-
House of
Gediminas (Lithuanian: Gediminaičių dinastija), or
simply the
Gediminids, were a
dynasty of
monarchs in the
Grand Duchy of
Lithuania that reigned...
- of
Gediminas (Lithuanian: Gediminaičių stulpai, lit. 'Pillars of the
Gediminids'; Belarusian: Калюмны, romanized: Kaliumny, 'Columns') are one of the...
- The
Prince of
Novgorod (Russian: князь новгородский, romanized: knyaz novgorodsky) was the
title of the
ruler of
Novgorod in present-day Russia. From 1136...
- (Russian: Бельский; plural: Бельские) was a
Ruthenianized princely family of
Gediminid origin in the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It
later defected to the Grand...
-
brought under his rule
lands from the
Baltic Sea to the
Black Sea. The
Gediminids dynasty he
founded and
which is
named after him came to rule over Poland...
-
dynasty in
Poland that
bears his name and was
previously also
known as the
Gediminid dynasty in the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The
dynasty ruled both states...
- Knights, a long-standing enemy, and
depicted Gediminas,
ancestor of the
Gediminids dynasty, as a
hostler of Vytenis. In this new
Lithuanian chronicle, Palemon...
- of
other countries by the
patrilineal members of the
Lithuanian ruling Gediminid dynasty, who
since the 14th–15th
centuries ruled not only Lithuania, but...
- kept separate. The
Jagiellon dynasty was a
direct continuation of the
Gediminids. The Polish–Lithuanian
Commonwealth was
established by the
Union of Lublin...
-
knights promised to
support Vytautas in the east and not to
support any
Gediminid who
could have
claims to the
title of
Grand Duke of Lithuania. However...