The
Chronicle of Henry of Livonia () is a document describing historic events in
Livonia (roughly corresponding to today's
Estonia and
Latvia) and surrounding areas from 1180 to 1227. Apart from the few references in the
Primary Chronicle compiled in
Kievan Rus in the twelfth century, it is the oldest known written document about the history of these countries. For many episodes in the early stages of the
Christianization of the peoples of the eastern Baltic, the Chronicle of Henry is the major surviving evidence aside from the
Livonian Rhymed Chronicle and the
Novgorod First Chronicle.
Background
Papal calls for renewed
holy war at the end of the twelfth century inspired not only the disastrous
Fourth Crusade that sacked
Constantinople in 1204, but also a series of simultaneous "
Northern Crusades" that are less fully covered in English-language popular history, but which were more successful in the long run. Before the crusades, the region of
Livonia was a mixed outpost, a pagan society where merchants from the
Hanseatic League encountered merchants of
Novgorod, and where Germanic, Scandinavian, and Russian trade, culture, and
cults all mingled. Scandinavian rulers and German military knightly orders led by the German
Prince-Bishops conquered and resettled the Baltic world and drew it into the Western orbit.
Content
The Chronicle of Henry of Livonia provides eyewitness accounts of the events, with an invaluable and deeply human history. It provides insight, not into only military operations in the East during this tumultuous period, but also into the conflicted attitudes of an eyewitness; it reveals the complexities of religious motives enmeshed with political aims. The other famous early Livonian text, the
Rhymed Chronicle has less historical value, as it was essentially intended as a patriotic and Christian courtly entertainment.
The
chronicles consist of four books.
- The first book, "On Livonia" describes events between 1186 and 1196: the arrival of the first bishop of Ikšķile Meynard and baptizing of Livonians.
- The second book, "On bishop Berthold" describes events between 1196 and 1198: the arrival of the second bishop of Ikšķile Berthold of Hanover and his death in the battle with Livonians near what later became the town of Riga.
The original
manuscript of the chronicles has not been preserved. There are sixteen different copies, dating from 14th to 19th century, the oldest of which is the
Codex Zamoscianus, written on
parchment and dating from the end of the 13th century. The
Codex Zamoscianus is incomplete, as the text of the Chronicle ends in the 23rd chapter. The
Codex Zamoscianus is presently kept in the
Polish National Library in
Warsaw.
English online material on the chronicle is rather scarce, though there are some excerpts , and the image of a page from one of the copies can also be viewed .
Author
The author of the chronicles is
Henry of Latvia (
Henricus de Lettis ). The chronicles say that he was a Catholic priest who witnessed most of events described. Henry is thought to have been born between 1180 and 1188. Henry was probably German, bearing a German forename and consistently referring to Germans in the first person plural, but it is also possible he came from Livonia. He had a thoroughly German and Catholic education and as a youth was attached to the household of the
Prince-Bishop Albert of Buxhoeveden, was ordained a priest in 1208, founded a parish and lived out his life in peace.
His
Chronicles are written from the clerical point-of-view, that the history of the Church was the essential history of Livonia. The
Chronicles may have originated as a report to the papal legate
William of Modena, to whom he was assigned as interpreter in 1225 through 1227. The legate, one of the papacy's most able diplomats, was in Livonia to mediate an internal church dispute between the Livonian Brothers of the Sword, and the territorial claims of the Catholic bishops of Livonia.