This is the last mention of Gedvydas in written sources, and historians assume he perished in the battle.
Despite this, some architectural historians have mistakenly assumed the cathedral is his work.
With that account dated January 1892, the historians assumed the event had occurred some months before.
While the purpose of the agreement is not explicitly mentioned, historians assume it was directed against the Livonian Order.
The date of the death of the Tsaritsa is unknown, although some historians assume she died in the late 1380s.
Many historians have assumed that the first hard evidence of the killings did not surface in the West until mid-1941.
Since there is nothing known about Mikalojus and Baltramiejus, historians assume they died in their youth.
For years most historians assumed there was no basic difference.
The last notice of Albert as a living person was around 1366, although some historians assumed that he died by between 1370-1375.
Any historian of the Steinbrenner Shuffle might assume that.