Among the most solid historical benchmarks signed by Dmytro in 1341 is a document "Letter to residents of Torun" that survived to our days where he calls to revive economical and social relationships between the city of Toruń and Halychyna.
During the Polish-Hungarian aggression against the Kingdom of Ruthenia, Dmytro successfully defended his territory, serving simultaneously as a vassal of three rulers: Lubart, Casimir the Great and Louis I of Hungary. Nevertheless, in 1344-1345 Casimir succeeded in annexing Sanok.
With the death of Dmytro and agreement with the Khan of Golden Horde Janibeg, Casimir occupied Halychyna in 1349. In return for the Halychyna occupation, Poland promised a tribute to Golden Horde.
The writer also says that in the Kingdom of Ruthenia there was a diarchy where one ruler governed in Volhynia, while another governed in Halychyna. Bilinsky states that Dmytro governed Halychyna not since 1340, but rather 1323 after the death of both Andriy and Yuriy II and along with Yuriy-Boleslav Troidenovych (Bolesław Jerzy II of Mazovia).
|
|