Overview
Country, the largest of the three Baltic States,
northeastern Europe.
Area: 25,212 sq mi (65,300 sq km). Population (2007 est.):
3,375,000. Capital: Vilnius. Lithuanians make up about
four-fifths of the population; there are smaller numbers of
Russians, Poles, and Belarusians. Languages: Lithuanian
(official), Russian, Polish, Belarusian. Religion: Christianity
(predominantly Roman Catholic; also Eastern Orthodox). Currency:
litas. The country consists of low-lying plains alternating with
hilly uplands, watered by rivers that meander westward to the
Baltic Sea. Manufacturing, including metalworking, woodworking,
and textile production, is especially important in the east and
south. Agriculture focuses on livestock breeding, especially
dairy farming and pigs, and the cultivation of cereals, flax,
sugar beets, potatoes, and fodder crops. Lithuania is a
multiparty republic with one legislative house; its head of
state is the president, and the head of government is the prime
minister. Lithuanian tribes united in the mid-13th century to
oppose the Teutonic Knights. Gediminas, one of the grand dukes,
expanded Lithuania into an empire that dominated much of eastern
Europe in the 14th–16th centuries. In 1386 the Lithuanian grand
duke became the king of Poland, and the two countries remained
closely associated for the next 400 years. Lithuania was
acquired by Russia in the Third Partition of Poland in 1795 and
joined in the Polish revolt in 1863. Occupied by Germany during
World War I, it declared its independence in 1918. In 1940 the
Soviet Red Army gained control of Lithuania, which was soon
incorporated into the Soviet Union. Germany occupied Lithuania
again from 1941, but the Red Army regained control in 1944. With
the breakup of the U.S.S.R., Lithuania declared its independence
in 1990 and gained full independence in 1991. In the 1990s and
early 21st century it sought economic stability, and in 2004 it
became a member of the European Union.
Profile
Official name Lietuvos Respublika (Republic of Lithuania)
Form of government unitary multiparty republic with single
legislative body (Seimas, or Parliament [141])
Head of state President
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Vilnius
Official language Lithuanian
Official religion none
Monetary unit litas (LTL)
Population estimate (2008) 3,358,000
Total area (sq mi) 25,212
Total area (sq km) 65,300
Main
country of northeastern Europe, the southernmost and largest
of the three Baltic states. Lithuania was a powerful empire that
dominated much of eastern Europe in the 14th–16th centuries
before becoming part of the Polish-Lithuanian confederation for
the next two centuries. Aside from a brief period of
independence from 1918 to 1940, Lithuania was occupied by Russia
beginning in 1795, was controlled by Germany for a brief period
during World War II, and was incorporated into the U.S.S.R. in
1944 as one of its constituent republics. On March 11, 1990,
Lithuania declared its independence by a unanimous vote of its
newly elected parliament. The new Soviet parliament acknowledged
Lithuania’s independence on Sept. 6, 1991. Lithuania was
admitted into the European Union (EU) and the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization in 2004. The capital is Vilnius.
Land
Lithuania is bounded by Latvia to the north, Belarus to
the east and south, Poland and the detached Russian oblast of
Kaliningrad to the southwest, and the Baltic Sea to the west.
Relief
Underlying rock structures are of little significance for
the contemporary Lithuanian terrain, which basically is a
low-lying plain scraped by Ice Age glaciers that left behind
thick, ridgelike terminal deposits known as moraines. The Baltic
coastal area is fringed by a region characterized by geographers
as the maritime depression, which rises gradually eastward. Sand
dunes line an attractive coast; the Curonian Lagoon (Lithuanian:
Kuršiu Marios), almost cut off from the sea by the Curonian
Spit, a thin 60-mile (100-km) sandspit, forms a distinctive
feature. It is bounded by the Žemaičiai Upland to the east,
which gives way to the flat expanses of the Middle Lithuanian
Lowland.
The lowland, consisting of glacial lake clays and
boulder-studded loams, stretches in a wide band across the
country from north to south; some portions of it are heavily
waterlogged. The elevated Baltic Highlands, adjacent to the
central lowland, thrust into the eastern and southeastern
portions of the country; their rumpled glacial relief includes a
host of small hills and numerous small lakes. The Švenčioniai
and the Ašmena highlands—the latter containing Mount Juozapinė,
at 957 feet (292 metres) above sea level the highest point in
Lithuania—are located in the extreme east and southeast.
Drainage
Lithuanian rivers drain to the Baltic and generally have the
slow, meandering characteristics of lowland rivers. The Neman
River (Nemunas), cutting north and then west through the heart
of the country, is the largest. Its main tributaries are the
Merkys, Neris, Nevėžis, Dubysa, Jūra, Minija, and Šešupė. A
distinctive feature of the Lithuanian landscape is the presence
of about 3,000 lakes, mostly in the east and southeast. The
boggy regions produce large quantities of peat that, dried by
air, is used in both industry and agriculture.
Soils
Lithuanian soils range from sands to heavy clays. In the
northwest the soil is either loamy or sandy (and sometimes
marshy) and is quite heavily podzolized, or leached out. In the
central region, weakly podzolized loamy peats predominate, and
it is there that the most fertile, and hence most cultivated,
soils are found. In the southeast there are sandy soils,
somewhat loamy and moderately podzolized. Sandy soils in fact
cover one-fourth of Lithuania, and most of these are blanketed
by woodlands.
Climate
The climate of the country is transitional between the
maritime type of western Europe and the continental type found
farther east. As a result, damp air masses of Atlantic origin
predominate, alternating with continental Eurasian and, more
rarely, colder Arctic air or air with a southern, tropical
origin. Baltic Sea influences dominate a comparatively narrow
coastal zone. The mean temperature for January, the coldest
month, is in the low 20s F (about −5 °C), while July, the
warmest month, has an average temperature in the 60s F (about 17
°C). Average annual rainfall usually exceeds 30 inches (about
800 mm), diminishing inland. Rainfall reaches a peak in August,
except in the maritime strip, where the maximum is reached two
to three months later.
Plant and animal life
Lithuanian vegetation falls into three separate regions. In
the maritime regions, pine forests predominate, and wild rye and
various bushy plants grow on the sand dunes. Spruce trees are
prevalent in the hilly eastern portion. The central region is
characterized by large tracts of oak trees, with elegant birch
forests in the northern portions, as well as distinctive black
alder and aspen groves. Pine forests prevail in the south.
Indeed, about one-third of the country is forested, and about
another one-fifth is taken up by meadowlands. Swamps and
marshlands account for only a small percentage of the total
land.
Wildlife is very diverse and includes numerous mammalian
species. There are wolves, foxes, otters, badgers, ermine, wild
boars, and many rodents. The deep forests harbour elk, stags,
deer, beavers, mink, and water rats. Lithuania is also home to
hundreds of species of birds, including white storks, ducks,
geese, swans, cormorants, herons, hawks, and even an occasional
bald eagle. There are many types of grouse and partridge as
well.
People
Ethnic groups, languages, and religion
Ethnic Lithuanians make up about four-fifths of the
country’s population; there are also Russians and Poles and
lesser numbers of Belarusians, Ukrainians, Latvians, Tatars,
Roma (Gypsies), and others. There was a significant Jewish
community in Lithuania prior to World War II, and an influx of
Jews from German-controlled Poland in 1941 boosted this
population to nearly 250,000. By 1944, however, the majority of
the population had been murdered, deported, or sent to
concentration camps (see Holocaust).
The official language of Lithuania is Lithuanian. Russian,
Polish, Belarusian, Ukrainian, and other languages are spoken in
the larger cities. Yiddish is commonly spoken by members of the
tiny remaining Jewish community in Lithuania.
Lithuania was the last pagan country in Europe, accepting
Roman Catholicism in the late 14th century. About four-fifths of
the population is Roman Catholic; there are smaller groups of
Evangelical Lutherans and other Protestants, as well as people
of other faiths. Elements of the pagan religion have survived in
the countryside.
Settlement patterns
There has been a modest but steady movement of people to the
cities since the 1990s, encouraged by the planning of regional
centres, such as Alytus, Marijampolė, Utena, Plungė, and
Mažeikiai. By the early 21st century about two-thirds of the
total population lived in urban areas.
The largest city is Vilnius, followed by Kaunas, Klaipėda,
Šiauliai, and Panevėžys.
Demographic trends
Natural increase, rather than immigration, has accounted for
most of Lithuania’s population growth in the early 21st century.
The high birth rate distinguishes Lithuania from its Baltic
neighbours, which have struggled to offset the aging of their
populations. The comparatively high level of ethnic homogeneity
in Lithuania and the persistence of Roman Catholicism in the
face of decades of Soviet promulgation of atheism as the
official state ideology further distinguish Lithuania from
Latvia and Estonia, where historically German-Scandinavian
religious and cultural values have predominated.
Economy
Even before independence from the U.S.S.R. was formally
established, the Lithuanian government had embarked on a program
of dismantling the Soviet economic system. Beginning in February
1991, laws were passed to facilitate privatization.
Complications marred the government’s aspirations, however.
Foremost, the bulk of Lithuania’s trade was still closely linked
to the former republics of the U.S.S.R., which were themselves
in the throes of economic collapse. Second, Lithuania was
dependent on critically important foreign oil and natural gas
and industrial raw materials. Finally, the transition to a
market economy had caused high rates of inflation and
unemployment. Nevertheless, the succeeding governments continued
to implement stringent stabilization policies; by 1995 inflation
had been reduced, and the country’s trade balance was positive
for the first time since independence. Lithuania was admitted to
the EU in 2004.
Agriculture
The development of agriculture since 1991 has been closely
linked to land reclamation and swamp-drainage schemes. By the
early 21st century agriculture contributed only a small
percentage to the gross national product (GNP) and employed only
about one-tenth of the economically active population. The chief
trend is toward the production of meat and milk and the
cultivation of flax, sugar beets, potatoes, and vegetables. A
significant portion of total production is made up of fodder
crops, grain (barley and rye), and leguminous crops; most of the
rest consists of potatoes and vegetables. Livestock breeding is
still the leading branch of agriculture, with an emphasis on
dairy cattle and pigs. Most crop cultivation is mechanized,
though during the autumn harvest large amounts of manual labour
are still required.
Lithuania has long been a small net exporter of food
products. The privatization of farming in the early 1990s began
with the decision to liquidate all former collective and state
farms. Some private farms emerged in the period immediately
following independence, but the process was slow. Not only were
there problems of financing, but equipment appropriate to
smaller-scale farming operations was not readily available. By
the late 1990s private farms had begun to outnumber state farms.
The majority of these farms are not specialized and are involved
in mixed production based on crops and livestock.
Resources and power
Lithuania possesses a range of useful mineral resources,
including sulfates, notably gypsum; chalk and chalky marl;
limestones; dolomites; various clays, sands, and gravels; peat;
some iron ore and phosphorites; and mineral waters. Amber, which
is a fossil tree resin, is found along the shore of the Baltic
Sea.
Oil deposits have been detected in the offshore regions. A
pipeline carries gas from Ukraine, and an oil pipeline
transports crude oil from fields in western Siberia to the
refinery at Mažeikiai, which was modernized in 2003. In 1999 a
crude oil terminal at Būtingė was opened on the Baltic Sea.
Almost all the oil that is exported through Būtingė comes from
Russia.
Lithuania’s rivers have the potential to generate
electricity. After 1961 the country’s power system became part
of the unified network that also served the northwestern
U.S.S.R. Major power plants include a hydroelectric station on
the Neman River, a thermal station at the town of Elektrėnai,
and a nuclear facility at Ignalina.
Manufacturing
During the Soviet period Lithuanian economic policy
emphasized manufacturing. After World War II the country’s
machinery, shipbuilding, electronic, electrical and radio
engineering, chemical, cement, and fish-processing industries
were overhauled. Traditional industries such as food processing
and various branches of light industry also expanded
significantly. Following independence in 1991, the textile,
chemical, and food-processing sectors were the first to adapt to
new market conditions. The manufacturing of communications
equipment became a dominant economic activity. By the late 1990s
much of Lithuania’s manufacturing sector had been privatized.
Finance
The national currency, the litas, was introduced to
Lithuania in 1922 and was restored in 1993. (During Soviet
occupation Lithuania used the Russian ruble as its currency.)
The litas is issued by the Bank of Lithuania, the country’s
central bank. All state-owned banks in Lithuania had been
privatized by 2002. A stock exchange opened in Vilnius in 1993.
Trade
Lithuania’s chief trading partners include Russia, Latvia,
Germany, Poland, Estonia, The Netherlands, and France. Imports
include crude petroleum, machinery, foodstuffs, chemical
products, and metals. Lithuania exports refined petroleum,
foodstuffs, machinery, textiles, and transport equipment (mainly
automotive parts).
Services
By the early 21st century the service sector was the largest
component of the Lithuanian economy, employing about half the
workforce and contributing about two-fifths of the annual GNP.
Tourism has grown in importance, and popular attractions in
Lithuania include the Baroque-, Renaissance-, and Gothic-style
mansions and castles in the historic centres of Vilnius, Kaunas,
Klaipėda, and Kėdainiai, as well as in the former capitals of
Kernavė and Trakai. The Kernavė archaeological site in eastern
Lithuania, which dates from the Middle Ages, encompasses forts,
settlements, and other historical monuments. It was designated a
UNESCO World Heritage site in 2004. The countryside’s lakes and
forests, and the Baltic coastline’s dune-covered Curonian Spit,
which was added to the World Heritage list in 2000, are popular
recreational areas.
Labour and taxation
Lithuanians’ salaries have generally been lower than those
of workers in other EU member countries. For this reason, and
because of high income taxes, many Lithuanian nationals were
motivated to seek work in other EU countries after Lithuania
joined the EU in 2004. Some of these emigrants started to return
in 2007, however, when the government reduced income taxes and
raised the minimum wage. Nearly half the women are economically
active; however, employer discrimination against women has been
a problem.
Transportation and telecommunications
Lithuania’s geographic location has created favourable
conditions for transit development. Railways are the main means
of transport in Lithuania. Two major rail routes run through
Lithuania—a north-south highway that connects Scandinavia with
central Europe, as well as an east-west route linking Lithuania
to the rest of Europe. Moreover, after independence Lithuania
emerged as a critical land bridge to Kaliningrad oblast, the
region of the Russian Federation on the Baltic coast. A major
rail route between Russia and the Kaliningrad region passes
through Lithuania.
Sea transport is an important sector, with freight
transportation showing a rapid increase since World War II.
Klaipėda is the country’s largest and most important port. River
transport also is significant, and the country’s hundreds of
miles of waterways, which are navigable year-round, are used for
internal shipping. Kaunas is a chief inland port.
Lithuania has international airports at Vilnius, Kaunas, and
Palanga. Vilnius is the main air transportation centre, with
links to many foreign cities. The independent Lithuanian
Airlines began operating in 1991.
Lithuania’s telecommunications sector is privatized.
Fixed-line telephone use has decreased in Lithuania, but new
technologies have been adopted quickly. The degree of cellular
phone penetration is among the highest in the EU, and many
Lithuanians have access to the Internet through their mobile
phones.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Lithuania’s current constitution was approved by national
referendum in 1992. The Republic of Lithuania, formerly the
Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic, is administered by a
president and a legislature, the Seimas, under a parliamentary
system. The Seimas consists of 141 members, who are elected to
four-year terms. The prime minister, formally appointed by the
president, oversees the country’s day-to-day affairs and is
generally the leader of the Seimas’s majority party. The
president is popularly elected for a five-year term (with a
maximum of two consecutive terms).
Local government
Lithuania is divided into apskritys (counties), which are
then divided into rajonas (districts). The districts are further
divided into savivalbyde (regional towns, urban settlements, and
localities). The governor of each county is appointed by the
national government. The districts are self-governing and elect
local councils, which in turn elect the mayors.
Justice and security
Lithuania’s judicial system is headed by a Supreme Court and
a Constitutional Court, whose judges are selected by the
parliament. There are also district and local courts whose
judges are appointed by the president for five-year terms.
Lithuania has an army, navy, and air force. Military service is
mandatory for men and women ages 19 to 45 for one year and
voluntary at age 18.
Political process
All Lithuanians age 18 and older are eligible to vote.
During the Soviet period the Lithuanian Communist Party
(Lietuvos Komunistu Partija; LKP) was the country’s only
political party. Its members and candidates for membership were
supported by the activities of the Komsomol youth movement. In
1989, however, the legislature ended the Communist Party’s
monopoly on power by legalizing other political parties. The LKP
began to lose power in spite of the fact that it voted to
disassociate itself from the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union. In August 1991 the Lithuanian legislature voted to remove
legal rights from the party and to seize its property.
The political landscape in the early 1990s was complex.
Factionalism was predominant, and coalition governments were the
norm. The principal political parties after independence were
the Lithuanian Reform Movement (Sąjūdis) and the Lithuanian
Democratic Labour Party (Lietuvos Demokratinė Darbo Partija;
LDDP), which broke away from the Communist Party of Lithuania.
The role of national minorities, especially the Poles, further
complicated the political arena. By the early 21st century
dozens of parties and coalitions had formed. The Homeland Union
(Tėvynės Sąjunga; TS), which became one of the country’s largest
political parties in the early 21st century, was founded in 1993
as a successor to the Lithuanian independence movement.
Other parties include the Labour Party (Darbo Partija; DP),
which advocates for workers’ rights, and the Lithuanian Social
Democratic Party (Lietuvos Socialdemokratų Partija; LSDP), which
supports the nationalization of industry, higher taxes for the
wealthy, and increased rights for labour unions. There are other
parties representing minority groups, nationalists,
conservatives, and other interests.
Health and welfare
Lithuania has significantly improved its social service
system since independence. The government provides free medical
care to Lithuanian nationals as well as a range of ancillary
services, including pension payments and funding for
kindergartens and day care.
Education
A new national educational system was introduced in 1990.
Primary and secondary education is free and compulsory beginning
at age six. More than nine-tenths of the population age 15 and
older are literate. Notable institutions of higher education
include Vilnius University (1579), Vytautas Magnus University
(founded 1922; reopened 1989) in Kaunas, Vilnius Gediminas
Technical University (1956), and the Lithuanian Academy of Music
and Theatre (1933), which specializes in music, theatre, and
multimedia arts. The Lithuanian Academy of Sciences was founded
in 1941.
Cultural life
Cultural milieu
In Lithuania there is a high level of interest in various
aspects of cultural life. In spite of modern influences,
Lithuanian folklore continues to be a significant part of
national heritage. Lithuanian songs and a remarkable collection
of fairy tales, legends, proverbs, and aphorisms have roots deep
in a language and culture that are among the oldest in Europe.
In the 20th century, however, war and Soviet occupation stifled
the works of many Lithuanian artists, writers, poets, and
playwrights.
Daily life and social customs
As a predominantly Roman Catholic country, Lithuania
celebrates all the major Christian holidays. The traditional
Christmas Eve feast consists of 12 vegetarian dishes served on a
straw-covered table, meat being saved for Christmas Day.
Cabbages and potatoes form a considerable part of the Lithuanian
diet, as do dairy products. Traditional dishes include
cepelinai, a large, zeppelin-shaped, stuffed potato dumpling;
cabbage rolls; cold beet soup; and potato pancakes.
The arts
Lithuanian folk art is mainly embodied in ceramics,
leatherwork, wood carving, and textiles; its colouring and its
original geometric or floral patterns are characteristic
features. Lithuanian drawing, noted for the use of natural
colour and a highly refined technique, has won international
acclaim. The Vilnius Drawing School, founded in 1866, has had a
strong influence on the country’s fine arts traditions. The
composer and painter Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis
(1875–1911), considered one of Lithuania’s most outstanding
artists of the early 20th century, was actively involved with
the school. Moreover, some of the Lithuanian artists who opposed
Soviet ideological constraints produced theatre and art of
lasting significance. After the second Soviet occupation in
1944, many Lithuanian artists emigrated and founded art
galleries and schools, mainly in other parts of Europe and in
North America.
Lithuania’s musical traditions did not develop until the late
19th century. From 1918 to 1940 cultural societies, choirs, and
orchestras were formed. In 1924 the first all-Lithuanian song
festival was held in Kaunas. Romantic songs combined with
Lithuanian folk music became a popular style. One of the most
well-known composers and the founder of the Kaunas Conservatory
(1933), Lithuania’s first university-level music school, was
Juozas Gruodis (1884–1948). Lithuanians are especially proud of
their sutartinės, an ancient and unique form of typically two-
and three-voiced polyphony notable for its parallel seconds.
Song and dance festivals are held every summer throughout the
country. Vilnius hosts the National Song and Dance Festival, the
International M.K. Čiurlionis Piano and Organ Competition, and
the International Balys Dvarionas Competition for Young Pianists
and Violinists. Music festivals are also held in Šiauliai,
Birštonas, and Panevėžys. Jazz has a strong following, and many
jazz clubs can be found in Vilnius.
Until the 18th century most Lithuanian literature was
religious in nature. During the 19th century there arose a new
movement to create a Lithuanian literary language and foster
interest in the early history of the country. The literature of
this era sought to rally Lithuanians against the political
control of Russia and the cultural influence of Poland.
Following independence in 1918, writers began to concentrate on
developing national culture and a greater degree of
sophistication in literature. Foremost among this group was
Vincas Krėvė-Mickievičius, a novelist and dramatist who often
used traditional folk songs and legends in his works, and he is
regarded by many as one of the greatest Lithuanian writers.
Cultural institutions
The Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet (1920) in Vilnius
is of international renown. Museums of note include the National
Museum of Lithuania in Vilnius, the Trakai Historical Museum
(featuring artifacts discovered at the island castle at Trakai),
and a war museum in Kaunas dedicated to Vytautas the Great. The
Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis National Art Museum, also in
Kaunas, displays the works of the distinguished artist, as well
as Lithuanian folk art and other national art. The open-air
Rumšiškės Museum of Folk Art, located between Kaunas and
Vilnius, includes re-created villages depicting 19th-century
Lithuanian life in different regions of the country. Martynas
Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania in Vilnius (founded 1919)
includes documents dating from the 15th century. Vilnius
University’s Yiddish Institute (founded 2001) was created to
preserve and enrich Yiddish and East European Jewish culture.
Sports and recreation
Football (soccer) is Lithuania’s most popular sport, and the
country boasts several professional leagues. Basketball has
grown in popularity, and Lithuania’s team has excelled in
international competitions. Several of the country’s leading
players, including ydrunas Ilgauskas, Šarunas Marciulionis, and
Arvydas Sabonis, have plied their trade in North America’s
National Basketball Association. Cross-country skiing, ice
skating, ice hockey, and ice fishing on Curonian Lagoon are
favourite winter pastimes. Bicycling and canoeing are popular in
the summer.
Lithuania’s first Olympic appearance was at the 1924 Winter
Games in Chamonix, France. After World War II, Lithuanian
athletes competed for the Soviet Olympic team. Lithuania was
able to again contend as an independent country at the 1992
Olympic Games in Barcelona. Lithuanian discus throwers have been
especially successful in Olympic competition, including gold
medalists Romas Ubartas (1992) and Virgilijus Alekna (2000,
2004). Lithuania has also fared well in Olympic basketball.
Media and publishing
Prior to independence the media were state-owned and
controlled by the Communist Party, mainly through state censors.
Media censorship was abolished in 1989, and much of the media
flourished as the economy became more liberalized. By the 21st
century all newspapers were privately owned, though the
Lithuanian Telegraph Agency (ELTA), a wire service that serves
the local media in Lithuanian and Russian, was state-owned.
Several daily newspapers are published in Vilnius, including
Lietuvos Rytas (“Lithuania’s Morning,” also published in
Russian), Kurier Wileński (“Vilnius Courier,” published in
Polish), and Lietuvos Aidas (“Echo of Lithuania,” also published
in Russian). There are no government-owned newspapers. Both
radio and television stations are a mixture of private and
state-owned. The languages of broadcast for both media are
Lithuanian, Russian, Polish, Belarusian, and Ukrainian, and
there are also some Yiddish radio broadcasts.
Kazimieras Meškauskas
James H. Bater
Aivars Stranga
History
Early history
Lithuanians are an Indo-European people belonging to the
Baltic group. They are the only branch within the group that
managed to create a state entity in premodern times. The
Prussians, overrun by the Teutonic Order in the 13th century,
became extinct by the 18th century. The Latvians to the north
were conquered during the first three decades of the 13th
century by the Order of the Brothers of the Sword (this order
became a branch of the Teutonic Order in 1237). The Lithuanians,
protected by a dense primeval forest and extensive marshland,
successfully resisted German pressure. Samogitia (Lithuanian:
Žemaitija), lying between Prussia and Livonia, two lands already
in the hands of the German Crusading knights, was a particular
object of German expansion.
The German threat induced the Lithuanian tribes to unite in
the middle of the 13th century under Mindaugas. He and his
family were baptized in 1251, and two years later he was
accepted into the feudal hierarchy of Europe by being crowned
king of Lithuania by authority of Pope Innocent IV. Mindaugas,
who had reverted to paganism, and two of his sons were
assassinated in 1263. The Lithuanians retained their
naturalistic pagan religion until the late 14th century.
Traidenis, ruler from 1270 to 1282, was probably the founder
of the dynasty named after Gediminas, who began to rule about
1315. Although Lithuanian expansion to the east and south into
the area of modern Belarus and Ukraine had begun after the
destruction of the Kiev realm, it was Gediminas who
systematically carved out the empire that was historic
Lithuania, a wide region inhabited by Lithuanians and East
Slavs. As his letters from 1323 indicate, Vilnius was by then
the capital. At Gediminas’s death in 1341 or 1342, Lithuania’s
frontiers extended across the upper Dvina in the northeast to
the Dnieper in the southeast and the Pripet (Prypyat) Marshes in
the south. The Lithuanians were not sufficiently numerous for
colonization. Control was maintained through undoubted political
talent and a spirit of religious tolerance. The ruling
Lithuanian warrior caste intermarried extensively with the
ruling princely families of the subject East Slav principalities
and accepted Orthodoxy.
Gediminas divided his empire among his seven sons. After a
brief period of internecine strife, a diarchy of two remained:
Algirdas, with his capital in Vilnius, assumed the title of
Great Prince and dealt with eastern affairs; Kęstutis, whose
capital was the island castle at Trakai, dealt with the threat
from the Teutonic Order. Upon his death in 1377, Algirdas left
his eldest son, Jogaila, an expanded empire in the east, which
after 1362 included Kiev. Relations between Jogaila and his
uncle Kęstutis, however, were inimical. In 1381 Kęstutis drove
Jogaila from Vilnius and assumed the title of Great Prince. In
the following year fortune changed. Jogaila captured Kęstutis
and his eldest son, Vytautas. Kęstutis was imprisoned and
killed, but Vytautas escaped and found sanctuary among the
Teutonic Order, which hoped to utilize him as its vassal. The
German threat had increased significantly. Jogaila had tried to
stem the tide in 1382 by granting all of Samogitia up to the
Dubysa River to the order. The extended ruling family of
Lithuania was split. Those of Jogaila’s brothers who ruled in
the East Slav regions of the realm counseled alliance with
Moscow, including acceptance of Orthodox Christianity. Those in
the core lands of the state favoured an alliance with Poland and
acceptance of Roman Christianity.
Union with Poland
Jogaila chose the latter course. On Aug. 14, 1385, he
concluded an agreement to join his realm with Poland in return
for marriage to the 12-year-old Polish queen Jadwiga and
assumption of the Polish throne as king. The agreement was
effected early in the following year. In 1387 Jogaila formally
introduced Roman Christianity among his Lithuanian-speaking
subjects. Newly baptized nobles were granted extensive
privileges. Their status was officially patterned on the feudal
social structure prevalent in Western Christendom. In 1392 a
reconciliation took place between Jogaila and Vytautas, who
returned as ruler of Lithuania. The baptism of the Lithuanians
removed the basis for the existence of the Teutonic Order, which
had officially been founded to defend Christianity. Its stature
was considerably reduced after a defeat on July 15, 1410, at
Grünwald (Tannenberg) at the hands of a joint Polish-Lithuanian
army. The battle signaled a decisive ebb of the German threat.
The Lithuanian state reached its apogee during the rule of
Vytautas, called the Great, who died in 1430. The realm extended
from the Baltic Sea south to the shores of the Black Sea and
east almost to Mozhaisk, some 100 miles west of Moscow. The
Teutonic Order was no longer menacing, but a new threat from the
east appeared. In 1480 Ivan III, Grand Prince of Moscow, assumed
the title of sovereign of all the Russes. In effect he laid
claim to all the lands of the old Kievan state. Most of these,
including Kiev itself, were part of the Lithuanian realm.
The struggle with Moscow continued over the next two
centuries. Until 1569 the union of Lithuania and Poland remained
a loose alliance by virtue of a common ruler. On July 1, 1569, a
common Polish-Lithuanian parliament meeting in Lublin
transformed the loose personal union of the two states into a
Commonwealth of Two Peoples. While Poland and Lithuania would
thereafter elect a joint sovereign and have a common parliament,
the basic dual state structure was retained. Each continued to
be administered separately and had its own law codes and armed
forces. The joint commonwealth, however, provided an impetus for
cultural Polonization of the Lithuanian nobility. By the end of
the 17th century it had virtually become indistinguishable from
its Polish counterpart. The peasantry, however, retained the old
language.
Russian rule
During the 18th century, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
declined as a political power. Attempts at reform triggered
foreign intervention. Following three partitions, the old state
ceased to exist. During the first two partitions, in 1772 and
1793, Lithuania lost only lands inhabited by East Slavs. The
Third Partition (1795) resulted in a division of the land
inhabited by ethnic Lithuanians. The bulk of it went to Russia.
However, lands southwest of the Nemunas River were annexed by
the Kingdom of Prussia. This region was incorporated in the
Grand Duchy of Warsaw established by Napoleon in 1807. In 1815,
at the Congress of Vienna, the duchy became the Kingdom of
Poland and was placed under Russian rule, although as a separate
political entity. As a result, this region of Lithuania retained
the separate administrative and judicial system introduced under
French rule. These changes, including the abolition of serfdom,
were significant and made the region distinct from the rest of
the Lithuanian lands.
The uprisings of 1830–31 and 1863 in Poland found resonance
in the Lithuanian lands. The suppression was particularly harsh
after the second revolt. Both insurrections were followed by
waves of Russification. The tsarist government treated the
Northwest Region—as historic Lithuania, apart from the
southeastern lands, was called after 1832—as an integral part of
Russia. In 1832 the University of Vilnius, founded in 1579, was
closed. In 1840 the Lithuanian legal code, which dated back to
the 16th century, was abolished. After the revolt of 1863 the
policy of Russification was extended to all areas of public
life. Russian was the only language sanctioned for public use,
including education. Books and magazines in the Lithuanian
language could be printed only in the Cyrillic (Russian)
alphabet. Such cultural imperialism triggered an indigenous
reaction that fueled a national renaissance. An informal system
of Lithuanian “schools of the hearth” in the villages was
organized. Books in the Cyrillic alphabet were boycotted, while
Lithuanian publications in the Latin script, printed mostly
across the German border in neighbouring East Prussia, were
smuggled into the country in large numbers.
A liberalization occurred after the Russian Revolution of
1905. The press prohibition had been annulled in 1904, allowing
the appearance of the first Lithuanian daily newspaper, Vilniaus
žinios (“Vilnius News”). On Dec. 4–5, 1905, a congress of some
2,000 delegates was held in Vilnius. The congress demanded an
autonomous political entity formed from the ethnic Lithuanian
lands. Its frontiers were to be formed in accordance with the
freely expressed wish of the inhabitants.
Independence
By late 1915 Lithuania had come under German military
occupation. The goal of the German administration was to create
a Lithuanian state that would be a satellite of Germany after
the final peace treaty. It authorized a gathering in Vilnius, on
Sept. 18–22, 1917, of a congress of 214 Lithuanian delegates.
The gathering called for an independent Lithuanian state within
ethnic frontiers with Vilnius as its capital, and it elected a
20-member Taryba, or council. On Feb. 16, 1918, the Taryba
proclaimed an independent Lithuanian state.
The country remained under German occupation, however. The
Germans began to withdraw after the armistice of Nov. 11, 1918.
The newly independent Lithuanian government was faced with an
invasion by the Soviets from the east. On Jan. 5, 1919, Vilnius
was occupied by the Red Army, and a communist Lithuanian
government was installed. The national government was evacuated
to Kaunas. By mid-1919 the tide had turned, and the Russians
were successfully pushed back east.
Foreign relations
Lithuania joined the League of Nations on Sept. 22, 1921, as
a recognized member of the international community of states. At
that time, its frontiers had not been clearly established, and
unresolved border questions characterized Lithuania’s foreign
relations throughout the interwar period. The problem of Vilnius
and its surrounding region bedeviled Polish-Lithuanian
relations. Modern Lithuanian nationalism was based on a fusion
of ethnicity and historic identity. Vilnius, the capital of the
historic state, was a multiethnic city with a heavily Polish
cultural veneer. Many in Poland, while not averse to Lithuania’s
claim, felt that Lithuania itself had historically become a part
of a wider Polish cultural realm and sought to resurrect some
form of the common political entity that had existed until 1795.
On April 20, 1919, the Polish army took Vilnius from the Red
Army and prevented the Lithuanians from reoccupying the city.
The Western Allied powers then intervened and set up a line of
demarcation between the Polish and Lithuanian forces, leaving
Vilnius in Polish hands. In 1920 Lithuania concluded a peace
treaty with Soviet Russia according to which Vilnius was
recognized as Lithuanian. During the Polish-Russian war of 1920,
Vilnius was occupied by the Red Army on July 14. The Lithuanians
occupied it in the wake of the Soviet retreat a month later. A
Polish-Lithuanian armistice signed in Suvalkai on Sept. 5, 1920,
left the city in Lithuanian hands. However, two days later,
Polish forces overran the area in dispute and set up a
government of Central Lithuania. Vilnius remained under Polish
control and was formally annexed in 1922. Lithuania, however,
refused to recognize the situation and continued to claim
Vilnius and its surroundings.
The status of Klaipėda also presented problems. The city,
Lithuania’s sole potential outlet to the sea, had been part of
Prussia and had never belonged to the historic Lithuanian state.
Although the city itself was largely German in character, the
surrounding countryside was largely populated by Lithuanians.
The port was occupied by Allied forces after World War I. The
Treaty of Versailles left its status undetermined. In January
1923 Lithuania occupied the territory. The following year an
agreement was concluded with the Allied powers according to
which Klaipėda became an autonomous part of Lithuania. Although
Weimar Germany acceded to Lithuanian control of Klaipėda, the
question resurfaced after Hitler’s accession to power. Nazi
propaganda agitated Germans to rise up against Lithuania.
Border problems figured prominently during the last two years
of the independent interwar republic. In the wake of a frontier
incident, a Polish ultimatum of March 17, 1938, demanded the
establishment of diplomatic relations and normal interstate
ties. Lithuania, which had refused to maintain relations with
Poland because of the dispute over Vilnius, yielded. On March
21, 1939, Lithuania yielded to another ultimatum and ceded the
port to Germany.
Domestic policies
The constitution adopted in 1922 set up a parliamentary
democracy. The system proved dysfunctional. Frequent cabinet
changes precluded stability. A coup d’état by a group of army
officers in December 1926 introduced an authoritarian
presidential system with restricted democracy that lasted until
the Soviet occupation of 1940. Antanas Smetona, who had been the
first president elected by the Taryba in 1918, was reinstated.
All political parties were proscribed, except for the ruling
Nationalist Union, which supported Smetona. In 1928 a new
constitution formalized this state of affairs. On Feb. 12, 1938,
a third constitution was adopted, envisaging a gradual return to
parliamentary institutions. Although the ban on political
parties remained in force, a de facto coalition government
representing a wide spectrum of political opinion was appointed.
However, by the outbreak of World War II only minimal political
change had been achieved.
Independence lost
A secret protocol to the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact of
Aug. 23, 1939, stipulated that, in the event of a territorial
and political rearrangement in the Baltic region, the northern
boundary of Lithuania should represent “the boundary of the
sphere of influence of Germany and the U.S.S.R.” When World War
II began, Germany made a concerted effort to induce Lithuania to
join in its attack on Poland, making it an ally and protégé.
Lithuania opted for neutrality. A secret protocol to the
German-Soviet boundary and friendship treaty of Sept. 28, 1939,
revised the earlier agreement and placed most of Lithuania, with
the exception of a small portion in the southwest, in the Soviet
sphere of influence.
On Oct. 10, 1939, the U.S.S.R. forced Lithuania to accept a
treaty of mutual assistance. Lithuania was compelled to admit
Soviet garrisons and air bases on its territory. In return
Lithuania received Vilnius and surrounding areas that had been
occupied by the Red Army during its attack on Poland. The
territory formed about one-third of the area that Soviet Russia
had recognized as Lithuanian according to the peace treaty of
1920 but that had been under Polish rule since 1920.
On June 15, 1940, the U.S.S.R. confronted Lithuania with an
ultimatum demanding the immediate formation of a “friendly”
government and the admission of unlimited numbers of Soviet
troops to its territory. The same day, the country was occupied.
President Smetona fled to Germany, though without resigning. In
his absence, the prime minister, Antanas Merkys, in his capacity
as acting president, appointed a left-wing journalist, Justas
Paleckis, prime minister. Merkys himself resigned, making
Paleckis acting president as well. The moves clearly violated
the constitution. The following month, the new Soviet regime
staged elections. On July 21, the newly “elected” people’s
parliament unanimously requested the incorporation of Lithuania
into the Soviet Union. On Aug. 3, 1940, the Supreme Soviet of
the U.S.S.R. acceded to this request and declared Lithuania a
constituent republic of the Soviet Union.
During the first year of occupation, Sovietization consisted
primarily of remolding the old political, social, economic, and
cultural structures into Soviet forms. A land reform was
enacted, though its effect was limited, as the land reform of
the 1920s had already to a large degree made the country one of
agrarian smallholders. A relatively small number of the
country’s political elite were deported in July 1940, before
incorporation into the U.S.S.R. Large-scale deportations,
affecting a wide cross section of the population, were initiated
on the night of June 13–14, 1941. The movement was still under
way at the time of the German attack a week later. It has been
estimated that this wave of deportation affected some 35,000
people.
When Germany attacked the U.S.S.R. on June 22, 1941, an
insurrection against Soviet rule broke out in Lithuania. On the
first day, insurgents gained control of Kaunas, then the
capital, and set up a provisional government. Within a week the
German army had overrun all of Lithuania. The Lithuanians hoped
to reestablish independence in alliance with Germany. However,
on July 28, 1941, an Ostland province, consisting of the three
Baltic countries and Belorussia (now Belarus), was created. The
Lithuanian provisional government refused to serve as
administrative agent for the German occupation and disbanded. A
German occupation regime was established, but it enjoyed only
limited success in fulfilling the demands of the Reich. For
three years manpower mobilization efforts were effectively
thwarted. Human losses during the German occupation have been
estimated at roughly 250,000. The bulk of these losses came from
the Jewish community, which was almost entirely exterminated.
Soviet republic
By the end of 1944 most of Lithuania had been reoccupied
by the Red Army. The first postwar decade was a period of
extensive repression and Russification. An organized guerrilla
resistance, at times involving up to 40,000 fighters, lasted
into the early 1950s. Several waves of deportations to Siberia
and Central Asia accompanied the collectivization of
agriculture: about 70,000 people were deported in late 1947;
70,000 in May 1948; and some 80,000 in 1949. Cultural life
stagnated under the imposition of rigid Stalinist norms.
During the thaw in the U.S.S.R. in the late 1950s and early
’60s, the ruling Lithuanian Communist Party, which had been
disproportionately composed of immigrant officials, was slowly
nativized and transformed into the political machine of the
long-term (1936–74) first secretary Antanas Sniečkus. The
relative liberalization coincided with the industrialization and
urbanization of the country. The possibility of planning
socioeconomic change at the local level precluded large-scale
immigration of labour from outside the republic. As a result,
Lithuania remained ethnically largely homogeneous, with
Lithuanians making up about 80 percent of the population in the
early 1990s. The ideological reaction during the 1970s and early
’80s failed to stem the development of national consciousness.
An extensive dissident movement developed. During the 1970s
Lithuania produced more per capita samizdat (unofficial and
unsanctioned underground publications) than any other Soviet
republic. The most prominent samizdat periodical, The Chronicle
of the Lithuanian Catholic Church, which first appeared in 1972,
outlasted the regime.
Independence restored
The effort during the late 1980s to renovate the U.S.S.R.
through glasnost (“openness”) and perestroika (“restructuring”)
created a new political atmosphere. A mass reform movement,
Sa̡jūdis (“Movement”), emerged in opposition. Elections in early
1990 resulted in a legislature that unanimously declared on
March 11 the reestablishment of Lithuania’s independence. Soviet
reaction initially consisted of a largely ineffectual economic
boycott during the spring and summer of 1990. An abortive effort
to topple the independent government on Jan. 13, 1991, ended in
bloodshed. Political independence and international recognition
were secured in the aftermath of the failed coup in Moscow in
August 1991.
Lithuania held its first post-Soviet elections in 1992. The
former Communist Party, which renamed itself the Lithuanian
Democratic Labour Party (LDLP), won 73 of 141 seats. Despite its
victory, the LDLP did not seek to reverse policies. Instead, the
government liberalized the economy, joined the Council of
Europe, became an associate member of the Western European
Union, and pursued membership in the European Union (EU) and the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Internal disagreements, charges of corruption, and economic
recession led to a drop in the government’s popularity in the
mid-1990s. In 1996 the LDLP won only 12 seats and was replaced
in government by a coalition between the Christian Democratic
Party and the Centre Party. The new government sought to further
liberalize the economy and to attract foreign capital. In 1998
Valdas Adamkus, who had been naturalized a U.S. citizen and who
sought to curb corruption, was elected president.
Romuald J. Misiunas
Throughout the first half of the 1990s, Lithuania’s economy
had remained reliant on Russia and was hit by recession. By the
late 1990s it had dramatically increased its share of trade with
western Europe, and inflation—which had exceeded 1,000 percent
in 1991—was reduced to less than 10 percent. Rolandas Paksas,
leader of Lithuania’s populist Liberal Democratic Party,
defeated Adamkus in the 2003 presidential election. Paksas was
impeached later that year, however, when the Constitutional
Court ruled that he had violated the constitution on at least
three occasions (most notably, in granting citizenship to a
Russian-born financial supporter). Moreover, members of Paksas’s
administration were linked to Russian organized crime. The
chairman of the Seimas (legislature) became acting president,
and Adamkus won a second term through a special presidential
election held in 2004. That same year Lithuania gained full
membership in both the EU and NATO, and its economic fortunes
turned as European holidaymakers flocked to seaside resorts,
including Palanga and Klaipėda.
By May 2008 the country’s economy had begun to sour, and the
European Commission rejected Lithuania’s application to join the
euro zone because of the country’s high inflation. The ailing
economy spurred violent protests in the capital, some of the
worst since 1991. Running as an independent with the promise of
change, Dalia Grybauskaitė, the EU budget commissioner, won the
May 2009 presidential election with about 69 percent of the
vote. The first woman in Lithuania to be elected president,
Grybauskaitė promised to stimulate exports, implement EU aid,
and provide tax breaks to owners of small businesses.
Relations with Russia continued to remain tense into the 21st
century. In 2006 Russia ceased supplying Lithuania’s main
petroleum refinery and further refused to honour Lithuania’s
request for reparations for the Soviet Union’s 50-year
occupation of Lithuania. In 2008 Lithuania’s parliament banned
any public display of Soviet or Nazi symbols.
Ed