Shchytkavichy Toponymy
The suffix -vichi or -wicze , derived from Old Polish , indicates that this is a patronymic name . The lexical morpheme of a patronymic name could be the name of a father's office or ancestors or the name or surname of a patron (e.g. the Polish surname Szczytko ).[ 2] [ 3]
History
Saints Cosmas and Damian 's Eastern Orthodox Church in Shchitkovichi, photographed in 1912.
The village was mentioned in 1433 as part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania .[ 4] According to Matvei Lyubavsky , Shchytkavichy was then part of the Principality of Slutsk , a magnate state of Olelkovich dukes , descendants from the Lithuanian Gediminids (male line) and Ruthenian Rurikids (female line).[ 5] The Slutsk dukes ruled with the help of a boyar "duma ", and their fiefs were knyazs , boyars and veldamai , who received landownership for their military or administrative service.[ 6]
Since 1567, Shchytkavichy was a part of the Porzecze estate in the Minsk province . From 1588, part of the Koidanova estate (now Dzyarzhynsk ), belonging to the family estate of the Radziwiłłs of the Trąby coat of arms . In 1791−1793, it was part of the Novogródek Voivodeship . From 1793 in the Russian Empire . From 1800 a village in Igumen county .[ 4] In the second half of the 19th century, Marie von Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn , Duchess of Hohenlohe , daughter of Stefania Radziwiłł and Ludwig zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg , sold the territory of the former Principality of Slutsk (including Shchytkavichy) under pressure of Tsar Alexander III of Russia .
Shchytkavichy was a village and a folwark . The Central Archives of Historical Records in Warsaw store architectural drawings of the folwark and the village of Szczytkowicze ,[ 7] dated between 1815 and 1873. The Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland (Volume 10th, page 527) mentions: Sielec, a large swamp on the southern edge of the Igumen county, in the area between the villages Szczytkowicze and Porzecze, belongs to the Porzecze Radziwiłł estate, in the Omelno municipality .[ 8]
In 1919, Shchytkavichy became part of the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic , and from 1959 it was a village. Since 25 August 1991, Shchytkavichy has belonged to the Republic of Belarus ; on 8 October 2010; the village received the status of an agrotown .[ 4]