Klaipėdos universitetas logo


  • List of journals
  • About Publisher
  • Help
  • Sitemap
Login Register

  1. Home
  2. Journals
  3. AHUK
  4. Issues
  5. Volume 22 (2011): 1260 metų Durbės mūšis: Šaltiniai ir istoriniai tyrimai = The Battle of Durbe, 1260: Sources and Historical Research
  6. Durbės mūšio interpretavimo tradicija Li ...

Acta Historica Universitatis Klaipedensis

About Editorial Policies
  • Article info
  • Related articles
  • More
    Article info Related articles

Durbės mūšio interpretavimo tradicija Livonijos ir Prūsijos istoriniuose šaltiniuose (XIII–XVI a. pr.) | The Tradition of Interpretations of the Battle of Durbė in Livonian and Prussian Historical Sources (Thirteenth – Early Sixteenth Centuries)
Volume 22 (2011): 1260 metų Durbės mūšis: Šaltiniai ir istoriniai tyrimai = The Battle of Durbe, 1260: Sources and Historical Research, pp. 85–101
Egidijus Miltakis  

Authors

 
Placeholder
Pub. online: 20 June 2011      Type: Article      Open accessOpen Access

Published
20 June 2011

Abstract

The article reviews the development stages of the battle of Durbė narrative over the period of the 13th to the early 16th c. in Prussian and Livonian historiographical traditions. Attempts are made to find out the way and the reasons of the changes in the battle of Durbė narrative in different traditions, the impact that caused the changes, and the functions the narrative played in historical works. Major attention is focused on three chronicles: the Livonian Rhymed Chronicle (the 13th c.). The Chronicle of the Prussian Land of Peter of Dusburg (mid-14th c.) and Simon Grunau’s Chronicle (mid-16th c.). The chronicles present three versions of the battle of Durbė story which are related and which, however, differ in the plot, details, and functions. Each version marked three different stages of the narrative development and formed three different traditions of the battle of Durbė narrative, on the basis of which subsequent authors created historical myths of the said battle. Part of the details of the historical myths (and especially those borrowed from Simon Grunau’s version) survived and are employed in contemporary Lithuanian fiction, historical, and educational literature.

Related articles PDF XML
Related articles PDF XML

Copyright
No copyright data available.

Keywords
chronicle historiography the Teutonic Order research into sources symbols historical memory

Metrics
since February 2021
506

Article info
views

0

Full article
views

188

PDF
downloads

187

XML
downloads

Export citation

Copy and paste formatted citation
Placeholder

Download citation in file


Share


RSS

Powered by PubliMill  •  Privacy policy