Daniel of Galicia explained

Daniel
Succession:King of Ruthenia
Reign:1253–1264
Successor:Leo I
Succession1:Prince of Galicia
Reign1:1205–1207
Predecessor1:Roman Mstyslavych
Successor1:Vladimir Igorevich
Reign2:1211–1212
Predecessor2:Vladimir Igorevich
Successor2:Mstislav Yaroslavich
Reign3:1230–1232
Predecessor3:Andrew of Hungary
Successor3:Andrew of Hungary
Reign4:1233–1234
Predecessor4:Andrew of Hungary
Successor4:Mikhail Vsevolodovich
Reign5:1238–1264
Predecessor5:Rostislav Mikhailovich
Successor5:Leo I
Succession6:Prince of Volhynia
Predecessor6:Alexander Vsevolodovich
Successor6:Vasilko Romanovich
Reign6:1215–1238
Spouse:Anna Mstislavna of Novgorod
Niece of King Mindaugas
Issue:Iraklii Danylovich
Lev I of Galicia
Roman Danylovich
Svarn
Issue-Link:
  1. Family
Issue-Pipe:more...
House:Romanovichi branch of the Rurikids
Father:Roman Mstislavich
Mother:Anna from Byzantium
Birth Date:1201
Death Place:Kholm

Daniel Romanovich (1201–1264)[1] was Prince of Galicia (1205–1207; 1211–1212; 1230–1232; 1233–1234; 1238–1264), Volhynia (1205–1208; 1215–1238), Grand Prince of Kiev (1240), and King of Ruthenia (1253–1264).[2]

Biography

Early life and reign

Daniel's father, Roman Mstislavich, united the principalities of Galicia and Volhynia in 1199.[3] After his death in 1205, the boyars of Galicia forced the four-year-old Daniel into exile with his mother Anna of Byzantium and brother Vasylko Romanovich. After the boyars proclaimed one of their own as prince, the Poles and Hungarians invaded the principality, ostensibly to support the claims of young Daniel and Vasylko, and divided it between themselves. In 1219, he renounced his claims to Galicia in favor of his father-in-law, Mstislav the Bold.

In 1221, Daniel re-established his rule over Volhynia, where the boyars and populace had reaffirmed their loyalty to his dynasty. In 1223 the young prince led his troops against the Mongols as part of the coalition of Rus' princes in the Battle of Kalka, which ended in destruction of the allied force. Wounded in the fighting, Daniel was able to escape encirclement by the enemy and survived. During his rule over Volhynia the prince gave his younger brother Vasylko the principality of Lutsk. The brothers fought tohether against Jotvingians, which raided his lands. Daniel's influence and his alliance with Polish duke Leszek the White made him a competitor to Volodymyr Rurikovich, Prince of Kyiv. After Leszek's assassination in 1228 Daniel and Vasylko allied with the deceased prince's brother Konrad of Masovia and campaigned tohether with him against Polish duke Władysław Spindleshanks. In 1230 Daniel was invited to take the throne of Halych for the second time and defeated Hungarian troops which besieged the city. However, the boyars once against plotted against the prince and helped Hungarian prince Andrew to recapture the city in 1232. In 1234 Daniel defeated Alexander Vsevolodovich, taking the Duchy of Belz. By 1238, he had defeated former Dobrzyń Knights at Drohiczyn (Dorohochyn), and regained most of Galicia,[4] including the capital. While the Prussians were under pressure from the Teutonic Order, Daniel attempted to conquer their neighbours, the Jotvingians.[5]

Mongol invasions

In 1239, with the advancing Mongols, Michael of Chernigov, the grand prince of Kiev, who was married to Daniel's sister, quickly left Kiev and petitioned Daniel for help. Daniel dispatched his voivode, Dmytro, to defend the city. However, after a long siege, its walls were breached and, despite fierce fighting within the city, Kiev fell on 6 December 1240 and was largely destroyed. Early in the next year, April 1241, the Mongols passed through Galicia and Volhynia, destroying Halych and advancing on Poland and Hungary.[6] Daniel and Vasylko fled to Poland, and eventually moved their capital from Halych to Kholm (modern Chełm) in late 1240 or early 1241. In his absence, Daniel appointed boyar Dobroslav Suddych to distribute lands to fellow Galician boyars in Kolomyia, but when the latter in early 1241 began allotting them to Chernigov boyars instead (possibly in collaboration with the Olgovichi prince Rostislav Mikhailovich), Daniel summoned him to Kholm and imprisoned him in late 1241.

Establishment of the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia

On 17 August 1245, Daniel defeated a combined force of the prince of Chernigov, disaffected boyars, and Hungarian and Polish elements at Yaroslav, and finally took the remainder of Galicia, thus reconstituting his father's holdings. He made his brother Vasylko the ruler of Volhynia and retained the Galician title for himself, though he continued to exercise real power in both places.[7]

Daniel's domestic policies focused on stability and economic growth. During his rule, German, Polish, and Rus' merchants and artisans were invited into Galicia, and numbers of Armenians and Jews established themselves in the towns and cities. Daniel founded the towns of Lviv (1256) and Kholm, naming the former for his son, and fortified many others. He appointed officials to protect the peasantry from aristocratic exploitation and formed peasant-based heavy infantry units.[8]

Yet Daniel's successes and his failed defense of Kiev attracted the further attention of the Mongols. In 1246, he was summoned to the capital of the Golden Horde at Sarai on the Volga River and was forced to accept Mongol overlordship. According to Ukrainian historian Orest Subtelny, Daniel was handed a cup of fermented mare's milk by the Mongol khan, Batu, and told to get used to it, as "you are one of ours now". They exchanged hostages whereby 100 families of Karaites were re-settled in Carpathian Galicia. According to James Chambers,[9] the following dialogue took place between Batu and Daniel of Galicia: "At a banquet Batu asked if he drank kumiz like the Mongols and Daniel answered: 'Until now I did not, but now I do as you command and I drink it'. To which Batu replied: 'You are now one of ours,' and since he was more used to it ordered that Daniel be given a goblet of wine." This was due to Daniel's notorious love of wine.

While formally accepting the Mongols as overlords, and supplying them with soldiers as required, Daniel built his foreign policy around opposition to the Golden Horde. Suffering from raids by Lithuanians and Jotvingians, he simultaneously established cordial relations with the rulers of the Kingdom of Poland and Kingdom of Hungary, and requested aid from Pope Innocent IV in the form of a crusade. In return for papal assistance, Daniel offered to place his lands under the ecclesiastical authority of Rome, a pledge never realised.[10] Wooed by the prospect of extending his authority, the Pope encouraged Daniel's resistance to the Mongols and his Western orientation, and in 1253, had a papal representative crown Daniel as king at Dorohochyn, present-day Drohiczyn on the Bug River. However, Daniel wanted more than recognition, and commented bitterly that he expected an army when he received the crown.[11] From then on, Daniel was known as rex Russiae and sometimes by the title korol.[10]

The following year, Daniel repelled Mongol assaults led by Orda's son, Kuremsa, on Ponyzia and Volhynia and dispatched an expedition with the aim of taking Kiev. Despite initial successes, in 1259, a Mongol force under Burundai and Nogai Khan entered Galicia and Volhynia and offered an ultimatum: Daniel was to destroy his fortifications or Burundai would assault the towns. Daniel complied and pulled down the city walls.In the last years of his reign, Daniel engaged in dynastic politics, marrying a son and a daughter to the offspring of Mindaugas of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and acquiring territorial concessions in Poland from the latter. Another daughter of his, Ustynia, was married to Andrey Yaroslavich of Vladimir-Suzdal. He also arranged for the marriage of his son Roman to Gertrude, the Babenberg heiress, but was unsuccessful in his bid to have him placed on the ducal throne of Austria.

By his death in 1264, Daniel had reconstructed and expanded the territories held by his father, held off the expansionist threats of Poland and Hungary, minimized Mongol influence in the territories of present-day western Ukraine, and raised the economic and social standards of his domains. He was succeeded in Galicia by his son Leo.

Legacy

A monument to him was erected in 1998 in the city of Halych.[12] In 2001 an equestrian statue honouring Daniel was unveiled in Lviv to commemorate 800 years from his birth.[13]

On 7 September 2011, the parliament of Ukraine (Verkhovna Rada) issued a resolution on "celebration of the 810th Anniversary of the birth of the first King of Ruthenia-Ukraine Daniel of Galicia".[14]

In 2012 the main airport in the city of Lviv was renamed in honour of the prince as Lviv Danylo Halytskyi International Airport.[15]

Family

Wives

Sisters

Sons

Daughters

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Biographical Index of the Middle Ages . 1 March 2011 . Walter de Gruyter . 978-3-11-091416-0 . 296 . en.
  2. Book: Войтович . Леонтій Вікторович . Генеалогія Рюриковичів і Гедиміновичів . 1992 . Avtor . 5-7702-0506-7 . uk . 87.
  3. Book: Langer . Lawrence N. . Historical Dictionary of Medieval Russia . 15 September 2021 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-1-5381-1942-6 . 42 . en.
  4. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Daniel-Romanovich. Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Daniel Romanovich". Encyclopedia Britannica
  5. Web site: Synytsia . Yevhen . YATVYAGI . The encyclopedia of the history of Ukraine.
  6. Web site: Alexander . Maiorov . March 2015 . The Mongol conquest of Volhynia and Galicia: Controversial and unresolved issues . Research Gate.
  7. Web site: Kotliar . Mykola . Daniel of Galicia . The encyclopedia of the history of Ukraine.
  8. Web site: Danilo Romanovich. The magical city of Zviagel.
  9. Chambers, James. The Devil´s Horsemen. The Mongol Invasion of Europe. New York 1979. page 120
  10. Book: Oresko . Robert . Gibbs . G. C. . Scott . H. M. . Royal and Republican Sovereignty in Early Modern Europe: Essays in Memory of Ragnhild Hatton . 30 January 1997 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-41910-9 . 355 . en.
  11. John Joseph Saunders. (2001). The history of the Mongol conquests. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, p. 101
  12. Web site: Пам'ятник королю Данилу Галицькому — Галич - Галицька міська рада . www.galych-rada.gov.ua . 11 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141104134514/http://www.galych-rada.gov.ua/varto-vidvidaty/pamyatnyk-korolyu-danylu-halytskomu/ . 4 November 2014 . dead.
  13. Web site: Monument to Daniel of Galicia or a monument for a birthday. 15 January 2025. uk.
  14. http://zakon4.rada.gov.ua/laws/show/3706-vi Law of Ukraine
  15. Web site: Lviv Airport receives officially received a new name. 7 February 2012. uk.