Overview
The order of Livonian Brothers of the Sword or Sword Brethren (German: Schwertbrüderorden), formally known as The Militia of Christ of Livonia (Latin: Fratres militiæ Christi Livoniae) was a Catholic military order of German crusading knights established in 1202 in Livonia by Albert, the third bishop of Riga. Pope Innocent III sanctioned the establishment in 1204 for the second time. The membership of the crusading order comprised warrior monks mostly from northern Germany, who fought Baltic and Finnic pagans in the area of modern-day Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Following their defeat by the Samogitians and Semigallians in the Battle of Saule in 1236, the remnants of the order were disbanded by the Pope in 1237 when some of the surviving.
Historical Periods
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1202–1205)
1202 CE – 1205 CE
Area: 2,438 km²
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1206–1209)
1206 CE – 1209 CE
Area: 4,956 km²
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1210–1215)
1210 CE – 1215 CE
Area: 8,484 km²
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1216–1219)
1216 CE – 1219 CE
Area: 20,585 km²
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1220–1226)
1220 CE – 1226 CE
Area: 53,570 km²
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1227–1235)
1227 CE – 1235 CE
Area: 68,327 km²
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (1236–1240)
1236 CE – 1240 CE
Area: 68,327 km²