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  1. Swedish Livonia ( Swedish: Svenska Livland) was a dominion of the Swedish Empire from 1629 until 1721. The territory, which constituted the southern part of modern Estonia (including the island of Ösel ceded by Denmark after the Treaty of Brömsebro) and the northern part of modern Latvia (the Vidzeme region), represented the ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LivoniaLivonia - Wikipedia

    Swedish Livonia, between Swedish Estonia and Courland (1600s) Livonia in 1820. Livonia [a] or in earlier records Livland, [1] is a historical region on the eastern shores of the Baltic Sea. It is named after the Livonians, who lived on the shores of present-day Latvia .

  3. Livonia, lands on the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea, north of Lithuania; the name was originally applied by Germans in the 12th century to the area inhabited by the Livs, a Finno-Ugric people whose settlements centred on the mouths of the Western Dvina and Gauja rivers, but eventually it was used to refer to nearly all of modern Latvia and ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Livonia (en livonio, Līvõmō; en estonio: Liivimaa; en alemán y lenguas escandinavas: Livland; en letón y en lituano: Livonija; en polaco: Inflanty; en inglés arcaico, Livland, 1 o Liwlandia; en ruso: Лифляндия, Liflyandiya) es la región que anteriormente estuvo habitada por los livonios, pero en la Edad Media vino a designar un territorio much...

  5. Swedish Livonia ( Swedish: Svenska Livland) was a dominion of the Swedish Empire from 1629 until 1721. The territory, which constituted the southern part of modern Estonia (including the island of Ösel ceded by Denmark after the Treaty of Brömsebro) and the northern part of modern Latvia (the Vidzeme region), represented the conquest of the ...

  6. Swedish Livonia. Inflanty Voivodeship. The Duchy of Livonia, [2] [a] also referred to as Polish Livonia or Livonia, [b] was a territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and later the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth that existed from 1561 to 1621.

  7. After decades of Polish control, Livonia became part of the Swedish Baltic empire, as confirmed in the Treaty of Altmark of 1629, but was lost to Russia during the Great Northern War (Treaty of Nystad of 1721).