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Council of Liubech

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TheCouncil of Liubech (sometimes referred to as theLiubech Conference)[1] (Ukrainian:Лю́бецький з'їзд,romanizedLiubetskyy z’ïzd, Russian:Любечский съезд,romanized:Lyubyechski cyozd) was one of the best documented princely meetings inKievan Rus' that took place inLiubech (today inChernihiv Oblast,Ukraine) on October 19, 1097.[2] The council ended theChernihiv war of succession [uk;ru] (1093–1097) betweenSviatopolk II of Kiev,Vladimir II Monomakh andOleg I of Chernigov who fought for the heritage of his fatherSviatoslav II of Kiev.[3]

Monument in Liubech (1997) byGiennadij Jerszow

The council, initiated by Vladimir Monomakh, brought together Sviatopolk II,Vasylko Rostyslavych,Davyd Sviatoslavich, Oleg I, and other Rus' princes. It aimed to stop the Chernigov war of succession,[4] to pacify the people, and to present a unified front against thePolovtsy (Cumans). It resulted in the division ofKievan Rus' among the princes, letting their immediate families inherit them. This broke arota system (lestvichnoe pravo) that had been followed in Kievan Rus' for two centuries which saw the oldest son take the throne and was ruled by a succession of the eldest. Further, rulership of certain regions were never stable but shifted gradually upwards.[2]

As a result, each prince within Kievan Rus’ was given his principality as patrimonial domain.[5]

Following the conference in the second-quarter of the 12th century, historical chronicles began mentioning local princes as the growing issue became the regularization of relations between local princes and their individual clan estates, orprincipalities.[6]

Allocation

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The Council assigned/confirmed the principalities as follows:

Of the remaining"outcast" princes:

Result

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This change effectively established afeudal system in Kievan Rus'.[citation needed] It stopped the struggle forChernigov, but was not observed perfectly. After the death of Sviatopolk in 1113, the citizens of Kyiv revolted and summoned Monomakh to the throne. Nevertheless, the new dispensation allowed other principalities to consolidate their power and to develop as powerful regional centers: most notablyGalicia-Volhynia andVladimir-Suzdal. Further, the conference resulted in numerous policy developments including continued progress towards the Kievan Russian legal code known as the "Russian Truth" and the historigraphical chronicle known as "The Initial Code."[10]

Despite the conference's larger goal of uniting the Kievan princes against theCumans (otherwise known as the Polovtsians), the feuding did not end between the princes and instead led to continued conflicts. The blinding of David Igorevich byVsevolod I of Kiev acted as a catalyst for continued warring which led to Vladimir II to organize theVytychiv Congress on August 10, 1100.[11]

Monuments

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  • 1997: Monument to the Lyubech Congress of Princes (Gennady Ershov, Ukraine)

See also

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References

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  1. ^Gerasimov, Ilya (2023)."Political Ecology".A New Imperial History of Northern Eurasia, 600–1700:5–35.doi:10.5040/9781350196834.0005.
  2. ^ab"Состоялся Любечский съезд русских князей".Президентская библиотека имени Б.Н. Ельцина (in Russian). Retrieved2024-01-06.
  3. ^Martin 1995, p. 30–32, 55.
  4. ^Martin 1995, p. 55.
  5. ^Curta, Florin (2019).Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages (500-1300) (2 Vols). Boston: BRILL. p. 301.ISBN 978-90-04-39519-0.OCLC 1111434007.
  6. ^Gerasimov (2023): 131.
  7. ^abcMartin 2007, p. 37.
  8. ^abcGerasimov (2023): 106.
  9. ^Council of LiubechArchived 2010-01-23 at theWayback Machine at the Handbook on History of Ukraine.
  10. ^"Любечский съезд 1097".Большая российская энциклопедия (in Russian). 2023-08-17. Retrieved2024-01-06.
  11. ^"Vytychiv congress of princes".www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved2024-01-06.

Bibliography

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