Inflanty Voivodeship
The Inflanty Voivodeship, or Livonian Voivodeship, also known as Polish Livonia, was an administrative division and local government in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, since it was formed in the 1620s out of the Wenden Voivodeship and lasted until the First Partition of Poland in 1772. The Inflanty Voivodeship was one of the few territories of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to be ruled jointly by Poland and Lithuania.Overview
The Inflanty Voivodeship, also called the Duchy of Inflanty, due to a 1667 bill of the Sejm, was the minority remainder of the Duchy of Livonia, which had been conquered by the Swedish Empire during the Polish–Swedish War of 1621–1625. The seat of the voivode was Dyneburg.
The name Inflanty is derived through Polonization of Livland, the German name for Livonia. In modern times the region is known as Latgalia in the Republic of Latvia.
Zygmunt Gloger in his monumental book Historical Geography of the Lands of Old Poland provides this description of Inflanty Voivodeship:Voivodes
This is a list of the voivodes for Inflanty:
- Jerzy Farensbach
- Maciej Demblński
- Krzysztof Słuszka
- Teodor Doenhoff
- Joachim Tarnowski
- Tomasz Sapieha
- Paweł Sapieha
- Mikołaj Korft
- Przecław Leszczyński
- Alexander Morszlyn
- Jan Teodor
- Jerzy Płatem
- Otto Fryderyk Felkierzamb
- Jan Koss
- Jędrzej Głębocki
- Piotr Przebendowski
- Antozi Morsztyn
- Wilhelm Płatem
- Jan Borch
- Stanisław Brzostowski
- Jozafat Zyberg
- Gaspar Rogaliński
- Adam Falkierzamb