Vilnius Voivodeship

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This is an article about a voivodship in Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. For the voivodeship in 20th century interwar Poland, see Wilno Voivodeship.
Territory of the Vilnius Voivodeship is marked in red. Voivodeship's borders have not changed after the Union of Lublin.
Territory of the Vilnius Voivodeship is marked in red. Voivodeship's borders have not changed after the Union of Lublin.
Vilnius Voivodeship (red) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Vilnius Voivodeship (red) in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

The Vilnius Voivodeship (Latin: Palatinatus Vilnensis, Lithuanian: Vilniaus vaivadija, Belarusian: Віленскае вайводзтва, Polish: województwo wileńskie) was one of Voivodeships in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, created in 1413, from the Duchy of Lithuania and the neighbouring lands.

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Geographically the area was centered around the city of Vilnius, which has always been the capital of the entity and the seat of a voivode. However, the actual shape of the voivodeship varied in time. Together with the Trakai Voivodeship it was known as Lithuania propria. Until the partitions of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth the voivodeship was composed of five smaller units of administrative division named powiat (in Lithuanian: plural - pavietai, singular - pavietas), roughly correspondent to British Counties:

Main article: History of Vilnius

In 1413 the Union of Horodło introduced the title of voivode to Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Before the reform, the area centred around a most important city of Lithuania, Vilnius was known as the Duchy of Lithuania, sometimes called as the Duchy of Vilnius.

Vilnius Voivodeship became the capital Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, of which Vilnius was the capital.

After the Union of Lublin in 1569 which formed the Commonwealth, Grand Duchy retained much of its autonomy, and Vilnius Voivodeship remained its capital voivodeship, just as Vilnius remained its capital city, although the capital of the Commonwealth was first in Kraków (Kraków Voivodeship) and later in Warsaw (Masovian Voivodeship).

After the partitions of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the territory of Vilnius Voivodship was incorporated into Imperial Russia, most of the territory becoming a part of Vilna Governorate. During Soviet rule former Vilnius Voivodship territory was divided between Belarusian SSR and Lithuanian SSR.

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