Jan Hieronimowicz Chodkiewicz

Jan Hieronimowicz Chodkiewicz (Lithuanian: Jonas Chodkevičius, Belarusian: Ян Геранімавіч Хадкевіч) (c. 1537 – 4 August 1579) was a 16th-century Lithuanian noble. He was Grand Pantler of Lithuania from 1559, Elder of Samogitia (1564–1579), Governor of Livonia (1566–1578), Grand Marshal of Lithuania (1566–1579), Count of Shklow 1568, Castellan of Vilnius (1574–1579). He was the elder of Telšiai and Plateliai from 1566, of Rumšiškės from 1568, and of Kaunas from 1569.

Jonas Jeronimaitis Chodkevicius
Governor of Livonia
Coat of arms Kościesza odm. Chodkiewicz
Tenure1566–1578
Born1537
Died4 August 1579 (aged 42)
Vilnius
BuriedVilnius Cathedral
FamilyChodkiewicz
ConsortKrystyna Zborowska h. Jastrzębiec
IssueAleksander
Jan Karol
Hieronim
Zofia Drohostajska
Anna, Princess Joachim Korecki
Aleksandara, Princess Adam Wiśniowiecki
Elżbieta, Princess Jan Żyliński
FatherHieronim Chodkiewicz h. Kościesza
MotherAnna Szemetówna h. Łabędź


Early life

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He was one of the most famous Lithuanian magnates of the 16th century. He was raised a Calvinist. He studied at the Universities of Königsberg (which he entered in 1547), Leipzig (1550), and Wittenberg.[1] He served in the court of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V from 1552 to 1555.[1] He returned to Lithuania in 1555.[1]

Military service

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From 1559, Jan Chodkiewicz defended the Livonian Confederation with the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army against the Muscovites during the Livonian War.[1] He hired 1,200 cavalry at his own expense to defend Livonia.[1] With the help of Michael Radziwiłł, Grand Chancellor of Lithuania, he succeeded in attaching Livonia to Lithuania. But this territory remained for long the main target of Russian attacks.

In 1564, he became Elder of Samogitia, in 1566 Grand Marshal of Lithuania and governor of Livonia (1566–78).[1] As governor of Livonia, he was headquartered at Sigulda near Riga. The Lithuanian nobles obliged Chodkevičius in the Brasta sejm to implement the union between Livonia and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, as well as to join it with Riga and Swedish-occupied Tallinn.[1] As a result, Chodkevičius managed to reach an agreement with Livonian representatives in the sejm of Cēsis.[1] Livonia was given his coat of arms.[1]

During the battles with the Muscovite army in 1568, he led the Grand Ducal Lithuanian Army in the Battle of Ula.[1] In 1578, he participated in the Livonian campaign of Stephen Báthory, the ruler of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, to retake Polotsk.[1]

Union of Lublin and thereafter

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During the preparation of the documents of the Union of Lublin (1569), he persistently defended the state interests of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and led its delegation.[1] Just like his uncle, he was a strong opponent to the Polish–Lithuanian union at Lublin.[citation needed] The Lithuanian delegation to the meetings preparing the Act of Union between Poland and Lithuania was led by Jan, who insisted in a long impassioned speech on the equality and independence of the two nations. Finally "bowing to the king's power, he pointed out those parts of the Act of Union which were unacceptable to Lithuania and he stated that he yielded to the King's will only with the deepest sorrow".[2] In practice the Union of Lublin in 1569 made sure that the Grand Duchy of Lithuania retained its own form of government and separate laws until the end of the joint state in 1795.[citation needed]

He supported the candidacies of the French Henri de Valois, the Russian Ivan IV the Terrible, and the Hungarian Stephen Báthory to the throne of the ruler of the Republic of the Two Nations.[1] In 1574, he became Castellan of Vilnius.[1] Due to health problems and military failures, he refused the position of Governor of Livonia and was dismissed in 1578.[3] He converted to Roman Catholicism from Protestantism in 1572.[3] He became a great benefactor to the Jesuits.

He contributed to the founding of Vilnius University and supported the chronicler Maciej Stryjkowski.[3]

Family

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He married the Calvinist Krystyna Zborowska before 1559 in Kraków, daughter of Marcin Zborowski, castellan of Krakow, and Anna Konarska. She remained Calvinist despite his conversion and raised some of their daughters in that religion despite their father's will.

They had issue: Hieronim was born at Vilnius in 1559; Aleksander at Trakai in 1560; Jan Karol at Vilnius in 1560–61; Anna at Vilnius in 1562; Zofia at Vilnius in 1564, Elzbieta at Vilnius in 1568; and Aleksandra at Vilnius in 1576.

He died on 4 August 1579 and was buried in Vilnius Cathedral.

Marriage and issue

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Jan Hieronim married Krystyna Zborowska h. Jastrzębiec (c. 1540–1588), daughter of Marcin Zborowski h. Jastrzębiec and Anna Konarska h. Abdank, the daughter of Stanisław Konarski h. Abdank and Zofia Lanckorońska h. Zadora, in 1559, and had seven children:[4]

Ancestry

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Anna of RiazanFyodor BielskiChodko Jurewicz
Jarosław HołwczyńskiJawnuta BielskaIvan Chodkiewicz
Elzbieta HlebowiczównaMelchior SzemetWasylissa HołowczyńskaAleksander Chodkiewicz
Anna SzemetównaHieronim Chodkiewicz
Jan Hieronimowicz Chodkiewicz
 
Vilnius Cathedral, place of Jan's burial

See also

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Sources

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Danuta Bogdan, Students of the Republic at the University of Königsberg, in Królewice and Poland, Olsztyn 1993, p 82.

Leszek Kieniewicz the Senate for the Stefan Batory Foundation, Warsaw 2000, p 299.

Joseph Janowski: Jan Chodkiewicz Hieronimowicz. In: Polish Biographical Dictionary . T. 3: Brozek Jan – Chwalczewski Francis. Cracow : Polish Academy of Learning – Main Ingredients in bookstores Gebethner and Wolff, 1937, pp. 361–363. Reprint: Department of National Theatre. Ossolińskich, Kraków 1989, ISBN 8304032910.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Tyla 2003, p. 79.
  2. ^ Encyclopedia Lithuanica
  3. ^ a b c Tyla 2003, p. 80.
  4. ^ "Krystyna Zborowska ze Zborowa h. Jastrzębiec".
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