Category
page 114th-century Lithuanian nobility
Aldona of Lithuania
Queen consort of Poland (c.1309–1339)

Birutė
thumb|A bronze sculpture of Birutė near her presumed grave
Birutė (c. 1330 – 1382) was the Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the second wife of Kęstutis, Grand Duke of Lithuania, and mother of Vytautas the Great. There is very little known about Birutė's life, but after her death a cult worshiping her developed among Lithuanians, especially in Samogitia.
Sophia of Lithuania
Grand duchess of Moscow and Vladimir
Narimantas
thumb|A fantasy portrait from the 18th century
thumb|The Staraya Ladoga|fortress of Ladoga

Lubart
thumb|Lutsk Castle, Ukraine, built by Liubartas and improved by [[Vytautas the Great. During Lithuanian rule the city started to prosper]]
Anna, Grand Duchess of Lithuania
Wife of Grand Duke Vytautas
Demetrius I Starshy
Belarusian noble
Vladimir Olgerdovich
Grand Prince of Kyiv
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Kaributas
thumb|Authentic seal of Kaributas, 1386
thumb|Seals of Kaributas, 1385 (1841)
Kaributas (Koribut, Korybut, baptized Dmitry; after 1350 – after 1404) was a son of Algirdas, Grand Duke of Lithuania, and reigned in Severian Novgorod until 1393.
Karigaila
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Karigaila (, died on 16 September 1390 in Vilnius) was a son of Algirdas, Grand Duke of Lithuania, and his second wife Uliana of Tver. He became the ruler of Mstsislaw after he captured it from the Principality of Smolensk. He is sometimes mistaken for his brother Constantine, who was the founder of the House of Czartoryski.
Karijotas
Karijotas or Koriat (baptized Michal; died between 1358 and 1363) was the duke of Navahrudak (since 1341) and Vawkavysk. A member of the House of Gediminas, he was one of the sons of Gediminas, the grand duke of Lithuania.
Maria of Vitebsk
Russian princess
Manvydas
Manvydas or Monwid (; died in 1348?) was the eldest son of Gediminas, Grand Duke of Lithuania, and inherited Kernavė and Slonim after his father's death in 1341. Nothing else is known about his life. Matthias of Neuenburg mentioned that two sons of Gediminas perished in the Battle of Strėva in February 1348. One was Narimantas and the other is believed to be Manvydas.

Margiris
thumb|Hill of Margiris in Punia, Lithuania|Punia, the traditional location for [[Pilėnai castle]]
Vainius
Vainius or Voin (died between 1338 and 1342) was the Lithuanian Prince of Polotsk from 1328 to his death. Very little is known about Vainius, brother of Gediminas, Grand Duke of Lithuania. He is mentioned in written sources in 1324 for the first time. In 1328 he, already as Prince of Polotsk, signed a treaty with the Livonian Order and Novgorod. His only known son Liubartas died in 1342 during fights with the Livonian Order.
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Vygantas
thumb|150px|Seal of Vygantas, Duke of Kernavė, 1388
Vygantas (baptized Alexander; ; died June 28, 1392, in Vilnius) was Duke of Kernavė. He was one of the sons of Algirdas, Grand Duke of Lithuania (1345–1377), and his second wife Uliana Alexandrovna of Tver.

David of Grodno
castellan of Grodno and one of the most famous military commanders of Gediminas

Fiodor of Kyiv
14th-century prince

Vaidotas
thumb|Kaunas Castle was unsuccessfully defended by Vaidotas
Jan Holszański
Lithuanian noble
Rymgajla
Rimgailė (also Rymgajla, Rimgaila, Ringaila, , ; c. 1367 – 1423 or 1430) was a Lithuanian princess of the House of Kęstutis. Daughter of the Grand Duke of Lithuania Kęstutis and Grand Duchess Birutė, sister of Grand Dukes Vytautas the Great and Žygimantas Kęstutaitis, Dukes Butautas and Tautvila, and Masovian Duchess Danutė of Lithuania. Baptismal name Ona.
Jurgis Gedgaudas
Lithuanian noble and diplomat (died c. 1435)
Tautvilas Kęstutaitis
Lithuanian noble
Butautas
thumb|St. Thomas' Church in Prague, the burial place of Butautas
Butautas (baptized Henryk; died on May 7, 1380, in Prague) was a son of Kęstutis, Grand Duke of Lithuania. He attempted to depose his uncle Algirdas and usurp power in Lithuania, but failed and was forced into exile. He joined the court of the Holy Roman Emperor and even inspired a poem about conversion to Christianity. Butautas is sometimes confused with his brother Vaidotas.
Jewna
Jaunė (, , literally, young woman in Lithuanian; died ca. 1344) was daughter of Prince Ivan of Polatsk and wife of Gediminas, the Grand Duke of Lithuania (1316���1341). She is mentioned in written sources only once – the Bychowiec Chronicle, a late and unreliable source. Therefore, some historians cast a serious doubt on her existence, but modern reference works still widely cite her as the ancestress of the Gediminids dynasty.
Jakub Plichta
bishop of the Roman Catholic Church
Vaidila
thumb|Seal of Vaidila, 1380
Danutė of Lithuania
Lithuanian princess, daughter of Kęstutis, Grand Duke of Lithuania, and wife of Janusz I of Warsaw
Albertas Manvydas
Lithuanian noble, first Voivode of Vilnius, and founder of the Manvydai family
Patrikas
thumb|300px|The Korela Fortress was built by Patrikas and his father on the bank of the [[Vuoksi River]]
Patrikey Glebovich or Patrikas Narimantaitis (, Finnish: Patrika Narimantinpoika) was a grandson (or great-grandson) of Gediminas who exchanged his lands in and near Starodub in Siveria for the Korela and Oreshek fortresses in the Novgorod Republic. He also founded the town of Yamskaya krepost (Yamburg) (now Kingisepp) near Pskov. His male line descendants include the Golitsyn, Kurakin, and princely houses of Russia.

Agrypina of Lithuania
Agrypina or Agrafena (; ) was a Lithuanian noblewoman from the Gediminid dynasty. She was a daughter of Grand Duke Algirdas by his first wife Maria of Vitebsk. In 1354, she married the Russian prince Boris of Suzdal and became the princess of Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal.
Stanislav Czupurna
Lithuanian noble
Vaišvilas
Vaišvilas (Polish: Wojszwił) (14th century) was a Lithuanian noble and sometimes is considered one of the sons of Kęstutis, Grand Duke of Lithuania. In 1358 Kęstutis and Masovian princes formed a commission to settle border disputes. The Lithuanian side was represented by Vaišvilas (Woyszwylt), Patirgas, possibly another son of Kęstutis, and Eikšis, son of Karijotas. This leads historians to believe that Vaišvilas ruled some area bordering Masovia. In 1367 a treaty with Livonia mention Vaišvilas as Waysewist. Later he is found in Lahojsk, now Belarus. There are theories that an unnamed "nobili
Fedor Vesna
Lithuanian noble