My family with Aunty Betty (sitting second from left) in Vilna, 1928

Sunday 13 October 2013

Vilne, Vilna, Wilno, Vilnius

When I was a child, if ever the origins of the family were mentioned in conversation, and that wasn't often, I heard a different country named each time. The one time we came from Russia, they next we were from Poland and yet another time our family came from Lithuania. Rather confusing for a youngster growing up in Scotland. My family came from a number of places in modern-day Lithuania and Belarus but nowhere are the above claims more true than with regards to Vilnius. Vilnius was a prized and heavily disputed city of the Baltics. For the Lithuanians, Vilnius is the historical seat of their ancient kings. The Germans referred to it as "the jewel of the Polish crown". For the Jews, Vilnius was an important spiritual centre of Rabbinical Judaism which earned it the title Yerushalayim de Lite (Jerusalem of Lithuania). 'Jerusalem of Lithuania' has a strange ring to it in the context of modern-day Lithuania. However one has to realise that this was a term coined when Vilnius was part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, an empire stretching all the way from Estonia almost to the Black Sea coast of modern-day Ukraine, a territory of more than 1million square kilometres.

Betty's sister, Esther, with Esther's husband, Sam. This photo was taken around the turn of the century when Vilnius was part of the Russian Empire. In Cyrillic the name of the photographer, A. Tsinovets, Vilna [collection Diana Esptein]

Here is an historical timeline of the city of Vilnius charting its turbulent history.

Period Rule Event
6th July 1253 Grand Dutchy of Lithuania Crowning of King Mindaugas
1st July 1569 Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Treaty of Lublin
24th October 1795 Russian Empire Third partition of Poland
1915 German Empire First World War
16th February 1918 Independant State of Lithuania Act of Independance of Lithuania 
5th January 1919 Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic Soviet Army captures Vilnius
27th February 1919 Lithuanian–Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic A merge by Soviet authorities to strengthen the two Soviet Republics
21st April 1919 Second Polish Republic Wilno offensive during the Polish-Soviet War
12th July 1920 Independant State of Lithuania Soviet-Lithuanian Peace Treaty
9th October 1920 Republic of Central Lithuania Formation of a state controlled by the Second Polish Republic
20th February 1922 Second Polish Republic Vilnius Sejm vote for Polish annexation
19th September 1939 Soviet Union Invasion of Poland after the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
28th October 1939 Independant State of Lithuania Soviet Army withdrawal from Vilnius
21st July 1940 Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic Vote by pro-Soviet Seimas to become LSSR
24th June 1941 German Reich Operation Barbarossa
13th July 1944 Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic Capture of Vilnius by the Soviet Army
6th September 1991 Republic of Lithuania Lithuania ceded by the Soviet Union

[Source: Wikipedia, compiled by author]