Mstislavl was first mentioned in the
Ipatiev Chronicle in 1156. It was initially a part of the
Principality of Smolensk, but had become the capital of the
Principality of Mstislavl by 1180. In the Middle Ages, it was the seat of the
Mstislavsky princely family.
Pyotr Mstislavets is believed to have been born in Mstislavl. In 1377, the town joined the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania with the free will of its residents. The first Lithuanian duke of Mstislavl was
Karigaila, brother of
Jogaila. Within the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, it was the capital of the
Mścisław Voivodeship, seat of the regional
sejmik and court. In 1634, King
Władysław IV Vasa granted
Magdeburg rights. During the
Great Northern War, in 1708 the Swedish occupiers plundered the town, and in 1717 the Russian occupiers deported part of the population to
Smolensk claiming they were
fugitive subjects of the Tsar. It was annexed by
Russia in the
Partitions of Poland in 1772. Jewish people had a historic presence in the town. In 1939, there were 2,067 Jewish people living in Mstislavl, representing almost 20% of the local population. The German army occupied the town in July 1941. In early October, they killed 30 elderly Jewish residents. On October 15, 1941, together with the local police, they murdered between 850 and 1,300 Jewish residents. The town is the birthplace of
Jewish historian and writer
Simon Dubnow, Jewish statesman and Communist politician
Yakov Chubin, and expressionist artist
Abraham A. Manievich, among others. ==Sights==