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The department was set up officially on April 3 1989.
Heads of
Department:
Professor
Antanas Tyla (03.04.1989–16.04.1992)
Dr
Algirdas
Antanas Baliulis 01.12.1994–31.12.1999 (acting head as of 24.05.1993)
Acting
heads of department:
Dr
Egidijus
Banionis, 21.04.1992–1993 (died August 6 1993)
Dr
Artūras
Dubonis, 01.01.2001–
Aims and
tasks: research into and the publication of volumes of the Lithuanian Metrica
and other historical sources.
The
Lithuanian Metrica is the name given to volumes of records from the chancery of
the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the oldest Lithuanian state archive, which was
started in the late fourteenth century. After the Russian Empire in
collaboration with Prussia and Austria partitioned the Polish Lithuanian
Commonwealth at the end of the eighteenth century, Russian officials removed the
Lithuanian Metrica from Warsaw and stored it in St Petersburg and Moscow. More
than 600 volumes are held now in Moscow; several dozen volumes lie in Polish
archives and one is preserved in Lithuania.
At the
beginning of the twentieth century Russian scholars published a few volumes of
Metrica in Moscow, but nowadays Russians have little interest in continuing this
tradition on the grounds that they should first publish Russian historical
sources. During the last century Belarusians published several volumes.
The
importance of researching and publishing the Metrica in Lithuania arises from
several factors. The oldest volumes (up to the second half of the sixteenth
century) contain material relevant to the history of Lithuania in the fifteenth
and early sixteenth century, a period with few sources now that the treasury
records (from the early sixteenth century) and Vilnius city records (from the
second half of the fifteenth century) have been lost along with other material.
The early volumes reveal aspects of the life of ethnic Lithuanians, which are
covered by almost half the records. The Metrica are important not only for
historians but also for Baltic and Slavonic linguists, legal historians,
demographers, cultural historians, sociologists, and economists. The cultural
heritage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania is of relevance not only to Lithuanians
but also to other states in eastern-central and eastern Europe. This publication
programme is a matter of national prestige. The Institute seeks to publish the
oldest Metrica volumes first.
Between
1985 and 1988 the Institute worked on a project headed by the Institute of
History of the USSR Academy of Sciences. Preparatory work was carried out.
Publication rules have been worked out and published (Metodologicheskie
rekomendatsii po izdaniiu i opisaniiu Litovskoi Metriki, ed. A.L. Khoroshkevich,
S.M. Kashtanov [Vilnius, 1985]). In 1986 there was an editorial board meeting in
Vilnius relating to the publication of the Metrica, which included
representatives from the USSR and People's Poland. A conference was held in
April 1988 and work began on editing Books 5 and 8. The Lithuanian Institute of
History has continued and extended this programme in the Department of
Palaeography.
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