You've forgotten to shrink the filesystem before shrinking the LV. Make sure that you do not attempt to mount or repair the filesystem right now, because that could lead to filesystem corruption. If the data is important, I highly recommend making a full-disk backup before attempting recovery.
If you have a backup of the VG metadata, you should recover using that instead of the following. By default, LVM creates and stores backups in /etc/lvm/{archive,backup}/
whenever you modify a VG, but I suspect you do not have access to this data.
To recover access to the filesystem, you need to re-extend the LV to at least its original size, and also make sure that the new logical extents are assigned in the same order as they were originally. This second condition will be hard to get right if you have a complicated configuration with many PVs. However, if you have a simple configuration with few PVs, and have not reassigned or removed the original logical extents, then the following might work (in a live USB environment):
lvextend --extents +100%FREE /dev/mapper/root-vg
See if you can mount the filesystem read-only:
mkdir -p /mnt/root-vg/
mount -o ro /dev/mapper/root-vg /mnt/root-vg/
If the mount is successful, then you should do a cursory examination of the files inside. If they look correct, then run an integrity check on filesystem (e.g., fsck
on ext*, or btrfs scrub
on btrfs).