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Mikolaj the Black Radziwill

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Resting place
  
Dubingiai, Lithuania

Spouse(s)
  
Elzbieta Szydlowiecka

Religion
  
Calvinism

Name
  
Mikolaj Black"

Mikolaj
Born
  
February 4, 1515 (
1515-02-04
)
Nesvizh (now in Belarus)

Died
  
May 28, 1565(1565-05-28) (aged 50)Vilnius

Children
  
with Elzbieta Szydlowiecka:Mikolaj Krzysztof RadziwillElzbieta RadziwillZofia Agnieszka RadziwillAnna Magdalena RadziwillJerzy RadziwillAlbrycht RadziwillStanislaw Pius RadziwillKrystyna Radziwill

Parent(s)
  
Jan RadziwillAnna Kiszka

Similar
Mikołaj "the Red" Radziwiłł, Mikołaj Krzysztof "the Orph, Barbara Radziwiłł, Jerzy Radziwiłł, Krzysztof Mikołaj "the Thunderb

Mikolaj Krzysztof Radziwill (1515 - 1565), nicknamed The Black, was a Lithuanian noble who held several administrative positions within the Grand Duchy of Lithuania: Voivode of Vilnius, Grand Lithuanian Chancellor, and Grand Hetman of Lithuania.

Alternate renditions of his name include Lithuanian: Mikalojus Radvila Juodasis, Belarusian: Mіkalai Radzіvіl CHorni, and Latin: Nicolaus Radvil. His first name is sometimes given in English as Nicholas.

Mikolaj was able to gain much political influence thanks to the romance between his cousin Barbara Radziwill and King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania Zygmunt II August. This made him one of the most powerful royal advisers. Mikolaj became Marshal of Lithuania, Grand Chancellor of Lithuania, as well as Palatine of Vilnius, gained immense wealth and became the most powerful magnate in the Commonwealth of that time.

The growing influence of the Radziwill family was further bolstered when, during a diplomatic mission to Charles V and Ferdinand I, he and his cousin Mikolaj the Red received a hereditary title of Prince (Reichsfurst (SRI)).

He formed an alliance with his cousin Mikolaj "the Red" Radziwill against other notable Lithuanian families in the rivalry for the dominant status in the Great Duchy of Lithuania. This alliance marked the formation of a dynastic-like cooperation between Radziwills and showed how family interests could affect magnates' relations with the state. Both Radziwills backed the cause of Lithuania's sovereignty and opposed the growing Polish-Lithuanian union.

Coincidentally, despite opposing close ties with Poland, he was the chief negotiator in the successful negotiation between Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the state controlled by the Livonian Order, which led to the secularisation of Livonia and its union with Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1562.

Mikolaj contributed to the ongoing Polonisation of the Grand Duchy, influencing other Lithuanian nobles to follow him in adopting Polish culture – its fashion, customs and language.

He was known for his religious beliefs, as he was one of the most prominent converts and advocates of the Reformed churches faith in Grand Duchy of Lithuania. He provided financial support for the printing of the first complete Polish translation of the Bible in 1563 in Brest-Litovsk, distributed works written in defense of the Reformed faith, financed a church and college in Vilnius, supported educated Protestants, and in various other ways fostered the Calvinist faith. He is known to have exchanged letters with John Calvin and protected religious exiles from Italy. Because Protestants supported usage of local languages, he is also believed to have funded Lithuanian churches and schools.

With the exception of his daughter Anna, all his children converted to Roman Catholicism and became ardent supporters of the Counter Reformation. He is remembered by a statue in the Brest Millennium Monument.

References

Mikolaj "the Black" Radziwill Wikipedia