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Vilnius County ( Lithuanian : Vilniaus apskritis ) is the largest of the 10 counties of Lithuania , located in the east of the country around the city Vilnius and is also known as Capital Region or Sostinės regionas by the Lithuanian statistics department and Eurostat . On 1 July 2010, the county administration was abolished, and since that date, Vilnius County remains as the territorial and statistical unit.

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49-578: Elektrėnai ( pronunciation ) is a city of about 11,000 inhabitants in Vilnius County , Lithuania ; since 2000 it has been the capital of the Elektrėnai Municipality . It is situated between the two largest cities in Lithuania – Vilnius and Kaunas . Historically, two villages were located in the area; one of those was Perkūnkiemis (Lithuanian: Thunder 's yard ). Elektrėnai is one of

98-508: A confederation of Baltic Western Lithuania (with Lithuanian as an official language ) and Central Lithuania (with Polish as an official language). Poland added the condition that the new state must be also federated with Poland, pursuing Józef Piłsudski 's goal of creating the Międzymorze Federation. Lithuanians rejected this condition. With nationalistic sentiments rising all over Europe, many Lithuanians were afraid that such

147-579: A Vilnius theater, stated that the attack was undertaken by his direct order. Żeligowski, a native to Lithuania, proclaimed a new state, the Republic of Central Lithuania ( Litwa Środkowa ). According to historian Jerzy J. Lerski , it was a " puppet state " which the Lithuanian Republic refused to recognize. The seat of Lithuanian government moved to Lithuania's second-largest city, Kaunas . Armed clashes between Kaunas and Central Lithuania continued for

196-479: A chance to maintain the control of the region. This led to the renewal of Polish–Lithuanian War , where the so-called Żeligowski's Mutiny , secretly ordered by Józef Piłsudski was a part of the military operation, fully supported and backed on flanks by the Polish army, and consequently to the establishment of the so-called Republic of Central Lithuania. The republic had features of a state administration, but actually

245-464: A discounter (IKI Cento) in Elektrėnai. Elektrėnai is well known for its ice hockey tradition. For a rather long period of time Elektrėnai was the only city in Lithuania with a well-equipped skating rink. Two National Hockey League players: Darius Kasparaitis and Dainius Zubrus were born in Elektrėnai. Its local ice hockey team is Energija . Inhabitants of Elektrėnai make up a considerable part of

294-722: A federation, resembling the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth from centuries ago, would be a threat to Lithuanian culture , as during the Commonwealth times many of the Lithuanian nobility was Polonized . General elections in Central Lithuania were decreed to take place on 9 January, and the regulations governing this election were to be issued prior to 28 November 1920. However, due to the League of Nations mediation, and

343-487: A few weeks, but neither side could gain a significant advantage. Due to the mediation efforts of the League of Nations, a new ceasefire was signed on November 21 and a truce six days later. On 12 October 1920, Żeligowski announced the creation of a provisional government . Soon the courts and the police were formed by his decree of 7 January 1921, and the civil rights of Central Lithuania were granted to all people who lived in

392-592: A halt when Poland demanded that a delegation from Central Lithuania (boycotted by Lithuania) be invited to Brussels . Hymans' proposal left Vilnius in Polish hands, which was unacceptable to Lithuania. A new plan was presented to the governments of Lithuania and Poland in September 1921. It was basically a modification of "Hymans' plan", with the difference that the Klaipėda Region (the area in East Prussia north of

441-534: A policy of Russification of the newly acquired lands, which escalated after the failed January Uprising of 1864. The discrimination against local inhabitants included restrictions and outright bans on the usage of the Polish , Lithuanian (see Lithuanian press ban ), Belarusian , and Ukrainian (see Valuyev circular ) languages. These measures, however, had limited effects on the Polonisation effort undertaken by

490-491: A relic of the pre-war independent state in Lithuanian SSR between 1944 and 1950. In this period, a significant part of its population moved to Poland during the so-called repatriation . After 1990, when Lithuania became independent, Vilnius county was re-established differently in 1994. This entity has different boundaries than any previous entity and is not directly related to previous entities in this area. The mission of

539-598: The Central Lithuania , and the Middle Lithuania ( Polish : Litwa Środkowa , Lithuanian : Vidurinė Lietuva , Belarusian : Сярэдняя Літва , romanized :  Siaredniaja Litva ), was an unrecognized short-lived puppet state of Poland , that existed from 1920 to 1922. It was founded on 12 October 1920, after successful Żeligowski's Mutiny , during which the volunteer 1st Lithuanian–Belarusian Division under command of general Lucjan Żeligowski seized

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588-756: The Curzon Line and taking advantage of the fact that victorious Poles after the Battle of Warsaw were advancing to the East against the Bolsheviks in the Polish–Soviet War . Poles believed that for this reason they should grab as much mixed areas as deemed possible as well as to protect the Catholic, predominantly Polish-speaking population in disputed areas, thus because of the colossal military outnumbering, Lithuania could not stand

637-530: The Neman River ) was to be incorporated into Lithuania. However, both Poland and Lithuania openly criticized this revised plan and finally this turn of talks came to a halt as well. After the talks in Brussels failed, the tensions in the area grew. The most important issue was the huge army Central Lithuania fielded (27,000). General Lucjan Żeligowski decided to pass the power to the civil authorities and confirmed

686-627: The Polish–Lithuanian relations in the interwar period. Alfred Erich Senn noted that if Poland had not prevailed in the Polish–Soviet War , Lithuania would have been invaded by the Soviets, and would never have experienced two decades of independence. Despite the Soviet–Lithuanian Peace Treaty of 1920, Lithuania was very close to being invaded by the Soviets in summer 1920 and being forcibly incorporated into that state, and only

735-609: The Red Army , which defeated the local self-defense units , but shortly afterwards the Soviets were pushed back by the Polish Army . 1920 saw the Vilnius region occupied by the Red Army for the second time. However, when the Red Army was defeated in the Battle of Warsaw , the Soviets, knowing that they wouldn't be able to hold Vilnius, decided to hand it over to Lithuania. By making such a move,

784-499: The Vilnius Region (published in 1919) however, reported strikingly different numbers. In 1917 in the Vilnius city Poles were at 53.65%, Jews at 41.45%, Lithuanians at 2.1%, Belarusians at 0.44%, Russians at 1.59%, Germans at 0,63% and 'Other' at 0.14%. According to the 1916 census , Poles constituted 89.8% of the inhabitants of Vilnius county (excluding the city) and Lithuanians only 4.3%. Censuses had encountered difficulties in

833-425: The Vilnius Region that Lithuania made claims to. It was incorporated into Poland on 18 April 1922. Vilnius , the historical capital of Lithuania, had majority Polish -speaking population with Lithuanian -speaking population of only 2–3%. Therefore, the Polish authorities decided that the region should belong to the newly-established Polish state and attempted to implement this idea using military force, ignoring

882-655: The interwar period , was recognized by the Conference of Ambassadors of the Entente and the League of Nations . It was not recognized by Kaunas -based Republic of Lithuania until the Polish ultimatum of 1938 in March, when Lithuania acknowledged the status quo of so-called demarcation line, but the newest edition of the Constitution of Lithuania in May 1938 one more time named Vilnius

931-718: The national ice hockey team . Vilnius County Until the Partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in late 18th century the area belonged to the Vilnius Voivodship and Trakai Voivodship of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth . In the Russian Empire it belonged to the Northwestern Krai and approximately corresponded to its Vilna Governorate (as of 1843). During World War I , following

980-509: The 19th century was suppressed by the Russian policies and had unfavourable conditions within the Catholic church , became a minority in the region. Based on this, Lithuanian authorities argued that the majority of inhabitants living there, even if they at the time did not speak Lithuanian, were thus Polonized (or Russified ) Lithuanians. Further complicating the situation, there were two Polish factions with quite different views on creation of

1029-627: The German offensive of 1915, it was occupied by the German army. After the war, some parts of the area was ruled by local Polish self-government established after the German Ober-Ost army withdrew from the area. Following the start of the Polish-Bolshevik War in 1919, it was occupied by the Red Army , which was pushed back by the Polish Army . In 1920, it was again occupied by the Red Army, but

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1078-565: The Jews and some Belarusians. Poles were the only major ethnic group out of which the majority of people voted. The elections were not recognized by Lithuania. Polish factions, which gained control over the parliament (Sejm) of the Republic (the Sejm of Central Lithuania ), on February 20 passed the request of incorporation into Poland. The request was accepted by the Polish Sejm on 22 March 1922. All of

1127-511: The Lithuanian boycott of the voting, the elections were postponed. Peace talks were held under the auspice of the League of Nations . The initial agreement was signed by both sides on 29 November 1920, and the talks started on 3 March 1921. The League of Nations considered the Polish proposal of a plebiscite on the future of Central Lithuania. As a compromise, the so-called "Hymans' plan" was proposed (named after Paul Hymans ). The plan consisted of 15 points, among them were: The talks came to

1176-399: The Polish patriotic leadership of the Vilnius educational district. A similar effort was pursued during the 19th century Lithuanian National Revival , which sought to distance itself from both Polish and Russian influences. The ethnic composition of the area has long been disputed, since censuses from that time and place are often considered unreliable. According to the first census of

1225-662: The Polish victory derailed this plan. After the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, Vilnius and its surroundings of up to 30 kilometres were given to Lithuania in accordance with the Soviet–Lithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty of 10 October 1939, and Vilnius again became the capital of Lithuania. However, in 1940, Lithuania was annexed by the Soviet Union, forcing

1274-426: The Republic's territory was eventually incorporated into the newly formed Wilno Voivodeship . Lithuania declined to accept the Polish authority over the area. Instead, it continued to treat the so-called Vilnius Region as part of its own territory and the city itself as its constitutional capital, with Kaunas being only a temporary seat of government . The dispute over the Vilnius region resulted in much tensions in

1323-527: The Russian Empire in 1897, known to have been intentionally falsified, the population of the Vilna Governorate was distributed as follows: Belarusians at 56.1% (including Roman Catholics), Lithuanians at 17.6%, Jews at 12.7%, Poles at 8.2%, Russians at 4.9%, Germans at 0.2%, Ukrainians at 0.1%, Tatars at 0.1%, and 'Others' at 0.1% as well. The German censuses of 1915, 1916 and 1917 of

1372-455: The Seimas, for the percentage of Lithuanian population in Vilnius was very small. On 8 October, General Lucjan Żeligowski and the 1st Lithuanian-Belarusian Division numbering around 14,000 men, with local self-defense, launched the Żeligowski's Mutiny and engaged the Lithuanian 4th Infantry Regiment which promptly retreated. Upon the Polish advance, on October 8, the Lithuanian government left

1421-640: The Soviets hoped to intensify the Polish-Lithuanian dispute over the region. The regular Polish–Lithuanian War broke out on 26 August 1920, when the Polish Army clashed with Lithuanian troops occupying Suwałki region during the Polish autumn offensive following the Battle of Warsaw. The League of Nations intervened and arranged negotiations in Suwałki . The League negotiated a cease-fire, signed on 7 October 7, placing

1470-515: The Soviets officially recognized the sovereignty of the Lithuanian Republic over the city immediately after defeat during Battle of Warsaw . During their retreat, the Bolsheviks passed the sovereignty over the area to Lithuania. The Polish commander Józef Piłsudski ordered his subordinate general Lucjan Żeligowski to "rebel" his Lithuanian- Belarusian division and capture the city of Vilnius , without declaring war on Lithuania. The area of

1519-447: The area on January 1, 1919, or for five years prior to August 1, 1914. The symbols of the state were a red flag with Polish White Eagle and Lithuanian Vytis . Its coat of arms was a mixture of Polish, Lithuanian and Vilnian symbols and resembled the Coat of arms of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth . Extensive diplomatic negotiations continued behind the scenes. Lithuania proposed creating

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1568-578: The area was captured by the Soviet Union , which transferred parts of what is now Vilnius County and Utena County to Lithuania , only to annex it the following year. In 1941, it was conquered by the Nazi Germany . During World War II , the area saw formation of many resistance units, most notably the Polish Home Army and, after 1943, Soviet partisans . After the war, Vilniaus Apskritis existed as

1617-583: The attempt to categorise their subjects. Ethnographers in the 1890s were often confronted with those who described themselves as both Lithuanians and Poles. According to a German census analyst, "Objectively determining conditions of nationality comes up against the greatest difficulties." In the aftermath of the First World War , both Poland and Lithuania regained independence. The conflict between them soon arose as both Lithuania and Poland claimed Vilnius (known in Polish as Wilno) region. Demographically,

1666-508: The capital of Lithuania . In 1931, an international court in The Hague stated that the Polish seizure of the region had been a violation of international law, but there were no political repercussions. Following the partitions of Poland , most of the lands that formerly constituted the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were annexed by the Russian Empire . The Imperial government increasingly pursued

1715-459: The city and the surrounding area. While Poland under Józef Piłsudski attempted to create a Polish-led federation in the area that would include a number of ethnically non-Polish territories ( Międzymorze ), Lithuania strove to create a fully independent state that would include the Vilnius region . Two early 20th-century censuses indicated that Lithuanian speakers, whose language in the second half of

1764-451: The city for Kaunas, and during withdrawal, meticulously destroyed telephone lines and rail between the two cities, which remained severed for a generation. Żeligowski entered Vilnius on 9 October, to enthusiastic cheers of the overwhelmingly Polish population of the city. The French and the British delegation decided to leave the matter in the hands of the League of Nations. On October 27, while

1813-411: The city of Vilnius in Lithuania. The Suwałki Agreement was to have taken effect at 12:00 on 10 October. The Lithuanian authorities entered Vilnius in late August 1920. The Grinius cabinet rejected the proposal to hold a plebiscite to confirm the will of the region's inhabitants, knowing that a plebiscite would inevitably legitimize Polish claims to the region. His declaration was promptly accepted by

1862-402: The county is different as well: its primary goal (as in that of Lithuania's other counties) is to oversee that municipalities in its area follow the laws of Lithuania. The county is subdivided into six district municipalities, one municipality and one city municipality: According to the 2021 census, the county population was 810,797 people, of which: In 2022, GDP per capita of Vilnius County

1911-429: The date of the elections (8 January 1922). There was a significant electioneering propaganda campaign as Poles tried to win the support of other ethnic groups present in the area. The Polish government was also accused of various strong-arm policies (like the closing of Lithuanian newspapers or election violations like not asking for a valid document from a voter). The elections were boycotted by Lithuanians, most of

1960-513: The end of World War I, the area of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania was divided between the Second Polish Republic , the short-lived unrecognized Belarusian People's Republic , and the Republic of Lithuania . Following the start of the Polish–Soviet War , during the next two years, the control of Vilnius and its environs changed frequently. In 1919 the territory was briefly occupied by

2009-538: The future Vilnius County was seized by the Polish forces without significant opposition from Lithuanian forces and Gen. Żeligowski created a short-lived state called the Republic of Central Lithuania . Following the elections held there in 1922 the state was incorporated into Poland (see Vilnius region , Central Lithuania ). As a result of the Nazi-Soviet Alliance and the Polish Defensive War of 1939,

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2058-400: The main groups inhabiting Vilnius were Poles and Jews, with Lithuanians constituting a small fraction of the total population (2.0%–2.6%, according to the Russian census of 1897 and the German census of 1916). The Lithuanians nonetheless believed that their historical claim to Vilnius (former capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania ) had precedence and refused to recognize any Polish claims to

2107-639: The modern state in Poland. One party, led by Roman Dmowski , saw modern Poland as an ethnic state, another, led by Józef Piłsudski , wished to rebuild the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Both parties were determined to take the Poles of Vilnius into the new state. Piłsudski attempted to rebuild the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in a canton structure, as part of the Międzymorze federation: Eventually, Piłsudski's plan failed; it

2156-485: The newest towns of Lithuania, having been established during the Soviet occupation in the early 1960s as the living space for workers of the nearby power plant. It was expanded in the 1980s and early 1990s as a residence for builders and workers at the nearby Kruonis Pumped Storage Plant . The name of the new town was derived from word elektra (English: electricity ) – a borrowing to Lithuanian language from Greek . Gintarėnai ( gintaras – Lithuanian word for amber )

2205-449: The Żeligowski's campaign still continued outside Vilnius, the League called for a popular referendum in the disputed area, which was again rejected by the Lithuanian representation. Poland disclaimed all responsibility for the action, maintaining that Żeligowski had acted entirely on his own initiative. This version of the event was redefined in August 1923 when Piłsudski, speaking in public at

2254-418: Was an imitation of a sovereign state which repressed Lithuanian organizations, education, censored and suspended Lithuanian publications. After a variety of delays, a disputed election took place on 8 January 1922, and the territory was annexed by Poland. Several years later the Polish leader Józef Piłsudski confirmed that he personally ordered Żeligowski to stage a mutiny. The Polish–Lithuanian border in

2303-616: Was another name considered, but was rejected before the start of the construction. Most of the buildings in Elektrėnai are large block housing projects built during the Soviet period, with no historical buildings. The town, however, is close to Elektrėnai Reservoir , an artificial lake that was created to cool the Elektrėnai Power Plant . The water is several degrees warmer than water at the other nearby lakes. There are several supermarkets ( Norfa XXL, Maxima XX, Iki , Lidl , as well as

2352-646: Was opposed both by the Lithuanian government and by the Dmowski's faction in Poland. Stanisław Grabski , representative of Dmowski's faction, was in charge of the Treaty of Riga negotiations with the Soviet Union , in which they rejected the Soviet offer of territories needed for the Minsk canton (Dmowski preferred Poland that would be smaller, but with higher percentage of ethnic Poles). The inclusion of territories predominant with non-Poles would have weakened support for Dmowski. At

2401-612: Was €35,300, making it the richest county in Lithuania and Baltic States . As of 2022, the average monthly gross wage in Vilnius County reached €2,002. 54°40′49″N 25°17′02″E  /  54.68028°N 25.28389°E  / 54.68028; 25.28389 Republic of Central Lithuania 54°30′N 25°45′E  /  54.500°N 25.750°E  / 54.500; 25.750 The Republic of Central Lithuania ( Polish : Republika Litwy Środkowej , Lithuanian : Vidurio Lietuvos Respublika ), commonly known as

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