The treaty comprised the
Pacta subiectionis by which the Livonian estates accepted Polish-Lithuanian superiority. This document is also known as
Provisio ducalis. Also included was the
Privilegium Sigismundi Augusti by which
Sigismund II Augustus guaranteed the Livonian estates several privileges, including religious freedom with respect to the
Augsburg Confession, the
Indigenat (), and continuation of the traditional German jurisdiction and administration. The Livonian regions south of the
Daugava River (Düna, Dvina), comprising
Courland (Kurland) and
Semigallia (Semgallen, Zemgale, Žiemgala), were established as the secular
Duchy of Courland and Semigallia with
Gotthard von Kettler as its duke. Shaped after the
Prussian model, Courland and Semigallia was thus made a hereditary fief of the
Grand Duke of Lithuania, later of the
Polish Crown. In contrast, Livonia north of the Daugava was subordinated directly to Sigismund II Augustus as
Duchy of Livonia, also referred to as
Livonia transdunensis, with Kettler installed as Sigismund's "Royal administrator". These territories however excluded
Riga, then a
Free imperial city of the
Holy Roman Empire, part of
Estonia with
Reval (Tallinn), which was under
Swedish protection, and the westernmost part of Estonia with
Øsel (Ösel, Saaremaa), which was
Danish. ==Consequences==