Duchy of Samogitia

Historically, in the west it had access to the Baltic Sea; in the north, it bordered the Duchy of Courland and Ducal Prussia in the south.

Samogitia is a Latinized version of the name Žemaitija, meaning "the Lowlands" as opposed to Aukštaitija for "the Highlands".

In the Middle Ages, the names Samaiten, Samaitae, Zamaytae, Samogitia, Samattae, Samethi were used in German and Latin sources.

They, together with other variants Schmudien, Schamaiten (German) and Żmudź (Polish), are all derived from the Lithuanian Žemaičiai, dial.

After the defeats in the Battle of Grunwald (1410) and following wars, in 1422 the Teutonic Order ceded Samogitia to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania under the Treaty of Melno.

Because of its prolonged wars with the Teutonic Order, Samogitia had developed a social and political structure different from the rest of Lithuania.

Samogitia and Lithuania proper in a 1712 map by Henri Chatelain
Duchy in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795)
The attacking Bear, the historical Coat of Arms of Samogitia
Samogitia in the 17th century
Map of Samogitia in 1753
French map of the 18th century Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth with Duchy of Samogitia ( Samogitie ) and Lithuania proper ( Vraye Lithuanie ) separated with red and green lines