Litvin


Litvin is a Slavic word which literally means "Lithuanian". The term is mostly used in reference to the people of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, which began in Lithuania Proper in the 12th century.

Description

Grand Duchy of Lithuania

The term "Litvin" was mostly used by East Slavs to refer to all inhabitants of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 16–18th centuries.

Ethnic group in Ukraine

Litvins are a small ethnic group in the area of the mid-stream Desna River. The ethnographic or cultural studies about Litvins are poorly noted and are traced to the beginning of the 18th century. The poet-monk who published several cultural studies noted that Litvins, perhaps after an older pagan tradition, worked on Sundays and rested on Fridays. More notes about Litvins were provided at the end of the 18th century by historians of the Russian Empire and. According to Markovych, Litvins are a regional group such as Gascoigne in France or Swabians in Germany.
The name Litvin owes its origin to political factors and is a demonym referencing the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Litvins in the Chernihiv region call themselves Ruski, but not Moskals or Katsaps. They consider the term Litvin to be derogatory. According to the 2011 census, there were 22 Litvins in Ukraine.

Modern usage in Belarus

Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the term "Litvin" has been adopted by some modern Belarusian nationalists to stress the Belarusian claim to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. This is an alternative to the demonym "Belarusians" which is derived from White Russia and, therefore, implies that it is somehow less than the Great Russia and also is part of Russia. Belarusian historians such as Mikola Yermalovich and Viktor Veras claim that the Grand Duchy was Belarusian and that modern Lithuanians are actually Samogitians who took the name "Lithuania" for themselves. As such, modern Belarusians are actually Lithuanians and modern Lithuanians are Samogitians. This theory is considered fringe and is not accepted by mainstream historians. During the 2009 census, 66 people identified themselves as Litvins in Belarus.