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Did this Lithuanian hill fort belong to the country's only king?
LT🏛️ PoliticsCenter2 days ago

Did this Lithuanian hill fort belong to the country's only king?

Archaeologist Gintautas Zabiela has spent 16 years investigating the location of Voruta, a 13th-century castle associated with the rise of Lithuania's only king, Mindaugas. The site is linked to a pivotal 1251 siege that shifted the balance of power between Mindaugas and his rivals, Tautvilas and Gedvydas. While historical records remain sparse, Zabiela argues that circumstantial evidence—including place names like Vorelis and Volupis—supports the theory that the Šeimyniškėliai hill fort is the lost Voruta. This theory, first proposed in the 1930s, has gained traction through decades of archaeological research, though definitive proof remains elusive due to limited written sources.

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LRT (English) logoLRT (English)State / PublicCenter2 days ago
Did this Lithuanian hill fort belong to the country's only king?

Archaeologist Gintautas Zabiela has spent 16 years investigating the location of Voruta, a 13th-century castle associated with the rise of Lithuania's only king, Mindaugas. The site is linked to a pivotal 1251 siege that shifted the balance of power between Mindaugas and his rivals, Tautvilas and Gedvydas. While historical records remain sparse, Zabiela argues that circumstantial evidence—including place names like Vorelis and Volupis—supports the theory that the Šeimyniškėliai hill fort is the lost Voruta. This theory, first proposed in the 1930s, has gained traction through decades of archaeological research, though definitive proof remains elusive due to limited written sources.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a scholarly investigation into a historical event tied to Lithuania's national identity and its only monarch, Mindaugas. It focuses on archaeological findings and historical interpretation without overtly promoting a political agenda or ideological stance. The framing remains客观,

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