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People: John V, Duke of Brittany

Smolensk, although spared the ravages of the …

Years: 1410 - 1410

Smolensk, although spared the ravages of the Mongol armies in 1240, had paid tribute to the Golden Horde, gradually becoming a pawn in the long struggle between Lithuania and the Grand Duchy of Moscow.

The last sovereign monarch of Smolensk was Yury of Smolensk; during his reign the city was taken by Vytautas the Great of Lithuania on three occasions: in 1395, 1404, and 1408.

After the city's incorporation into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, some of Smolensk's boyars (e.g., the Sapiehas) move to Vilnius; descendants of the ruling princes (e.g., the Tatishchevs, Kropotkins, Mussorgskys, Vyazemskys) flee to Moscow.

With tens of thousands of people living here, Smolensk is probably the largest city in fifteenth-century Lithuania.

Three Smolensk regiments prove decisive during the Battle of Grunwald against the Teutonic Knights.

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