date=3 July 2021 |language=en}}</ref> that Lithuania in the past ruled territories of present-day Belarus<ref name="ByLtPolRule">{{cite web |title=Belarus - Lithuanian and Polish rule |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Belarus/History#ref33453 |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=3 July 2021 |language=en}}</ref> and that the Belarusians had no state and no national symbols until 1918.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Smith |first1=Whitney |authorlink=Whitney Smith |title=Flag of Belarus |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/flag-of-Belarus |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=3 July 2021 |language=en}}</ref> Notable historians such as ] and ] also support the approach that the Lithuanians (Balts) conquered/gathered ]n territories, incorporating them into their state.<ref name="Toynbee">{{cite book |last1=Toynbee |first1=Arnold Joseph |authorlink=Arnold J. Toynbee |title=A Study Of History (Volume II) |date=1948 |publisher=] |location=] |page=172 |edition=Fourth impression |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.499044/page/n181/mode/2up |access-date=4 July 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Snyder |first1=Timothy D. |title=Timothy Snyder: The Making of Modern Ukraine. Class 6: The Grand Duchy of Lithuania (related timelapse: from 29:14 to 38:13) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlvE6tgPEf8 |website=YouTube.com |date=24 September 2022 |access-date=11 November 2023}}</ref> | |||
Multiple international scientists made conclusions that the ] territory was larger in the past. A note written by ] in the first half of the 16th century states that, in an ocean of ] in this part of Europe, there were two non-Ruthenian regions: Lithuania and Samogitia where its inhabitants spoke their own language, but many Ruthenians were also living among them.<ref name="Dubonis2002">{{Cite journal |last=Dubonis |first=Artūras |date=2002 |title=Lietuvių kalba: poreikis ir vartojimo mastai : XV a. antra pusė - XVI a. pirma pusė |url=https://etalpykla.lituanistika.lt/fedora/objects/LT-LDB-0001:J.04~2002~1367186030476/datastreams/DS.002.0.01.ARTIC/content |journal=Naujasis židinys–Aidai |volume=9-10 |pages=473–478}}</ref> By studying place names of Lithuanian origin, linguist {{ill|Jan Safarewicz|pl}} concluded that the eastern boundaries of the Lithuanian language used to be in the shape of zigzags through ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref name="OriginVle">{{cite web |last1=Zinkevičius |first1=Zigmas |title=Lietuvių kalbos kilmė |trans-title=The Origin of the Lithuanian Language |url=https://www.vle.lt/straipsnis/lietuviu-kalbos-kilme/ |website=Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija |access-date=16 October 2023 |language=lt}}</ref> Such eastern boundaries partly coincide with the spread of ] and ] faith, and should have existed at the time of the ] in 1387 and later.<ref name="OriginVle"/> Safarewicz's eastern boundaries were moved even further to the south and east by other scholars (e.g. {{ill|Mikalay Biryla|be|Мікалай Васілевіч Бірыла}}, {{ill|Jerzy Ochmański|pl}}, and others).<ref name="OriginVle"/> | |||
According to Polish linguist ], ] and ] were formed due to the dependence on the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bednarczuk |first1=Leszek |author-link=Leszek Bednarczuk |title=Wydaje się, że odrębny etnos i język białoruski wytworzył się dzięki przynależności do Welkiego Księstwa Litewskiego, którego polityczne granice okreslają omal do kładnie zasięg etnograficznej Białorusi |pages=47–48}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Palionis |first1=Jonas |date=2012 |journal=Acta Linguistica Lithuanica |title=Leszek Bednarczuk. Językowy obraz Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. Millenium Lithuaniae MIX–MMIX |url=http://lki.lt/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/all_66_maketas.pdf|language=lt |publisher=Lithuanian Language Institute |issue=LXVI |page=174 |access-date=3 November 2023}}</ref> Moreover, according to the Encyclopædia Britannica, during this epoch of ] domination, the Belarusian language and nationality began to take shape.<ref name="ByLtPolRule"/> | |||
According to Polish professor ]'s article published in 1931, the Polish dialect in the Vilnius Region and in the northeastern areas in general are very interesting variant of Polishness as this dialect developed in a foreign territory which was mostly inhabited by the ] who were ] (mostly) or ], and to prove this Otrębski provided examples of ] in the ] language.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Nitsch |first1=Kazimierz |last2=Otrębski |first2=Jan |title=Język Polski. 1931, nr 3 (maj/czerwiec) |date=1931 |pages=80–85 |url=http://mbc.malopolska.pl/dlibra/plain-content?id=15400 |access-date=3 November 2023 |publisher=Polska Akademia Umiejętności, Komisja Języka Polskiego |language=pl}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Martinkėnas |first1=Vincas |title= Vilniaus ir jo apylinkių čiabuviai |url=https://alkas.lt/2016/12/19/is-rytu-lietuvos-lenkinimo-istorijos-vincas-martinkenas-vilniaus-ir-jo-apylinkiu-ciabuviai/ |website=Alkas.lt |access-date=3 November 2023 |language=lt |date=19 December 2016}}</ref> In 2015, Polish linguist {{ill|Mirosław Jankowiak|pl}} attested that many of the Vilnius Region's inhabitants who declare ] speak a Belarusian dialect which they call ''mowa prosta'' (']').<ref>{{Cite web|last1=Jankowiak |first1=Miroslaw|url=http://zw.lt/opinie/jankowiak-mowa-prosta-jest-dla-mnie-synonimem-gwary-bialoruskiej/|title="Mowa prosta" jest dla mnie synonimem gwary białoruskiej|date = 26 August 2015|access-date=3 November 2023|language=pl}}</ref> | |||
In 2023, ] journalist ] criticized Zianon Pazniak, Litvinists, their claims to Lithuania's history and capital Vilnius and concluded that such Litvinists should be deported from Lithuania with ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Муждабаєв |first1=Айдер |title=ЛИТВИНИСТОВ — ВОН ИЗ ЛИТВЫ. Отрицание Литвы = депортация |url=https://www.youtube.com/shorts/eBdQ3L5-3SQ |website=YouTube.com |access-date=29 December 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Муждабаєв |first1=Айдер |title=БІДОРУСИ – ЦЕ ГРИБИ. Інакше важко пояснити їхні ''претензії'' до литовців |url=https://blogs.pravda.com.ua/authors/muzhdabaev/6438f12b9262c/ |website=Українська правда |access-date=30 December 2023}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
Line 34: | Line 281: | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
===Citations=== | |||
{{Reflist|2}} | {{Reflist|2}} | ||
==Sources== | |||
===Bibliography=== | |||
* {{Cite journal|last=Budreckis|first=Algirdas|date=1967|title=ETNOGRAFINĖS LIETUVOS RYTINĖS IR PIETINĖS SIENOS|url=http://partizanai.org/karys-1967m-7-8/5742-etnografines-lietuvos-rytines-ir-pietines-sienos|journal=]}} | |||
* {{Cite journal|last=Budreckis|first=Algirdas|date=1967|title=ETNOGRAFINĖS LIETUVOS RYTINĖS IR PIETINĖS SIENOS|url=http://partizanai.org/karys-1967m-7-8/5742-etnografines-lietuvos-rytines-ir-pietines-sienos|journal=]|language=lt}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Hesch|first=Michael|title=Letten, Litauer, Weissrussen|year=1933|location=Wien|language=German}} | * {{Cite book|last=Hesch|first=Michael|title=Letten, Litauer, Weissrussen|year=1933|location=Wien|language=German}} | ||
* {{Cite journal|last=Sutkus|first=Darius|date=2020a|title=Litvinizmas: istorija, prielaidos, perspektyvos|url=https://archive.org/details/karys-nr.-1-2020|journal=]|language=lt|volume=1 |pages=3–9}} | |||
* {{Cite journal|last=Sutkus|first=Darius|date=2020b|title=Litvinizmas II: Baltarusija – ideologinės kovos laukas|url=https://archive.org/details/zurnalas-karys-nr-2-2020|journal=]|language=lt|volume=2 |pages=4–10}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Dubonis |first1=Artūras |author-link1=Artūras Dubonis |title=Saldus lietuvių gyvenimas "svetimu pasu" |journal=Naujasis Židinys-Aidai |date=2005 |url=https://etalpykla.lituanistika.lt/object/LT-LDB-0001:J.04~2005~1367152277348/J.04~2005~1367152277348.pdf |language=lt}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Dubonis |first1=Artūras |title=The Prestige and decline of the official (state) language in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (fifteenth-sixteenth century): problems in Belarusian historiography |journal=Lithuanian Historical Studies |date=2016 |volume=20 |pages=1–30 |doi=10.30965/25386565-02001002 |s2cid=217985575 |url=https://etalpykla.lituanistika.lt/fedora/objects/LT-LDB-0001:J.04~2016~1512655799738/datastreams/DS.002.1.01.ARTIC/content|doi-access=free }} | |||
] | ] | ||
Line 52: | Line 308: | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] |
Latest revision as of 17:30, 19 January 2025
Pseudohistorical theory according to which Belarusians founded the Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Litvinism (Belarusian: Літвінізм, romanized: Litvinizm; Russian: Литвинизм, romanized: Litvinizm) is a pseudohistorical branch of nationalism, philosophy and political current in Belarus, which bases the history of its state on the heritage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and emphasizes the Baltic component of the Belarusian ethnic group. According to this branch of Belarusian nationalism, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Slavic or Belarusian state, the medieval Lithuanians were Belarusians, and modern Lithuania is a consequence of a falsification of history. On the other hand, some Russian Litvinists refer to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a Slavic Russian state.
The ideas of Litvinism claiming that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a "Belarusian state" and that the Belarusians have "historical rights" to the Lithuanian capital Vilnius were expressed by interwar period Belarusians, Belarusian communists, long-term Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, members of the Belarusian opposition to Lukashenko, and some modern Belarusian scientists. Some Belarusians appropriate the Lithuanians national identity by claiming that they are the "real Litvins (Lithuanians)", while according to them modern Lithuanians are lietuvisai or Žmudins (Samogitians) who never before had their own state because Samogitia never was a state and because the current Lithuanian nation has nothing in common with "historical Litva (Lithuania)". Furthermore, according to Litvinist theories Aukštaitija, including Vilnius, are "historical Litvins, that is Belarusians, lands". Moreover, some Belarusians claim that the history of "Летува " is based on the "twisted real history of Belarus (historical Litva)", and demand to use separate terms to denote "historical Litva" as "Літва, ліцьвіны " and modern Lithuania as "Летува, летувісы ".
Opponents of Litvinism consider it a fringe pseudohistorical theory. The usage of the word "Letuva" when referring to modern Lithuania in Belarusian language was also criticized among Belarusians themselves who deemed it "unacceptable" and "monstrous" and stressed that in the early 1990s there was an agreement between Belarusian and Lithuanian intellectuals to stop using terms Лету́ва, Letuva and летувíсы, letuvísy in Belarusian publications. Belarusian political activist Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya described Litvinism as "marginal cases" which seek to artificially set at variance Lithuanians and Belarusians, and claimed that Belarusians respect the integrity and heritage of Lithuania. Litvinism was also described as a form of fascism with expansionistic territorial claims to neighboring countries of Belarus. In 2024, a dozen of Belarusian organizations in Lithuania signed a declaration with which they distanced themselves from the ideology of Litvinism and denied any territorial claims to Lithuania.
Some Litvinists reject their Belarusian national identity and affiliation with the Republic of Belarus, in favor of a reconstructed Baltic Catholic Litvin ("Lithuanian") identity, based on the history and legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. According to national censuses, only a few dozen residents of Belarus state their ethnic identity as Litvin rather than Belarusian.
History
According to the Lithuanian author Tomas Baranauskas, who claims to have coined the term, "Litvinism" is the synthesis of two different historiographies: the Tsarist Russian, which claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Russian state, and the interwar Polish historiography, which deemed the Polonized Lithuanians of eastern Lithuania proper as "Litwins" (i.e. "real Lithuanians"), in contrast to the "Lietuvisy" of the Republic of Lithuania.
Litvinism began following the Partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, due to the Russian Empire's needs to change the old Grand Ducal Lithuanian identity into a new one that would better suit the Empire's interests. Professor Osip Senkovsky from St. Petersburg University, originally from the Vilnius Region, collaborated with the Tsarist administration and developed the theory that the Lithuanian state's origin was Slavic and that it was allegedly created by the Ruthenians who had moved westwards due to Mongol attacks. Furthermore, his contemporary, the Polish-speaking pseudo-historian, poet Ignacy Kołakowski [pl] propagated the thesis that Lithuania was Slavic before the creation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
After the First World War, Józef Piłsudski's plans to restore Poland-Lithuania were shattered by Lithuanian desires for an independent state, manifested in an independent Lithuanian republic. For propaganda purposes, theories about how the inhabitants of the Republic of Lithuania are lietuvisai, who were unrelated to the "right" and "historical" Lithuanians, the Litvins, appeared. The Polish historian Feliks Koneczny used the terms letuwskije, Letuwa and letuwini to describe the "fake Lithuanians" in his book Polska między Wschodem i Zachodem, 'Poland between East and West', and other works. He also wrote about how Vilnius should belong to the Litvins and thus be a Polish-owned city, instead of a lietuvisai one. General Lucjan Żeligowski, who supported Pan-Slavism and commanded the Polish forces which captured Vilnius from the Lithuanians during the Żeligowski's Mutiny in 1920, claimed that "Lithuania was the heart of the Slavs" and strongly opposed to what he considered to be a "German ploy for Samogitian Lithuania". Żeligowski in his youth only spoke in the Tutejszy language, which is a Belarusian vernacular, and identified himself as a Litvin, not a Belarusian, but was very positive towards the Belarusian movements. In contrary, Żeligowski referred to the Baltic-Lithuanians only as Samogitians and personally staunchly denied their right to use the ethnonym "Lithuanians". Subsequently, being in exile in 1943 following the invasion of Poland, Żeligowski wrote: "Why did we, the eternal inhabitants of Lithuania, have to avoid that dear name for us, and other people who have nothing in common with Lithuania shamelessly call themselves Lithuanians?" and criticized the world-wide politicians and scientists whose point of view did not match with his.
The dissolution of the Soviet Union led to these ideas being taken over by some Belarusian nationalists seeking a national identity. The amateur Belarusian historian Mikola Yermalovich stated that Lithuania began in the territory between Novogrudok and Minsk, i.e. in modern Belarusian lands, which allegedly occupied parts of modern Lithuania. M. Yermalovich considers Samogitia as the country's sole Baltic territory, while Aukštaitija is an artificially conceived ethnographic region occupying a part of the Belarusian lands. Litvinism's theories were developed even earlier by Paviel Urban [be] in the Belarusian diaspora, who presented his pseudo-scientific theories in his writings "On the National Nature of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Historical Term of Lithuania" (1964), "In the Light of Historical Facts" (1972), "Ethnic belongings of Ancient Litvins" (1994) and "Ancient Litvins. Language, origin, ethnicity". By the end of the 20th century, there were more disseminators of Litvinism's ideas: Vitovt Charopko popularized the concept of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania being a Belarusian state with Belarusian leaders, while Alexander Kravtsevich tried proving that the Lithuanian state's old capital and that the city where King Mindaugas had been crowned was Novogrudok, Belarus.
In recent years, the number of followers of Litvinism in Belarus has been growing, and there is a division into even smaller, often marginal historical and ideological directions.
Litvinism is mostly espoused in books published in Belarus and on the Internet, as well as in English, which target a foreign audience in an attempt to disseminate M. Yermalovich's "discoveries" and the "real" history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. However, experts say that Litvinism is not widespread as it is marginal and sometimes associated with pro-Russian ideas. The Belarusian academia is dominated by a variety of ideas, e.g. ancient historians guided by Soviet guidelines and methodology, although there certainly is a number of Litvinist scholars.
Identity
The motivation behind some Belarusian cultural activists adopting the Litvin identity is a rejection of the Soviet ideology, the Soviet-imposed Pan-Slavism and simultaneously the Belarusian national identity which the Litvin activists claim to be Soviet-related. The Litvinists underline their closeness to Lithuanians, Poles and Ukrainians (Ruthenians) viewing the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a common heritage of the nations that live on its former territory. Previously an idea exclusive to some intellectuals, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, "Litvinism" gained popularity among some Belarusian civilians.
Litvinists consider the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as being a joint Baltic and Eastern Slavic state. Litvinists claim this duality due to the significant Russian influence on the state.
Language
The Belarusian historian Jan Lyalevich, who self-identifies as Litvin, cited medieval Muscovite sources referring to the "Old Belarusian" language as the "Lithuanian language". He also describes the medieval Litvins as a "proto-nation that existed approximately since the 14th century to the late 19th century, when its remainders, represented by mostly Catholic szlachta and intelligentsia, disappeared".
The theory of Jan Lyalevich coincides with the opinion of some historians of the 19th and 20th century.
In 1988, Polish literary historian and linguist Aleksander Brückner emphasized that "when later described the Rusyns, they spoke "Lithuanian" (i.m, Belarusian; Litvin was always only Belarusian for him, never Ukrainian)".
Some Litvin activists are reported to teach their children altered forms of the Belarusian language considered more traditional and de-russified, or asking that their passport states their Litvin ethnicity. This may also extend to the Belarusian state, one example of this being the Belarusian historian Jan Lyalevich, who stated in 2017: "Personally, I am still convinced that it is not too late for returning to our state its real name: Lithuania" (Літва in Belarusian).
Nevertheless, 19th-century poet Władysław Syrokomla, who titled himself as "Litwin", whose writings were mainly dedicated to the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania and who wrote his publications in the Polish (mostly) and Belarusian languages, in his own texts was clearly disappointed by his inability to speak the Lithuanian language: "z powodu nieznajomości Litewskiéj wymowy, ducha Litewskiego schwycić mi było niepodobna" (English: Due to my ignorance of Lithuanian pronunciation, it was impossible for me to capture the Lithuanian spirit). Moreover, Syrokomla described his experience talking with a Lithuanian villager near Kernavė as follows: "tu kiedym się chciał wieśniaka o cóś rozpytać, niezrozumiał mię i zbył jedném słowem ne suprantu. Litwin, na ziemi czysto Litewskiéj, nie mogłem się rozmówić z Litwinem!" (English: Here, when I wanted to ask the villager something, he didn't understand me and answered me with one word "ne suprantu" . I, a Lithuanian on purely Lithuanian soil, couldn't talk to a Lithuanian!).
Assessment
In Belarus
Litvinism does not have a relevant impact on Belarusian politics, with its supporters focusing more on areas such as education. It has been at times both tolerated and opposed by the state narrative of the Government of Belarus, and has found some support among the Belarusian opposition as a part of broader effort to express pre-Russian Belarusian culture. According to the Belarusian Litvinists, the Republic of Lithuania without the Vilnius Region is Samogitia and according to them the name of Lithuania was historically used for the entire state or exclusively Belarusian territories by clearly separating Baltic Samogitia during the existence of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania until 1795 when it was partitioned together with Poland and subsequently annexed by the Russian Empire. The Belarusian Litvinists claim that the Belarusian lands were the core and the main part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Nevertheless, some of patriotic Belarusians criticize the idea of Litvinism considering it as a form of national separatism.
On 20 February 1918, the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic formed a government, announced the Belarusian Democratic Republic in 9 March 1918, and on 25 March 1918 declared its independence, but these were mostly symbolic acts, as the state's development was restricted by the Bolsheviks, Germans, and later Poles. In 1918, the Republic of Lithuania was one of the first countries to recognize the independence of the Belarusian Democratic Republic; however, the Belarusian territories were captured by the Red Army in December 1918 and the Belarusian government in exile moved to the Lithuanian temporary capital Kaunas, while Jazep Varonka became a minister of the Lithuanian Ministry for Belarusian Affairs. The Belarusians and Lithuanians agreed to attach Grodno to the Republic of Lithuania and to form Belarusian military units there (e.g. 1st Belarusian Regiment). In November 1920, the Government of the Belarusian Democratic Republic and the Government of Lithuania signed mutual recognition treaties. During the Genoa Conference in 1922 Vaclau Lastouski, a Prime Minister of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, and Alaksandar Ćvikievič, a Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, recognized the Republic of Lithuania's rights to the Vilnius Region, but this was evaluated negatively by other members of the Belarusian Rada and Vaclau Lastouski resigned. In November 1923, the leadership of the Belarusian Rada departed to Prague due to the worsened relationships with the Government of Lithuania. In October 1926, Vaclau Lastouski presented to the Soviet Embassy in Kaunas a concept where he argued that the Lithuanians are "living with a foreign passport" because the Republic of Lithuania "illegally appropriated Belarusian state legacy" and that the "real Lietuviai" are Samogitians.
According to Polish historian Daniel Boćkowski [pl], Arkadź Smolič, a Minister of Education of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, wrote in 1919 that if the Bolsheviks will "restore real borders" and will create a united Belarus (according to Smolič such Belarus must include Vilnius, Białystok, Gomel), then "we " should join the defenders of such an order and to "fight even with the entire world", despite the fact that Smolič also acknowledged that the Bolsheviks do more harm to Belarus than they bring benefits.
According to Belarusian historian Hienadź Sahanovič, in the early years of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, national Belarusians mainly supported Lastouski's ideas that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was "their own", were explaining incorporation of Belarusian territories into it as "voluntary" and valued it positively, while Russia was then evaluated as "alien" to the Belarusians, therefore such national Belarusians faced Soviet political repressions. Subsequently, according to Sahanovič, there was a major shift in the 1930s and 1940s when historians in the Byelorussian SSR presented Russia positively, while the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was then described as "predatory" and "alien" country for the Belarusian statehood.
In 1938, Mikalaj Škialionak [be], a Belarusian historian, military and political figure, published an article "Padzieł historyi Biełarusi na peryjady" (Belarusian: Падзел гiсторыi Беларусi на перыяды, lit. 'Partition of the History of Belarus into Periods') in which he claimed that the Lithuanian King Mindaugas' Kingdom of Lithuania was Belarusian from its formation, as it consisted of Novogrudok, Grodno, Slonim, and Vawkavysk lands, while the Lithuanian regions Aukštaitija and Samogitia were only later "conquered" by the Belarusians from these lands, and then other Belarusian territories (e.g. Principality of Polotsk, Principality of Turov, Principality of Minsk, Principality of Vitebsk) voluntarily and willingly joined the newly established state – the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
In September 1939, Vilnius was captured by the Red Army and the Belarusian nationalists (e.g. Anton Luckievich) publicly welcomed the accession of the Vilnius Region to the Byelorussian SSR, while the Communist Party of Byelorussia (e.g. Ivan Klimov) in Minsk also were positive about the possible attachment of Vilnius to the Byelorussian SSR. The CPB considered the Vilnius Region as a part of Western Belorussia and the NKVD of the Byelorussian SSR also claimed that the Vilnius Region should be annexed by the Byelorussian SSR. Provisionally, the Vilnius Region was administrated by envoys from Minsk, while the chairman of the provisional administration was the Belarusian Jakim Žylianin [be]. On 24 September 1939, an official ceremony was organized in the Belarusian Gymnasium of Vilnia to commemorate the accession of Vilnius to the Byelorussian SSR "forever and ever". On 7 October 1939, a rally was held in the Lukiškės Square which demanded to attach the Vilnius Region to the Byelorussian SSR, whose numbers of attendees the Soviet propaganda had inflated to 75,000 people. Furthermore, pro-attachment rallies were also held in other towns of the Vilnius Region during which its participants also demanded to attach the region to the Byelorussian SSR. Moreover, Byelorussian SSR central newspapers proclaimed that "Vilnius is Byelorussian again", additionally arguing that it was a "historical justice" and discussing plans for Belarusization of the Vilnius Region. Articles in Soviet publications (in the Byelorussian SSR and outside of it) narrated that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a "Belarusian state", therefore according to them the Belarusians had "historical rights" to the Vilnius Region. The publishing of the Vilienskaja praŭda [be] (English: Vilnius' Truth) newspaper was started in the Vilnius Region and other regional centres of the Byelorussian SSR which regularly promoted ideas about the Belarusians' "historical rights" to the Vilnius Region. Panteleimon Ponomarenko, a First Secretary of the Communist Party of Byelorussia, issued authorizations to Ivan Klimov to declare Vilnius as the capital of Western Belorussia. The preparations for the elections to the People's Assembly of Western Belorussia were started in the Vilnius Region and there even were ideas to move the Byelorussian SSR capital from Minsk to Vilnius. Nevertheless, none of the Soviet Union's documents in 1939 officially stated that Vilnius belongs to the Byelorussian SSR.
The Byelorussian administration of the entire Vilnius Region lasted for only 40 days and subsequently, according to the Soviet–Lithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty of 10 October 1939, a part of the Vilnius Region, including the city of Vilnius, was attached to the Republic of Lithuania, which was soon converted into the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic. The Soviets blackmailed the Lithuanians that if they will not accept the Mutual Assistance Treaty, Vilnius will be attached to the Byelorussian SSR. The Byelorussian SSR also transferred to the Lithuanian SSR cities and surroundings of Švenčionys, Dieveniškės, Druskininkai that were mostly inhabited by Lithuanians. According to Uładzimir Arłou, a Belarusian historian and politician, the 1939 transfer of the Vilnius Region to "Letuvy" (Летувы) was a "criminal conspiracy" of Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, while Arłou refers to the Vilnius Region and the city of Vilnius as "ethnic Belarusian territory". Arłou claims that the Vilnius Region was historically and ethnically Belarusian since the early Middle Ages and that for centuries the Belarusians-Lićviny (Беларусы-ліцьвіны) composed the majority of its population.
In the early 1960s, Paval Urban [be], a historian of Belarusian diaspora, claimed that from the beginning the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Slavic–Belarusian state and completely rejected the possibility of other conclusions and concepts, thus he denied that modern Lithuania ("Летува ") and Lithuanians ("Летувісы ") has any exclusive connection to the national character of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and blamed Soviet historians for such conclusions. In 1972, Urban published a book In the light of historical facts (У сьвятле гістарычных фактаў) where he equated Lithuania ("Litva") and Litvins ("ліцьвіны ") to Western Baltic Slavs.
The theories of Škialionak were further developed in the late 20th century by Mikola Yermalovich, who also denied the Baltic origin of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Subsequently, Alexander Kravtsevich [be] also argued that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was from the beginning a "Baltic–Eastern Slavic state" in which the Slavs "dominated", followed by the assimilation of Balts by the Slavs; a new Belarusian ethnic group appeared in the 13th century. According to Kravtsevich, the Samogitians (who he also describes as "Letuvisy", not equal to "Litviny") have appropriated the name of Lithuania during the Lithuanian National Revival and in 1918 attached it to the Republic of Lithuania (which he calls "Lituva").
In 1990, following the adoption of the Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania by the Supreme Council – Reconstituent Seimas, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic on 29 March 1990 adopted an official statement, signed by chairman Mikalay Dzyemyantsyey, which claimed that upon the withdrawal of the Lithuanian SSR from the Union with the Byelorussian SSR, the Byelorussian SSR will not consider itself bound by all laws, decrees and other acts regarding the transfer of part of the Belarusian lands to Lithuania. On 24 October 1991 Vytautas Landsbergis and Stanislav Shushkevich in Vilnius signed a declaration regarding the principles of good neighborly relations between the Republic of Lithuania and the Republic of Belarus. However, in 1992 Piatro Kravchanka, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Belarus, told the Reuters correspondent that the Vilnius Region should belong to Belarus (the ministry later apologized for these words), while Zianon Pazniak, the founder and leader of the Belarusian Popular Front, spoke about possible Belarusian claims to the territories of the Republic of Lithuania during his visit to the Supreme Council of the Republic of Lithuania in Vilnius. Moreover, in the early 1990s, Belarusian mass media (e.g. Sovetskaya Belorussiya on 25 August 1990, Nasha Niva in 1992) considered the issue of the transfer of Vilnius to Belarus or granting an independent city status to Vilnius, while an assembly named Slavic Sobor on 20 February 1992 adopted a statement that Belarus had legal and historical rights to inherit the Vilnius Region. In June 2024, Viktoras Baublys, the first Lithuanian ambassador to independent Belarus, recalled that in the early 1990s the narratives that the heritage and history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were mostly Belarusian were very popular among Belarusian cultural representatives and oppositionists to Lukashenko. According to Justas Vincas Paleckis, the former adviser for foreign affairs of Lithuanian President Algirdas Brazauskas, Stanislav Shushkevich, the first head of state of independent Belarus, publicly demonstrated in the early 1990s that he do not recognize the Belarus–Lithuania border when during his visit to Lithuania he refused to be welcomed near the border (which was common at the time). Consequently, the agreement between the Republic of Lithuania and the Republic of Belarus on good neighborliness and cooperation was signed only on 6 February 1995.
When Alexander Lukashenko was elected president in 1994, he altered government historiography to be closer to Soviet historiography, claiming that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Lithuanian state while Belarus was created during the Russian Revolution. This marked a change from the Belarusian position before 1994, which regarded the Grand Duchy as jointly Belarusian and Lithuanian. In 2005, the state narrative returned to this position. According to Lithuanian historian Rūstis Kamuntavičius, this could have possibly been caused by a rapproachment between Lukashenko and the opposition or an effort by the former to distance Belarus from Russia. After the 2020–2021 Belarusian protests, Lukashenko began persecuting historians and changed textbooks and university curricula to remove references to Belarusian involvement in the Grand Duchy.
The Belarusian regime does not follow a coherent historical narrative and juggles conflicting facts to pursue unclear goals. Kamuntavičius states that "There is complete chaos. They write textbooks for schools, and before publishing, they rewrite them in a different way. History is taught according to one logic in the earlier grades, and according to another logic in the older grades." and argues that "Belarusian authorities don't have the intellectual capacity to control the narrative."
On 20 May 2000, a group of mostly Belarusian Litvinists in Novogrudok signed the Act of Proclamation of the Litvin nation, while its members consider that in 1900-1922 the Old Lithuania died and the name "Lithuanians" was assigned to the Samogitians. Subsequently, the leaders of the Congress of the Litvin League ("Ліцвінскай лігі, Licvinskaj lihi") and the authors of the Act of Proclamation of the Litvin nation were arrested in Poland as agents of Federal Security Service.
In February 2005, Viačaslaŭ Rakicki [be], a Belarusian writer and journalist, publicly discussed with Alieh Trusaŭ [be], a Belarusian archaeologist and publicist, and mutually agreed that the "ancient Belarusian state" – Grand Duchy of Lithuania had two colonies: the Duchy of Livonia and the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia (both of which were primarily presented as the former "Belarusian colonies" near the Baltic Sea). According to Trusaŭ, the Belarusian nation and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were created from East Slavs, thus the Grand Duchy of Lithuania since the Middle Ages was a predominantly Belarusian state with Lithuanian (" / litoŭskija") and Ukrainian elements.
Following his departure from Belarus in fear of repressions, Belarusian nationalist Zianon Pazniak complained in the June 2004 edition of the newsletter Belarusian News [be] that Belarus was a victorious state in World War II, but instead of territorial gains like other victorious states it "lost its territories and even its historical capital". In February 2005, Arłou expressed his agreement to such Pazniak's statements about World War II. In 2005, Pazniak wrote that the task of the Belarusian intelligentsia, education, educational and national literature is to "return the historical consciousness of the people to their native home – to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania" and in the next stage "return the official name of the state" which according to him should be named in the Constitution of Belarus as the Grand Duchy of Lithuanian Belarus (Belarusian: Вялікае Княства Літоўскае Беларусь) and abbreviated as Belarus to solve political and historical-ethnic questions. Pazniak's suggestion to change the name of Belarus to the Grand Duchy of Lithuanian Belarus received only partial support among the Belarusians and also was criticized. According to Pazniak, the Belarusian language, culture and other attributes were destroyed by the Russian occupation policy (tsarist and communist), which instead tried to tie the historical consciousness of Belarusians to the history of Russia, while Lukashenko's government is a "pro-Muscovite regime". The 2019 census demonstrated that the Belarusian language is perceived as a native language of Belarus by ~60% of its population, however only ~25% use it in their everyday life.
Belarusian public figures Voĺha Ipatava (left) and Alexander Kravtsevich (right), both expressed their support for claims that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania "arose in Belarusian lands" and that Belarus is its "main successor"On January 22, 2009, a public organizing committee Lithuania Millennium was formed to commemorate the first mentioning of the name of Lithuania in written sources in 1009 (its chairman was professor Anatol Hrytskievich and it also included: writer Voĺha Ipatava [be], historian Alexander Kravtsevich, professor Alieś Astroŭski [be], biologist Aliaksiej Mikulič [be], archeologist Edvard Zajkoŭski [be], painter Aliaksiej Maračkin [be], priest Lieanid Akalovič, writer Zdzislaŭ Sićka [be]). According to members of the committee Lithuania Millennium, the name of Lithuania refers to the ancient territory of Belarus because the Grand Duchy of Lithuania "arose in our lands" and its first capital was in Novogrudok, while the current Belarusians called themselves Lithuanians ("літвінамі ") until the beginning of the 20th century, thus Belarus is the "main successor" of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
In September 2009, Belsat TV published a video where Belarusian historians, including Hienadź Sahanovič and Alexander Kravtsevich, narrated that under the reign of Grand Duke Vytautas the "Belarusian state" became the largest in Europe.
In October 2009, Vadim Deruzhinskiy and Anatoĺ Taras [be] (scientific editor) published a 560 pages book Secrets of Belarusian History (Тайны белорусской истории) where in its preface it was stated that the Belarusians were previously called Litvins and Belarus did not exist in the Middle Ages, however instead there was Lithuania to which the Republic of Lithuania ("Республика Летува ") has no relation because in ~1220 Lithuania appeared in Western Belarus due to the migration of Polabian Slavs.
On 23 April 2017, it was stated in the official website of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was always considered as the previous embodiment of Belarusian statehood by the leadership of the Belarusian Democratic Republic.
In September 2015, Zianon Pazniak claimed that the Russian propaganda is trying to use some "Belarusian marginals" who dream about the revival of Greater Lithuania. Later, in December 2016, Pazniak stated that "the state was called Grand Duchy of Lithuania (now Belarus), Ruthenia (now Ukraine) and Samogitia (now Letuva)" and that "fantastic history of Letuva is based on a twisted real history of Belarus (historical Litva)". However, according to Pazniak the agenda of "returning to the name Літва " would be fruitless for Belarus because it is 150 years too late and a new Belarusian nation was created over this time. Nevertheless, by describing etymological terms, he continued to claim that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (Belarusian: Вялікае Княства Літоўскае) corresponds to today's Belarus (according to him, the term was also favorable for the Russian Empire for Russification purposes, but was later banned by the Governing Senate in 1840 and the Belarusians were then treated as a "branch of the Russian tribe"), while the current Lithuania is Samogitia (Belarusian: Жамойцкае), and that in the 17th century the Belarusian language was noted in Muscovy as "Litvinskaya" (Belarusian: ліцьвінскай), "Lithuanian" (Belarusian: літоўскай), "Lithuanian writing" (Belarusian: літоўскае пісьмо). Also, according to Pazniak, due to struggle in the Belarusian–Russian relations during the national revival in the 19th century, the Samogitians (Belarusian: Жамойць), who according to him allegedly did not even have their own writing system, benefited by choosing the name "Літва " and built a fantastic state ideology.
In recent times, open declarations have been published in Belarus, stating that Vilnius is a "non-Lithuanian" city and should supposedly belong to the "historical Lithuanians" – Belarusians. For example, since 2013, during annual Zapad (English: West) exercises in which the Russian Armed Forces and Armed Forces of Belarus jointly participate, the narrative that the Vilnius Region should supposedly belong to Belarus is openly repeated. In 2018, Alexander Lukashenko stated during an interview with the Echo of Moscow that "we are not the heirs of Kievan Rus', we are the heirs of Vilnius". Russian right-wing politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky also publicly called on Belarusians to "take back" Vilnius.
On 1 March 2021, Belsat TV published a program in which Alexander Kravtsevich, a Belarusian professor, Doctor of History, argued that Vilnius was founded, built and named by the Belarusians and that history does not know cities built by Lithuanians. According to Alvydas Nikžentaitis, the director of Lithuanian Institute of History, this theory is not new, but has been known for a long time and has its fans and followers in Belarus; however, even some Belarusian historians regard Alexander Kravtsevich as a radical and refuse to cooperate with him. Nevertheless, Belsat TV actively promotes the Litvinist narrative in various programs it shows: movies, discussions of historians and scientists in the TV studio, and the main narrator of the Litvinist movies is Litvinism propagator Alexander Kravtsevich. Belsat TV show where historians gather and promote Litvinism is called Intermarium, which is named after Józef Piłsudski's post-World War I geopolitical plan of a future federal state in Central and Eastern Europe dominated by Poland. Since June 2022 Belsat TV is being broadcast in Belarusian and Russian languages in Southeastern Lithuania. On 19 November 2022, Belsat published an article where it was stated that Vilnius is "our lost capital" of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In October 2023, Belsat TV published a show during which the events of Żeligowski's Mutiny were justified when, according to the host of this show, Vilnius was captured by the Lithuanians–Belarusians, led by general Lucjan Żeligowski, who until his death "hated three things: the Bolsheviks, Germans and Lithuanians" and was separating Litvins from Lithuanians.
Moreover, Alexander Kravtsevich also seeks to segregate the terms "Lietuviai" (a word in the Lithuanian language meaning Lithuanians, but according to Kravtsevich "Lietuviai" were Catholic Samogitians (жамойты) in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania), "Lietuva" (a word in the Lithuanian language meaning Lithuania) from "Litovcy" (a word in some Slavic languages, including Belarusian, meaning Lithuanians), "Litva" (a word in the Slavic languages, including Belarusian, meaning Lithuania) and accuses Lithuanians (Lietuviai) that they assigned the whole history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania for themselves after proclaiming the restoration of an independent State of Lithuania in 1918 and maintaining it. According to Kravtsevich, the usage of the words "Litva" (Літва), "Lićviny" (ліцьвіны) when describing a historical country and "Letuva" (Летува), "Letuvisy" (летувісы) when describing a modern country is "completely justified and even necessary", because according to him, the historical Lithuania was created in the middle of the 13th century in territories which mostly are "ethnically Belarusian" (Grodno Region, Vilnius Region, Novogrudok Region, and western Minsk Region) and the "Letuvisy" (летувісы) made up only a small percentage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania's population, but during the Soviet period the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was attributed to the Lithuanians and now it is almost exclusive to a Baltic state with the endonym of "Letuva".
According to Źmicier Sańko [be], a Belarusian linguist and publisher, the ancient history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was "changed" by manipulations of the 20th-century dictators and if Joseph Stalin had assigned Vilnius to Belarus, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania would have been "indisputably interpreted as a Belarusian state". Sańko also stated that the Lithuanians want to preserve the equality between historical and modern Lithuania, therefore, according to him, there is an urgent requirement to terminologically demarcate historical Lithuania and modern Lithuania. Furthermore, according to Sańko, Moscow made two "expensive gifts" to Lithuania when it "gave Vilnius from us " in 1939 and "organized" the 1995 Belarusian referendum to change the national state symbols.
— Vincuk Viačorka, Sergei Shupa [be]"The words "Litva", "Litvin", "Litoŭski" in the Old Belarusian language from the beginning meant the Baltic union of tribes, its representatives and their language. (...) For modern Belarusians, Lithuania is the name of today's neighboring country. (...) Every Belarusian should know that Lithuania is also his ancient country and "childish complexes" about it should be discarded."
In February 2020, Vincuk Viačorka and Sergei Šupa [be] together wrote an article arguing that Lithuania should be called "Litva", rather than "Letuva". Viačorka and Shupa argued that "Litva" is "our ancient word" and "Litva" as well as Baltic "Lietuva" are etymological equivalents, while the usage of a word "Letuva" is unacceptable because it contradicts the nature of the Belarusian language and that such an approach was incompetent linguistically. Moreover, from the early periods the Old Belarusian language words "Litva", "Litvin", "Litoŭski" described Baltic tribes, their language and representatives, and this approach was continued by the interwar classical orthography tradition linguists (e.g. Valiancina Paškievič [be]). According to Viačorka and Šupa, every Belarusian should know that Lithuania is also his ancient country and "childish complexes" about it should be discarded, while the imposition of a word "Letuva" is "monstrous" and instead there is a necessity of historical education. Viačorka and Šupa also reminded that in the early 1990s there was an agreement between the Belarusian and Lithuanian intellectuals to stop using the terms "Letuva" and "Letuvísaŭ" in Belarusian publications.
On 23 April 2020, the official account in Twitter of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic stated that the political ideal of Belarusians was the revival of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a federation of Belarus and Lithuania ("").
In December 2021, Belarusian politician Valery Tsepkalo, one of the denied candidates of the 2020 Belarusian presidential election, stated online that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was created in the current Belarusian territory in the 13th–14th centuries and later expanded, while the spoken language in the state was the Ruthenian/Russian language ("Russkiy jazyk"), not the current Lithuanian language.
According to Aleś Čajčyc, the Information Secretary of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, the Litvinism article on English Misplaced Pages was written by "Lithuanian marginals". However, the same year after secretary's statement the official Twitter account of the exiled government tweeted that the coat of arms is "a symbol of centuries of friendship between Belarusians and Lithuanians".
In September 2021, Alexander Lukashenko claimed that the Lithuanian capital Vilnius and Polish city Białystok are Belarusian lands. In January 2022, the official website of the Union State published an explanation by Lukashenko which claims that "Lithuania and Poland deny the contribution of the Belarusian people to the development of historical forms of statehood on Belarusian soil" and that the "modern Lithuanians" (whose ancestors previously "lived in the darkness of paganism and led a primitive economy", while the "Polotsk and Turov principalities thundered throughout Europe as centers of spirituality and enlightenment") privatized the heritage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, but according to Lukashenko historically the language of this state was "ours ", "the people are 80% ours – Slavs", the dominant faith was Eastern Christianity (Orthodoxy) and the state mainly constituted of modern Belarusian, Ukrainian, and Russian territories. In July 2022, during the Independence Day celebration, Lukashenko claimed that the Belarusian ethnos was the "backbone" of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania which was "the first Belarusian country" and "a defensive alliance with the Baltic tribes, where the Slavs taught them to read, introduced them to the philosophy of Christianity". However, the same month the statues of Grand Dukes Vytautas and Jogaila, who were called "Polish occupiers", were removed from the Belarusian National History Museum. Furthermore, there were cases in 2022 when people in Belarus were arrested or even sentenced to multiple years in prison for the usage of Pahonia (one of the historical names of the coat of arms of Lithuania, alternative unofficial coat of arms of Belarus with a horse rider closely resembles it and bears the same name) when they publicly painted it or left a sticker featuring it.
In March 2023, Zianon Pazniak stated that "in our history and our culture Vilnius is our head, the loss of Vilnius turned out to be very disadvantageous for us", and further claimed that the Lithuanians have no rights to Vilnius, provided propositions how Vilnius could be separated from Lithuania by granting Vilnius an "independent city" status, a "special status" or a "common city" status or making it "Belarusian", and used term "Letuvisy" when describing Lithuanians. While in one of his earlier published articles Pazniak wrote that "in 1939, 'Letuvisy' accepted Stalin's offer to take Vilnius (...) lost their independence (...) but historically (at least for today) they won. Vilnius remained in Letuva".
On 18 March 2023, Íhar Marzaliúk [be], a Belarusian historian, archaeologist and politician, known for his support of Lukashenko's policies, claimed in his television show that Vilnius was not established by Baltic-Lithuanians at all but by Krivichs, who he equated to "our ancestors" and stressed that despite Vilnius currently not being part of the Republic of Belarus, it must "remain in our historical memory and hearts". In October 2023, Marzaliúk, acting as the Chairman of the Commission on Education, Culture and Science of the House of Representatives of the National Assembly of the Republic of Belarus, publicly presented in the premises of the Belarusian State University his newly published book about the history of Belarus titled Symbols of the Belarusian Eternity: Historical Symbols of the Belarusian Eternity . This Marzaliúk's book was published by the Belarus Publishing House [be], which is controlled by the Ministry of Information of the Republic of Belarus [be], while its content is based on Marzaliúk's television show Symbols of Belarusian Eternity , but is also supplemented with additional content.
— Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya"This problem is artificially created, I am absolutely sure that 99 percent of Belarusians have never heard of Litvinism. This is created here now so that Lithuanians and Belarusians would be set against each other, just to provoke people and this discussion. This is only talked about in Lithuania, there are no such discussions in Belarus at all. We will never question the integrity of Lithuania. Vilnius is a Lithuanian city. I don't understand why people talk about it at all, because it is only intended to set Lithuanians and Belarusians against each other. (...) There is not even such an idea in Belarusian society. Call the historians and talk. Belarusians respect the integrity and heritage of Lithuania."
On 23 August 2023, Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya stated that the theory of Litvinism was put forward in order to set at variance Lithuanians and Belarusians, that Belarus would never question the integrity of Lithuania, and that Vilnius was a city of Lithuania. Moreover, Tsikhanouskaya claimed that Belarusians generally do not talk about Litvinism and that these are isolated, marginal cases. On the other hand, according to Lithuanian military historian Karolis Zikaras, Litvinist attitude prevails in the society of Belarus, but there is an increase of Belarusian historians who look more objectively at the history of their country.
According to Lithuanian scientist Artūras Dubonis, the ethnogenesis of Belarusians is still in process and its community is divided into two unequal groups: pro-Moscow (larger) and pro-Western (smaller), however both of these groups seek to find or create historical ethno-cultural supports and the pro-Moscow ones also do not want to become Russians/Muscovites. During a poll conducted in 2021, 86% of Belarusians evaluated Russia positively, Russian President Vladimir Putin received 60% support and about two-thirds supported the development of the Union State.
In April 2023, Belarusian oppositionist Siarhei Kavalenka with others organized a political demonstration near the Embassy of Lithuania in Warsaw, which by them was described as "Samogitian Embassy" (""), and its participants narrated that the "Samogitian Government" ("") laws are discriminatory towards the "Belarusian–Lithuanians" ("") and suggested to do not use "our name" in the future.
On 14 August 2023, Vladislav Zhivitsa (who previously fled from Russia) and Yan Rudzik held a press conference where they announced that they are planning to recreate independent Smolensk statehood in a close union with Belarus and other countries whose territories were part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania because "Smolensk is a Belarusian land which is under Moscow occupation".
On 26 August 2023, Aleś Čajčyc, a Member of the Presidium at the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic, claimed that "we " are the descendants of the historical Litvins ("літвінаў ") and Lithuanians ("летувісы ") are also their descendants. Also in August 2023 Čajčyc stated that the discussion on a topic of territorial claims of Belarusians to the Republic of Lithuania is "heating up more and more actively", as well that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was the "golden age of Belarusian statehood" and that identifying modern Lithuanians with historical Lithuanians is an "unforgivable simplification". Furthermore, Čajčyc claimed that modern Lithuania ("сучаснай Летувой ") should be clearly linguistically separated from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ("Вялікім княствам Літоўскім ") and historical Lithuania ("істарычнай Літвой ") because according to him the usage of the same word "creates confusion" which is "useful for Lithuanian ("летувіскага ") nationalist historical myth". Nevertheless, according to Čajčyc, the term Samogitia ("Жмудзь ") is not suitable because the Republic of Lithuania is more than that . In the same post Čajčyc also stated by using a hashtag that he is a proud Litvinist. On 26 October 2023, Čajčyc criticized the usage of the name Vilnius ("Вільнюс") when referring to the "ancient Lithuanian capital" ("старадаўняй літоўскай сталіцы ") in Belarusian because according to him such a name is a "word from the colonial Soviet dictionary". On 27 October 2023, Čajčyc suggested to make Belarusian, Lithuanian ("летувіскую ") and Polish as semi-official languages in the region compromising of Białystok, Vilnius, and Grodno.
In November 2023, a discussion of Belarusian opposition was held in Warsaw during which Belarusian historian Cimoch Akudovič (Цімох Акудовіч) narrated that for the Belarusians the concept that Vilnius is "theirs" is important and that the monoethnic Vilnius is "some kind of nonsense", therefore Belarusian elements in Vilnius should be "restored". Soon afterwards, also in November 2023, Cimoch Akudovič sent a letter of apology to the Lithuanian news portal DELFI where he narrated that he said a "disappointing stupidity".
On 19 November 2023, Alexei Dzermant, a Belarusian philosopher, journalist and political observer, stated that Vilnius is a "Belarusian city" and criticized emigrated Belarusian politicians who according to him "favor Lithuanian chauvinists" and do not defend Belarusians interests, thus he claimed that the Belarusian national movement in Lithuania must be organized and led by other leaders. On the other hand, Dzermant previously advocated the banning of the white-red-white flag in February 2021.
On 15 March 2024, Belarusian online news outlet Charter 97 published an article where it claimed that the Battle of Saule in 1236 near Šiauliai was won by the Belarusian Army, despite the fact that it was won by Samogitians commanded by Samogitian Duke Vykintas.
On 24 March 2024, Pazniak congratulated the Belarusians with Freedom Day and claimed that factually in 1918 the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was restored but with a name Belarus, while in the territory of Samogitia appeared "Letuva".
On 19 January 2025, Dzianis Kuchynski, a representative of Belarusian oppositionist Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, stated that the coat of arms of Pahonia (horse rider) depicted on the New Belarus passport project is not the same symbol as Lithuanian Vytis (coat of arms of Lithuania), altthough they have a historical connection based on the shared past. Previously the New Belarus passport received criticism from Lithuanian politicians (e.g. Audronius Ažubalis) for "coveting other countries symbols" and because it featured a map of Belarus where the Lithuanian territory of Dieveniškės eldership was allocated to Belarus. According to Ažubalis, it would be simple if the Belarusian democratic opposition wrote an statement from which we would see that they "are not a tool in the hands of Litvinists", however they "do not want to dispel doubts".
In Lithuania
Lithuanian (Lingwa Lietowia) was mentioned as one of the languages of the participants of the Council of Constance in a 15th century chronicle by Ulrich of Richenthal.Universitas lingvarum Litvaniae, Vilnius, 1737.According to Lithuanian scientists, the Ruthenian language was one of the chancellery languages of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (also with Latin, Polish), but they deny that it was a state language, while Lithuanian was mostly a spoken language in ethnographic Lithuania until the 17th century (later partly).Numerous Lithuanian authors view "Litvinism" as potentially dangerous or harmful for the modern Lithuanian state. In 1952–1953, Lithuanian Americans newspaper Draugas and Lithuanian Brazilians journal Mūsų Lietuva published articles why the Belarusians are embezzling Lithuania and concluded that it is because their leaders for a long-time were and still are under the influence of Russian Marxism–Leninism which further developed the Russian imperialism theory about Lithuania as "Russian land" which was "recovered" by Catherine the Great in 1795. In 1955, Lithuanian professor Mykolas Biržiška gave a lecture in Los Angeles during which he drew attention that some Belarusians have intensified propaganda where they claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, its rulers, coat of arms, culture, and language were Belarusian and criticized such Belarusians theories. In 1996, Lithuanian historian Edvardas Gudavičius criticized Mikola Yermalovich's theories by providing scientific counterarguments. Furthermore, Lithuanian scientists deny that Novogrudok anytime in its history was the capital of Lithuania and tractate it is as a "parasitic myth" in Belarusian historiography.
According to Lithuanian scientist Zigmas Zinkevičius, some Belarusian nationalists present the Belarusians' historical affiliation with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in an anti-historical way because they claim that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was created by the Slavic Litvins (who according to them are the current Belarusians ancestors), while they describe the current Lithuanians as "lietuvisai" who according to them were previously called Samogitians (not "lićviny") and did not participate in the creation of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Zinkevičius also explained that the most reliable theory how the name "White Ruthenia" was established is that the White Lands ("белая земля") or White Ruthenia ("Белая Русь") did not pay tribute to the Lithuanian Dukes, unlike the Black Lands ("белая земля") or Black Ruthenia ("Черная Русь") which had to pay tribute, while the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was created by the Lithuanian-speakers. Moreover, Zinkevičius pointed out that the Belarusian historian, professor Jakaŭ Traščanok [be] in 2003 acknowledged that there was no large preponderance of Slavs over the Balts in the early years of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania's existence (compared to the contemporary times because Western Ruthenian principalities were very scarcely populated), territories inhabited by the Balts were previously vaster than are currently and the ethnic Lithuanian units formed the basis of Lithuanian military power, while the German chroniclers wrote by strictly distinguishing the Lithuanians from Slavs.
According to Lithuanian scientists, part of the ethnic eastern and southeastern Lithuanian territories, which historically used to be part of the Lithuania proper (considered as a state founding Baltic-origin core of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania by Lithuanian scientists), were Slavicized in the 16th–19th centuries through Belarusization, Russification, and Polonization, therefore they are no longer dominated by Lithuanians or Lithuanian-speakers (e.g. Lida, Kreva, Ashmyany, Smarhon, Vidzy, Braslaw). In the 1338 Peace and Trade Agreement, concluded between Gediminids Gediminas, Algirdas, Narimantas and the Livonian Order, there is a clear distinction between the Lithuanians and the Rus' people as well as Lithuania from Rus' as these were recorded as separate entities. Furthermore, a relevant historical source illustrating Lithuania in the 15th century is Lithuanian Grand Duke Vytautas the Great's 11 March 1420 letter to Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor, in which he wrote that Samogitia is the same land of Lithuania and that Lithuanians in Aukštaitija and Samogitians (who also call themselves only as Lithuanians) are the same people with one language. In 1501, Erazm Ciołek, a priest of the Vilnius Cathedral, explained to the Pope that the Lithuanians preserve their language and ensure respect to it (Linguam propriam observant), but they also use the Ruthenian language for simplicity reasons because it is spoken by almost half of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The exact territory of Lithuania proper is known since the 1566 reform of the administrative divisions of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and it was constituted of the Vilnius Voivodeship and Trakai Voivodeship (included Grodno County in 1413–1793), however, the Lithuanians themselves also considered the Duchy of Samogitia as part of Lithuania proper, while other six voivodeships (out of nine voivodeships since 1569) of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were called "Lithuanian Ruthenia" (Litovskaja Rus). Moreover, the importance of Lithuanian language for Lithuanian-speaking population within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth also remained in the later years as during the Kościuszko Uprising in 1794 Tadeusz Kościuszko's appeals were written in Lithuanian and Polish languages. In the first half of the 20th century, despite the restoration of Lithuanian statehood in 1918, a part of historical Lithuania proper, including the cities of Grodno, Lida, Braslaw, Kreva, Ashmyany and their surroundings, became a part of Poland and later a part of the Byelorussian SSR, and in the late 20th century (1989) only 7606 people in the Byelorussian SSR considered themselves Lithuanians.
According to Lithuanian publications, terms which start with the traditional Lithuanian roots "Let" and "Liet" have a significant and historical usage. For example, in early German chronicles the name of Lithuania was spelled Lettowen and in Latin as Lethovia, Lettovia, Lettavia, Lithuanian monarch Gediminas in the 14th century titled himself in Latin letter to Pope John XXII as "Gedeminne, letwinorum et multorum ruthenorum rex" (which literally translates to English as "Gediminas, by the grace of God, King of the Lithuanians and many Ruthenians"), his son Algirdas after becoming the Lithuanian monarch appeared as "rex Letwinorum" (English: King of Lithuania) in the Livonian Chronicles, and Algirdas' son Jogaila, being a Lithuanian monarch since 1377, used a seal in 1377–1386 with a Latin gothic minuscule "* ia ‚ gal * - dey * gracia * r - ex - in * lettow" (which literally translates to English as "Jogaila, by the Grace of God, King in Lithuania"), while the name of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Lithuanian language publications even in the mid-17th century was still written "dides Kunigiſtes Lietuwos", etc. Furthermore, Lithuanian (Lietuviai) ethnicity consists not only of Samogitians (Žemaičiai), but also of Aukštaitians (the largest Lithuanian ethnic group) and the region of Aukštaitija is known in the written sources since the late 13th century when Peter of Dusburg described it as "Austechia, terra regis Lethowie" (English: Aukštaitija, the land of Lithuanians King), while some German sources also titled Lithuanian monarch Gediminas as "Rex de Owsteiten" (English: King of Aukštaitija). The patrilineal descendants of Gediminas from the Gediminids dynasty had continuously ruled the Grand Duchy of Lithuania until the death of Sigismund II Augustus in 1572.
According to Lithuanian sources, the name of Vilnius is of Lithuanian-origin and it comes from a Vilnia River which flows through the city and historically was an important element of the Vilnius Castle Complex's defensive system. The hydronym "Vilnia" is linked with the Lithuanian words "vilnia", "vilnis" (English: a water mound or a wave), while the Lithuanian verb "vilnyti" in English means "to wave ". The name of the city "Vilnius" was established in the ~15th-century when in the Lithuanian language it replaced form "Vilnia" and form "Vilnius" is used in the 17th-century Lithuanian language written sources, however form "Vilna" remained in Latin texts. The ruler of the Duchy of Vilnius (did not include Duchy of Trakai), which is known since the second quarter of the 14th century, also was the Grand Duke of Lithuania, but in 1392 Vytautas the Great transformed it into the Vilnius Voivodeship.
The Act of Independence of Lithuania, signed by the Council of Lithuania on February 16, 1918, proclaimed that "the Council of Lithuania, as the sole representative of the Lithuanian nation, based on the recognized right to national self-determination, and on the Vilnius Conference's resolution of September 18–23, 1917, proclaims the restoration of the independent state of Lithuania, founded on democratic principles, with Vilnius as its capital, and declares the termination of all state ties which formerly bound this State to other nations". In the preamble of the most recent Constitution of Lithuania, adopted during the 1992 Lithuanian constitutional referendum, the continuity of Lithuanian statehood is also stressed with the words "the Lithuanian Nation, having created the State of Lithuania many centuries ago, having based its legal foundations on the Lithuanian Statutes and the Constitutions of the Republic of Lithuania, having for centuries staunchly defended its freedom and independence, having preserved its spirit, native language, writing, and customs, embodying the innate right of the human being and the Nation to live and create freely in the land of their fathers and forefathers – in the independent State of Lithuania, fostering national concord in the land of Lithuania, striving for an open, just, and harmonious civil society and a State under the rule of law, by the will of the citizens of the reborn State of Lithuania, adopts and proclaims this Constitution".
According to Lithuanian historian Artūras Dubonis, the theories of Mikola Yermalovich and Alexander Kravtsevich have nothing in common with the science of history, distort the past of the Lithuanian nation and are politically motivated to strengthen the Belarusians' self-awareness and their statehood.
In 2013, Lithuanian Ministry of National Defence stated that the Belarusians attempt to present Lithuanian monarchs as Belarusians in an information warfare part of Russian attempts to discredit Lithuania's efforts to restore its independence.
In 2014, Lithuanian historian Alfredas Bumblauskas claimed that the relations with the Belarusians should be reconsidered (e.g. by establishing counterpropaganda institutions) because the Belarusians spread heritage propaganda and have appropriated the history of Lithuania. Furthermore, Bumblauskas said that to him the imperialistic-minded Belarusians remind Adolf Hitler's aspirations in the Sudetenland. Moreover, Bumblauskas recalled that already 15 years ago there were messages in the internet claiming that Vilnius will see Belarusian tanks with the symbolism of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Bumblauskas stressed that historically Lithuanian monarch Algirdas was the creator of the Lithuanian Empire who annexed through conquests and marriages large parts of the current Belarusian and Ukrainian territories.
In September 2022, public institution Litvinai was established in Lithuania. Reportedly members of the club Litvinai (Lićviny) train militarily and strives to preserve internal relations and self-identification of Belarusians in Lithuania, however they train with airsoft weaponry as citizens of Russia and Belarus are prohibited to own combat weaponry in Lithuania since late 2022 and the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union terminated cooperation with them. According to Siarhei Shalyhin, leader of the club Litvinai, they do not have plans to overthrow Lukashenko's government.
In August 2023, Laurynas Kasčiūnas, the Chairman of the National Security and Defense Committee of Seimas, said that Litvinism is a threat to Lithuania because it is a concept where, on the one hand, Belarusians appropriate the tradition of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, on the other hand, they push us aside, saying that the national state of Lithuania is a Russian project. According to Kasčiūnas, Lithuania cannot tolerate an ideology of Litvinism that denies Lithuania's identity and memory and appealed to the Belarusian opposition regarding the issue. In November 2023, Kasčiūnas said that identical restrictions should be applied to the Belarusians like to the citizens of the Russian Federation. Another member of the National Security and Defense Committee of Seimas, Raimundas Lopata, urged Lithuanian institutions to create a strategy of Lithuania's policy towards hostile Belarus by including measures to completely close the Belarus–Lithuania border, strengthened border protection and measures to combat Litvinism which he described as Kremlin hybrid warfare. Petras Auštrevičius, Member of the European Parliament, also named Litvinism as a hybrid warfare designed to antagonize nations, create mistrust and historical revanchism. In November 2023, Lopata said that the Belarusians often deviates into the theories of Litvinism and seeks to deprive a part of history of Lithuania for themselves, however the Belarusians should concentrate to the independence of Belarus, not the conquests of Vilnius.
The State Security Department of Lithuania (VSD) stated in August 2023 that the supporters of the radical Belarusian nationalist ideology of Litvinism claims that modern-day Belarusians are the true heirs to the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, thus they are making territorial claims to other countries surrounding Belarus, including Lithuania and its capital city Vilnius; however, their activities do not pose a real threat to the sovereignty, constitutional order and territorial integrity of the Republic of Lithuania at the moment, but may increase inter-ethnic tensions and negative attitudes towards Belarusian community in Lithuania. The VSD also stated that the Litvinists are against the governments of Belarus and Russia and do not support narrative that Russians and Belarusians are "one people", thus part of the Litvinists departed to EU countries amid repressions against them. Also, in August 2023, it was announced that 910 Belarusians and 254 Russians were recognized as a threat to the national security of Lithuania and all these 1164 foreigners were prohibited to arrive in Lithuania.
According to Lithuanian politician Vytautas Sinica, Litvinism is especially characteristic of the opponents of Alexander Lukashenko's rule and the denial of Lithuanian historical statehood by them is a serious issue, which is incompatible with the national security of Lithuania, therefore he suggested to inquire Belarusians, who want to live in Lithuania, who founded the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Vilnius. According to Sinica, Belarus was highly sovietized during the Soviet period and currently it lacks national identity, thus attempting to solve this issue the theory of Litvinism is employed and is becoming more popular.
In September 2023, members of the Seimas unanimously voted for the proposed amendment to the Lithuanian Law on the State Flag and other flags which consist of the permission to raise the historical flag of Lithuania (with Vytis) at border checkpoints and encourages residents to raise it near their homes during historical Lithuanian public holidays, while the initiator of the changes, Andrius Kupčinskas, pointed out Litvinism from the Belarusian side as one of the reasons for these changes.
On 30 September 2023, Dainius Gaižauskas [lt], a Deputy Chairman of the National Security and Defense Committee of the Seimas, said that a topic of Litvinism must be legally included in a questionnaire of the Lithuanian Migration Department to determine person's opinion about Litvinism, and drew parallels between Litvinism and Russian propaganda which justified the Russian invasion of Ukraine with "falsified facts". According to Justinas Dementavičius, a scientist of the Vilnius University Institute of International Relations and Political Science, Litvinism is a romantic or radical form of Belarusian nationalism, which questions the fact that historically the Lithuanians created the State of Lithuania.
On 2 October 2023 a discussion was held in Seimas Palace with Lithuanian, Polish, Belarusian scientists, writers and politicians about the origin of Litvinism, its influence and challenges in Belarusians and Lithuanians relations. One of the members of the Lithuanian coalition government, Liberals' Movement, announced that the purpose of the discussion in Seimas Palace was searching for ways to stop the radical Litvinism ideology. Soon afterwards, also in October 2023, a video was published online where three armed men standing in front of the Belarusian white-red-white flags issued threats to Lithuanian politicians, demanded to stop persecuting Belarusians and explained that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Belarusian, not a Lithuanian state.
In April 2024 Auksė Ūsienė, a Lithuanian historian and analyst of the Department of Strategic Communication of the Lithuanian Armed Forces, drew parallels between the Litvinists' statements and Russia's denial of Ukrainian statehood and stated that the Belarusian Litvinists become the executors of the goal of the "Russian world", she also pointed out to the fact that in Belarusian school history programs it is still claimed that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was a Belarusian state with its initial capital in Novogrudok and later in Vilnius.
In July 2024 a dozen of Belarusian organizations which are operating in Lithuania (e.g. public organization Dapamoga, Belarusian Council for Culture, public organization Litvinai, etc.) signed a declaration with which they distanced themselves from the ideology of Litvinism and denied any territorial claims to Lithuania.
In Russia
Tomas Baranauskas claims that Litvinism also has some supporters in Russia, although it is much less popular than in Belarus. Some Russian Litvinists refer to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a Russian state. According to Belarusian historian Alieś Biely [be], Litvinism is the frontier ideology of Russian civilization. According to Virginijus Savukynas, a Lithuanian historian and journalist, Litvinism is the Belarusian variant of the ideology of Russian imperialism and the beginning of Litvinism lie in the Russian Empire when it annexed the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1795 and then Russian Empress Catherine the Great claimed that she just "restored historical truth". Moreover, Savukynas pointed out to the fact that in the early 20th century a monument was unveiled in Vilnius dedicated to the Russian Empress Catherine the Great with inscription "separated to recover".
In an interview held by Lietuvos rytas, the Belarusian journalist Alesis Mikas stated that the Russian Government could be using the new phenomenon of Litvinism in Belarus as a form of hybrid warfare against Lithuania.
Lev Krishtapovich claims that:
In fact, under the guise of Belarusian nationalism, or the so-called Litvinism, a Polish gentry clique stands aimed at transforming Belarus into Poland's eastern frontiers.
In response to the Belarusian nationalism and unable to erase the importance of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (GDL) for the formation of the Belarusian nation, Russian propaganda seek to slavicize GDL and its rulers. Additionally, Russia actively deny occupation of the Baltic states and tractate Baltic states statehood of 1918 and 1990 as temporary and accidental formations resulting from crises in Russia. Since GDL, which has existed for more than 500 years, prevents such a narrative in relation to Lithuania, several strategies are used in Russia to rewrite GDL history. According to one of the strategies, it is aimed to present the GDL as a "historical misunderstanding" in the area of Russian civilization that allegedly gravitated towards Poland, and in some publications the entire Baltic region is named as the historical area of Russia since the 10th–12th centuries. According to another strategy, it is claimed that the GDL also supposedly was a Russian (Ruthenian) state ("more democratic"), which has nothing to do nor with the 20th century "Samogitian" statehood of Lithuania, nor with Ukraine and Belarus as historical entities. Even in Russian sources that emphasize the subjectivity of the history of the GDL, the "Russian" aspects are treated as phenomena of the history of Russia, not Ukraine or Belarus.
Russian far-right political philosopher Aleksandr Dugin claims that after the Golden Horde there was not one Russia (Rusj Moskovskaja – Grand Duchy of Moscow), but two – also a "Lithuanian Russia" (Rusj Litovskaja – GDL), which had a majority population (80%) of Orthodox Slavs who also were the elites of the state and at the same time deny the Baltic origin of the GDL and claim that the rulers of the GDL were Russians. Other Russian historians (for example, Michail Kojalovich, Nikolai Ustrialov, Matvei Liubavskii) in their publications consider the GDL as a state of Western Russia, and the expansion of the GDL to the east and south was supposedly a process of unification of Russian lands in which Western Russia (GDL) and Eastern Russia (Muscovy) competed. Also, Russian historians often call the vicegerents of the GDL rulers as Russian dukes because they supposedly spoke Russian and claims that the GDL was a Slavic state because its written language was Slavic. According to these Russian historians, precisely because of the majority of Orthodox Slavs in the population of the GDL, the GDL was supposedly a "non-Baltic" or "non-Lithuanian" state. These Russian paradigms are taken from the 19th century and are intended to justify the destruction of the GDL. From such Russian points of view, the partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and GDL were essentially a "restoration" of the separated Russian lands. These assumptions are also actively echoed by Litvinists, who claim that the Slavic (Litvin) origin of the GDL can be judged from the fact that its political elite allegedly spoke Old East Slavic language (Litvin language), however actually in the GDL it was only one of the written languages, not a spoken language. Moreover, historically only the Slavic voivodeships of the GDL (six out of nine) were referred to as "Lithuanian Ruthenia" (Litovskaja Rus).
A number of Russian historians consider Ruthenian language to be a "Western dialect of Russian language" or "Western Russians language". For propaganda purposes, the ancient Eastern Slavs are equated with Russian speakers or even modern Russians. However, actually during the time of the GDL there was no such nationality as Russian and there was no standardized Russian language as different Ruthenian dialects were spoken. Slavic-speakers of the GDL and Muscovites could understand each other, but letters received from the GDL, before being presented to the addressee, were translated into the Muscovite variant of the written language in the Grand Dukes of Moscow chancellery which proves their separateness. Moreover, the separateness of GDL Orthodox and Muscovite Orthodox is proved by the Orthodox Metropolis of Lithuania which using the favor of the Patriarch of Constantinople and seeking church power was liquidated by the Metropolitans of Moscow. When the Muscovites took control of the left-bank Ukraine, Metropolitan Methodius of Kiev refused to swear an oath to Moscow, stating that "If a Muscovite Metropolitan is sent to us, we will shut ourselves up in monasteries, and let them drag us out of them by our necks and legs. We would rather die than accept a metropolitan from Moscow." Until then Orthodox Christians of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth massively switched to the Ruthenian Uniate Church, and in the 18th century only Mstsislaw and Mogilev remained Orthodox in the territory of the Commonwealth. In 1790, Catholics of the "Latin" and "Greek" rites made up 77.8% of the total population of the GDL.
Lithuanian monarchs Gediminas (left) and Algirdas (right) depicted in the Millennium of Russia Monument which was built in Veliky Novgorod in 1862A lot of anti-Lithuanian propaganda is directed at Grand Duke Algirdas because he used war and diplomatic means to unite Ruthenian lands into the GDL. Also, many dukes of Slavic lands gave priority to their own positively evaluated GDL rather than the Tatar Golden Horde and their negatively evaluated money collectors ‒ the Muscovites. These circumstances destroy the authority of Moscow as the "unifier of all Russian lands", so the aim of such claims is to Russify Grand Duke Algirdas or at least convert him to Orthodoxy. The first attempts to do this can be seen already in the 16th–17th centuries Bychowiec Chronicle and Hustyn Chronicle which describe Algirdas supposedly Orthodox baptism after his first or second marriage in an anti-Catholic context. Also already in the 16th century annals of the Moscow state it was stated that Algirdas was allegedly an Orthodox believer, this way aiming to undermine the rulers of Lithuania and show their subordination to the rulers of Moscow. Later this narrative, which contradicts the Catholic Christianization of pagan Lithuania in 1387 and the history of the martyrs of Vilnius, was being repeated by the propagandists of the Russian Empire. For example, Russian historiographer and writer sentimentalist Nikolay Karamzin in the 18th century "discovered" another date of Algirdas alleged baptism and put into use, claiming that Algirdas, who was ordained as a monk on his deathbed, was buried according to Orthodox rites. However, German and old Ruthenian chronicles mention that Algirdas died as a "pagan fire-worshipper, an enemy of the cross and faith" and was burned. Some Litvinists claim that Lithuanian King Mindaugas also adopted Orthodoxy in Novogrudok.
In 2011, Belarusian Exarchate of the Moscow Patriarchate initiated the canonization of the former Metropolitan of Vilnius Joseph Semashko who was the primary organizer of the Synod of Polotsk in 1839 during which the 1596 Union of Brest was abolished. Consequently, Lithuanian and Belarusian Uniates became part of the Russian Orthodox Church and Joseph Semashko assisted to formulate ethnopolitical ideology of "Western Russia". Proponents of canonization identify this event as the "return" of the lands of Lithuania and Belarus to the sphere of influence of Eastern Christian civilization and the restoration of the self-awareness of the Russian Orthodox people of Belarus. In Belarus, the 1839 Synod of Polotsk is commemorated in celebrations.
The Institute of Russian Civilization operating in Moscow has published the encyclopedia Holy Russia. The Great Encyclopedia of the Russian Nation (Russian: Святая Русь. Большая энциклопедия русского народа) which is full of historical forgeries as in it the GDL is called an artificial and unviable state that existed from the 13th to the 18th century. In this encyclopedia it is stated that already in the 10th–12th centuries the territories of the Baltic states were supposedly part of the Russian state. Also, in this encyclopedia the Baltic states are named as puppet states, and their occupation in 1940 is seen as the collapse of pro-Western regimes allegedly ruled by German agents and political adventurers and a "legal return" to Russia. It also states that in 1991 the "puppet" Baltic states were led by representatives of the US Central Intelligence Agency and other Western special services, and in this way they allegedly became Western colonies.
However, there is also an unofficial narrative in Russia that emphasizes the civilizational space determined by the GDL together with Poland, thus Lithuania is considered the main obstacle for Russia to implement the Eurasian strategy in the post-Soviet states. Every year on 4 November Russia celebrates a national holiday called the National Unity Day which marks the expulsion of the Polish–Lithuanian military crew from the Moscow Kremlin on 4 November 1612. According to historians, Lithuania was the generalized symbol of an enemy or a foreign country in the consciousness of 17th-century Russians, and it became established in folklore as well (for example, about a stubborn person they said: "Fight him like with Lithuania", and an unfamiliar guest was asked: "What kind of horde are you? What kind of Lithuanian are you?"). Russian President Vladimir Putin explains the conflict with the Ukrainians by the fact that Lithuanians and Poles created a "divide and conquer" strategy in "historical Russian lands" in the 15th century and developed it in the 16th–18th centuries. According to Putin, both Lithuanian Russia and Muscovite Russia could have had united "Old Russia", but it happened that Moscow allegedly became the "center of unification" and after the partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth the Russian Empire allegedly "regained" the old lands of Western Russia (Little Russia and Novorossiya, where supposedly only Russians lived). Putin has also publicly stated that "Russia's borders do not end anywhere". In 2022, Dmitry Medvedev wrote on his Telegram account that "after liberating Kyiv and all the territories of Little Russia from the nationalist gangs, Russia will become united again" and that "We will embark on another campaign to restore the borders of our Motherland, which, as we know, do not end anywhere." Also, Russia seeks to escalate conflicts in Lithuania–Poland relations.
By international sources
Litvinism is not supported by notable information sources such as Encyclopædia Britannica, which states that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was exclusively created by Lithuanians, that Lithuania in the past ruled territories of present-day Belarus and that the Belarusians had no state and no national symbols until 1918. Notable historians such as Arnold J. Toynbee and Timothy D. Snyder also support the approach that the Lithuanians (Balts) conquered/gathered Ruthenian territories, incorporating them into their state.
Multiple international scientists made conclusions that the Lithuanian-speaking territory was larger in the past. A note written by Sigismund von Herberstein in the first half of the 16th century states that, in an ocean of Ruthenian in this part of Europe, there were two non-Ruthenian regions: Lithuania and Samogitia where its inhabitants spoke their own language, but many Ruthenians were also living among them. By studying place names of Lithuanian origin, linguist Jan Safarewicz [pl] concluded that the eastern boundaries of the Lithuanian language used to be in the shape of zigzags through Grodno, Shchuchyn, Lida, Valozhyn, Svir, and Braslaw. Such eastern boundaries partly coincide with the spread of Catholic and Orthodox faith, and should have existed at the time of the Christianization of Lithuania in 1387 and later. Safarewicz's eastern boundaries were moved even further to the south and east by other scholars (e.g. Mikalay Biryla [be], Jerzy Ochmański [pl], and others).
According to Polish linguist Leszek Bednarczuk, Belarusian ethnos and language were formed due to the dependence on the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Moreover, according to the Encyclopædia Britannica, during this epoch of Lithuanian domination, the Belarusian language and nationality began to take shape.
According to Polish professor Jan Otrębski's article published in 1931, the Polish dialect in the Vilnius Region and in the northeastern areas in general are very interesting variant of Polishness as this dialect developed in a foreign territory which was mostly inhabited by the Lithuanians who were Belarusized (mostly) or Polonized, and to prove this Otrębski provided examples of Lithuanianisms in the Tutejszy language. In 2015, Polish linguist Mirosław Jankowiak [pl] attested that many of the Vilnius Region's inhabitants who declare Polish nationality speak a Belarusian dialect which they call mowa prosta ('simple speech').
In 2023, Crimean Tatar journalist Ayder Muzhdabaev criticized Zianon Pazniak, Litvinists, their claims to Lithuania's history and capital Vilnius and concluded that such Litvinists should be deported from Lithuania with wolf's tickets.
See also
- Coat of arms of Lithuania
- Belarusian nationalism
- Belarusian national revival
- Lithuanian national revival
- Ethnographic Lithuania
- Lithuanians in Belarus
- Russification of Belarus
Notes
- The article of Darius Sutkus spells his name as I. Kulakovskis, i.e., Ignacijus Kulakovskis.
References
Citations
- ^ Sutkus 2020a.
- ^ Venckūnas, V. (29 September 2012). "Tomas Baranauskas: Litvinistams svarbiausia turėti gražią istoriją, kuri galėtų sutelkti tautą". Bernardinai.lt (in Lithuanian).
- Sąlygaitė, Jonė; Baranauskas, Tomas; Laužikas, Rimvydas. "Kaip užkirsti kelią litvinizmo apraiškoms?". Žinių radijas (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- Bružas, Rimas; Baranauskas, Tomas (6 September 2023). "Istorijos perimetrai. Litvinizmas - istorinė fikcija ar hibridinio karo dalis?". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ Savukynas, Virginijus. ""Istorijos detektyvai": kodėl Rusija siekia perrašyti Lietuvos istoriją?". 15min.lt, Lrt.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- ^ Savukynas, Virginijus (19 September 2023). ""Litvinizmo" šaknys slypi Rusijos imperinėje ideologijoje". Lithuanian National Television and Radio (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- Dubonis 2005, p. 520–521, 524.
- ^ Pazniak, Kiryla (10 October 2019). "80 гадоў без Вільні". Novy Chas (in Belarusian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ Arloŭ, Uladzimir; Navumčyk, Siarhiej; Katkoŭski, Uladzimir (11 December 2007). "Вільня, Вялікае Княства і Беларусь — поўны тэкст онлайнавай канфэрэнцыі з Уладзімерам Арловым". Radio Liberty (in Belarusian). Retrieved 20 October 2023.
Questions: "07/02/2005 14:24", "08/02/2005 09:39", "08/02/2005 12:10" and answers to them
- ^ "Lukašenka pareiškė, kad baltarusiai buvo LDK stuburas" [Lukashenko stated that the Belarusians were the backbone of the GDL]. Lithuanian National Radio and Television.
- ^ Gurevičius, Ainis. "Karininkas: jie kels ginklą prieš Lietuvą nuoširdžiai tikėdami, kad Vilnius priklauso jiems". Alfa.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- ^ Repečkaitė, Daiva (26 July 2022). "Medieval history powers a crisis of identity in Lithuania and Belarus". Coda. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- ^ Pazniak, Zianon (26 March 2023). "Вільня - наша. Пазняк пра тое, як падзяліць сталіцу з Літвой". YouTube.com (in Belarusian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- ^ Tsepkalo, Valery (28 December 2021). "ВКЛ. Маяк ДЕМОКРАТИИ. Авторский фильм Валерия Цепкало. (related timelapse from 6:20)". YouTube.com (in Russian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- ^ "Gluminantys baltarusių istoriko žodžiai: vientautis Vilnius yra nesąmonė". DELFI, LNK (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- Dubonis 2005, p. 521–522.
- ^ Grigaliūnaitė, Violeta. "Istorijos profesorius baltarusiškos televizijos BELSAT laidoje apie Vilnių: jį įkūrė baltarusiai". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- ^ Sanko, Zmicer (2 March 2020). "І ўсё ж — Літва ці Летува?". Радыё Свабода (in Belarusian). Retrieved 14 October 2023.
- ^ Арлоў, Уладзімер (7 October 2010). "Ці належала Вільня БССР?". Радыё Свабода (in Belarusian). Retrieved 21 October 2023.
- ^ Марзалюк, Ігар (18 March 2023). "Марзалюк: Вільня можа быць за межамі Беларусі, але заўсёды мусіць заставацца ў нашым сэрцы". Belarus-news.by (in Belarusian). Retrieved 31 October 2023.
- ^ Tinteris, Andrius; Ūsienė, Auksė (16 April 2024). "Istorikė A. Ūsienė apie baltarusių litvinistus: jie tampa rusiško pasaulio tikslo įgyvendintojais". Bernardinai.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 July 2024.
- ^ Salynė, Roberta. "Kai kurių baltarusių galvose lietuviai – tik lituvisai ar "žmudai": įrodinėjama, kad dabartinė mūsų tauta neturi nieko bendra su istorine Litva". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 13 September 2023.
- Strikulienė, Olava (16 April 2024). "Litvinizmas: sunerimti ar juoktis?". Respublika.lt (in Lithuanian).
- ^ Пазняк, Зянон (December 2016). "БЕЛАРУСЬ-ЛІТВА". Pazniak.info (in Belarusian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- ^ Краўцэвіч, Аляксандар (20 July 2023). "Чаму трэба казаць і "Літва", і "Летува". Аргумэнты гісторыка Алеся Краўцэвіча". Радыё Свабода (in Belarusian). Retrieved 14 October 2023.
- Bakaitė, Jurga (27 December 2011). "LRT FAKTAI. Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusių nacionalinio atgimimo?" (in Lithuanian). Lithuanian National Radio and Television.
- Baranauskas, Tomas; Ramanauskas, Algis (16 July 2015). ""Greiti Pietūs": Algis Ramanauskas ir Tomas Baranauskas". YouTube (in Lithuanian). Žinių radijas. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
- Baranauskas, Tomas; Baranauskienė, Inga; Ramanauskas, Algis (11 October 2019). "B&R Pristato: Istorikai Inga ir Tomas Baranauskai. LICVINIZMAS 20191010". YouTube. Bačiulis ir Ramanauskas. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
- Pancerovas, Dovydas. "Ar perrašinėjamos istorijos pasakų įkvėpta Baltarusija gali kėsintis į Rytų Lietuvą?" [Can Belarus, inspired by the fairy tales of rewritten history, invade Eastern Lithuania?]. 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2014.
- "Opinion: Why are our neighbours poaching our history?". Lithuania Tribune. 17 July 2014.
- ^ Viačorka, Vincuk; Šupa, Siarhiei (20 February 2020). "Чаму Літва, а не "Летува"". Radio Liberty (in Belarusian). Retrieved 14 October 2023.
- ^ Gaučaitė-Znutienė, Modesta; Skėrytė, Jūratė (23 August 2023). "Cichanouskaja apie litvinizmo apraiškas: tai kuriama dirbtinai, norint sukiršinti lietuvius ir baltarusius". Lithuanian National Radio and Television, Baltic News Service (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- ^ Valkauskas, Tomas (12 September 2023). "Litvinizmo baimė: ar Lietuva labiau pripratusi prie Lukašenkos, o ne demokratinės Baltarusijos?". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- "Gudijos fašistai atidarė filialą Vilniuj". Alkas.lt (in Lithuanian). 28 August 2023.
- ^ Venckūnas, Vilmantas (11 July 2024). "Baltarusių visuomeninės organizacijos Lietuvoje atsiriboja nuo litvinizmo". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 July 2024.
- ^ "Litwinizm – nowe zjawisko na Białorusi [Litvinism - a new phenomenon in Belarus]". Kresy.pl (in Polish). 24 July 2008.
- ^ Kirkevich, Ales (29 January 2017). ""Яшчэ не позна вярнуць краіне сапраўднае імя — Літва" ["It is not too late for returning to our state its real name: Lithuania"]". Novy Chas (in Belarusian).
- Kurdiukov, Oleg (30 September 2023). "Mūsų rusų gatvė. Litvinizmo įtaka baltarusių ir lietuvių santykiams bei "Caritas" parama Ukrainai". Lithuanian National Television and Radio (in Russian and Lithuanian). Retrieved 18 October 2023.
- ^ Палескі, Іван (6 August 2022). "Сярэдняя Літва. Мара Люцыяна Жалігоўскага". Новы Час. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- "Люциан Желиговский и его "Zapomniane prawdy (Забытые истины)"". History-belarus.by (in Russian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- Бычкоўскі, Валер (17 October 2017). "Люцыян Жалігоўскі: літвін, паляк ці беларус?". Новы Час (in Belarusian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- "Pramanytos Lietuvos Šmėkla". Voruta.lt. 10 January 2010.
- ^ Bakaitė, Jurga (27 December 2011). "LRT FAKTAI. Ar lietuviams reikia bijoti baltarusių nacionalinio atgimimo?" (in Lithuanian). Lithuanian National Radio and Television.
- "Grand duchy of Lithuania". Encyclopædia Britannica. 21 September 2023.
- Brückner, Aleksander (1988). Mikołaj Rej (in Polish). Państwowe Wydawn. Nauk. p. 14. ISBN 978-83-01-08023-5. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- ^ Griškaitė, Reda (2018). "Zalučės ir Bareikiškių šeimininko Vladislovo Sirokomlės istorikos" (PDF). Archivum Lithuanicum (in Lithuanian and Polish). 20: 49. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
- ^ Литвин, Игорь. "Где находилась летописная Литва". Litvin.by (in Russian). Archived from the original on 22 April 2021. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
- ^ Кіркевіч, Алесь. ""Ліцвіны": патрыёты, секта або агенты ФСБ?". Belsat.eu (in Belarusian). Archived from the original on 22 February 2020. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
- "Baltarusijos istorija". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ Mockienė, Jurgita; Spečiūnas, Vytautas. "Baltarusijos santykiai su Lietuva". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- ^ "Baltarusijos rada". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- Dubonis 2005, p. 524.
- ^ Lukšas, Aras. "Kaip Vilnius netapo Baltarusijos miestu". Lietuvos aidas (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 November 2023.
- ^ Sahanovič, Hienadź (2008). The Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a mirror of Belarusian historiography. Sejny: Fundacja Pogranicze. pp. 244–273. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- Dubonis 2005, p. 520–521.
- ^ "Як Сталін і Гітлер малявалі беларускія межы ў 1939-м". Radio Liberty (in Belarusian). Retrieved 21 October 2023.
- "Sovietų kariuomenė Vilniaus krašte 1939–1940 m. (iki Lietuvos okupacijos)". KGBveikla.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- Урбан, Паўла (1960–1964). "Пра нацыянальны характар Вялікага Княства Літоўскага й гістарычны тэрмін "Літва"". Knihi.com (in Belarusian). Retrieved 26 November 2023.
Mainly the last paragraph below "* * *" symbols
- Урбан, Паўла (1972). "У сьвятле гістарычных фактаў". Knihi.com (in Belarusian). Retrieved 26 November 2023.
Section "Літва-ліцьвіны - заходнепрыбалтыцкія славяне"
- ^ Dubonis 2005, p. 521.
- Dubonis 2005, p. 522.
- ^ Kuzmickas, Bronislovas; Plečkaitis, Vytautas Petras (2016). "Nelengva geros kaimynystės pradžia. Baltarusija" (PDF). Nepriklausomybės sąsiuviniai (in Lithuanian). 3 (17): 15–16, 78. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- "Belarus Official Lays Claim To Lithuanian Border Lands". The New York Times. 25 February 1992. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- ^ Leonavičiūtė-Gecevičienė, Rasa; Šadauskas, Vilius (2023). Lietuvos ir Baltarusijos kultūriniai ir istoriniai ryšiai (PDF) (in Lithuanian). Kaunas: Vytautas Magnus University. p. 48. ISBN 978-609-467-564-5. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Jonkus, Artūras (13 June 2024). "V. Baublys: "Pretenzijos į LDK istoriją buvo būdingos vadinamajai A. Lukašenkos opozicijai"". IQ.lt (in Lithuanian).
- Jonkus, Artūras (6 June 2024). "J. V. Paleckis: A. Lukašenka iš pradžių atmetė litvinizmo idėjas, bet po to ėmė jas skatinti". IQ.lt (in Lithuanian).
- "Lietuvos Respublikos ir Baltarusijos Respublikos sutartis dėl geros kaimynystės ir bendradarbiavimo". Official website of Seimas (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- ^ "Lukashenko and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania – appropriation of history or taking distance from Moscow?". Lithuanian National Radio and Television. 30 July 2022.
- "ЛИТВИНЫ - ИСТОРИЧЕСКАЯ ЕВРОПЕЙСКАЯ НАЦИЯ НА ТЕРРИТОРИИ БЕЛАРУСИ". Litvania.org (in Russian). Archived from the original on 8 October 2013.
- Rakicki, Viačaslaŭ; Trusaŭ, Alieh (22 February 2005). "Беларускія калёніі на беразе Балтыйскага мора – Інфляндзкае княства і Курляндыя". Радыё Свабода (in Belarusian). Retrieved 26 October 2023.
- Trusaŭ, Alieh (2 October 2016). "Алег Трусаў: Хай маладзейшыя бяруць уладу!". Novy Chas (in Belarusian). Retrieved 26 October 2023.
- Skobla, Michas; Trusaŭ, Alieh (13 October 2016). "Алег Трусаў выдаў "Гісторыю сярэднявечнай Еўропы" — гутарка". Nasha Niva (in Belarusian). Retrieved 26 October 2023.
- ^ Pazniak, Zianon (15 September 2005). "(Разьдзел з артыкула "Прамаскоўскі рэжым")". Bielarus.net (in Belarusian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- "Вялікае Княства Літоўскае Беларусь — пражэкцёрства ці візіянэрства?". Nasha Niva (in Belarusian). 11 November 2005. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- Coakley, Amanda (28 October 2022). "Inside the Fight To Preserve the Belarusian Language". Time. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- ^ "У Беларусі рыхтуецца святкаванне 1000-годдзя назвы Літва". European Radio for Belarus (in Belarusian). 22 January 2009. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
- Sahanovič, Hienadź; Kravtsevich, Alexander (31 August 2009). "Гісторыя пад знакам Пагоні. Вітаўт". БЕЛСАТ NEWS (in Belarusian). Retrieved 30 December 2023.
- "В Минске вышла книга Вадима Деружинского "Тайны белорусской истории"". Budzma.org (in Russian). Retrieved 23 December 2023.
- "Беларусы прапануюць адраджэньне ВКЛ – 23.04.1918". Radabnr.org (in Belarusian). 13 November 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- Пазняк, Зянон. "ГЭТА СЛОВА САКРАЛЬНАЕ. АБ НЕКАТОРЫХ АСПЭКТАХ БЕЛАРУСКАГА АДРАДЖЭНЬНЯ І ПАРАЗЫ РУСКАЙ ПАЛІТЫКІ". Pazniak.info (in Belarusian). Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- ^ Sutkus, Darius (2020b). "Litvinizmas II: Baltarusija – ideologinės kovos laukas". Karys (in Lithuanian). 2.
- Pankūnė, Dainora. "Kokiu tikslu Lukašenka svaidosi išgalvotais kaltinimais: ar baltarusių pajėgos ruošiasi naujiems iššūkiams". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- Rimkevičienė, Liepa; Jakilaitis, Edmundas. "Dekonstrukcijos. Rusija propagandos mašina taikosi ne tik į LDK, Vilnių, bet ir Žalgirio mūšį". DELFI. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
- "Редактор "Эха Москвы": Руководство России относится к Беларуси, как к Крыму". Ex-press.live (in Belarusian). 16 December 2018. Retrieved 18 November 2023.
- ^ Rimkevičienė, Liepa; Jakilaitis, Edmundas. "Dekonstrukcijos. Rusija propagandos mašina taikosi ne tik į LDK, Vilnių, bet ir Žalgirio mūšį". DELFI, Laisvės TV (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- ^ Dilius, Rimgaudas (7 December 2019). "Kas ir kodėl skatina litvinizmą?". Alkas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- Kraucewicz, Alaksandr (30 May 2017). "Вялікае Княства Літоўскае – Беларусь ці Летува? / Загадкі беларускай гісторыі" [Grand Duchy of Lithuania – Belarus or Lithuania?]. БЕЛСАТ NEWS (in Belarusian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- Kraucewicz, Alaksandr (14 January 2019). "Вільня як нашая сталіца / Загадкі беларускай гісторыі" [Vilnius as our capital / Riddles of the history of Belarus]. БЕЛСАТ HISTORY (in Belarusian). Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- "Intermarium – гістарычнае ток-шоў". Belsat.eu. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- "Intermarium". Naviny.belsat.eu. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- "Pietryčių Lietuvoje pradėtos retransliuoti dvi naujos televizijos programos". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). 3 June 2022. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
- "Ад рэдакцыяў першых газетаў да ўлюбёнага бару Караткевіча: беларускія месцы Вільні". Belsat.eu (in Belarusian). 19 November 2022.
- "Люцыян Жалігоўскі. Стваральнік самаабвешчанай дзяржавы Сярэдняя Літва". БЕЛСАТ HISTORY (in Belarusian). 9 October 2023. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- Краўцэвіч, Аляксандар (29 November 2022). "Літва - ЯКАЯ сапраўдная і ДЗЕ яна?". YouTube.com (in Belarusian). Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- "Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic via Twitter". Twitter (in Belarusian). 23 April 2020. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- ^ "TV3 Žinios. Siaubo diena Izraelyje; Litvinistai grasina Lietuvos politikams; Didmiesčiai griežtina automobilių stovėjimo kontrolę (related timelapse from 9:28)". TV3.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- "Прэзыдыюм – Рада Беларускай Народнай Рэспублікі" [Presidium - the Council of the Belarusian People's Republic] (in Belarusian). Retrieved 6 September 2021.
- Čajčyc, Aleś (13 August 2021). "Будзьма беларусамі! » Хобі для эрудытаў: абараняць "Пагоню" ў галоўнай сусветнай энцыклапедыі" [Hobbies for scholars: to defend the Pahonia in the world's major encyclopedia]. Будзтма беларусамі (in Belarusian).
- "Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic". Twitter. 23 September 2021.
- "A. Lukašenka: Balstogė ir Vilnius yra Baltarusijos miestai". Lrytas.lt (in Lithuanian). 19 September 2021. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- "Лукашенко: необходима адекватная оценка времён ВКЛ и Речи Посполитой". Soyuz.by (in Russian). 6 January 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- Romanenko, Valentyna. "Lukashenko regime deems "Long live Belarus!" to be Nazi slogan". Ukrainska Pravda. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
- "2022 Country Report on Human Rights Practices: Belarus". U.S. Embassy in Belarus. 25 May 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
- "Baltarusų opozicionierius Zenon Pazniak teigia, kad LDK ir Vilnius yra baltarusų". YouTube.com (in Belarusian and Lithuanian). 19 August 2023.
- Pazniak, Zianon (25 March 2023). "ПАЗНЯК: як беларусы стварылі краіну, Вільня – наша, Дзень Волі – галоўнае свята, БНР – 105 год (related timelapse: from 48:10 to 01:11:32)". YouTube.com (in Belarusian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- Пазняк, Зянон. "Ідэалы БНР у рэчышчы геапалітыкі". Pazniak.info (in Belarusian). Retrieved 9 October 2023.
- Гурневіч, Дзьмітры (21 November 2022). "Дэпутат Марзалюк 13 хвілінаў бараніў на СТВ "Пагоню". Але ёсьць нюанс". Радыё Свабода (in Belarusian). Retrieved 31 October 2023.
- "Презентация книги "Сімвалы беларускай вечнасці: гісторыя сімвалаў беларускай дзяржаўнасці" состоялась в БГУ". Белару́скі дзяржа́ўны ўніверсітэ́т (in Russian). Retrieved 31 October 2023.
- Марзалюк, Íhar. "Сімвалы беларускай вечнасці: гісторыя сімвалаў беларускай дзяржаўнасці". Izdatelstvo.by (in Belarusian). Retrieved 31 October 2023.
- Kojala, Linas (1 February 2021). "Ką baltarusiai mano apie Rusiją ir Lietuvą". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 13 September 2023.
- "Mityng la ambasady Žmudzi suprać dyskryminacyji Biełarusaŭ - Licvinaŭ j kradziež spadčyny Litvy". YouTube.com (in Belarusian). 25 April 2023. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
- "Российский депутат заявил о создании движения за независимость Смоленской области от РФ". The New Voice of Ukraine (in Russian). Retrieved 26 December 2023.
- ^ "Aleś Čajčyc via Facebook". Facebook.com. 26 August 2023. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- Чайчыц, Алесь (22 August 2023). "Бессэнсоўная, але непазьбежная спрэчка. Чаму настаў час дамовіцца, што ВКЛ — агульная спадчына". Радыё Свабода (in Belarusian). Retrieved 26 December 2023.
- "Aleś Čajčyc via Facebook". Facebook.com (in Belarusian). 26 October 2023. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- "Aleś Čajčyc via Facebook". Facebook.com. 27 October 2023. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- "Вільня і Варшава нашы: чаму беларусы за іх б'юцца, але не будуць захопліваць | Ток-шоу Сугак". YouTube.com (in Belarusian). 5 November 2023. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- "Baltarusių istoriko žodžiai Lietuvoje sukėlė šoką". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 26 November 2023.
pasakiau apmaudžią kvailystę
- Дзермант, Аляксей. "Вильно – белорусский город". Telegram (in Russian). Retrieved 1 December 2023.
- "Алексей Дзермант о бчб-символике: "Совершенно несостоятельны аргументы, что под этим флагом не совершались преступления"" (in Russian). Archived from the original on 4 February 2021.
- Спаткай, Леонид. "Великие победы белорусов". Charter 97 (in Russian). Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- "Šiaulių mūšis". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian).
- Pazniak, Zenon (24 March 2024). "Дзень Волі 2024". ВОЛЬНАЯ БЕЛАРУСЬ via YouTube.com (in Belarusian). Retrieved 24 March 2024.
- Datkūnas, Dominykas (19 January 2025). "Į kritiką dėl pasų sureagavo Cichanouskajos atstovas: „Pagonia" nėra lietuviškas Vytis". Lithuanian National Radio and Television, ELTA.
- ^ Sąlygaitė, Jonė (18 January 2025). "Baltarusijos opozicijos užmojis įžiebė aštrias diskusijas: atskirkime, kas yra priešai, o kas – draugai". DELFI, Žinių radijas (in Lithuanian).
- Stanevičiūtė, Deimantė (16 February 2024). "Baltarusijos opozicijos Lietuvoje sukurtas pasas kelia aistras: dalį Lietuvos priskyrė Baltarusijai, už klaidą atsiprašo". Alfa.lt.
- Ragauskienė, Raimonda (2013). "Kalbinė padėtis Lietuvos Didžiojoje Kunigaikštystėje (iki XVI a. vid.): interpretacijos istoriografijoje". Lituanistica (in Lithuanian). 59 (3(93)). Lithuanian Academy of Sciences: 148–149. doi:10.6001/lituanistica.v59i3.2730. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- Dubonis 2016, p. 5–7, 24–25.
- "1613-ųjų Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunigaikštijos žemėlapis" (PDF) (in Lithuanian). Bank of Lithuania. 2013: 1. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Dubonis, Artūras. "The Myth of Navahrudak | Orbis Lituaniae". LDKistorija.lt. Vilnius University. Retrieved 20 October 2023.
- ^ Spečiūnas, Vytautas. "Didžioji Lietuva" [Lithuania proper]. Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- ^ Minkevičius, Jonas; Jasas, Rimantas; Vidugiris, Aloyzas. "Gardinas". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- ^ Ereminas, Gintautas; Garšva, Kazimieras. "Lyda". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- ^ Garšva, Kazimieras; Gaučas, Petras. "Breslauja". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- Bružas, Rimas; Baranauskas, Tomas (6 September 2023). "Istorijos perimetrai. Litvinizmas - istorinė fikcija ar hibridinio karo dalis?". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- Laurinkus, Mečys. "Litvinizmas ir jo pavojai: ką apie jį žino Lietuvoje ir Baltarusijoje?". Lrytas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- Milašius, Arūnas; Rakutis, Valdas (23 September 2023). "Tylusis istorijos pagrobimas. Litvinizmas - kas tai?". Paninfo.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- Matusas, Jonas (1952). "Dėlko baltgudžiai savinasi Lietuva?" (PDF). Draugas (in Lithuanian): 6. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
- "Dėlko baltgudžiai savinasi Lietuva?" (PDF). Mūsų Lietuva (in Lithuanian). 188 (5): 4. 1953. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
- Biržiška, Mykolas (1955). "Apie lietuvių ir gudų santykius" (PDF). Santarvė (in Lithuanian). 4 (5): 4-5 (158-159).
- Gudavičius, Edvardas (1996). "Following the Tracks of a Myth". Lithuanian Historical Studies. 1 (1): 38–58. doi:10.30965/25386565-00101003. S2CID 231347582. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- ^ Zinkevičius, Zigmas (2006). "Lietuviu etnogenezė ir Gudija". Acta Baltico-Slavica (in Lithuanian). 30. Warsaw: 27–29. Retrieved 28 October 2023.
- Трашчанок, Якаў (2003). История Беларуси, часть 1, Досоветский период. Могилев: Министерством образования Республики Беларусь. p. 45.
- ^ "Baltarusijos lietuviai". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 10 October 2023.
- Gaučas, Petras; Universitetas, Vilniaus (1997). "Etnolingvistinė Rytų Lietuvos gyventojų raida XVII a. antrojoje pusėje - 1939 m: istorinė-geografinė analizė". Lituanistika (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- Vidugiris, Aloyzas (1994). "Dėl pietryčių Lietuvos ankstyvųjų slavėjimo tarpsnių". Lietuvių kalbotyros klausimai (in Lithuanian and German). XXXIV: 75–83. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- Staliūnas, Darius. "Rusinimas". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- Rowell, Stephen Christopher (2003). Chartularium Lithuaniae res gestas magni ducis Gedeminne illustrans (in German and Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vaga [lt]. pp. 380–385. ISBN 5-415-01700-3. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- Vytautas the Great; Valkūnas, Leonas (translation from Latin). Vytauto laiškai [ Letters of Vytautas the Great ] (PDF) (in Lithuanian). Vilnius University, Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore. p. 6. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
Juk pirmiausia Jūs padarėte ir paskelbėte sprendimą dėl Žemaičių žemės, kuri yra mūsų paveldėjimas ir mūsų tėvonija iš teisėtos prosenolių bei senolių įpėdinystės. Ją ir dabar nuosavybėje turime, ji dabar yra ir visada buvo viena ir ta pati Lietuvos žemė, nes yra viena kalba bei tie patys gyventojai. Bet kadangi Žemaičių žemė yra žemiau negu Lietuvos žemė, todėl ir vadinama Žemaitija, nes taip lietuviškai yra vadinama žemesnė žemė. O žemaičiai Lietuvą vadina Aukštaitija, t. y. iš Žemaičių žiūrint, aukštesne žeme. Taip pat Žemaitijos žmonės nuo senų laikų save vadino lietuviais ir niekada žemaičiais, ir dėl tokio tapatumo (sic) savo rašte mes nerašome apie Žemaitiją, nes viskas yra viena, vienas kraštas ir tie patys gyventojai.
- Dubonis 2016, p. 7.
- Gimžauskas, Edmundas (2005). "LDK idėjos likimas XX a. Lietuvos bei Baltarusijos valstybingumų dirvoje". Naujasis Židinys-Aidai (in Lithuanian): 528. Retrieved 10 October 2023.
- Kuolys, Darius. "Tadas Kosciuška". Šaltiniai.info (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- ^ Zinkevičius, Zigmas. "Lietuvos vardas". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Ūsienė, Auksė. Lietuvos karaliai arba Lietuvos valstybės statusas XIII–XIV a. (PDF) (in Lithuanian). Ministry of National Defence of Lithuania. p. 7.
- Baranauskas, Tomas. "Medieval Lithuania – Sources 1283–1386". Viduramziu.istorija.net (in English and Latin). Archived from the original on 8 April 2022.
- "Knyga nobažnystės krikščioniškos (1684)". Wroblewski Library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Milius, Vacys. "Aukštaičiai". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Tautavičius, Adolfas; Vyšniauskaitė, Angelė. "Aukštaitija". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Rowell, Stephen Christopher (1994). Lithuania Ascending: A Pagan Empire Within East-Central Europe, 1295-1345. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-107-65876-9. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Baranauskas, Tomas (2006). "Aukštaitija XIII–XV amžiuje". Aukštaičių tapatumo paieškos: Straipsnių rinkinys (in Lithuanian). Kaunas: Žiemgalos leidykla: 32. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- "Gediminaičiai". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 25 October 2023.
- ^ Bertulienė, Sigita. "Kaip vadinti sostinei vardą davusią upę?". Vilnius City Municipality (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- ^ "Vilnius Lietuva". Lithuaniainworld.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- "Gedimino kalnas keletą šimtmečių buvo "sala"". MadeinVilnius.lt (in Lithuanian). 24 January 2021. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- "Kas yra Vilnia?". Žodynas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- "Kas yra Vilnis?". Žodynas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- "Kas yra Vilnyti?". Žodynas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- Gudvičius, Edvardas. "Vilniaus kunigaikštystė". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2 November 2023.
- Media, Fresh. "Act of 16 February". Official website of the Constitutional Court of Lithuania.
- "The Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania". Official website of the Seimas.
- Dubonis 2005, p. 524–525.
- "Ministerija: Rusijos ir Baltarusijos taikiniai - Lietuvos viduramžių istorija". KaunoDiena.lt (in Lithuanian). 30 December 2013.
- ^ Ignatavičius, Tadas; Bumblauskas, Alfredas (1 July 2014). "A. Bumblauskas: "Baltarusiai seniai yra pasisavinę LDK istoriją"". Lrytas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 21 October 2023.
- ^ "Lietuvoje gyvenantys baltarusiai įkūrė klubą: Šaulių sąjunga jau nutraukė bendradarbiavimą". DELFI, LNK.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- "Litvinai, VšĮ". Rekvizitai.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- Vasiliauskas, Mindaugas. "Lietuvai priekaištų pažėrę baltarusiai apie LDK šaknis: "Gal laimėsim, tada pasiaiškinsim"". TV3.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- Lyberytė, Augustė. "Kasčiūnui neramu dėl baltarusių pretenzijų į Lietuvos tapatybei svarbius simbolius: turime nusibrėžti raudonas linijas". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 7 October 2023.
- "Lopata ragina kurti nacionalinę strategiją Baltarusijos atžvilgiu: siūlo uždaryti sieną, kovoti su litvinizmu". Lithuanian National Radio and Television, ELTA (in Lithuanian). 16 August 2023. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- Miliūtė, Rita (27 August 2023). "Europarlamentaras Auštrevičius: turime būti budrūs, bet nepradėti taikyti neprotingų apribojimų baltarusiams". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- Lopata, Raimundas. "Kodėl baltarusių emigracijai rūpi Vilnius, o ne kova už Baltarusijos laisvę?". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- ^ Jakučionis, Saulius (24 August 2023). "Litvinism not a threat to Lithuania, but may stoke tensions – intelligence". Lithuanian National Radio and Television, Baltic News Service. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- ^ "Litvinizmas". State Security Department of Lithuania via Facebook (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- "Grėsme Lietuvos nacionaliniam saugumui pripažinti 910 baltarusių ir 254 rusai". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). 4 August 2023. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- Sinica, Vytautas (30 August 2023). "Litvinizmas ir baltarusių problema". Lithuanian National Television and Radio (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- Sinica, Vytautas (30 November 2023). "XFM Pokalbis: apie baltarusių imigraciją į Lietuvą ir litvinizmą (related timelapse from 5:00)". XFM via YouTube.com (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 29 December 2023.
- "Amendments to the law: the historical flag of Lithuania can be hoisted at border checkpoints". MadeinVilnius.lt, ELTA. 14 September 2023. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- ^ Balcerytė, Emilija (30 September 2023). "Dėl litvinizmo susitarti nepavyksta: ekspertams tai pseudomokslas, NSGK atstovams – propagandos mašina". Lithuanian National Radio and Television (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 26 November 2023.
- "2023-10-02 Diskusija "LITVINIZMAS": kilmė, įtaka ir iššūkiai baltarusių ir lietuvių santykiams". Seimas via YouTube (in Lithuanian). 2 October 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- "Seime ieškos būdo, kaip stabdyti radikaliojo litvinizmo ideologiją". Liberalai.lt (in Lithuanian). 28 September 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- Lopata, Raimundas (9 October 2023). "Apie geopolitinį Baltarusijos pasirinkimą". DELFI (in Lithuanian).
- "Paminklą lietuviui atidengę baltarusiai: "Į Lydą pagaliau grįžo šeimininkas"". Lietuvos rytas (in Lithuanian). 19 September 2019.
- Krishtapovich, Lev (21 November 2016). "Общерусская культура как основа белорусской идентичности" [All-Russian culture as the basis of Belarusian identity]. Regnum.ru (in Russian).
- Yeliseyeu, Andrei; Laputska, Veranika (2016). "Anti-Belarus disinformation in Russian media: Trends, features, countermeasures" (PDF). EAST Media Review (1): 11.
- ^ Bumblauskas, Alfredas; Jegelevic̆ius, Sigitas; Potašenko, Grigorijus; Pšibilskis, Vygintas Bronius (2009). Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunigaikštijos tradicija ir tautiniai naratyvai (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vilniaus universiteto leidykla. pp. 19–21. ISBN 978-9955-33-500-9. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Платонов, О. А. "Прибалтика // Большая энциклопедия русского народа / Институт Русской Цивилизации". Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Широкорад, А. Б (2004). "Русь и Литва. Рюриковичи против Гедеминовичей" (in Russian). Москва.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Katinas, Petras. ""Didysis brolis" peržengia visas ribas". Xxiamzius.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Norkus, Zenonas (2007). "The Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Retrospective of Comparative Historical Sociology of Empires" (PDF). World Political Science Review (in Lithuanian). 3 (4): 3. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Jakštas, Juozas. "Russian historiography on the origin of the Lithuanian state: some critical remarks on V. T. Pashuto's Study". Lituanus.org. Archived from the original on 9 August 2022. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Курукин И. Великая Литва или «альтернативная» Русь? Вокруг cвета, Январь 2007. № 1 (2796).
- Laužikas, Rimvydas. "Lietuvos stačiatikių metropolija". Aruodai.lt, Lietuvos istorijos institutas (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Mockus, Vitalijus. "Lietuvos Stačiatikių Bažnyčia". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- Pusčius, Šarūnas. "LDK santvarka - liberali ar katalikiška? (I)". Fsspx.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- ^ Baronas, Darius (30 April 2020). "Algirdas – "stačiatikis"". LDKistorija.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- "The origins of the Grand Duchy of Litva (Lithuania)". Belarusguide.com. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
- ^ "Metr. Josifas Semaška – ar "Vakarų Rusios" ideologijos simbolis bus paskelbtas Maskvos patriarchato šventuoju?". Ortodoksas.lt (in Lithuanian). 17 September 2022. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- "Belarusian Church celebrates anniversary of council that brought 1.5 million Uniates back to Orthodoxy". OrthoChristian.Com. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- Žalys, Leonas. "Paslaptinga šventė Rusijoje". Kauno.diena.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- ^ Iškauskas, Česlovas. "Tautos vienybės diena – paprasto putinizmo išraiška". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- ^ Saldžiūnas, Vaidas. "Skandalingas Putino laiškas – grėsmingas signalas ne tik Ukrainai: Lietuva paminėta neatsitiktinai". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- Saldžiūnas, Vaidas. "Besišypsančio V. Putino perspėjimas pasauliui: Rusijos sienos niekur nesibaigia". DELFI (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- "Medvedevo paskyroje – skandalingas įrašas: leisimės į kitą žygį". DELFI, ELTA (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 10 September 2023.
- "Lithuania - History". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- ^ "Belarus - Lithuanian and Polish rule". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- Smith, Whitney. "Flag of Belarus". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- Toynbee, Arnold Joseph (1948). A Study Of History (Volume II) (Fourth impression ed.). Great Britain: Oxford University Press. p. 172. Retrieved 4 July 2021.
- Snyder, Timothy D. (24 September 2022). "Timothy Snyder: The Making of Modern Ukraine. Class 6: The Grand Duchy of Lithuania (related timelapse: from 29:14 to 38:13)". YouTube.com. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
- Dubonis, Artūras (2002). "Lietuvių kalba: poreikis ir vartojimo mastai : XV a. antra pusė - XVI a. pirma pusė". Naujasis židinys–Aidai. 9–10: 473–478.
- ^ Zinkevičius, Zigmas. "Lietuvių kalbos kilmė" [The Origin of the Lithuanian Language]. Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 16 October 2023.
- Bednarczuk, Leszek. Wydaje się, że odrębny etnos i język białoruski wytworzył się dzięki przynależności do Welkiego Księstwa Litewskiego, którego polityczne granice okreslają omal do kładnie zasięg etnograficznej Białorusi. pp. 47–48.
- Palionis, Jonas (2012). "Leszek Bednarczuk. Językowy obraz Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. Millenium Lithuaniae MIX–MMIX" (PDF). Acta Linguistica Lithuanica (in Lithuanian) (LXVI). Lithuanian Language Institute: 174. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- Nitsch, Kazimierz; Otrębski, Jan (1931). "Język Polski. 1931, nr 3 (maj/czerwiec)" (in Polish). Polska Akademia Umiejętności, Komisja Języka Polskiego: 80–85. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - Martinkėnas, Vincas (19 December 2016). "Vilniaus ir jo apylinkių čiabuviai". Alkas.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- Jankowiak, Miroslaw (26 August 2015). ""Mowa prosta" jest dla mnie synonimem gwary białoruskiej" (in Polish). Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- Муждабаєв, Айдер. "ЛИТВИНИСТОВ — ВОН ИЗ ЛИТВЫ. Отрицание Литвы = депортация". YouTube.com. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
- Муждабаєв, Айдер. "БІДОРУСИ – ЦЕ ГРИБИ. Інакше важко пояснити їхні претензії до литовців". Українська правда. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
Bibliography
- Budreckis, Algirdas (1967). "ETNOGRAFINĖS LIETUVOS RYTINĖS IR PIETINĖS SIENOS". Karys (in Lithuanian).
- Hesch, Michael (1933). Letten, Litauer, Weissrussen (in German). Wien.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Sutkus, Darius (2020a). "Litvinizmas: istorija, prielaidos, perspektyvos". Karys (in Lithuanian). 1: 3–9.
- Sutkus, Darius (2020b). "Litvinizmas II: Baltarusija – ideologinės kovos laukas". Karys (in Lithuanian). 2: 4–10.
- Dubonis, Artūras (2005). "Saldus lietuvių gyvenimas "svetimu pasu"" (PDF). Naujasis Židinys-Aidai (in Lithuanian).
- Dubonis, Artūras (2016). "The Prestige and decline of the official (state) language in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (fifteenth-sixteenth century): problems in Belarusian historiography". Lithuanian Historical Studies. 20: 1–30. doi:10.30965/25386565-02001002. S2CID 217985575.