Coat of arms of Lithuania
The Coat of Arms of Lithuania is called Vytis (the Knight) or Raitelis (the Rider). It is one of the oldest Coat of Arms in Europe. Article 15 of the Constitution of Lithuania, approved by national referendum in 1992, stipulates, "The Coat of Arms of the State shall be a white Vytis on a red field".
The modern heraldic shield adopted in September, 1991 features the field Gules (red) with an armored knight on a horse salient Argent (white). The knight is holding in his
The blazon is the following:
Gules, a knight armed cap-à-pie mounted on a horse salient argent, brandishing a sword proper and maintaining a shield azure
charged with a cross of Lorraine Or.
History
According to some sources the knight on horseback was mentioned in some early chronicles, but the charging knight is known to have been first used as the state emblem in 1366 on the seal of the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Algirdas. The earliest coins featuring Vytis come also from the last quarter of the 14th century; the other side of these coins depicts Columns of Gediminas. The emblem was handed down through the generations, from Algirdas to his son, Grand Duke Jogaila, then to Jogaila's cousin Grand Duke Vytautas and others. In the 14th century, the knight was featured on a heraldic shield, first on Jogaila's seal in 1386 or 1387, and also on the seal of Vytautas in 1401. As early as the 15th century, the heraldic knight became the Coat of Arms of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and of its central part — the Duchy of Vilnius. It is known that at the Battle of Grunwald in 1410, a major victory of the united Polish-Lithuanian army against the Teutonic Knights, thirty Lithuanian regiments out of the total forty were flying the banner of the Vytis.
At first, the charging knight was depicted riding to left or right, and holding a lance instead of the sword. Two seals of Lengvenis of 1385 and of 1388 exhibit this change.[1] The lance was more often exhibited on the seals of Skirgaila and Kaributas. By the first half of the 15th century, the rider is always shown riding to the left (as seen by the viewer) with a sword in his raised hand and a shield in the left hand (if he rode to the right, the shield would be concealed by the rider). During the 15th century, the colors of the seal became uniform: a white (silver) charging knight on a red field of the heraldic shield. The shield was blue with a gold double cross. The double cross was introduced by Jogaila, who adopted it after his baptism as Ladislaus and marriage with Hungarian princess and Queen of Poland Hedvig Angevin in 1386. It is derived from the Hungarian cross, the assumed coat of arms of Saint Ladislaus, King of Hungary, which is in turn a derivative of the Patriarchal cross. The cross is constructed in such a way that all six ends are equal in length.
The Renaissance introduced minor stylistic changes and variations: long feathers waving from the tip of the knight's helm, a long saddle-cloth, the horse tail turned upwards and shaped as nosegay. With these changes the Vytis Coat of Arms remained the State symbol of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania until 1795, when Lithuania was annexed by the Russian Empire. The Vytis was abolished. However, in 1845 tsar Nicholas I confirmed a Coat of Arms for the Vilna Governorate that closely resembled the Vytis. At first, the charging knight was interpreted as the ruler of the country. As time passed, he became a knight who is chasing intruders out of his native country. Such an interpretation was especially popular in the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century, when Lithuania was part of the Russian Empire and sought its independence.
When Lithuania restored its independence in 1918–1920, several artists produced different versions of the Coat of Arms. Almost
all versions included a scabbard, which is not found in earliest speciments. A
The Vytis was the state emblem of the Republic of Lithuania until 1940, when the Republic was annexed by the Soviet Union and all national insignia were outlawed. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Vytis, together with the Columns of Gediminas and the national flag, became symbols of the independence movement in Lithuania. In 1988, the Vytis was legalized. On March 11, 1990 Lithuania declared its independence and restored all of its pre-war national symbols, including the Vytis. On March 20, 1990 the Supreme Council of Lithuania approved the description of the State's Coat of Arms and determined the principal regulations for its use. The design was based on Juozas Zikaras design that was used on all litas coins in the interwar period. This was to demonstrate that Lithuania was continuing the traditions of the State that existed between 1918–1940. On September 4, 1991, a new design was approved based on recommendations of a special heraldic committee. It abandoned romantic interwar traditions and went back to the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It re-established the original colors. However, early coins of centas still bear the old Zikaras' design.
In 2004, the Seimas confirmed the new national symbol and the historical flag of Lithuania. It depicts the Coat of Arms on a rectangular red fabric. It did not replace the tri-color national flag of Lithuania. It is used only by official institutions for special occasions and anniversaries. It is currently proposed that a larger version of the Coat of Arms should be adopted. It would have a line from Tautiška giesmė, the national anthem of Lithuania, "Vienybė težydi" (Let Unity Flourish).
Interpretations
Jonas Trinkūnas, the leader of a neo-pagan movement Romuva, believes that in the Lithuanian mythology Vytis represents Perkūnas, a god of thunder. It is believed that the Vytis may represent Perkūnas as supreme god or Kovas who was also a war god and has been depicted as a horseman since ancient times. Gintaras Beresnevičius also points out that a white horse had a sacral meaning to Balts. These interpretations coincide with one of the interpretations of the German coat of arms, that suggests an adler being the bird of Odin, a god of war, which is commonly depicted as a horserider.
Origins of the word Vytis
The origin of the word Vytis is not quite clear. The word itself was used for the first time in 1846, by Simonas Daukantas. He used it to refer to knights and horse riders. Some linguists believe that Daukantas invented the word by translating Polish pogoń. However, other disagree because Lithuanian language has a common verb vyti meaning to chase. The verb vyti and noun Vytis pair seems to follow semantic rules. Compare: pykti (to get angry) and pyktis (anger), krypti (to lean) and kryptis (direction). The earlier Lithuanian texts call it Pagaunia or Vaikymas, also derivatives from Pahonia/Pogon.
Another linguistic version of Vytis is derivative from Slavic knight (vytiaz'), same as Bajoras (the nobleman) is derivative from the boyar.
It is likely the word Vytis to describe the Coat of Arms, was popularized in 1884, in the newspaper Aušra.
Similar coats of arms
The former coat of arms of Belarus — last used 1991–1995 — was very similar to the Vytis, with one difference only — the cross on the shield was a patriarchal cross with arms of uneven length. This symbol is known as the Pahonia. Several Polish and Lithuanian szlachta families adopted the earlier versions of the Vytis. Recently adopted coats of arms of Vilnius and Panevėžys Counties use different color schemes and add additional details to the basic image of the knight.
Several towns in Lithuania use similar motifs as the Vytis. For example, the coat of arms of Liudvinavas is parted per pale. One half depicts the Vytis and the other — Lady Justice. The coats of arms of Marijampolė, Prienai and Varniai show Saint George slaying a dragon. The saint is depicted in a very similar fashion as the Vytis and some suggest that this is just a christianized version of the Vytis same as a Coat of Arms of Moscow.
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Vilnius County coat of arms |
Coat of arms of Belarus (1991–1995) |
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See also
References
- Jonas Palionis, Kieno sukurtas Lietuvos herbas (Vytis)?, Literatūra ir menas, Nov. 22, 2002, no. 2926
- The Coat of Arms of Lithuania, Seimas
- Gimtoji istorija, Nuo 7 iki 12 klasės (Lietuvos istorijos vadovėlis), CD, 2002, ISBN 9986-9216-7-8
- Edmundas Rimša. Heraldry past to present. ISBN 9955-601-73-6.
- Simas Sužiedėlis and Antanas Vasaitis (ed.), Encyclopedia Lithuanica, Boston: 1978, Vol. VI, pages 223-225.
- Gintaras Beresnevičius, Lietuvių religija ir mitologija, Tyto alba, Vilnius: 2004. Pages 66-69. ISBN 9986-16-389-7
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