HISTORY
Lithuanians belong to the Baltic group
of nations. Their ancestors moved to the Baltic region
about 3000 B.C. from beyond the Volga region of central
Russia. In Roman times, they traded amber with Rome
and around A.D. 900-1000 split into different language
groups, namely, Lithuanians, Prussians, Latvians, Semigallians,
and others. The Prussians were conquered by the Teutonic
Knights, and, ironically, the name "Prussia"
was taken over by the conquerors, who destroyed or assimilated
Prussia's original inhabitants. Other groups also died
out or were assimilated by their neighbors. Only the
Lithuanians and the Latvians survived the ravages of
history.
Traditions of Lithuanian statehood
date from the early Middle Ages. As a nation, Lithuania
emerged about 1230 under the leadership of Duke Mindaugas.
He united Lithuanian tribes to defend themselves against
attacks by the Teutonic Knights, who had conquered the
kindred tribes of Prussia and also parts of present-day
Latvia. In 1251 Mindaugas accepted Latin Christianity,
and in 1253 he became king. But his nobles disagreed
with his policy of coexistence with the Teutonic Knights
and with his search for access to western Europe. Mindaugas
was killed, the monarchy was discontinued, and the country
reverted to paganism. His successors looked for expansion
toward the Slavic East. At that early stage of development,
Lithuania had to face the historically recurring question
dictated by its geopolitical position--whether to join
western or eastern Europe.
At the end of the fourteenth century,
Lithuania was already a large empire extending from
the Baltic Sea to the shores of the Black Sea. Grand
Duke Jogaila (r. 1377-81 and 1382-92) of the Gediminas
Dynasty faced a problem similar to that faced by Mindaugas
150 years earlier: whether to look to the East or the
West for political and cultural influences. Under pressure
from the Teutonic Knights, Lithuania, a kingdom of Lithuanians
and Slavs, pagans and Orthodox Christians, could no
longer stand alone. Jogaila chose to open links to western
Europe and to defeat the Teutonic Knights, who claimed
that their mission was not to conquer the Lithuanians
but to Christianize them. He was offered the crown of
Poland, which he accepted in 1386. In return for the
crown, Jogaila promised to Christianize Lithuania. He
and his cousin Vytautas, who became Lithuania's grand
duke, converted Lithuania to Christianity beginning
in 1387. Lithuania was the last pagan country in Europe
to become Christian. The cousins then defeated the Teutonic
Knights in the Battle of Tannenberg in 1410, stopping
Germanic expansion to the east.
Attempts by Vytautas to separate Lithuania
from Poland (and to secure his own crown) failed because
of the strength of the Polish nobility. Lithuania continued
in a political union with Poland. In 1569 Lithuania
and Poland united into a single state, the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth, whose capital was Krakow, and for the
next 226 years Lithuania shared the fate of Poland.
During this period, Lithuania's political elite was
dominated by the Polish nobility and church, resulting
in neglect of the Lithuanian language and introduction
of Polish social and political institutions. It also
opened the doors to Western models in education and
culture.
In 1795 an alliance between the Germanic
states--Prussia and Austria--and the Russian Empire
ended Poland's independent existence. Lithuania became
a Russian province. Two insurrections, initiated by
the Poles in 1831 and again in 1863, failed to liberate
the country. The Russian Empire eliminated Polish influence
on Lithuanians and introduced Russian social and political
institutions. Under tsarist rule, Lithuanian schools
were forbidden, Lithuanian publications in the Latin
script were outlawed, and the Roman Catholic Church
was severely suppressed. However, the restrictive policies
failed to extinguish indigenous cultural institutions
and language.
A national awakening in the 1880s,
led by the secular and clerical intelligentsia, produced
demands for self-government. In 1905 Lithuania was the
first of the Russian provinces to demand autonomy. Independence
was not granted because the tsar firmly reestablished
his rule after the Revolution of 1905. But the demand,
articulated by the elected Grand Diet of Vilnius, was
not abandoned. World War I led to the collapse of the
two empires--the Russian and the German--making it possible
for Lithuania to assert its statehood. Germany's attempt
to persuade Lithuania to become a German protectorate
was unsuccessful. On February 16, 1918, Lithuania declared
its full independence, and the country still celebrates
that day as its Independence Day.
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