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Medininkai

Medininkai (Polish: Miedniki Królewskie; Belarusian: Меднікі; Russian: Ме́дники, old Russian: Мьдники) is a village in Lithuania. Administrationwise it is centre to the Medininkai Eldership, which forms part of the Vilnius District Municipality; the district itself is in turn part of the Vilnius County. Beginnings of the village are related to the 14th century. The local castle was among the key ones in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania; in 1387, upon christening of the country, the grand duke Jogaila founded one of the first 7 churches here. Medininkai enjoyed its golden era in the late 15th century. In the early modern period the settlement reached the status of a town, but it failed to develop into a major urban centre. Over time the place was losing importance, and at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries it was reduced to a village. The area has retained its traditionally rural character, though during recent decades it started to host transport and spedition businesses, related to the nearby Lithuania-Belarus border crossing at the Vilnius-Minsk highway. Since the early 21st century Medininkai is home to a major compound which educates border-control officials. The place enjoys some appeal among tourists; visitors are attracted by ruins of the castle, now turned into a museum, and the highest natural point in Lithuania, named Aukštojas. The village and the eldership are populated mostly by members of the Polish national minority.

Medininkai
Village
old centre of Medininkai
Medininkai
Location of Medininkai
Coordinates: 54°32′20″N 25°39′00″E / 54.53889°N 25.65000°E / 54.53889; 25.65000
Country Lithuania
CountyVilnius County
MunicipalityVilnius district municipality
EldershipMedininkai eldership
Capital ofMedininkai eldership
Population
 (2021)
 • Total413
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)

History edit

Beginnings (13-14th c.) edit

 
grand duke Algirdas

Beginnings of Medininkai are related to a fortress. According to some historians it might have been built already in the late 13th century, during the era of duke Traidenis; it was either him or one of minor local dukes who initiated the construction.[1] An unclear and not necessarily reliable chronicle points rather to the early 14th century, i.e. the times of the grand duke Gedyminas.[2] The most popular theory claims that the stronghold was built in the mid-14th century on orders of the grand duke Algirdas. It was located at the major Ashmyany route, though its exact role remains uncertain.[3] Historiographic accounts from the 19th century, rooted in a somewhat loose interpretation of sources, advanced the theory that Algirdas and his wife were frequent visitors to the place.[4] However, the first scientifically accepted note on the fortress is related to the year of 1385, when it was conquered by troops of the Teutonic Order, led by the grand master Konrad Zöllner von Rotenstein.[5]

In 1387 the grand duke Jogaila abandoned paganism and adopted the Roman Catholic faith, which is usually considered as the christening of Lithuania. In an accompanying act he set up and endowed 7 churches, among them the one in Medininkai.[6] According to historians it demonstrates that there was already some sort of settlement beyond the castle walls existent at the time. It proves also that Medininkai was among key points in the state infrastructure.[7] The church has indeed been constructed. In 1391 Jogaila subordinated the shrine to the newly erected Bystritsa parish, where he set up the monastery of Canons of Penitence; it is most likely they who delivered religious service in the Medininkai church.[8] The year of 1398 brings the first information about a representative of the grand duke and his powers in Medininkai; he is mentioned as a certain "Careybo" (Korejwo, Korejko).[9] His rule was rather shaky, though; in 1402 another raid of Teutonic Order knights, this time commanded by Wilhelm von Helfenstein, seized and burnt the stronghold.[10]

Development (early 15th century) edit

 
grand duke Vytautas

Since the early 15th century the rule of Lithuanian grand dukes became more stable, and the Medininkai fortress was gradually gaining importance. The grand duke Vytautas visited it a number of times, e.g. in 1415 it was there that he was writing a letter to master of the Teutonic Order,[11] and when referring his 1426 stay a medieval chronicle notes "unsere husse Medniki".[12] Most likely at the time the stronghold underwent major upgrade, and a previous earth-wooden structure was replaced with stone-and-brick walls with towers and bastions. In the first half of the 15th century it was probably the largest construction of this type in Lithuania, by far larger even than the castle compound in Vilnius; its walls of 560 metres length embraced the internal yard of some 2 ha.[13] It was then that the Medininkai boyars formed a separate military unit, named “chorągiew miednicka”; Jan Długosz noted its taking part during the Battle of Grunwald, and 4 of its commanders are known by name for the period until the mid-16th century.[14]

The scale and character of the settlement behind the castle walls are not clear. At unspecified time a parish has been erected in Medininkai; in the mid-15th century the local church is referred to as a parish church and it is known that it operated a school for children.[15] As the Catholic infrastructure in Lithuania was being gradually developed, the Medininkai church became one of 27 churches in the Vilnius diocese.[16] Starting with a certain Gleb Andreevitsch, named in the document of 1453,[17] there are 13 boyars listed as representatives of the grand duke until the mid-16th century; they were named "palatinus", "praefectus", "castellanus", or "tivunus".[18] Usually they were holding tenures of land estates located around the castle and the settlement, though the estates remained the property of grand dukes. Feudal tenants are listed since the mid-15th century; it is known that there were 40 such tenures in the entire Vilnius voivodship.[14]

Golden era (late 15th century) edit

 
Dlugosz and prince Casimir

The second half of the 15th century marks Medininkai's golden era, the period when the place enjoyed the most prestigious status. During long strings the grand duke and the king of Poland Casimir resided in the castle “to breathe better air”; he was accompanied by his sons, especially the princes Casimir, Jan and Alexander.[19] Their preceptor and mentor, who spent long months if not years in the castle, was Jan Długosz, a monumental figure in Polish medieval historiography.[20] Following the death of Prince Casimir, who passed away already considered a quasi-saint in Lithuania, in 1484 his remnants were buried in the castle, though not clear whether in the walls or in a purpose-built sepulchral crypt; they would remain there during the following over 150 years.[21] The place played also important ceremonial roles, e.g. in 1494 the Muscovite legacy which accompanied princess Helena, fiancé of grand duke Alexander travelling from Moscow to Vilnius, were pompously met by Lithuanian representatives in Medininkai.[22]

The exact status of the settlement remains unclear. Some scholars claim that in the 15th century Medininkai was formally granted a borough charter,[23] and few authors even point to the year of 1486 as the date,[24] but details remain unknown and the reliability of this claim is disputed. Late medieval chronicles mention the place as "oppidum",[25] which points to the castle and its military role rather than to a settlement of urban features. There is no source information on usual medieval urban self-governing bodies, like a town council or municipal judicature. It is known, though, that as the town was located on a major trade route, it was of fundamental financial importance for the dukes; a document from 1486 confirms that two inns in Medininkai were producing major gains both for the tenants and for the grand dukes.[26] The first information on Tatars having been settled near the castle comes from the year of 1488; they inhabited the hamlet of Kurhany/Pilkapiai, later to become part of Medininkai.[27]

Crisis (early 16th century) edit

 
castle, present view

The Lithuanian-Muscovite war, which broke out in 1512, produced enemy incursions deep into central Lithuania. The imperial envoy Sigmund von Herberstein when coming back from Moscow in 1517 noted that he saw the Medininkai castle devastated; it is not clear whether this was the result of Muscovite troops having seized and routed the fortress or another cause, e.g. an accidental fire.[28] None of the sources consulted mentioned that the castle performed any military role afterwards and it seems it was being gradually abandoned. Though at that time city walls were being built around Vilnius, there is no information about city walls being built around Medininkai. The local military unit continued to operate as a separate formation, e.g. on periodical review of local nobility of 1528 the boyars from the area were supposed to produce 138-men-strong cavalry detachment (out of nobility-raised 19,842 cavalry for the entire Grand Duchy);[29] it was only in the 1560s that "chorąstwo miednickie" was incorporated into a unit raised in the entire Vilnius county,[30] of which Medininkai formed part.

The first half of the 16th century spelled problems in terms of religious service, and it is despite the Medininkai-Bystritsa Augustians receiving new endowments and donations.[31] The discipline within the monastery deteriorated; in 1523 the Canons left Bystritsa,[32] and in 1528 they were removed from Medininkai for "non-compliance with rules of the order"; it was manifested e.g. by drunken episodes and dereliction of duty.[33] Most likely at the time the church building ceased to exist; one historian speculates it might have been the result of fire.[34] The Canons were re-established by a separate foundation in 1540 and it was then that the friars returned to the town. The new church of Holy Trinity was built centrally by the main road leading to Ashmyany,[35] while the renewed parish and cloister received new donations from the grand duke Sigismund (1541)[36] and his son (1560,[37] 1562[38]). Despite this, the parish was in legal dispute over property with local boyars.[39]

Stagnation (1550 to 1650) edit

 
Medininkai on map, 1613

In the early modern era Medininkai was within a "fairly large, but rather poor group of towns", which evolved from medieval lower castle settlements. However, none of them developed towards a typical large urban format.[40] On the one hand, Medininkai boasted of various privileges for the mayor and city-dwellers, e.g. these which exempted them from transportation services;[41] on the other, none of the sources consulted contains information e.g. on staple right, and it is despite that the town was located on a busy commercial route from Vilnius eastwards.[42] The town demonstrated some urban features like market square,[35] castle or parish church, but it lacked city walls or bricked houses; there is neither any information on functioning of municipal self-government. The town owned some 1,250 ha,[43] e.g. twice the amount owned by the monastery.[38] It was also due to deliver numerous fiscal contributions, e.g. a document from 1594 lists them meticulously even for minor hamlets and settlements.[44] It is known that Medininkai still counted among major places, e.g. the Vilnius diocese was composed of 5 so-called keys, corresponding to present-day decanates; one of them was the Medininkai key.[8]

Extinction of the royal Yagiellonian line did not spell much change for Medininkai, except that the now electable Polish kings and Lithuanian dukes when residing in the Grand Duchy lived in Vilnius and no longer visited other locations, as was their habit before. The rule of grand duke Stephen Báthory produced further donations for the Medininkai boyars,[45] but not for the town itself. As political and economic regime of the Duchy petrified, the landed nobility was getting increasingly influential. The 1620s are marked by expropriations and confiscations of municipal and religious estates by local boyars, which resulted in a spate of protests to the royal court.[46] The Medininkai prestige suffered enormously in 1632, when remnants of prince Casimir, sanctified in 1602, were transferred from the castle to the newly built chapel in the Vilnius cathedral.[47]

Disaster and rebirth (late 17th century) edit

 
Medininkai church, 17th c.

In the early 1650s the church underwent major rehaul; it was financially supported by the royal secretary Dymitr Karp.[35] In 1654 a rare away sitting of the Vilnius County sejmik took place in Medininkai.[48] However, soon afterwards the town suffered the largest disaster until then. The war between the Lithuanian-Polish state and Muscovy broke out in 1654. In 1655 the Muscovite army seized most of eastern and central Lithuania and entered Vilnius; the occupation lasted until 1660. Its results were tragic; the Muscovite troops inflicted massive damage upon the area, not only by total destruction of numerous settlements, but also by abducting great share of the population into Russia. It is known that the population of Vilnius shrank from 40 to 5 thousand, though it is not clear what was the demographic loss suffered by Medininkai. It was probably enormous, as in the 1660s and 1670s there were very few children baptised in the parish church every year.[49]

There is some statistical data available for the second half of the 17th century, based on evidence reported in the parish books. It is hence known that in 1690 Medininkai consisted of 39 houses; application of converters typical for the era[50] suggests that the population was around 300.[51] It was about 30% of the population of the entire parish, which comprised also neighboring villages; on its territory there were 137 households, with key villages having been Kiena/Kena (20) and Kosiny/Kuosinė (16).[52] During half-a-century between the years of 1652 and 1702 there were 1,388 children baptised in the parish.[35] Following demographic disaster related to the Muscovite invasion, Medininkai regained dynamics in the last two decades of the century, when on average there were 70-80 children baptised every year.[53] However, the town has already lost its standing; a decree by grand duke Augustus II specifies some fiscal duties named podwody for every town of the Vilnius voivodship; Medininkai was obliged to pay 15 złoty per annum, the same amount as Niemenczyn/Nemenčinė; the neighboring Ashmyany was obliged to pay 30 złoty.[54]

Last years of the Grand Duchy (18th century) edit

 
Swedish troops, Northern War

None of the sources consulted mentions the fate of Medininkai during the Northern War. In 1702 Vilnius was captured by the Swedish army, but it is not known whether the Swedes garrisoned the town before in 1708 the region was seized by Russian troops, theoretically allied with the grand duke Augustus. Medininkai was undergoing the period of moderate territorial growth; the 1730 inventory of municipal estates for the first time listed some new hamlets, like Kamienny Ług.[55] In the Saxon times the parish also recorded demographic growth, as in the mid-18th century on average there were some 135 children baptised every year;[56] such figures were recorded again only in the mid-1920s, once the parish would be re-erected. During the early rule of the grand duke Stanisław August Poniatowski the parish counted 367 houses,[57] it is some 2.7 times more than the figure recorded 100 years earlier; the census from 1781 recorded 3.482 Catholics in the parish.[56] The town consisted of a market square and 6 streets.[58]

In 1778 the fire broke out in religious premises and the 250-year-old church was burnt down to the ground.[59] Reconstruction works commenced a few years later and probably in 1788 a new, already third shrine, was completed; it was also a wooden building.[60] For reasons which are not clear it got consecrated 3 years later, in 1791, again dedicated to the Holy Trinity.[61] In the 1780s and 1790s the Canons monastery, still operational in the town, was running a primary school. Its books indicate that boys "of urban descent" prevailed, though there were also boys "of rural descent" and exceptionally also few "of noble descent".[62] The Augustians were also running a small hospital for the poor,[63] but for most of the 18th century the monastery was related to scandals resulting from lack of discipline.[64] According to some sources Medininkai was "in the possessions of Duke Radziwiłł".[65] Administrationwise until the third partition of the Lithuanian-Polish Commonwealth Medininkai formed part of the Vilnius county in the Vilnius voivodship; in 1795 with remnants of the Grand Duchy it was incorporated into the imperial Russia.

Post-partition and Napoleonic periods (early 19th century) edit

 
Grande Armée near Medininkai

In Russia Medininkai formed part of Ви́ленский уе́зд within the Виленская губерния. This period is marked by property transformations. Estates around the town, which until the end of the Commonwealth belonged to grand dukes, were seized by the imperial economy. Then they were put on sale and acquired by Ignacy Grabowski,[63] previously a high functionary of the Grand Duchy Tribunal.[66] When taking possession of his new property in 1796 he seized also the Augustian hospital, evicted the sick and took over the estate; the county court ordered him to give back the land and the premises, but it is not clear to what effect.[63] Grabowski, who in new political conditions became counselor to His Imperial Majesty, kept harassing the town; as owner of the inn in 1802 he sent his men to assault the tenant of the competitive, Augustian inn.[67]

Another disastrous year in the history of Medininkai was 1812. The French Grand Armee, during their withdrawal from Russia was back in central Lithuania. In extremely harsh winter conditions (on Dec 6 the temperature in Medininkai was -37,5 °C)[68] when seeking wood to warm up, the troops stationed in the town burnt down all facilities within the castle and destroyed a large part of the town itself;[69] the French also looted the place[70] before withdrawing further west. Grabowski continued his private war; 1815 marks another assault of his men, who robbed municipal property and cut down much of the municipal forest. The same year the presbytery was destroyed by fire, it is not clear whether the result of arson or an accident.[71] The parochial census of 1827 documents another period of demographic regress; it recorded 208 households and 1,386 faithful,[72] merely 40% of the population listed in the census carried out 46 years earlier.[56] Medininkai was not even marked on a Russian map from the 1820s, though it was located on a major route and though similar or minor neighboring locations, like Rukojnie/Rukainiai, Kiena/Kena or Turgiele/Turgeliai were marked; even the Kamienny Ług hamlet was acknowledged.[73]

The Risings Period (mid-19th century) edit

 
Lithuania by Grottger

During the November Rising the insurgents took control of the neighboring Ashmyany in the spring of 1831, but none of the sources consulted notes any rebel activity in Medininkai, except some insurgents receiving assistance in the nearby estate of the Koziełł-Poklewski family.[74] Despite this, having re-taken control the Russian administration embarked on a repressive course. In late 1831 the Canons following some 400 years of service were forced to abandon the village.[71] The full-scale drama unfolded in 1832, when the governorate officials closed down the church and declared the parish dissolved.[75] The faithful were distributed among the neighboring parishes of Turgiele/Turgeliai, Taboryszki/Tabariškės and Rukojnie/Rukainiai; Medininkai was assigned to the Taboryszki parish.[76] In 1834 the building of the closed church was disassembled and materiel was moved to the Soły/Salos village, where it was re-assembled as the new church of the local parish community.[77]

At the time the owner of the Medininkai estate was first the son of Ignacy Grabowski, Józef[78] and then his relative Apolinary Grabowski,[79] major of the imperial Russian army and deputy chairman of the Vilnius county nobility.[80] Under his rule the economy got heavily indebted; in the 1850s a certain Zofia Kamińska purchased Grabowski's payable notes and became the next owner.[81] In 1857 she was permitted to build a small chapel, completed the same year near foundations of the disassembled church. Kamińska ensured also the religious service, though formal status of a priest saying the mass is not clarified.[82] After 3 years and in unknown circumstances the priest was moved to the Carmelitan monastery in Vilnius; also in 1860 the chapel was demolished.[82] At that time the town was visited by a Polish writer Władysław Syrokomla; his late-romantic account dedicated to ruins of the castle was published as part of a book, which went to print in 1860.[83] During the January Rising in the spring of 1863 Medininkai proved a recruitment ground for an insurgent detachment of Józef Śniadecki.[84]

Post-rising period (late 19th century) edit

 
general Labyntsev

In the second half the 19th century Medininkai was getting furtherly marginalised. One of the reasons was the 1873-built railway line from Vilnius to Minsk; it bypassed the village running some 2 km north of the Ashmyany road, and the nearest station turned to be Kiena/Kena, some 12 km away. According to data from 1885 the Medininkai population was 297, mostly Catholics.[85] At this time the estate again changed hands; after the Kamiński family,[86] its new owner was general Ivan Mikhailovich Labyntsev;[87] he took over also the former religious property, of unclear status since the parish and monastery had been closed down.[88] Following the abolition of serfdom and gradual enfranchisment, estates started to become the property of local peasants, turning into independent farmers; documents from the 1880s note that the land near Medininkai was the property of „generała Łabińcowa i włościan”.[89] It is not clear who inherited the estate once Labyntsev passed away; a document from 1897 notes as "the sole heir" his granddaughter Katarzyna Drohojowska née Komar,[90] but later data lists as the owner her mother, Elżbieta Komarowa, daughter to general Labyntsev.

Following the administrative reform from the turn of the centuries Medininkai formed part of the Szumsk/Šumskas Commune (Шумская волость), which in turn formed part of the Vilnius County (Виленский уезд) in the Vilnius Governorate. The official census of 1905 lists 9 separate settlements named "Мьдники".[91] Though at the turn of the centuries the place was still officially considered a town,[92] in the census mentioned it is already categorized as "деревня" (village). The exact date when Medninkai lost its urban status is not known; most likely it was re-categorized with no tangible practical implications.[93] The village listed consisted of 269 inhabitants. However, all settlements named Мьдники, in the census usually[94] categorized as "усадьба" (hamlet), together numbered 415 inhabitants. The census listed separately hamlets and colonies which are now often considered parts of Medininkai, like Курганы (Kurhany, 222 inhabitants) or Язово (Józefowo, 34).[95]

Crisis and war (early 20th century) edit

 
Polish eastern troops

In 1900-1902 the villagers tried to get the parish re-established; eventually the Russian administration did not consent.[96] Already in 1905 the villagers resumed their efforts; this time they addressed the religious hierarchy; in a letter to the Vilnius bishop Edward Ropp they noted that there had been a new church constructed in Ławaryszki/Lavoriškės, so the old one might be moved to Medininkai. However, there were also other villages who set their eyes on the Ławaryszki/Lavoriškės building; the matter got stuck in the bishopic bureaucracy and has not been solved until the collapse of the Russian rule in the area.[96] In the early 20th century there was a 3-grade Russian school operational in the village; in 1911 there were 34 boys attending the classes.[97]

In September 1915 the Vilnius region was seized by the German army. In 1916 the bishop agreed to the parish having been re-established in the village and a church to be built.[98] In 1917 a temporary chapel was constructed; the new parish accounted for 3,287 faithful, most of them taken over from the Taboryszki/Tabariškės parish.[76] During the following few years the village changed hands a few times. In January 1919 the withdrawing Germans were replaced by the Bolsheviks; in April 1919 the Bolsheviks were driven away by the Polish army; in July 1920 the Poles were driven away by the Bolshevik troops; in August 1920 the Bolsheviks handed over to the newly born Lithuanian Republic; in October 1920 the area was seized by Polish units, who for the sake of international politics posed as in mutiny against the Warsaw government. None of the sources consulted provides information on the fate of Medininkai during these turbulent times. During elections to so-called Vilnius Parliament, organized under the provisional Polish rule within allegedly an independent state of Central Lithuania, Medininkai formed part of the Wilno Południe electoral district.[99] Results below the district level are not known.[100] In April 1922 Medininkai and the entire Vilnius region was incorporated into Poland.

In Poland (1922-1939) edit

 
castle, interwar period

Within the Polish republic Medininkai formed part of the Szumsk/Šumskas Commune within the Vilnius County, itself part of the Vilnius Voivodeship. In the fall of 1921, during the first official census, the village was beyond the state frontiers; the following census, dated 1931, recorded 79 households and 504 inhabitants. It excluded minor colonies and settlements which are now de facto parts of Medininkai, like Kurhany/Pilkapiai (45 houses, 249 inhabitants) or Józefowo/Juozapinė (respectively 14 and 64)[101] Religious statistics reveals similar data; in 1927 the entire parish amounted to 2,877 faithful,[102] in 1931 to 3,017,[103] and in 1934 to 3,287. The latter comprised 502 faithful in Medininkai alone; other major locations were Kurhany/Pilkapiai (294), Żemajtele/Žemaitėliai (223), Gudzie/Gudai (201), Podwarańce/Padvarionys (197), Dworce/Dvarčiai (181), Bojary/Bajorai (127) and Wołkogule/Valkagulia (116).[104] The community was almost entirely Catholic; there were merely 3 Orthodox faithful and a handful of Jews recorded.[105]

The overwhelming majority of the Medininkai neighbourhood residents were farmers or agricultural workers; apart from few small brickyards and sawmills there were no industrial facilities in the area. Migration to Vilnius and other urban centres was minor.[106] Elżbieta Komarowa, who commenced parcelation of her possessions already in 1908,[107] was anxious that implementation of agrarian reform might prove disastrous; she decided to sell the rest of her estates in advance, before the law comes into force.[88] The process was marked by tension and conflict; when the villagers decided to purchase a plot for a future church, intervention of the official land estate office was needed to get the deal done.[108] Location of the plot purchased was not very convenient, as it was placed somewhat away from the village, on the other side of the castle ruins. In 1927 the villagers purchased the closed church in Rukojnie/Rukainiai. It was disassembled and re-assembled in Medininkai, consecrated in 1929;[109] it was the sixth subsequent shrine in the village.[102] In the 1920s there were schools open in Medininkai (180 students), Podwarańce/Padvarionys, Żemajtele/Žemaitėliai and Nielidziszki/Nelidiskai;[97] after the so-called Jędrzejewicz reform there was one 6-grade school in Medininkai.[97]

Second World War (1939-1944) edit

 
AK near Medininkai, 1944

Following the Soviet invasion of Poland on September 17, 1939, two days later[110] Medininkai was seized by the Red Army with no combat recorded.[111] After a month, in late October the area was ceded by the Soviets to the Republic of Lithuania. The newly established Lithuanian-Soviet frontier separated Medininkai from some of its remote settlements, e.g. Kamienny Ług as part of the Ashmyany County became part of the Byelorussian SSR; this was also the fate of some more distant fields, which belonged to Medininkai villagers. In June 1940 the village and the entire Lithuania was incorporated into the USSR as the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic; administrationwise it formed part of the Szumsk/Šumskas Commune within the Vilnius County. In June 1941 Medininkai were seized by the Wehrmacht, which commenced over 3 years of German occupation.

Since 1943 the territory south-east of Vilnius as part of so-called Inspectorate A of the underground Home Army[112] became operational area of Polish partisan units. In early 1944 they were developed into a battalion-size 3. Wileńska Brygada Armii Krajowej. It carried out a number of combat operations against the Germans and during brief spells controlled minor locations, like Szumsk/Šumskas or Turgiele/Turgeliai; it is known that on February 23, 1944, its sub-units mounted an ambush near Medininkai,[113] but it is not clear whether the battalion has ever seized the village itself. In early July 1944 the joint command of Home Army units, assembled to capture Vilnius, was located in the village of Wołkorabiszki, some 8 km from Medininkai.[114] Following a successful joint Home Army and Soviet operation the Red Army and the NKVD started to detain Polish combatants; they were held prisoners within the walls of the Medininkai castle ruins. It is estimated that on July 20 there were between 4[115] and 6 thousand[116] disarmed Home Army POWs amassed in the yard of the castle. By August they were marched to the Kiena railway station, loaded into trains and transported to Kaluga.[117]

Soviet Lithuania, early decades (1945-1965) edit

 
Medininkai youth, around 1950

Within the re-built Soviet Lithuanian structures Medininkai was again incorporated into the Szumsk/Šumskas Commune. Very few of its inhabitants decided to join the organized transfer of Poles into Poland, and almost all preferred to stay on their family economy.[118] However some farmers, usually owners of larger properties who employed hired workforce, were dubbed kulaks and enemies of the working people. In 1948-1952 53 people, which was around 2% of the parish population, were sentenced to a penal settlement in Siberia (mostly in the Tomsk Oblast’).[119] In case of some hamlets, like Józefowo/Juozapinė, the rate of the deported reached 11%.[120] The deportees who survived returned to Medininkai or travelled further west to Poland, some as late as in the late 1950s.[121] At the turn of the 1940s and 1950s the forced collectivisation began; the village started to host the “Red Banner” kolkhoz.[92] Following the 1950 administrative reform Medininkai became the centre of the Medininkai Commune in the Nowa Wilejka/Naujoji Vilnia County.

According to the Soviet standard, theoretically the official languages in Medininkai were the republican one, i.e. Lithuanian, and the pan-Soviet Russian. In practice the Kolkhoz language was either Russian or "po prostemu", a rural mixture of Polish and Belarusian. The school, opened in the late 1940s, adopted Polish as the language of instruction,[122] though the management layer was formed by Russians.[123] Until the late 1950s the school educated students until late teenage; in 1956-8 there were 25 boys and girls who completed the curriculum.[122] Later the school switched to 8th grade profile, and since then there was no school above the primary school level in Medininkai. In 1959 Nowa Wilejka/Naujoji Vilnia was incorporated into Vilnius; as a result, the Medininkai Commune was moved from the Naujoji Vilnia County to the Vilnius County. In 1963 the commune was dissolved and Medninkai was incorporated into the newly established Podwarance/Padvarionys Commune, but 1965 marked return to the old setup. What ratio of villagers were members of the Communist Party is unclear.[124]

Soviet Lithuania, late decades (1965-1990) edit

 
Medininkai school (present view)

Medininkai and surroundings remained a typical agricultural area, with no industrial facilities built. What change the village was a housing estate, developed by the Kolkhoz for its employees since the mid-1970s. Buildings were located along a network of streets south of the church.[125] As a result, the historical west–east axis of the village, running below the castle, was reduced to secondary role; the centre of gravity moved above the ruins, along the north–south axis. Traditional centre of the village gradually became an empty crossroads also because of the major infrastructural investment in the region: the Vilnius-Minsk highway, completed in the late 1970s.[126] It was some 2 km north and parallel to historical route from Medininkai to Ahmyeny. It spared the village the nuisance of growing heavy traffic, but on the other hand it turned Medininkai into a backwater spot with agricultural machinery and horse carts having been most or the only vehicles.

The village was plugged into the electric power grid in the early 1960s. Ruins of the Medininkai castle twice underwent some conservation works, for the first time at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s,[127] and then in the early 1970s. In both cases there were minor excavation works carried out, while the major objective was ensuring that the crumbling walls would not decay further on.[128] In 1967 a modern, large school building was completed.[129] In 1981 there were new modules added: a gym hall, canteen and library; there was also an outdoor sport compound built.[130] In the 1970s and 1980s some 40-50 students were completing education every year.[131] Other investments visible until today are 4 residential multi-flat blocks, a large kindergarten, the community office and a shop. The less visible investments are the water supply network and the partially completed sewage system.[132] Because of fairly decent public bus transport and 1-hour-commuting time more and more villagers decided to seek employment in Vilnius and commuted each day to and from the city.[133] Except brief periods, religious service was continuously offered in the church every Sunday.

Reborn Lithuania (late 20th century) edit

 
memorial to 1991 victims

In wake of decomposition of the USSR in 1988 the Medininkai Commune protested against planned legislation, which would strengthen position of the Lithuanian language; in 1989 the Supreme Soviet of LSRR ignored the protest.[134] During emergence of the reborn Lithuanian state Medininkai was witness to an obscure episode, not fully explained until today; on July 31, 1991, 7 officials of the Lithuanian customs, border and security services were killed at the border crossing. According to Lithuanian juridical authorities, they were victims of the Soviet OMON troops.[135] What used to be the internal Soviet border between the Byelorussian SRR and the Lithuanian SRR turned into a state frontier between the independent states of Lithuania and Belarus; it ran some 2 km from the centre of Medininkai. In 1994 the post-Soviet local self-government, Council of People's Deputies, was dissolved. In 1995 the third-level admin unit, the Medininkai Eldership (Medininkų seniūnija), was set up. Its headquarters was in Medininkai[136] and the eldership formed part of the Vilnius Area County (Vilniaus rajono savivaldybė), which in turn formed part of the Vilnius Region (Vilniaus apskritis). The same year the first local elections were held; both at the commune level and at the county level the strongest part turned out to be the Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania;[137] the first elected mayor was Czesław Ancukiewicz.[138]

In line with general political and economic change the "Red Banner" kolkhoz was disbanded, and its estates and properties were divided among local coopratives, enterprises and private individuals; some plots expropriated half a century earlier returned to heirs of the original owners.[139] Nearby border crossing at the key highway between Vilnius and Minsk triggered emergence of business from logistics and transport sectors.[140] In the early 1990s a member of the Polish branch of the Franciscan order settled in Medininkai; few others followed.[141] In 1994 a small Franciscan monastery was set up in the village, the first one after the Augustians had been evicted 163 years earlier. Very briefly the monastery consisted also of a postulate and a novitiate,[142] moved to Vilnius by the end of the decade.[143]

Present day edit

Administration and demography edit

 
eldership office

Within the administrative structure of the country Medininkai is the centre of the Medininkai Eldership; it is one of 23 third-level units which form the Vilnius Area County, which in turn as one of 8 second-level units forms the Vilnius Region, one of 10 first-level administration units in Lithuania. According to the number of inhabitants recorded in 2011 (1,374), the eldership is among the least populated ones in the country and ranks 439. in Lithuania. According to territory (62.9 km2) it is also one of smallest ones and ranks 404. in Lithuania. According to population density (22 persons per km2) the eldership ranks mid-range at position 255. Of the total eldersip surface some 50 km2 is cultivated agricultural area, 10.8 km2 is forests, and the rest is settlements, barren land and water (mostly small lakes and ponds). The eldership falls into 5 sub-elderships (lit. seniūnaitija), 4-level smallest admin units[144]

According to the 2011 census there were 37 settlements in the eldership. Medininkai was inhabited by 580 people; other largest settlements were Podwarańce/Padvarionys (114), Łabiszki/Laibiškės (72), Kurhany/Pilkapiai (68) and Kosinka/Kuosinė (62), though borders between them are vague (e.g. the closest buildings in Medininkai and Pilkapiai are separated by some 500 metres). Both the Medininkai eldership and the Medininkai village are subject to ongoing population decline; since the fall of the USSR the number of villagers fell by 30%,[145] and in 2021-2022 the eldership lost 43 people.[146] Among the eldership population (no data for Medininkai separately) 63% are aged 18–65 (860 people), 21% are minors (284), and 17% are the retired (230). The eldership recorded the second lowest share of minors and the third highest share of retirees in the county.[147] Medininkai is also one of the elderships with the lowest proportion of males vs females, the phenomenon typical for rural regions.[148] Like in most elderships south-east of Vilnius, most of the population are Poles (93.2%). Largest national minorities are Lithuanians (3.2%) and Russians (2.9%).[149]

Economy edit

 
storing hay, Medininkai

Until the early 21st century most Medininkai villagers lived either exclusively or mostly off agriculture. Today there are still many households depending upon agrarian jobs, usually related to cereal and forage type of cultivation.[150] Animal husbandry is in decline, and a cow or a horse on Medininkai pastures is becoming sort of a rarity. Many households still keep small gardens, orchards or cultivated plots, but usually for own consumption and only with minor or no part of the production intended for sale; the same applies to poultry and pigs. Single enterprises rely on activities which target the Vilnius consumer market, e.g. cultivating and trading in flowers.

For few decades the most dynamic Medininkai business is a variety of services related to long-distance road haulage. Trumtransa is a Medininkai-based company which runs consignement stocks, warehouses, workshops, sale of spare parts, renting semitrailers, brokerage and customs-related service. However, its core activity is road transport, mostly between the Baltic states and Belarus and/or Russia.[151] A similar Medininkai company, Hegvita Agro, apart from activities listed also leases buses and specialised heavy equipment (snow ploughs, bulldozers, loaders, dump trucks) and offers services related to its operations.[152] Highly diversified fleet of both companies ranges from mini-vans to road trains. Some companies like Durga are based elsewhere but they operate their offices in Medininkai, e.g. those which offer border-related services.[153]

There are few rural retail trade outlets in Medininkai; their number differs depending upon business conditions, usually ranging from 2 to 3. Some services, e.g. barbers, operate bordering the grey economy or as neighbourhood mutual assistance. Some people take advantage of the nearby Lithuanian-Belarus border crossing and offer services related, like sale of insurance, highway vignettes, currency exchange etc. State employers are the local eldership office, the school and the kindergarten. A sizeable group of villagers, especially the young ones, commute to Vilnius and work there.

Official infrastructure edit

 
border guards school

Formally the key point of the official infrastructure is the eldership office, which hosts also scaled-down post services.[154] The eldership is responsible for the Secondary School of St. Casimir. There were 15 teachers on the payroll in the schooling year of 2022/2023; on its website the school provides no information as to the number of class groups or students.[155] The number of teenagers who completed the curriculum keeps falling; there were 40-50 graduates annually in the 1980s, but since the 1990s the figure is around 10.[156] The language of instruction is Polish.[157] Another facility of the educational infrastructure is the kindergarten.[158] The eldership maintains a network of streets in the village; in the early 2020s there were 12 of them.[92] It is also responsible for maintenance of 46.2 km local roads; 42 km of them are categorized as “hardened”.[159] Some criticise the eldership for alleged lack of investment in cycling paths.[160]

The eldership is not responsible for the A3 highway, running some 2 km away from the village centre; it is categorized as major road (magistralinis kelias) and forms part of the European E28 transport corridor, running from Berlin to Minsk. There are 3 state roads in Medininkai; 5358 runs north to Szumsk/Šumskas, 5213 runs south to Turgiele/Turgeliai, and 5258 runs west to Rukojnie/Rukainiai (its 2-km-long eastern sector ends at the Belarus frontier). There is no railway line in the eldership. On the distance of some 9 km the eastern border of the eldersip overlaps the state frontier between Lithuania and Belarus. The key state investment in Medininkai is the border guards school (Medininkų pasieniečių mokykla), previously located in Wisaginia/Visaginas. Following some 2 years of construction work, it was opened in 2007. The compound is located somewhat away from the village and consists of some 10 large buildings; students are hosted in barracks. Graduation is equal to obtaining a university diploma.[161]

Politics edit

 
Poles in Lithuania

The key organisation active in Medininkai is Union of Poles in Lithuania (ZPL). Political life in the eldership has been for decades dominated by its political emanation, Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania (AWPL),[162] which keeps winning subsequent local elections.[163] In the 2023 Lithuanian local elections in the Medininkai electoral district AWPL gathered 79% of all votes cast[164] and it was the third best result of the party in the Vilnius County.[165] Local ZPL and AWPL branches focus on raising living standards and maintaining the Polish identity of the population. However, efforts of local Polish councilors did not result in bi-lingual, Lithuanian and Polish placename signs,[166] though there were efforts to bring the matter before the EU bodies.[167] The ratio of Poles in the village is slowly but steadily decreasing. At times nationalist Lithuanian groupings and personalities advance threads, supposed to demonstrate Lithuanian character of the region.[168]

In the late 2010s there was much anxiety in Lithuania, and in particular in regions borering Belarus, related to construction of the Astravets Nuclear Power Plant, located 20 km away from Medininkai.[169] Despite protests of the Lithuanian government the plant has been opened and remains operational. Another Lithuanian-Belarusian controversy turned out to be the migrant issue. Since the summer of 2021 the Belarus authorities launched the campaign of transferring Asian and African migrants across western borders of the country, to Poland and Lithuania. In order to accommodate migrants detained by Lithuanian border guards in the fall of 2021 the Vilnius government built a temporary site, named Foreigners Registration Centre. During the peak period it housed some 900 migrants.[170] Soon media, including foreign news agencies,[171] started to report discrimination of LGBT persons and sexual exploitation of women by Lithuanian servicemen,[172] and Medininkai attracted attention of the EU representatives.[173] Following media criticism in the fall of 2022 the migrants were moved to centres elsewhere and the Medininkai camp was dismantled.[174] Some military plans envision Medininkai to be headquarters of one of rotating brigades from the Polish 12. Mechanised Division, as part of NATO troops supposed to flank would-be Russian advance corridor from Belarus to Poland.[175]

Culture edit

 
House of Culture, Medininkai

Theoretically the key cultural outpost in Medininkai is the local House of Culture, constructed already during the Soviet era. In the early 21st century its manager was Katažina Zvonkuvienė, later a dancer, singer and a Lithuanian show-business celebrity;[176] recently the facility is mostly closed. Presently there are 4 local institutions which contribute to cultural life in the village: the local branch of Trakai Historical Museum (Trakų istorijos muziejus), the St. Casimir school, the Roman Catholic parish and the local branch of ZPL.

The museum focuses on organizing various types of events in the castle; they usually combine some popular education threads, related to its history, and entertainment. They might embrace historical reenactments, concertos, sport competitions, lectures, plays, workshops etc. In case of good weather they attract hundreds of visitors, including many travelling from Vilnius.[177]

Students from the St. Casimir School since 2007 have been issuing a local bulletin, named Echo. The school is housing so-called Museum of Local History, founded by a teacher Aleksander Olenkowicz; it is dedicated to Medininkai and its environs.[178] There is also a Memory Room, which presents the history of the institution, a library and a local folk group, which used to perform also beyond Lithuania.[179]

One of statutory ZPL activities is contributing to Polish culture in Lithuania. Its Medininkai branch is co-organising various competitions for children and teenagers, sight-seeing tours across Lithuania, journeys in footsteps of Polish history in Vilnius and elsewhere, and excursions to Poland, including taking part in nationwide events like Narodowy Dzień Pamięci Żołnierzy Wyklętych. ZPL is also supporting sports activities and co-financing the annual harvest festival.[180]

Sort of cultural activity is carried out by the Medininkai parish and the Franciscan monastery. It is calibrated along religious lines and related to the liturgical timeline, including lectures preceding the Lent, Christmas concertos or events accompanying Corpus Christi. The Medininkai monastery is also co-organizing meditations and debates in the Franciscan Spiritual Centre in Vilnius.[181]

Religion edit

 
church in Medininkai

Medininkai is the centre of the Holy Trinity and St. Casimir parish, organized around the 1929-built church. In case the 1916-erected parish is considered continuation of the 1832-abolished parish, it is now over 600-year old and counts among the oldest ones on the territory of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[182] The parish forms part of the Naujosios Vilnios decanate, which in turns is part of the Vilnius archdiocese. On working days the service is held once,[183] on Sundays and religious holidays three times a day.[184] Religious service is only in Polish. The villagers remain fairly religious; the annual pastoral visit, which takes place around Christmas, is admitted by 70-80% of households. The most important day in a year, the Harvest Festival, is partially a religious event, strongly marked by the Catholic spirit.[180]

Religious service in the parish is held by the Franciscans from the 1994-established Medininkai monastery. Since then there have been 7 guardians, who in parallel headed the parish; until 2020 they appeared as pastoral administrators, later as a parish priests.[185] In 2023 this role was performed by Józef Makarczyk, the guardian but also a scientist and scholar in history of the Church, especially in the Grand Duchy.[186] The Medininkai monastery is very compact; in the 21st century there have been usually no more than 5 friars hosted at the premises. At the turn of the centuries it was the centre of Franciscan rebirth in Lithuania; currently it is one of 3 Franciscan monasteries in the country.[187] The parish and the monastery take care of the cemetery, located near the plot where the old, pre-1834 church used to stand. The oldest existing graves come from the 1860s;[188] it is still where the defunct villagers are laid to rest. There are few private cemeteries on the parish territory (Czapuniszki, Gudzie, Koleśniki, Kule, Małyniszki, Tumasy, Żemły); last burials took place there in the 1960s.[189]

Tourist attractions edit

 
Juozapinė summit

One of two major tourist attractions of Medininkai is the castle. Since regaining independence it has become a piece of the politically loaded national historiographic narrative, supposed to demonstrate the ancient grandeur of Lithuania and glory of the Lithuanian nation.[190] Hence, in the 21st century it was subject to far-reaching works going far beyond conservation of the ruins; on basis of historian's idea of the original construction the decayed walls were subject to major overhaul. They were heightened, reinforced and leveled; a tower, supposed to be the reconstruction of the original, has been constructed in the north-eastern corner.[191] Its lower floors currently host an exposition; apart from models and drawings it contains artefacts from the medieval history of Lithuania. As a result, an opened dilapidating ruin became a closed museum, subject to entry fee.[192] The castle periodically is location to theme festivals, related to medieval history of Lithuania.[193]

Another magnet attracting tourists to Medninkai is a hill, declared the highest natural point in the country. Until the early 21st century it was believed that it is located at Juozapinė Hill, a culmination some 1.5 km from the castle. Traditionally it hosted a rural cross with the pictore of Our Madonna from Ostra Brama; in the 1990s the authorities mounted atop also a large boulder with inscription honoring Mendogas the king and a wooden totem, styled after the old pagan symbols.[194] For some time the objects were subject to controversy; unknown perpetrators used to vandalise the place, e.g. by pouring paint on the rock.[195] New measurement works of 2004 revealed that the actual height of Juozapinė Hill is lower than believed (292.7 instead of 293.6 metres); the highest point was found to be a nameless hill located some 500 metres south; it was named Aukštojas Hill and declared to be 293.8 metres high.[196] A stone circle-shaped ring referring to monarchic Lithuanian mythology has been mounted on top of it; also, an observation tower has been constructed; the entrance is free.

Notable people edit

  • Francišak Bahuševič (1840-1900), Belarusian author and lawyer, born in Świrany near Medininkai
  • Józef Łukaszewicz (1863-1928), Polish conspirator, physicist and geographer, born in Bykówka near Medininkai
  • Medard Czobot (1928-2000), Polish doctor and activist, born in Medininkai
  • Katažina Zvonkuvienė (b. 1980), born Katarzyna Niemyćko, Polish-Lithuanian singer and media celebrity, born in Medininkai

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Józef Makarczyk, Miedniki Królewskie wczoraj i dziś, Miedniki Królewskie 2022, ISBN 978-609-95291-5-8, p. 34
  2. ^ e.g. Maciej Stryjkowski in his 16th-century chronicle mentions the year of 1313 as the moment that construction of the Medininkai castle started. The source of this information is not clear; moreover, the author might have referred to another place named "Medniki", where he served as a canon in 1579-1586, Mieczysław Jackiewicz, Litwa: podróż sentymentalna, Olsztyn 2006, ISBN 978-83-89913-77-7, p. 123
  3. ^ according to some historians, "bardzo dziwnie wygląda pojawienie się największego z nich [i.e. castles]... Budowę trudno wytłumaczyć zarówno potrzebami wojennymi, jak i administracyjnymi", Tomas Baranauskas, Zamki i kościoły litewskie XIV-XV wieku jako ośrodki kultury, [in:] Urszula Augustyniak (ed.), Środowiska kulturotwórcze i kontakty kulturalne Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego od XV do XIX wieku, Warszawa 2009, ISBN 978-83-7543-095-0, p. 19
  4. ^ Teodor Narbutt, Dzieje starożytne narodu litewskiego, vol. V, Wilno 1835, p. 237
  5. ^ Michał Balinski, Tymoteusz Lipinski, Starożytna Polska pod względem historycznym, jeograficznym i statystycznym, Warszawa 1845, p. 173
  6. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 89-90
  7. ^ Jerzy Ochmański, Historia Litwy, Wrocław 1990, ISBN 978-83-04-03107-4, p. 61
  8. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 90
  9. ^ Andrzej Rachuba (ed.), Urzędnicy Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. Spisy, vol. 1, pp. XIV-XVIII wiek, Warszawa 2004, ISBN 978-83-65880-49-9, p. 70
  10. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 35
  11. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 35-36
  12. ^ Algirdas M. Budreckis, Eastern Lithuania: A Collection of Historical and Ethnographic Studies, Chicago 1985, p. 59
  13. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 37
  14. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 71
  15. ^ Teodor Wierzbowski, Szkoły parafialne w polsce i na Litwie za czasów Komisji Edukacji Narodowej, Kraków 1921, p. 22
  16. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 91
  17. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 67
  18. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 67-70
  19. ^ Jan Marek Giżycki, Kanonicy regularni od Pokuty na Litwie w XIX w., [in:] Podręczna Encyklopedia Katolicka vols. 19-20, Warszawa 1910, p. 257
  20. ^ Grzegorz Rąkowski, Kresowe rezydencje, vol. I, Warszawa 2017, ISBN 978-83-8098-093-8, pp. 342-343
  21. ^ Rąkowski 2017, pp. 342-343
  22. ^ Józef Wolff, Kniaziowie litewsko-ruscy od końca czternastego wieku, Warszawa 1895, p. 589
  23. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 45
  24. ^ zob. np. Janusz Hrybacz, Miedniki Królewskie, [in:] service Karta dziejów wileńskiej i nowogródzkiej Armii Krajowej
  25. ^ Jan Długosz, Roczniki czyli kroniki sławnego Królestwa Polskiego, vol. 10, Warszawa 1985, ISBN 978-83-01-04266-0, p. 344
  26. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 60-61
  27. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 61
  28. ^ Jarosław Nikodem, Witold. Wielki książę litewski, Kraków 2013, ISBN 978-83-7730-051-0, p. 174
  29. ^ Ochmański 1990, p. 100
  30. ^ Rachuba 2004, pp. 69-70
  31. ^ e.g. in the late 15th century a widow Anna Korejowa donated 30 włokas to the monastery , Makarczyk 2022, p. 154
  32. ^ the Bystritsa prior murdered a friar from Medininkai, Aldona Prašmantaitė, Kanonicy regularni od pokuty prowincji litewskiej na ziemiach byłego Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego w pierwszych latach po rozbiorach Rzeczypospolitej, [w:] Andrzej Bruździński, Tomasz Graff (ed.), Duchowe korzenie błogosławionego Michała Giedroycia, Kraków 2021, ISBN 978-83-8138-583-1, p. 57
  33. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 156
  34. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 92
  35. ^ a b c d Makarczyk 2022, p. 95
  36. ^ the area needed for sewing 14 barrels of grain, Makarczyk 2022, p. 154
  37. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 93-95
  38. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 154
  39. ^ e.g. in 1547 the parish priest sued prince Glebovitsch, Makarczyk 2022, p. 92
  40. ^ Ochmański 1990, p. 60
  41. ^ see e.g. the privilege dated 1536, Makarczyk 2022, p. 45
  42. ^ the route from Vilnius to Ashmyany and further east was among the most important ones, leading from the capital of the Grand Duchy, Tomas Čelkis, Stan dróg lądowych i struktura systemu połączeń w Wielkim Księstwie Litewskim w końcu XV-XVII wieku, [in:] Zapiski Historyczne LXXIX (2014), pp. 54-55
  43. ^ in original 70 wlokas, Lietuvos Metryku Knyga nr 564, Vilnius 1966, p. 70, after Makarczyk 2022, p. 74
  44. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 51-60
  45. ^ see e.g. the text of a privileged listed in Johann Baptist Albertrandy, Panowanie Henryka Walezjusza i Stefa Batorego królów polskich, Kraków 1849, p. 331
  46. ^ e.g. in 1629 the Halicz archbishop, also the archimandrite of the Holy Trinity Monastery in Vilnius Rafał Korsak charged a certain Mikołaj Matuszkowski with looting the monasterial property in Medininkai, Makarczyk 2022, pp. 47-48. It is not clear why the Orthodox hierarch complained about estates which apparently belonged to the Roman Catholic monastery
  47. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 11
  48. ^ in the 17th century only 4 times the sejmik gathered outside Vilnius, Robert Jurgaitis, Gdzie odbywały się obrady sejmiku wileńskiego w latach 1717-1795?, [w:] Przegląd Nauk Historycznych XVI/2 (2017), p. 246
  49. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 95-96, 132
  50. ^ it is assumed that for ethnically Lithuanian areas of the modern era there were 8 persons per every household, Ochmański 1990, p. 160
  51. ^ the 2-person monastery owned 2 cows, 1 horse, 1 calf, 3 sheep, 6 pigs, and 4 hens. Their area was 85 ha, Tadeusz M. Trajdos, Kanonicy regularni od pokuty w Miednikach w ostatnim stuleciu Rzeczypospolitej (1695-1795), [w:] Nasza Przeszłość 127 (2017), p. 28
  52. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 133-135
  53. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 132; most of the surnames sound Polish, compare Makarczyk 2022, pp. 96-99
  54. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 62
  55. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 51
  56. ^ a b c Makarczyk 2022, p. 132
  57. ^ inventory from 1775, Makarczyk 2022, p. 101
  58. ^ Mirosław Gajewski, Historie z okolic Wilna, Wilno 2007, ISBN 978-9986-542-34-6, p. 128
  59. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 101
  60. ^ According to another account after the 1778 fire the church was rebuilt in 1783, but was lost in another fire, to be reconstructed in 1788, Trajdos 2017, p. 24
  61. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 101-102
  62. ^ e.g. in 1781 there were 8 urban boys and 9 rural boys recorded; in 1782 there were 2 noble boys, 5 urban boys and 5 rural boys, Makarczyk 2022, p. 81
  63. ^ a b c Makarczyk 2022, p. 102
  64. ^ Trajdos 2017, p. 31
  65. ^ According to the decanal inventory, after: Iwona Siwicka, Dekanat oszmiański w 1784 r. w świetle opisów parafii praca magisterska przyjęta na Uniwersytecie w Białymstoku, Białystok 2007, p. 81
  66. ^ Czesław Malewski, Rodziny szlacheckie na Litwie w XIX wieku. Powiaty lidzki, oszmiański i wileński, Warszawa 2016, ISBN 978-83-63352-75-2, p. 508
  67. ^ apparently the tenant was a Jew, as his name was Nochim Mowszowicz, Makarczyk 2022, p. 103
  68. ^ a French surgeon doctor Louis Lagneau measured temperature in Medininkai on the frosty morning of December 6, 1812; Adam Zamoyski, 1812. Wojna z Rosją, Kraków 2007, ISBN 978-83-240-0770-7, p. 344
  69. ^ Władysław Syrokomla, Wycieczki po Litwie w promieniach od Wilna, Wilno 1860, p. 66
  70. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 65
  71. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 104
  72. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 180-222
  73. ^ see the map here
  74. ^ one account mentions escape "do Miednik Janusza Koziełły, skąd przebrałem się przez Kamienny Łog, gdzie Czerkasy pilnowali stacyi pocztowej", after: Sławomir Kalembka, Tajemniczy pamiętnik z powstania 1831 roku na Litwie Ignacego Klukowskiego, [w:] Acta Universitatis Nicolai Copernici. Bibliologia 4 (2000), p. 107. Already in 1719 Michał Koziełł Poklewski was noted as "ówczesny possessor miednicki", Trajdos 2017, p. 32
  75. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 105
  76. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, pp. 149-150
  77. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 112
  78. ^ Józef Grabowski (1794-1830), married to Marianna Sławińska, Makarczyk 2022, p. 64
  79. ^ "Zamek miednicki, dziś dziedzictwem P. Apolinarego Grabowskiego będący", Michał Baliński, Historya Miasta Wilna, Wilno 1836, p. 32
  80. ^ Malewski 2016, p. 508
  81. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 114
  82. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 115
  83. ^ Władysław Syrokomla, Wycieczki po Litwie w promieniach od Wilna, Wilno 1860. Syrokomla's estate, Borejkowszczyzna, was located some 12 km from Medininkai, but in a different parish
  84. ^ Ignacy Kajetan Jacewicz entry, [in:] Powstanie Styczniowe - uczestnicy service
  85. ^ Filip Sulimierski, Bronisław Chlebowski, Władysław Walewski (ed.), Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, vol. 6, Warszawa 1885, pp. 329-330
  86. ^ in some sources spelled "Kamieński", Makarczyk 2022, p. 63
  87. ^ Ivan Mikhailovich Labyntsev (1802-1883) gained his laurels mostly during Caucasian campaigns and the Hungarian campaign of 1848, В. П. Пономарёв, В. М. Шабанов (ed.), Кавалеры Императорского ордена Святого Александра Невского, 1725—1917: биобиблиографический словарь в трёх томах, vol. 2, Мoscow 2009, ISBN 978-5-89577-144-0, p. 197
  88. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 120
  89. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 63
  90. ^ Seweryn Zygmunt Stanisław Drohojowski (1861-?) married Katarzyna Komarówna (1875-?) in 1897, noted as the only heir of the Medininkai estate. She was daughter to Antoni Komar from Szumsk and Elżbieta, daughter to general Labyntsev, Jerzy Dunin Borkowski, Almanach błękitny. Genealogia żyjących rodów polskich, Lwów 1908, p. 328
  91. ^ including "Мьдники Комаровские" and "Мьдники Козелловые"
  92. ^ a b c Makarczyk 2022, p. 66
  93. ^ however, some authors claim that as late as in 1912 Medininkai was one of 40 "towns" in the Vilnius county, Malewski 2016, p. 17
  94. ^ in one case Мьдники was classified as „б. кор” (бывшая корчма, former inn)
  95. ^ Иосиф Гошкевич (ed.), Виленская губерния: полный список населенных мест со статистическими данными о каждом поселении, Вильна 1905, pp. 81-83
  96. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, pp. 115-116
  97. ^ a b c Makarczyk 2022, p. 81
  98. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 117
  99. ^ which included also the communities of Rudomino, Bukojnie, Szumsk, Wornie, Małe Soleczniki and Turgiele, Aleksander Srebrakowski, Sejm Wileński 1922 roku. Idea i jej realizacja, Wrocław 1993, p. 127
  100. ^ the district of Wilno Południe recorded the highest turnout of 77%; in Vilnius it was mere 55%, Srebrakowski 1993, p. 84. See also Zenon Krajewski, Geneza i dzieje wewnętrzne Litwy Środkowej, Lublin 1996, ISBN 978-83-906321-0-0, p. 100
  101. ^ Wykaz miejscowości Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej, vol. 1, Województwo Wileńskie, Warszawa 1938, p. 76
  102. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 124
  103. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 150
  104. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 141-142
  105. ^ data for 1926, Makarczyk 2022, p. 141
  106. ^ in 1931-1934 there were 358 children baptised in the parish, while delta between the number of the faithful in 1931 and 1934 was 270 osób. Given typical death ratio for the period (the parish books which contain the record of funerals did not survive until today), the figures correspond to natural demographic dynamics with almost no migration
  107. ^ Napoleon Rouba, Przewodnik po Litwie i Białejrusi, Wilno 1909, p. 121
  108. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 121
  109. ^ since re-establishment of the parish in 1927-1929 there were some 140 christenings recorded annually, Makarczyk 2022, p. 138. These were record figures in the entire history of the place. So high an average probably resulted from the fact that when the parish church was away, some parents did not bother to baptise their children, but decided to make up when the church was built nearby. In the 1930s the average dropped to some 120 christenings annually, Makarczyk 2022, p. 138
  110. ^ Medininkai were within the sector operated by the Soviet 36. Cavalry Division, which advanced along the Boruny – Oszmiana – Medininkai – Vilnius axis. Once it crushed minor Polish resistance on Sep 17, on Sep 18 it was ordered to seize Vilnius by the end of the day. However, the division reached Murowana Oszmianka only. It resumed the advance since early morning hours of September 19 and reached Vilnius by mid-day, Czesław Grzelak, Kresy w czerwieni, Warszawa 2008, ISBN 978-83-89935-61-8, p. 222
  111. ^ none of the works consulted mentions any combat near Medininkai, see Grzelak 2008, Karol Liszewski, Wojna polsko-sowiecka, Londyn 1986, ISBN 0-85065-170-0
  112. ^ Jarosław Wołkonowski, Okręg Wileński Związku Walki Zbrojnej Armii Krajowej w latach 1939-1945, Warszawa 1996, ISBN 83-86100-18-4, p. 380
  113. ^ Wołkonowski 1996, pp. 200, 204
  114. ^ Roman Korab-Żebryk, Operacja wileńska AK, Warszawa 1985, ISBN 83-01-04946-4, p. 114
  115. ^ see estimates by an eye-witness, quoted in Wołkonowski 1996, p. 280
  116. ^ see scholarly estimates, Wołkonowski 1996, p. 282
  117. ^ Wołkonowski 1996, p. 282
  118. ^ in the late 1940s the average annual rate of christenings was relatively high, around 96 per annum, Makarczyk 2022, p. 138
  119. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 361-364
  120. ^ there are 7 individuals known by name as deported from Józefowo, Makarczyk 2022, pp. 362-364; the 1934 census recorded 64 inhabitants of the hamlet, see Wykaz miejscowości Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej, vol. 1, Województwo Wileńskie, Warszawa 1938, p. 76
  121. ^ Przez Syberię do Chrzanowa, [in:] Przełom 21.04.2004, also Przebaczyliśmy, ale pamiętamy, [in:] Tygodnik Wileński 46 (2011)
  122. ^ a b Makarczyk 2022, p. 82
  123. ^ Ludmiła Kamardina i Nadieżda Worobej, Mokyklos istorija, [in:] service Medininkų šv. Kazimiero gimnazija
  124. ^ in the Soviet Lithuania Poles were underrepresented within the Communist Party of Lithuania; by the end of the Soviet era Poles formed 3,45% of the party members, while they formed some 7% of the entire population, Aleksander Srebrakowski, Rozwój polskojęzycznej prasy na Litwie po 1944 roku, [in:] Marek Szczerbiński (ed.), Z dziejów polskiej prasy na obczyźnie, Gorzów Wlkp. 2002, p. 268
  125. ^ Za ciężką pracę, [in:] Czerwony Sztandar 30.04.1976
  126. ^ Дороги, [in:] Литва. Краткая энциклопедия, Вйьнюс 1989, p. 240, także Transportation, [in:] Lithuania. An Encyclopedic Survey, Vilnius 1986, p. 217
  127. ^ В. Даугудис, Й. Мардоса, З. Жемайтите и др. 300 памятников культуры, Вильнюс 1984, pp. 150–151
  128. ^ Даугудис, Мардоса 1984, p. 151
  129. ^ before the pre-war wooden parish building served as a school, Mokyklos istorija, [in:] service Medininkų šv. Kazimiero gimnazija
  130. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 84
  131. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 83-5
  132. ^ Medininki otrzymają nowoczesny system wodny, [in:] Czerwony Sztandar 04.04.1978
  133. ^ Nasze rozmowy: do Wilniusa jadę co jeden dzień, [in:] Czerwony Sztandar 11.10.1982
  134. ^ Medininkai was among 9 communes which protested. However, unlike the communes like Rukojnie/Rukainiai or Suderwa/Sudervė, Medininkai did not declare itself "Polish nationality commune", Barbara Jundo-Kaliszewska, Zakładnicy historii. Mniejszość polska w postradzieckiej Litwie, Łódź 2018, ISBN 978-83-8142-196-6, p. 108
  135. ^ Dainius Sinkevičius, Medininkų byla: K.Michailovas kalės iki gyvos galvos, [in:] Delfi 11.05.2011
  136. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 76
  137. ^ Po ponad dwuletnich rządach lewicy wyborcy Litwy znów wolą prawicę, [in:] Kurier Wileński 28.03.1995
  138. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 77
  139. ^ Zwrot ziemi: najnowsze statystyki, [in:] Miryna Kutysz, Joanna Hyndle, Monitor Litewski 9 (Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich bulletin), Warszawa 1996, p. 4
  140. ^ e.g. Trumtransa, the transport-expedition company based in Medininkai, was registered in 1996, see the certificates presented at the corporate web page Registravimo pažymėjimas
  141. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 160
  142. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 161
  143. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 162
  144. ^ Miedniki/Medininkai, Łabiszki/Laibiškėsi, Podwarańce/Padvarionys, Słoboda/Slabada i Słobódka/Slabadka. 1-level admin unit is apskritis, 2-level unit is savivaldybė, 3-level is seniūnija, and 4-level is seniūnaitija
  145. ^ the last Soviet data from 1989 recorded 586 inhabitants in Medininkai; early data from the 2021 census shows 413 inhabitants
  146. ^ 1.136 (2021) vs 1.093 (2022), Rekordowy przyrost ludności w rejonie wileńskim w ciągu dziesięciolecia, [in:] service of the Medininkai Eldership
  147. ^ in the Vilnius Area County the share of minors is 21.9%, in Medininkai Eldership it stands at 19.6%. In the county the share of pensioners is 18.7%, in Medininkai it stands at 26,8% (third after Bujwidze and Rukojnie, Vilniaus apskrities kaimo gyvenamosios vietovės ir jų gyventojai, Vilnius 2003, ISBN 9955-588-04-7, p. 113
  148. ^ 52,3% are females; in the Vilnius country the share is 51.8%, 53.4%, Vilniaus apskrities... 2003, p. 113
  149. ^ [bare URL]
  150. ^ The most important day in a year in Medininkai is the harvest festival, see the mayor of Medininkai speaking Rozmowa Dnia. Wywiad z Renatą Bogdanowicz, starostą Miednik, [in:] service YoutTube, 6:30
  151. ^ See the Trumtransa website, available tutaj
  152. ^ see the Hegvita Agro website, available tutaj
  153. ^ see the Durga website, available tutaj
  154. ^ Vilniaus apskrities... 2003, p. 123, Makarczyk 2022, p. 79
  155. ^ 2022-2023 mokslo metais gimnazijoe dirbančių mokytojų sarasas, [in:] the official school website
  156. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 83-85
  157. ^ here are 7 hours of Polish vs 5 hours of Lithuanian per week in the curriculum, see Tvarkarasciai, [in:] the official school website. Internal school documentation and its official website are in Lithuanian, though
  158. ^ It maintains 2 language groups, a Lithuanian and a Polish one, Rozmowa Dnia. Wywiad z Renatą Bogdanowicz, starostą Miednik, [in:] service YoutTube, 2:10
  159. ^ 6,5 km covered with bitumen, 35,5 km gravel ones, Vilniaus rajono savivaldybės administracijos Medininkų seniūnijos 2010 m. veiklos programa, p. 1
  160. ^ Gediminas Kazėnas, Vilniaus rajono savivaldybė stokoja ambicijų. II dalis, [in:] Voruta 08.04.2021
  161. ^ Apie Pasieniečių mokyklą, [in:] official website of the Lithuanian government Mano vyriausybė
  162. ^ in 1994 the Lithuanian parliamen adopted a law, which permitted only political parties to participate in elections. Since ZPL was registered as a generic type of organisation, its members set up AWPL. On its domination in the Poles-inhabited regions see Gediminas Kazėnas, Lithuanian Polish Political Party in Parliamentary Election 2016 in Lithuania, [in:] Political Preferences 14 (2017), pp. 93-94
  163. ^ mayors were/are people related to ZPL and AWPL: Czesław Ancukiewicz (1995-1997), Janina Noniewicz (1997-2000), Stanisław Boroszko (2000-2014) and Renata Bogdanowicz (since 2014), Makarczyk 2022, p. 77
  164. ^ Medininkų (Nr.26) rinkimų apylinkė. Savivaldybių tarybų rinkimų rezultatai, [in:] service Vyriausioji rinkimų komisija
  165. ^ after Bujwidze/Buivydžiai (85%) and Sawiczuny (84%), Vilniaus rajono (Nr.58) savivaldybė, [in:] service Vyriausioji rinkimų komisija
  166. ^ various Lithuanian juridical instances keep ordering that bilingual placename signs mounted by municipal authorities be dismantled, see e.g. Stanisław Tarasiewicz, Litwa nie odpuszcza polskim nazwom, [in:] Kurier Wileński 02.10.2013, Anna Pieszko, Polskie tabliczki tylko na prywatnych posesjach lub jako informacja turystyczna, [in:] Kurier Wileński 15.11.2016
  167. ^ Litwinów niepokoją "próby podżegania do nienawiści", [in:] service TVN24 24.06.2011
  168. ^ see e.g. Kazimieras Garšva, Vilniaus ir Šalčininkų rajonų vietovardžių kilmė, [in:] Voruta 22.09.2022
  169. ^ see e.g. Sonda Wileńska: Mieszkańcy Miednik o budowie elektrowni w Ostrowcu, [in:] service YouTube 20.04.2017
  170. ^ Lithuania officially closing Medininkai migrant centre, [in:] service LRT 22.09.2022
  171. ^ por. Lituanie: le calvaire des migrants, [in:] service YT 02.03.2022, Djamel Belayachi, African women protest against discrimination, poor conditions in Lithuanian migrant camp, [in:] service France24 02.11.2021
  172. ^ zob. np. Dominyka Bukšaitytė, Dar vienas skandalas Medininkų užsieniečių registracijos centre: psichologas seksualiai išnaudojo migrantus, [in:] Lietuvos rytas 26.04.2022
  173. ^ The largest number of migrants trying to enter Lithuania. Medininkai Foreigners Registration Centre, service YouTube 04.02.2022
  174. ^ Žiniop. Oficialiai uždarytas Medininkų užsieniečių registracijos centras, [in:] service LRT 02.09.2022
  175. ^ Krzysztof Wojczal, Armia Nowego Wzoru, Warszawa 2021, ss. 43. However, latest news suggest that there is far greater chance of deploying a Bundeswher brigade in Medininkai, Lidia Gibadło, Joanna Hyndle-Hussein. Kontrowersje wokół rozmieszczenia niemieckiej brygady na Litwie, [in:] Analizy OSW 04.05.2023
  176. ^ 40-metį švenčianti Katažina Zvonkuvienė – atvirai apie vaikystę, pažintį su vyru ir netikėtus gyvenimo vingius, [in:] service LRT 03.05.2020
  177. ^ Senųjų amatų šventė kviečia į Medininkų pilį, [in:] service alkas.lt 16.09.2022
  178. ^ Mokyklos istorija, [in:] official school web page
  179. ^ Mokyklos istorija, [in:] official school web page, see also the FB profile Gimnazjum im. św. Kazimierza w Miednikach na FB
  180. ^ a b zob. Radio Wilno. Rozmowa Dnia. Wywiad z Renatą Bogdanowicz i o. Piotrem Stroceniem, [in:] service YouTube
  181. ^ zob. profil Medininkų Švč. Trejybės ir Šv. Kazimiero Parapija na serviceie FB
  182. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 131
  183. ^ at 3:30 PM
  184. ^ at 8:30 AM, 11:30 AM i 3:30 PM, Miedniki Królewskie, [in:] service Msze święte za granicą
  185. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 142, 164
  186. ^ zob. Józef Makarczyk, [in:] service Czasopisma Humanistyczne
  187. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 164
  188. ^ Makarczyk 2022, p. 165
  189. ^ Makarczyk 2022, pp. 170-172
  190. ^ see e.g. Medininkų pilyje – Vilnijos vietos bendruomenių diena, [in:] Voruta 08.06.2016
  191. ^ Stanislovas Buchaveckas, Jonas Rimantas Glemža, Medininkų pilis, [in:] Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija vol. XIV, Vilnius 2008, ISBN 978-5-420-01646-6, p. 571
  192. ^ currently the Medininkai castle is a branch of the Trakų istorijos muziejus, see its website tutaj
  193. ^ see castle FB profile
  194. ^ Juozapinės kalnas, [in:] service Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija
  195. ^ Romualdas Ozolas, Ir vėl, [in:] Voruta 11.04.1994
  196. ^ Lietuvoje - naujas aukščiausias kalnas, [in:] service Delfi 22.05.2006

Further reading edit

  • Józef Makarczyk, Miedniki Królewskie wczoraj i dziś, Miedniki Królewskie 2022, ISBN 978-609-95291-5-8
  • Aldona Prašmantaitė, Kanonicy regularni od pokuty prowincji litewskiej na ziemiach byłego Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego w pierwszych latach po rozbiorach Rzeczypospolitej, [in:] Andrzej Bruździński, Tomasz Graff (ed.), Duchowe korzenie błogosławionego Michała Giedroycia, Kraków 2021, ISBN 978-83-8138-583-1, pp. 55-85
  • Tadeusz M. Trajdos, Kanonicy regularni od pokuty w Miednikach w ostatnim stuleciu Rzeczypospolitej (1695-1795), [w:] Nasza Przeszłość 127 (2017), pp. 21–52
  • Tadeusz M. Trajdos, Najstarsze fundacje dla kanoników regularnych od pokuty w diecezji wileńskiej, [in:] Nasza Przeszłość 119 (2013), pp. 21–66
  • Tadeusz M. Trajdos, Odnowa i wytrwałość. Kanonicy regularni od pokuty w Miednikach od połowy XVI do schyłku XVII wieku, [in:] S. Górzyński, M. Nagielski (ed.), Studia z dziejów Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego (XVI-XVIII wieku), Warszawa 2014, ISBN 978-83-7181-850-9, pp. 425–434

External links edit

  • eldership profile at FB
  • Medininkai entry in Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija online
  • Józef Makarczyk OFMConv about Medininkai at YT

medininkai, other, locations, named, miedniki, miedniki, varniai, polish, miedniki, królewskie, belarusian, Меднікі, russian, Ме, дники, russian, Мьдники, village, lithuania, administrationwise, centre, eldership, which, forms, part, vilnius, district, municip. For other locations named Miedniki see Miedniki and Varniai Medininkai Polish Miedniki Krolewskie Belarusian Medniki Russian Me dniki old Russian Mdniki is a village in Lithuania Administrationwise it is centre to the Medininkai Eldership which forms part of the Vilnius District Municipality the district itself is in turn part of the Vilnius County Beginnings of the village are related to the 14th century The local castle was among the key ones in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1387 upon christening of the country the grand duke Jogaila founded one of the first 7 churches here Medininkai enjoyed its golden era in the late 15th century In the early modern period the settlement reached the status of a town but it failed to develop into a major urban centre Over time the place was losing importance and at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries it was reduced to a village The area has retained its traditionally rural character though during recent decades it started to host transport and spedition businesses related to the nearby Lithuania Belarus border crossing at the Vilnius Minsk highway Since the early 21st century Medininkai is home to a major compound which educates border control officials The place enjoys some appeal among tourists visitors are attracted by ruins of the castle now turned into a museum and the highest natural point in Lithuania named Aukstojas The village and the eldership are populated mostly by members of the Polish national minority MedininkaiVillageold centre of MedininkaiCoat of armsMedininkaiLocation of MedininkaiCoordinates 54 32 20 N 25 39 00 E 54 53889 N 25 65000 E 54 53889 25 65000Country LithuaniaCountyVilnius CountyMunicipalityVilnius district municipalityEldershipMedininkai eldershipCapital ofMedininkai eldershipPopulation 2021 Total413Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 13 14th c 1 2 Development early 15th century 1 3 Golden era late 15th century 1 4 Crisis early 16th century 1 5 Stagnation 1550 to 1650 1 6 Disaster and rebirth late 17th century 1 7 Last years of the Grand Duchy 18th century 1 8 Post partition and Napoleonic periods early 19th century 1 9 The Risings Period mid 19th century 1 10 Post rising period late 19th century 1 11 Crisis and war early 20th century 1 12 In Poland 1922 1939 1 13 Second World War 1939 1944 1 14 Soviet Lithuania early decades 1945 1965 1 15 Soviet Lithuania late decades 1965 1990 1 16 Reborn Lithuania late 20th century 2 Present day 2 1 Administration and demography 2 2 Economy 2 3 Official infrastructure 2 4 Politics 2 5 Culture 2 6 Religion 2 7 Tourist attractions 3 Notable people 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editBeginnings 13 14th c edit nbsp grand duke Algirdas Beginnings of Medininkai are related to a fortress According to some historians it might have been built already in the late 13th century during the era of duke Traidenis it was either him or one of minor local dukes who initiated the construction 1 An unclear and not necessarily reliable chronicle points rather to the early 14th century i e the times of the grand duke Gedyminas 2 The most popular theory claims that the stronghold was built in the mid 14th century on orders of the grand duke Algirdas It was located at the major Ashmyany route though its exact role remains uncertain 3 Historiographic accounts from the 19th century rooted in a somewhat loose interpretation of sources advanced the theory that Algirdas and his wife were frequent visitors to the place 4 However the first scientifically accepted note on the fortress is related to the year of 1385 when it was conquered by troops of the Teutonic Order led by the grand master Konrad Zollner von Rotenstein 5 In 1387 the grand duke Jogaila abandoned paganism and adopted the Roman Catholic faith which is usually considered as the christening of Lithuania In an accompanying act he set up and endowed 7 churches among them the one in Medininkai 6 According to historians it demonstrates that there was already some sort of settlement beyond the castle walls existent at the time It proves also that Medininkai was among key points in the state infrastructure 7 The church has indeed been constructed In 1391 Jogaila subordinated the shrine to the newly erected Bystritsa parish where he set up the monastery of Canons of Penitence it is most likely they who delivered religious service in the Medininkai church 8 The year of 1398 brings the first information about a representative of the grand duke and his powers in Medininkai he is mentioned as a certain Careybo Korejwo Korejko 9 His rule was rather shaky though in 1402 another raid of Teutonic Order knights this time commanded by Wilhelm von Helfenstein seized and burnt the stronghold 10 Development early 15th century edit nbsp grand duke Vytautas Since the early 15th century the rule of Lithuanian grand dukes became more stable and the Medininkai fortress was gradually gaining importance The grand duke Vytautas visited it a number of times e g in 1415 it was there that he was writing a letter to master of the Teutonic Order 11 and when referring his 1426 stay a medieval chronicle notes unsere husse Medniki 12 Most likely at the time the stronghold underwent major upgrade and a previous earth wooden structure was replaced with stone and brick walls with towers and bastions In the first half of the 15th century it was probably the largest construction of this type in Lithuania by far larger even than the castle compound in Vilnius its walls of 560 metres length embraced the internal yard of some 2 ha 13 It was then that the Medininkai boyars formed a separate military unit named choragiew miednicka Jan Dlugosz noted its taking part during the Battle of Grunwald and 4 of its commanders are known by name for the period until the mid 16th century 14 The scale and character of the settlement behind the castle walls are not clear At unspecified time a parish has been erected in Medininkai in the mid 15th century the local church is referred to as a parish church and it is known that it operated a school for children 15 As the Catholic infrastructure in Lithuania was being gradually developed the Medininkai church became one of 27 churches in the Vilnius diocese 16 Starting with a certain Gleb Andreevitsch named in the document of 1453 17 there are 13 boyars listed as representatives of the grand duke until the mid 16th century they were named palatinus praefectus castellanus or tivunus 18 Usually they were holding tenures of land estates located around the castle and the settlement though the estates remained the property of grand dukes Feudal tenants are listed since the mid 15th century it is known that there were 40 such tenures in the entire Vilnius voivodship 14 Golden era late 15th century edit nbsp Dlugosz and prince Casimir The second half of the 15th century marks Medininkai s golden era the period when the place enjoyed the most prestigious status During long strings the grand duke and the king of Poland Casimir resided in the castle to breathe better air he was accompanied by his sons especially the princes Casimir Jan and Alexander 19 Their preceptor and mentor who spent long months if not years in the castle was Jan Dlugosz a monumental figure in Polish medieval historiography 20 Following the death of Prince Casimir who passed away already considered a quasi saint in Lithuania in 1484 his remnants were buried in the castle though not clear whether in the walls or in a purpose built sepulchral crypt they would remain there during the following over 150 years 21 The place played also important ceremonial roles e g in 1494 the Muscovite legacy which accompanied princess Helena fiance of grand duke Alexander travelling from Moscow to Vilnius were pompously met by Lithuanian representatives in Medininkai 22 The exact status of the settlement remains unclear Some scholars claim that in the 15th century Medininkai was formally granted a borough charter 23 and few authors even point to the year of 1486 as the date 24 but details remain unknown and the reliability of this claim is disputed Late medieval chronicles mention the place as oppidum 25 which points to the castle and its military role rather than to a settlement of urban features There is no source information on usual medieval urban self governing bodies like a town council or municipal judicature It is known though that as the town was located on a major trade route it was of fundamental financial importance for the dukes a document from 1486 confirms that two inns in Medininkai were producing major gains both for the tenants and for the grand dukes 26 The first information on Tatars having been settled near the castle comes from the year of 1488 they inhabited the hamlet of Kurhany Pilkapiai later to become part of Medininkai 27 Crisis early 16th century edit nbsp castle present view The Lithuanian Muscovite war which broke out in 1512 produced enemy incursions deep into central Lithuania The imperial envoy Sigmund von Herberstein when coming back from Moscow in 1517 noted that he saw the Medininkai castle devastated it is not clear whether this was the result of Muscovite troops having seized and routed the fortress or another cause e g an accidental fire 28 None of the sources consulted mentioned that the castle performed any military role afterwards and it seems it was being gradually abandoned Though at that time city walls were being built around Vilnius there is no information about city walls being built around Medininkai The local military unit continued to operate as a separate formation e g on periodical review of local nobility of 1528 the boyars from the area were supposed to produce 138 men strong cavalry detachment out of nobility raised 19 842 cavalry for the entire Grand Duchy 29 it was only in the 1560s that chorastwo miednickie was incorporated into a unit raised in the entire Vilnius county 30 of which Medininkai formed part The first half of the 16th century spelled problems in terms of religious service and it is despite the Medininkai Bystritsa Augustians receiving new endowments and donations 31 The discipline within the monastery deteriorated in 1523 the Canons left Bystritsa 32 and in 1528 they were removed from Medininkai for non compliance with rules of the order it was manifested e g by drunken episodes and dereliction of duty 33 Most likely at the time the church building ceased to exist one historian speculates it might have been the result of fire 34 The Canons were re established by a separate foundation in 1540 and it was then that the friars returned to the town The new church of Holy Trinity was built centrally by the main road leading to Ashmyany 35 while the renewed parish and cloister received new donations from the grand duke Sigismund 1541 36 and his son 1560 37 1562 38 Despite this the parish was in legal dispute over property with local boyars 39 Stagnation 1550 to 1650 edit nbsp Medininkai on map 1613 In the early modern era Medininkai was within a fairly large but rather poor group of towns which evolved from medieval lower castle settlements However none of them developed towards a typical large urban format 40 On the one hand Medininkai boasted of various privileges for the mayor and city dwellers e g these which exempted them from transportation services 41 on the other none of the sources consulted contains information e g on staple right and it is despite that the town was located on a busy commercial route from Vilnius eastwards 42 The town demonstrated some urban features like market square 35 castle or parish church but it lacked city walls or bricked houses there is neither any information on functioning of municipal self government The town owned some 1 250 ha 43 e g twice the amount owned by the monastery 38 It was also due to deliver numerous fiscal contributions e g a document from 1594 lists them meticulously even for minor hamlets and settlements 44 It is known that Medininkai still counted among major places e g the Vilnius diocese was composed of 5 so called keys corresponding to present day decanates one of them was the Medininkai key 8 Extinction of the royal Yagiellonian line did not spell much change for Medininkai except that the now electable Polish kings and Lithuanian dukes when residing in the Grand Duchy lived in Vilnius and no longer visited other locations as was their habit before The rule of grand duke Stephen Bathory produced further donations for the Medininkai boyars 45 but not for the town itself As political and economic regime of the Duchy petrified the landed nobility was getting increasingly influential The 1620s are marked by expropriations and confiscations of municipal and religious estates by local boyars which resulted in a spate of protests to the royal court 46 The Medininkai prestige suffered enormously in 1632 when remnants of prince Casimir sanctified in 1602 were transferred from the castle to the newly built chapel in the Vilnius cathedral 47 Disaster and rebirth late 17th century edit nbsp Medininkai church 17th c In the early 1650s the church underwent major rehaul it was financially supported by the royal secretary Dymitr Karp 35 In 1654 a rare away sitting of the Vilnius County sejmik took place in Medininkai 48 However soon afterwards the town suffered the largest disaster until then The war between the Lithuanian Polish state and Muscovy broke out in 1654 In 1655 the Muscovite army seized most of eastern and central Lithuania and entered Vilnius the occupation lasted until 1660 Its results were tragic the Muscovite troops inflicted massive damage upon the area not only by total destruction of numerous settlements but also by abducting great share of the population into Russia It is known that the population of Vilnius shrank from 40 to 5 thousand though it is not clear what was the demographic loss suffered by Medininkai It was probably enormous as in the 1660s and 1670s there were very few children baptised in the parish church every year 49 There is some statistical data available for the second half of the 17th century based on evidence reported in the parish books It is hence known that in 1690 Medininkai consisted of 39 houses application of converters typical for the era 50 suggests that the population was around 300 51 It was about 30 of the population of the entire parish which comprised also neighboring villages on its territory there were 137 households with key villages having been Kiena Kena 20 and Kosiny Kuosine 16 52 During half a century between the years of 1652 and 1702 there were 1 388 children baptised in the parish 35 Following demographic disaster related to the Muscovite invasion Medininkai regained dynamics in the last two decades of the century when on average there were 70 80 children baptised every year 53 However the town has already lost its standing a decree by grand duke Augustus II specifies some fiscal duties named podwody for every town of the Vilnius voivodship Medininkai was obliged to pay 15 zloty per annum the same amount as Niemenczyn Nemencine the neighboring Ashmyany was obliged to pay 30 zloty 54 Last years of the Grand Duchy 18th century edit nbsp Swedish troops Northern War None of the sources consulted mentions the fate of Medininkai during the Northern War In 1702 Vilnius was captured by the Swedish army but it is not known whether the Swedes garrisoned the town before in 1708 the region was seized by Russian troops theoretically allied with the grand duke Augustus Medininkai was undergoing the period of moderate territorial growth the 1730 inventory of municipal estates for the first time listed some new hamlets like Kamienny Lug 55 In the Saxon times the parish also recorded demographic growth as in the mid 18th century on average there were some 135 children baptised every year 56 such figures were recorded again only in the mid 1920s once the parish would be re erected During the early rule of the grand duke Stanislaw August Poniatowski the parish counted 367 houses 57 it is some 2 7 times more than the figure recorded 100 years earlier the census from 1781 recorded 3 482 Catholics in the parish 56 The town consisted of a market square and 6 streets 58 In 1778 the fire broke out in religious premises and the 250 year old church was burnt down to the ground 59 Reconstruction works commenced a few years later and probably in 1788 a new already third shrine was completed it was also a wooden building 60 For reasons which are not clear it got consecrated 3 years later in 1791 again dedicated to the Holy Trinity 61 In the 1780s and 1790s the Canons monastery still operational in the town was running a primary school Its books indicate that boys of urban descent prevailed though there were also boys of rural descent and exceptionally also few of noble descent 62 The Augustians were also running a small hospital for the poor 63 but for most of the 18th century the monastery was related to scandals resulting from lack of discipline 64 According to some sources Medininkai was in the possessions of Duke Radziwill 65 Administrationwise until the third partition of the Lithuanian Polish Commonwealth Medininkai formed part of the Vilnius county in the Vilnius voivodship in 1795 with remnants of the Grand Duchy it was incorporated into the imperial Russia Post partition and Napoleonic periods early 19th century edit nbsp Grande Armee near Medininkai In Russia Medininkai formed part of Vi lenskij ue zd within the Vilenskaya guberniya This period is marked by property transformations Estates around the town which until the end of the Commonwealth belonged to grand dukes were seized by the imperial economy Then they were put on sale and acquired by Ignacy Grabowski 63 previously a high functionary of the Grand Duchy Tribunal 66 When taking possession of his new property in 1796 he seized also the Augustian hospital evicted the sick and took over the estate the county court ordered him to give back the land and the premises but it is not clear to what effect 63 Grabowski who in new political conditions became counselor to His Imperial Majesty kept harassing the town as owner of the inn in 1802 he sent his men to assault the tenant of the competitive Augustian inn 67 Another disastrous year in the history of Medininkai was 1812 The French Grand Armee during their withdrawal from Russia was back in central Lithuania In extremely harsh winter conditions on Dec 6 the temperature in Medininkai was 37 5 C 68 when seeking wood to warm up the troops stationed in the town burnt down all facilities within the castle and destroyed a large part of the town itself 69 the French also looted the place 70 before withdrawing further west Grabowski continued his private war 1815 marks another assault of his men who robbed municipal property and cut down much of the municipal forest The same year the presbytery was destroyed by fire it is not clear whether the result of arson or an accident 71 The parochial census of 1827 documents another period of demographic regress it recorded 208 households and 1 386 faithful 72 merely 40 of the population listed in the census carried out 46 years earlier 56 Medininkai was not even marked on a Russian map from the 1820s though it was located on a major route and though similar or minor neighboring locations like Rukojnie Rukainiai Kiena Kena or Turgiele Turgeliai were marked even the Kamienny Lug hamlet was acknowledged 73 The Risings Period mid 19th century edit nbsp Lithuania by Grottger During the November Rising the insurgents took control of the neighboring Ashmyany in the spring of 1831 but none of the sources consulted notes any rebel activity in Medininkai except some insurgents receiving assistance in the nearby estate of the Koziell Poklewski family 74 Despite this having re taken control the Russian administration embarked on a repressive course In late 1831 the Canons following some 400 years of service were forced to abandon the village 71 The full scale drama unfolded in 1832 when the governorate officials closed down the church and declared the parish dissolved 75 The faithful were distributed among the neighboring parishes of Turgiele Turgeliai Taboryszki Tabariskes and Rukojnie Rukainiai Medininkai was assigned to the Taboryszki parish 76 In 1834 the building of the closed church was disassembled and materiel was moved to the Soly Salos village where it was re assembled as the new church of the local parish community 77 At the time the owner of the Medininkai estate was first the son of Ignacy Grabowski Jozef 78 and then his relative Apolinary Grabowski 79 major of the imperial Russian army and deputy chairman of the Vilnius county nobility 80 Under his rule the economy got heavily indebted in the 1850s a certain Zofia Kaminska purchased Grabowski s payable notes and became the next owner 81 In 1857 she was permitted to build a small chapel completed the same year near foundations of the disassembled church Kaminska ensured also the religious service though formal status of a priest saying the mass is not clarified 82 After 3 years and in unknown circumstances the priest was moved to the Carmelitan monastery in Vilnius also in 1860 the chapel was demolished 82 At that time the town was visited by a Polish writer Wladyslaw Syrokomla his late romantic account dedicated to ruins of the castle was published as part of a book which went to print in 1860 83 During the January Rising in the spring of 1863 Medininkai proved a recruitment ground for an insurgent detachment of Jozef Sniadecki 84 Post rising period late 19th century edit nbsp general Labyntsev In the second half the 19th century Medininkai was getting furtherly marginalised One of the reasons was the 1873 built railway line from Vilnius to Minsk it bypassed the village running some 2 km north of the Ashmyany road and the nearest station turned to be Kiena Kena some 12 km away According to data from 1885 the Medininkai population was 297 mostly Catholics 85 At this time the estate again changed hands after the Kaminski family 86 its new owner was general Ivan Mikhailovich Labyntsev 87 he took over also the former religious property of unclear status since the parish and monastery had been closed down 88 Following the abolition of serfdom and gradual enfranchisment estates started to become the property of local peasants turning into independent farmers documents from the 1880s note that the land near Medininkai was the property of generala Labincowa i wloscian 89 It is not clear who inherited the estate once Labyntsev passed away a document from 1897 notes as the sole heir his granddaughter Katarzyna Drohojowska nee Komar 90 but later data lists as the owner her mother Elzbieta Komarowa daughter to general Labyntsev Following the administrative reform from the turn of the centuries Medininkai formed part of the Szumsk Sumskas Commune Shumskaya volost which in turn formed part of the Vilnius County Vilenskij uezd in the Vilnius Governorate The official census of 1905 lists 9 separate settlements named Mdniki 91 Though at the turn of the centuries the place was still officially considered a town 92 in the census mentioned it is already categorized as derevnya village The exact date when Medninkai lost its urban status is not known most likely it was re categorized with no tangible practical implications 93 The village listed consisted of 269 inhabitants However all settlements named Mdniki in the census usually 94 categorized as usadba hamlet together numbered 415 inhabitants The census listed separately hamlets and colonies which are now often considered parts of Medininkai like Kurgany Kurhany 222 inhabitants or Yazovo Jozefowo 34 95 Crisis and war early 20th century edit nbsp Polish eastern troops In 1900 1902 the villagers tried to get the parish re established eventually the Russian administration did not consent 96 Already in 1905 the villagers resumed their efforts this time they addressed the religious hierarchy in a letter to the Vilnius bishop Edward Ropp they noted that there had been a new church constructed in Lawaryszki Lavoriskes so the old one might be moved to Medininkai However there were also other villages who set their eyes on the Lawaryszki Lavoriskes building the matter got stuck in the bishopic bureaucracy and has not been solved until the collapse of the Russian rule in the area 96 In the early 20th century there was a 3 grade Russian school operational in the village in 1911 there were 34 boys attending the classes 97 In September 1915 the Vilnius region was seized by the German army In 1916 the bishop agreed to the parish having been re established in the village and a church to be built 98 In 1917 a temporary chapel was constructed the new parish accounted for 3 287 faithful most of them taken over from the Taboryszki Tabariskes parish 76 During the following few years the village changed hands a few times In January 1919 the withdrawing Germans were replaced by the Bolsheviks in April 1919 the Bolsheviks were driven away by the Polish army in July 1920 the Poles were driven away by the Bolshevik troops in August 1920 the Bolsheviks handed over to the newly born Lithuanian Republic in October 1920 the area was seized by Polish units who for the sake of international politics posed as in mutiny against the Warsaw government None of the sources consulted provides information on the fate of Medininkai during these turbulent times During elections to so called Vilnius Parliament organized under the provisional Polish rule within allegedly an independent state of Central Lithuania Medininkai formed part of the Wilno Poludnie electoral district 99 Results below the district level are not known 100 In April 1922 Medininkai and the entire Vilnius region was incorporated into Poland In Poland 1922 1939 edit nbsp castle interwar period Within the Polish republic Medininkai formed part of the Szumsk Sumskas Commune within the Vilnius County itself part of the Vilnius Voivodeship In the fall of 1921 during the first official census the village was beyond the state frontiers the following census dated 1931 recorded 79 households and 504 inhabitants It excluded minor colonies and settlements which are now de facto parts of Medininkai like Kurhany Pilkapiai 45 houses 249 inhabitants or Jozefowo Juozapine respectively 14 and 64 101 Religious statistics reveals similar data in 1927 the entire parish amounted to 2 877 faithful 102 in 1931 to 3 017 103 and in 1934 to 3 287 The latter comprised 502 faithful in Medininkai alone other major locations were Kurhany Pilkapiai 294 Zemajtele Zemaiteliai 223 Gudzie Gudai 201 Podwarance Padvarionys 197 Dworce Dvarciai 181 Bojary Bajorai 127 and Wolkogule Valkagulia 116 104 The community was almost entirely Catholic there were merely 3 Orthodox faithful and a handful of Jews recorded 105 The overwhelming majority of the Medininkai neighbourhood residents were farmers or agricultural workers apart from few small brickyards and sawmills there were no industrial facilities in the area Migration to Vilnius and other urban centres was minor 106 Elzbieta Komarowa who commenced parcelation of her possessions already in 1908 107 was anxious that implementation of agrarian reform might prove disastrous she decided to sell the rest of her estates in advance before the law comes into force 88 The process was marked by tension and conflict when the villagers decided to purchase a plot for a future church intervention of the official land estate office was needed to get the deal done 108 Location of the plot purchased was not very convenient as it was placed somewhat away from the village on the other side of the castle ruins In 1927 the villagers purchased the closed church in Rukojnie Rukainiai It was disassembled and re assembled in Medininkai consecrated in 1929 109 it was the sixth subsequent shrine in the village 102 In the 1920s there were schools open in Medininkai 180 students Podwarance Padvarionys Zemajtele Zemaiteliai and Nielidziszki Nelidiskai 97 after the so called Jedrzejewicz reform there was one 6 grade school in Medininkai 97 Second World War 1939 1944 edit nbsp AK near Medininkai 1944 Following the Soviet invasion of Poland on September 17 1939 two days later 110 Medininkai was seized by the Red Army with no combat recorded 111 After a month in late October the area was ceded by the Soviets to the Republic of Lithuania The newly established Lithuanian Soviet frontier separated Medininkai from some of its remote settlements e g Kamienny Lug as part of the Ashmyany County became part of the Byelorussian SSR this was also the fate of some more distant fields which belonged to Medininkai villagers In June 1940 the village and the entire Lithuania was incorporated into the USSR as the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic administrationwise it formed part of the Szumsk Sumskas Commune within the Vilnius County In June 1941 Medininkai were seized by the Wehrmacht which commenced over 3 years of German occupation Since 1943 the territory south east of Vilnius as part of so called Inspectorate A of the underground Home Army 112 became operational area of Polish partisan units In early 1944 they were developed into a battalion size 3 Wilenska Brygada Armii Krajowej It carried out a number of combat operations against the Germans and during brief spells controlled minor locations like Szumsk Sumskas or Turgiele Turgeliai it is known that on February 23 1944 its sub units mounted an ambush near Medininkai 113 but it is not clear whether the battalion has ever seized the village itself In early July 1944 the joint command of Home Army units assembled to capture Vilnius was located in the village of Wolkorabiszki some 8 km from Medininkai 114 Following a successful joint Home Army and Soviet operation the Red Army and the NKVD started to detain Polish combatants they were held prisoners within the walls of the Medininkai castle ruins It is estimated that on July 20 there were between 4 115 and 6 thousand 116 disarmed Home Army POWs amassed in the yard of the castle By August they were marched to the Kiena railway station loaded into trains and transported to Kaluga 117 Soviet Lithuania early decades 1945 1965 edit nbsp Medininkai youth around 1950 Within the re built Soviet Lithuanian structures Medininkai was again incorporated into the Szumsk Sumskas Commune Very few of its inhabitants decided to join the organized transfer of Poles into Poland and almost all preferred to stay on their family economy 118 However some farmers usually owners of larger properties who employed hired workforce were dubbed kulaks and enemies of the working people In 1948 1952 53 people which was around 2 of the parish population were sentenced to a penal settlement in Siberia mostly in the Tomsk Oblast 119 In case of some hamlets like Jozefowo Juozapine the rate of the deported reached 11 120 The deportees who survived returned to Medininkai or travelled further west to Poland some as late as in the late 1950s 121 At the turn of the 1940s and 1950s the forced collectivisation began the village started to host the Red Banner kolkhoz 92 Following the 1950 administrative reform Medininkai became the centre of the Medininkai Commune in the Nowa Wilejka Naujoji Vilnia County According to the Soviet standard theoretically the official languages in Medininkai were the republican one i e Lithuanian and the pan Soviet Russian In practice the Kolkhoz language was either Russian or po prostemu a rural mixture of Polish and Belarusian The school opened in the late 1940s adopted Polish as the language of instruction 122 though the management layer was formed by Russians 123 Until the late 1950s the school educated students until late teenage in 1956 8 there were 25 boys and girls who completed the curriculum 122 Later the school switched to 8th grade profile and since then there was no school above the primary school level in Medininkai In 1959 Nowa Wilejka Naujoji Vilnia was incorporated into Vilnius as a result the Medininkai Commune was moved from the Naujoji Vilnia County to the Vilnius County In 1963 the commune was dissolved and Medninkai was incorporated into the newly established Podwarance Padvarionys Commune but 1965 marked return to the old setup What ratio of villagers were members of the Communist Party is unclear 124 Soviet Lithuania late decades 1965 1990 edit nbsp Medininkai school present view Medininkai and surroundings remained a typical agricultural area with no industrial facilities built What change the village was a housing estate developed by the Kolkhoz for its employees since the mid 1970s Buildings were located along a network of streets south of the church 125 As a result the historical west east axis of the village running below the castle was reduced to secondary role the centre of gravity moved above the ruins along the north south axis Traditional centre of the village gradually became an empty crossroads also because of the major infrastructural investment in the region the Vilnius Minsk highway completed in the late 1970s 126 It was some 2 km north and parallel to historical route from Medininkai to Ahmyeny It spared the village the nuisance of growing heavy traffic but on the other hand it turned Medininkai into a backwater spot with agricultural machinery and horse carts having been most or the only vehicles The village was plugged into the electric power grid in the early 1960s Ruins of the Medininkai castle twice underwent some conservation works for the first time at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s 127 and then in the early 1970s In both cases there were minor excavation works carried out while the major objective was ensuring that the crumbling walls would not decay further on 128 In 1967 a modern large school building was completed 129 In 1981 there were new modules added a gym hall canteen and library there was also an outdoor sport compound built 130 In the 1970s and 1980s some 40 50 students were completing education every year 131 Other investments visible until today are 4 residential multi flat blocks a large kindergarten the community office and a shop The less visible investments are the water supply network and the partially completed sewage system 132 Because of fairly decent public bus transport and 1 hour commuting time more and more villagers decided to seek employment in Vilnius and commuted each day to and from the city 133 Except brief periods religious service was continuously offered in the church every Sunday Reborn Lithuania late 20th century edit nbsp memorial to 1991 victims In wake of decomposition of the USSR in 1988 the Medininkai Commune protested against planned legislation which would strengthen position of the Lithuanian language in 1989 the Supreme Soviet of LSRR ignored the protest 134 During emergence of the reborn Lithuanian state Medininkai was witness to an obscure episode not fully explained until today on July 31 1991 7 officials of the Lithuanian customs border and security services were killed at the border crossing According to Lithuanian juridical authorities they were victims of the Soviet OMON troops 135 What used to be the internal Soviet border between the Byelorussian SRR and the Lithuanian SRR turned into a state frontier between the independent states of Lithuania and Belarus it ran some 2 km from the centre of Medininkai In 1994 the post Soviet local self government Council of People s Deputies was dissolved In 1995 the third level admin unit the Medininkai Eldership Medininku seniunija was set up Its headquarters was in Medininkai 136 and the eldership formed part of the Vilnius Area County Vilniaus rajono savivaldybe which in turn formed part of the Vilnius Region Vilniaus apskritis The same year the first local elections were held both at the commune level and at the county level the strongest part turned out to be the Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania 137 the first elected mayor was Czeslaw Ancukiewicz 138 In line with general political and economic change the Red Banner kolkhoz was disbanded and its estates and properties were divided among local coopratives enterprises and private individuals some plots expropriated half a century earlier returned to heirs of the original owners 139 Nearby border crossing at the key highway between Vilnius and Minsk triggered emergence of business from logistics and transport sectors 140 In the early 1990s a member of the Polish branch of the Franciscan order settled in Medininkai few others followed 141 In 1994 a small Franciscan monastery was set up in the village the first one after the Augustians had been evicted 163 years earlier Very briefly the monastery consisted also of a postulate and a novitiate 142 moved to Vilnius by the end of the decade 143 Present day editAdministration and demography edit nbsp eldership office Within the administrative structure of the country Medininkai is the centre of the Medininkai Eldership it is one of 23 third level units which form the Vilnius Area County which in turn as one of 8 second level units forms the Vilnius Region one of 10 first level administration units in Lithuania According to the number of inhabitants recorded in 2011 1 374 the eldership is among the least populated ones in the country and ranks 439 in Lithuania According to territory 62 9 km2 it is also one of smallest ones and ranks 404 in Lithuania According to population density 22 persons per km2 the eldership ranks mid range at position 255 Of the total eldersip surface some 50 km2 is cultivated agricultural area 10 8 km2 is forests and the rest is settlements barren land and water mostly small lakes and ponds The eldership falls into 5 sub elderships lit seniunaitija 4 level smallest admin units 144 According to the 2011 census there were 37 settlements in the eldership Medininkai was inhabited by 580 people other largest settlements were Podwarance Padvarionys 114 Labiszki Laibiskes 72 Kurhany Pilkapiai 68 and Kosinka Kuosine 62 though borders between them are vague e g the closest buildings in Medininkai and Pilkapiai are separated by some 500 metres Both the Medininkai eldership and the Medininkai village are subject to ongoing population decline since the fall of the USSR the number of villagers fell by 30 145 and in 2021 2022 the eldership lost 43 people 146 Among the eldership population no data for Medininkai separately 63 are aged 18 65 860 people 21 are minors 284 and 17 are the retired 230 The eldership recorded the second lowest share of minors and the third highest share of retirees in the county 147 Medininkai is also one of the elderships with the lowest proportion of males vs females the phenomenon typical for rural regions 148 Like in most elderships south east of Vilnius most of the population are Poles 93 2 Largest national minorities are Lithuanians 3 2 and Russians 2 9 149 Economy edit nbsp storing hay Medininkai Until the early 21st century most Medininkai villagers lived either exclusively or mostly off agriculture Today there are still many households depending upon agrarian jobs usually related to cereal and forage type of cultivation 150 Animal husbandry is in decline and a cow or a horse on Medininkai pastures is becoming sort of a rarity Many households still keep small gardens orchards or cultivated plots but usually for own consumption and only with minor or no part of the production intended for sale the same applies to poultry and pigs Single enterprises rely on activities which target the Vilnius consumer market e g cultivating and trading in flowers For few decades the most dynamic Medininkai business is a variety of services related to long distance road haulage Trumtransa is a Medininkai based company which runs consignement stocks warehouses workshops sale of spare parts renting semitrailers brokerage and customs related service However its core activity is road transport mostly between the Baltic states and Belarus and or Russia 151 A similar Medininkai company Hegvita Agro apart from activities listed also leases buses and specialised heavy equipment snow ploughs bulldozers loaders dump trucks and offers services related to its operations 152 Highly diversified fleet of both companies ranges from mini vans to road trains Some companies like Durga are based elsewhere but they operate their offices in Medininkai e g those which offer border related services 153 There are few rural retail trade outlets in Medininkai their number differs depending upon business conditions usually ranging from 2 to 3 Some services e g barbers operate bordering the grey economy or as neighbourhood mutual assistance Some people take advantage of the nearby Lithuanian Belarus border crossing and offer services related like sale of insurance highway vignettes currency exchange etc State employers are the local eldership office the school and the kindergarten A sizeable group of villagers especially the young ones commute to Vilnius and work there Official infrastructure edit nbsp border guards school Formally the key point of the official infrastructure is the eldership office which hosts also scaled down post services 154 The eldership is responsible for the Secondary School of St Casimir There were 15 teachers on the payroll in the schooling year of 2022 2023 on its website the school provides no information as to the number of class groups or students 155 The number of teenagers who completed the curriculum keeps falling there were 40 50 graduates annually in the 1980s but since the 1990s the figure is around 10 156 The language of instruction is Polish 157 Another facility of the educational infrastructure is the kindergarten 158 The eldership maintains a network of streets in the village in the early 2020s there were 12 of them 92 It is also responsible for maintenance of 46 2 km local roads 42 km of them are categorized as hardened 159 Some criticise the eldership for alleged lack of investment in cycling paths 160 The eldership is not responsible for the A3 highway running some 2 km away from the village centre it is categorized as major road magistralinis kelias and forms part of the European E28 transport corridor running from Berlin to Minsk There are 3 state roads in Medininkai 5358 runs north to Szumsk Sumskas 5213 runs south to Turgiele Turgeliai and 5258 runs west to Rukojnie Rukainiai its 2 km long eastern sector ends at the Belarus frontier There is no railway line in the eldership On the distance of some 9 km the eastern border of the eldersip overlaps the state frontier between Lithuania and Belarus The key state investment in Medininkai is the border guards school Medininku pasienieciu mokykla previously located in Wisaginia Visaginas Following some 2 years of construction work it was opened in 2007 The compound is located somewhat away from the village and consists of some 10 large buildings students are hosted in barracks Graduation is equal to obtaining a university diploma 161 Politics edit nbsp Poles in Lithuania The key organisation active in Medininkai is Union of Poles in Lithuania ZPL Political life in the eldership has been for decades dominated by its political emanation Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania AWPL 162 which keeps winning subsequent local elections 163 In the 2023 Lithuanian local elections in the Medininkai electoral district AWPL gathered 79 of all votes cast 164 and it was the third best result of the party in the Vilnius County 165 Local ZPL and AWPL branches focus on raising living standards and maintaining the Polish identity of the population However efforts of local Polish councilors did not result in bi lingual Lithuanian and Polish placename signs 166 though there were efforts to bring the matter before the EU bodies 167 The ratio of Poles in the village is slowly but steadily decreasing At times nationalist Lithuanian groupings and personalities advance threads supposed to demonstrate Lithuanian character of the region 168 In the late 2010s there was much anxiety in Lithuania and in particular in regions borering Belarus related to construction of the Astravets Nuclear Power Plant located 20 km away from Medininkai 169 Despite protests of the Lithuanian government the plant has been opened and remains operational Another Lithuanian Belarusian controversy turned out to be the migrant issue Since the summer of 2021 the Belarus authorities launched the campaign of transferring Asian and African migrants across western borders of the country to Poland and Lithuania In order to accommodate migrants detained by Lithuanian border guards in the fall of 2021 the Vilnius government built a temporary site named Foreigners Registration Centre During the peak period it housed some 900 migrants 170 Soon media including foreign news agencies 171 started to report discrimination of LGBT persons and sexual exploitation of women by Lithuanian servicemen 172 and Medininkai attracted attention of the EU representatives 173 Following media criticism in the fall of 2022 the migrants were moved to centres elsewhere and the Medininkai camp was dismantled 174 Some military plans envision Medininkai to be headquarters of one of rotating brigades from the Polish 12 Mechanised Division as part of NATO troops supposed to flank would be Russian advance corridor from Belarus to Poland 175 Culture edit nbsp House of Culture Medininkai Theoretically the key cultural outpost in Medininkai is the local House of Culture constructed already during the Soviet era In the early 21st century its manager was Katazina Zvonkuviene later a dancer singer and a Lithuanian show business celebrity 176 recently the facility is mostly closed Presently there are 4 local institutions which contribute to cultural life in the village the local branch of Trakai Historical Museum Traku istorijos muziejus the St Casimir school the Roman Catholic parish and the local branch of ZPL The museum focuses on organizing various types of events in the castle they usually combine some popular education threads related to its history and entertainment They might embrace historical reenactments concertos sport competitions lectures plays workshops etc In case of good weather they attract hundreds of visitors including many travelling from Vilnius 177 Students from the St Casimir School since 2007 have been issuing a local bulletin named Echo The school is housing so called Museum of Local History founded by a teacher Aleksander Olenkowicz it is dedicated to Medininkai and its environs 178 There is also a Memory Room which presents the history of the institution a library and a local folk group which used to perform also beyond Lithuania 179 One of statutory ZPL activities is contributing to Polish culture in Lithuania Its Medininkai branch is co organising various competitions for children and teenagers sight seeing tours across Lithuania journeys in footsteps of Polish history in Vilnius and elsewhere and excursions to Poland including taking part in nationwide events like Narodowy Dzien Pamieci Zolnierzy Wykletych ZPL is also supporting sports activities and co financing the annual harvest festival 180 Sort of cultural activity is carried out by the Medininkai parish and the Franciscan monastery It is calibrated along religious lines and related to the liturgical timeline including lectures preceding the Lent Christmas concertos or events accompanying Corpus Christi The Medininkai monastery is also co organizing meditations and debates in the Franciscan Spiritual Centre in Vilnius 181 Religion edit nbsp church in Medininkai Medininkai is the centre of the Holy Trinity and St Casimir parish organized around the 1929 built church In case the 1916 erected parish is considered continuation of the 1832 abolished parish it is now over 600 year old and counts among the oldest ones on the territory of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania 182 The parish forms part of the Naujosios Vilnios decanate which in turns is part of the Vilnius archdiocese On working days the service is held once 183 on Sundays and religious holidays three times a day 184 Religious service is only in Polish The villagers remain fairly religious the annual pastoral visit which takes place around Christmas is admitted by 70 80 of households The most important day in a year the Harvest Festival is partially a religious event strongly marked by the Catholic spirit 180 Religious service in the parish is held by the Franciscans from the 1994 established Medininkai monastery Since then there have been 7 guardians who in parallel headed the parish until 2020 they appeared as pastoral administrators later as a parish priests 185 In 2023 this role was performed by Jozef Makarczyk the guardian but also a scientist and scholar in history of the Church especially in the Grand Duchy 186 The Medininkai monastery is very compact in the 21st century there have been usually no more than 5 friars hosted at the premises At the turn of the centuries it was the centre of Franciscan rebirth in Lithuania currently it is one of 3 Franciscan monasteries in the country 187 The parish and the monastery take care of the cemetery located near the plot where the old pre 1834 church used to stand The oldest existing graves come from the 1860s 188 it is still where the defunct villagers are laid to rest There are few private cemeteries on the parish territory Czapuniszki Gudzie Kolesniki Kule Malyniszki Tumasy Zemly last burials took place there in the 1960s 189 Tourist attractions edit nbsp Juozapine summit One of two major tourist attractions of Medininkai is the castle Since regaining independence it has become a piece of the politically loaded national historiographic narrative supposed to demonstrate the ancient grandeur of Lithuania and glory of the Lithuanian nation 190 Hence in the 21st century it was subject to far reaching works going far beyond conservation of the ruins on basis of historian s idea of the original construction the decayed walls were subject to major overhaul They were heightened reinforced and leveled a tower supposed to be the reconstruction of the original has been constructed in the north eastern corner 191 Its lower floors currently host an exposition apart from models and drawings it contains artefacts from the medieval history of Lithuania As a result an opened dilapidating ruin became a closed museum subject to entry fee 192 The castle periodically is location to theme festivals related to medieval history of Lithuania 193 Another magnet attracting tourists to Medninkai is a hill declared the highest natural point in the country Until the early 21st century it was believed that it is located at Juozapine Hill a culmination some 1 5 km from the castle Traditionally it hosted a rural cross with the pictore of Our Madonna from Ostra Brama in the 1990s the authorities mounted atop also a large boulder with inscription honoring Mendogas the king and a wooden totem styled after the old pagan symbols 194 For some time the objects were subject to controversy unknown perpetrators used to vandalise the place e g by pouring paint on the rock 195 New measurement works of 2004 revealed that the actual height of Juozapine Hill is lower than believed 292 7 instead of 293 6 metres the highest point was found to be a nameless hill located some 500 metres south it was named Aukstojas Hill and declared to be 293 8 metres high 196 A stone circle shaped ring referring to monarchic Lithuanian mythology has been mounted on top of it also an observation tower has been constructed the entrance is free Notable people editFrancisak Bahusevic 1840 1900 Belarusian author and lawyer born in Swirany near Medininkai Jozef Lukaszewicz 1863 1928 Polish conspirator physicist and geographer born in Bykowka near Medininkai Medard Czobot 1928 2000 Polish doctor and activist born in Medininkai Katazina Zvonkuviene b 1980 born Katarzyna Niemycko Polish Lithuanian singer and media celebrity born in MedininkaiSee also editMedininkai Castle Soviet OMON assaults on Lithuanian border postsReferences edit Jozef Makarczyk Miedniki Krolewskie wczoraj i dzis Miedniki Krolewskie 2022 ISBN 978 609 95291 5 8 p 34 e g Maciej Stryjkowski in his 16th century chronicle mentions the year of 1313 as the moment that construction of the Medininkai castle started The source of this information is not clear moreover the author might have referred to another place named Medniki where he served as a canon in 1579 1586 Mieczyslaw Jackiewicz Litwa podroz sentymentalna Olsztyn 2006 ISBN 978 83 89913 77 7 p 123 according to some historians bardzo dziwnie wyglada pojawienie sie najwiekszego z nich i e castles Budowe trudno wytlumaczyc zarowno potrzebami wojennymi jak i administracyjnymi Tomas Baranauskas Zamki i koscioly litewskie XIV XV wieku jako osrodki kultury in Urszula Augustyniak ed Srodowiska kulturotworcze i kontakty kulturalne Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego od XV do XIX wieku Warszawa 2009 ISBN 978 83 7543 095 0 p 19 Teodor Narbutt Dzieje starozytne narodu litewskiego vol V Wilno 1835 p 237 Michal Balinski Tymoteusz Lipinski Starozytna Polska pod wzgledem historycznym jeograficznym i statystycznym Warszawa 1845 p 173 Makarczyk 2022 pp 89 90 Jerzy Ochmanski Historia Litwy Wroclaw 1990 ISBN 978 83 04 03107 4 p 61 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 90 Andrzej Rachuba ed Urzednicy Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego Spisy vol 1 pp XIV XVIII wiek Warszawa 2004 ISBN 978 83 65880 49 9 p 70 Makarczyk 2022 p 35 Makarczyk 2022 pp 35 36 Algirdas M Budreckis Eastern Lithuania A Collection of Historical and Ethnographic Studies Chicago 1985 p 59 Makarczyk 2022 p 37 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 71 Teodor Wierzbowski Szkoly parafialne w polsce i na Litwie za czasow Komisji Edukacji Narodowej Krakow 1921 p 22 Makarczyk 2022 p 91 Makarczyk 2022 p 67 Makarczyk 2022 pp 67 70 Jan Marek Gizycki Kanonicy regularni od Pokuty na Litwie w XIX w in Podreczna Encyklopedia Katolicka vols 19 20 Warszawa 1910 p 257 Grzegorz Rakowski Kresowe rezydencje vol I Warszawa 2017 ISBN 978 83 8098 093 8 pp 342 343 Rakowski 2017 pp 342 343 Jozef Wolff Kniaziowie litewsko ruscy od konca czternastego wieku Warszawa 1895 p 589 Makarczyk 2022 p 45 zob np Janusz Hrybacz Miedniki Krolewskie in service Karta dziejow wilenskiej i nowogrodzkiej Armii Krajowej Jan Dlugosz Roczniki czyli kroniki slawnego Krolestwa Polskiego vol 10 Warszawa 1985 ISBN 978 83 01 04266 0 p 344 Makarczyk 2022 pp 60 61 Makarczyk 2022 p 61 Jaroslaw Nikodem Witold Wielki ksiaze litewski Krakow 2013 ISBN 978 83 7730 051 0 p 174 Ochmanski 1990 p 100 Rachuba 2004 pp 69 70 e g in the late 15th century a widow Anna Korejowa donated 30 wlokas to the monastery Makarczyk 2022 p 154 the Bystritsa prior murdered a friar from Medininkai Aldona Prasmantaite Kanonicy regularni od pokuty prowincji litewskiej na ziemiach bylego Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego w pierwszych latach po rozbiorach Rzeczypospolitej w Andrzej Bruzdzinski Tomasz Graff ed Duchowe korzenie blogoslawionego Michala Giedroycia Krakow 2021 ISBN 978 83 8138 583 1 p 57 Makarczyk 2022 p 156 Makarczyk 2022 p 92 a b c d Makarczyk 2022 p 95 the area needed for sewing 14 barrels of grain Makarczyk 2022 p 154 Makarczyk 2022 pp 93 95 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 154 e g in 1547 the parish priest sued prince Glebovitsch Makarczyk 2022 p 92 Ochmanski 1990 p 60 see e g the privilege dated 1536 Makarczyk 2022 p 45 the route from Vilnius to Ashmyany and further east was among the most important ones leading from the capital of the Grand Duchy Tomas Celkis Stan drog ladowych i struktura systemu polaczen w Wielkim Ksiestwie Litewskim w koncu XV XVII wieku in Zapiski Historyczne LXXIX 2014 pp 54 55 in original 70 wlokas Lietuvos Metryku Knyga nr 564 Vilnius 1966 p 70 after Makarczyk 2022 p 74 Makarczyk 2022 pp 51 60 see e g the text of a privileged listed in Johann Baptist Albertrandy Panowanie Henryka Walezjusza i Stefa Batorego krolow polskich Krakow 1849 p 331 e g in 1629 the Halicz archbishop also the archimandrite of the Holy Trinity Monastery in Vilnius Rafal Korsak charged a certain Mikolaj Matuszkowski with looting the monasterial property in Medininkai Makarczyk 2022 pp 47 48 It is not clear why the Orthodox hierarch complained about estates which apparently belonged to the Roman Catholic monastery Makarczyk 2022 p 11 in the 17th century only 4 times the sejmik gathered outside Vilnius Robert Jurgaitis Gdzie odbywaly sie obrady sejmiku wilenskiego w latach 1717 1795 w Przeglad Nauk Historycznych XVI 2 2017 p 246 Makarczyk 2022 pp 95 96 132 it is assumed that for ethnically Lithuanian areas of the modern era there were 8 persons per every household Ochmanski 1990 p 160 the 2 person monastery owned 2 cows 1 horse 1 calf 3 sheep 6 pigs and 4 hens Their area was 85 ha Tadeusz M Trajdos Kanonicy regularni od pokuty w Miednikach w ostatnim stuleciu Rzeczypospolitej 1695 1795 w Nasza Przeszlosc 127 2017 p 28 Makarczyk 2022 pp 133 135 Makarczyk 2022 p 132 most of the surnames sound Polish compare Makarczyk 2022 pp 96 99 Makarczyk 2022 p 62 Makarczyk 2022 p 51 a b c Makarczyk 2022 p 132 inventory from 1775 Makarczyk 2022 p 101 Miroslaw Gajewski Historie z okolic Wilna Wilno 2007 ISBN 978 9986 542 34 6 p 128 Makarczyk 2022 p 101 According to another account after the 1778 fire the church was rebuilt in 1783 but was lost in another fire to be reconstructed in 1788 Trajdos 2017 p 24 Makarczyk 2022 pp 101 102 e g in 1781 there were 8 urban boys and 9 rural boys recorded in 1782 there were 2 noble boys 5 urban boys and 5 rural boys Makarczyk 2022 p 81 a b c Makarczyk 2022 p 102 Trajdos 2017 p 31 According to the decanal inventory after Iwona Siwicka Dekanat oszmianski w 1784 r w swietle opisow parafii praca magisterska przyjeta na Uniwersytecie w Bialymstoku Bialystok 2007 p 81 Czeslaw Malewski Rodziny szlacheckie na Litwie w XIX wieku Powiaty lidzki oszmianski i wilenski Warszawa 2016 ISBN 978 83 63352 75 2 p 508 apparently the tenant was a Jew as his name was Nochim Mowszowicz Makarczyk 2022 p 103 a French surgeon doctor Louis Lagneau measured temperature in Medininkai on the frosty morning of December 6 1812 Adam Zamoyski 1812 Wojna z Rosja Krakow 2007 ISBN 978 83 240 0770 7 p 344 Wladyslaw Syrokomla Wycieczki po Litwie w promieniach od Wilna Wilno 1860 p 66 Makarczyk 2022 p 65 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 104 Makarczyk 2022 pp 180 222 see the map here one account mentions escape do Miednik Janusza Kozielly skad przebralem sie przez Kamienny Log gdzie Czerkasy pilnowali stacyi pocztowej after Slawomir Kalembka Tajemniczy pamietnik z powstania 1831 roku na Litwie Ignacego Klukowskiego w Acta Universitatis Nicolai Copernici Bibliologia 4 2000 p 107 Already in 1719 Michal Koziell Poklewski was noted as owczesny possessor miednicki Trajdos 2017 p 32 Makarczyk 2022 p 105 a b Makarczyk 2022 pp 149 150 Makarczyk 2022 p 112 Jozef Grabowski 1794 1830 married to Marianna Slawinska Makarczyk 2022 p 64 Zamek miednicki dzis dziedzictwem P Apolinarego Grabowskiego bedacy Michal Balinski Historya Miasta Wilna Wilno 1836 p 32 Malewski 2016 p 508 Makarczyk 2022 p 114 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 115 Wladyslaw Syrokomla Wycieczki po Litwie w promieniach od Wilna Wilno 1860 Syrokomla s estate Borejkowszczyzna was located some 12 km from Medininkai but in a different parish Ignacy Kajetan Jacewicz entry in Powstanie Styczniowe uczestnicy service Filip Sulimierski Bronislaw Chlebowski Wladyslaw Walewski ed Slownik geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego i innych krajow slowianskich vol 6 Warszawa 1885 pp 329 330 in some sources spelled Kamienski Makarczyk 2022 p 63 Ivan Mikhailovich Labyntsev 1802 1883 gained his laurels mostly during Caucasian campaigns and the Hungarian campaign of 1848 V P Ponomaryov V M Shabanov ed Kavalery Imperatorskogo ordena Svyatogo Aleksandra Nevskogo 1725 1917 biobibliograficheskij slovar v tryoh tomah vol 2 Moscow 2009 ISBN 978 5 89577 144 0 p 197 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 120 Makarczyk 2022 p 63 Seweryn Zygmunt Stanislaw Drohojowski 1861 married Katarzyna Komarowna 1875 in 1897 noted as the only heir of the Medininkai estate She was daughter to Antoni Komar from Szumsk and Elzbieta daughter to general Labyntsev Jerzy Dunin Borkowski Almanach blekitny Genealogia zyjacych rodow polskich Lwow 1908 p 328 including Mdniki Komarovskie and Mdniki Kozellovye a b c Makarczyk 2022 p 66 however some authors claim that as late as in 1912 Medininkai was one of 40 towns in the Vilnius county Malewski 2016 p 17 in one case Mdniki was classified as b kor byvshaya korchma former inn Iosif Goshkevich ed Vilenskaya guberniya polnyj spisok naselennyh mest so statisticheskimi dannymi o kazhdom poselenii Vilna 1905 pp 81 83 a b Makarczyk 2022 pp 115 116 a b c Makarczyk 2022 p 81 Makarczyk 2022 p 117 which included also the communities of Rudomino Bukojnie Szumsk Wornie Male Soleczniki and Turgiele Aleksander Srebrakowski Sejm Wilenski 1922 roku Idea i jej realizacja Wroclaw 1993 p 127 the district of Wilno Poludnie recorded the highest turnout of 77 in Vilnius it was mere 55 Srebrakowski 1993 p 84 See also Zenon Krajewski Geneza i dzieje wewnetrzne Litwy Srodkowej Lublin 1996 ISBN 978 83 906321 0 0 p 100 Wykaz miejscowosci Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej vol 1 Wojewodztwo Wilenskie Warszawa 1938 p 76 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 124 Makarczyk 2022 p 150 Makarczyk 2022 pp 141 142 data for 1926 Makarczyk 2022 p 141 in 1931 1934 there were 358 children baptised in the parish while delta between the number of the faithful in 1931 and 1934 was 270 osob Given typical death ratio for the period the parish books which contain the record of funerals did not survive until today the figures correspond to natural demographic dynamics with almost no migration Napoleon Rouba Przewodnik po Litwie i Bialejrusi Wilno 1909 p 121 Makarczyk 2022 p 121 since re establishment of the parish in 1927 1929 there were some 140 christenings recorded annually Makarczyk 2022 p 138 These were record figures in the entire history of the place So high an average probably resulted from the fact that when the parish church was away some parents did not bother to baptise their children but decided to make up when the church was built nearby In the 1930s the average dropped to some 120 christenings annually Makarczyk 2022 p 138 Medininkai were within the sector operated by the Soviet 36 Cavalry Division which advanced along the Boruny Oszmiana Medininkai Vilnius axis Once it crushed minor Polish resistance on Sep 17 on Sep 18 it was ordered to seize Vilnius by the end of the day However the division reached Murowana Oszmianka only It resumed the advance since early morning hours of September 19 and reached Vilnius by mid day Czeslaw Grzelak Kresy w czerwieni Warszawa 2008 ISBN 978 83 89935 61 8 p 222 none of the works consulted mentions any combat near Medininkai see Grzelak 2008 Karol Liszewski Wojna polsko sowiecka Londyn 1986 ISBN 0 85065 170 0 Jaroslaw Wolkonowski Okreg Wilenski Zwiazku Walki Zbrojnej Armii Krajowej w latach 1939 1945 Warszawa 1996 ISBN 83 86100 18 4 p 380 Wolkonowski 1996 pp 200 204 Roman Korab Zebryk Operacja wilenska AK Warszawa 1985 ISBN 83 01 04946 4 p 114 see estimates by an eye witness quoted in Wolkonowski 1996 p 280 see scholarly estimates Wolkonowski 1996 p 282 Wolkonowski 1996 p 282 in the late 1940s the average annual rate of christenings was relatively high around 96 per annum Makarczyk 2022 p 138 Makarczyk 2022 pp 361 364 there are 7 individuals known by name as deported from Jozefowo Makarczyk 2022 pp 362 364 the 1934 census recorded 64 inhabitants of the hamlet see Wykaz miejscowosci Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej vol 1 Wojewodztwo Wilenskie Warszawa 1938 p 76 Przez Syberie do Chrzanowa in Przelom 21 04 2004 also Przebaczylismy ale pamietamy in Tygodnik Wilenski 46 2011 a b Makarczyk 2022 p 82 Ludmila Kamardina i Nadiezda Worobej Mokyklos istorija in service Medininku sv Kazimiero gimnazija in the Soviet Lithuania Poles were underrepresented within the Communist Party of Lithuania by the end of the Soviet era Poles formed 3 45 of the party members while they formed some 7 of the entire population Aleksander Srebrakowski Rozwoj polskojezycznej prasy na Litwie po 1944 roku in Marek Szczerbinski ed Z dziejow polskiej prasy na obczyznie Gorzow Wlkp 2002 p 268 Za ciezka prace in Czerwony Sztandar 30 04 1976 Dorogi in Litva Kratkaya enciklopediya Vjnyus 1989 p 240 takze Transportation in Lithuania An Encyclopedic Survey Vilnius 1986 p 217 V Daugudis J Mardosa Z Zhemajtite i dr 300 pamyatnikov kultury Vilnyus 1984 pp 150 151 Daugudis Mardosa 1984 p 151 before the pre war wooden parish building served as a school Mokyklos istorija in service Medininku sv Kazimiero gimnazija Makarczyk 2022 p 84 Makarczyk 2022 pp 83 5 Medininki otrzymaja nowoczesny system wodny in Czerwony Sztandar 04 04 1978 Nasze rozmowy do Wilniusa jade co jeden dzien in Czerwony Sztandar 11 10 1982 Medininkai was among 9 communes which protested However unlike the communes like Rukojnie Rukainiai or Suderwa Suderve Medininkai did not declare itself Polish nationality commune Barbara Jundo Kaliszewska Zakladnicy historii Mniejszosc polska w postradzieckiej Litwie Lodz 2018 ISBN 978 83 8142 196 6 p 108 Dainius Sinkevicius Medininku byla K Michailovas kales iki gyvos galvos in Delfi 11 05 2011 Makarczyk 2022 p 76 Po ponad dwuletnich rzadach lewicy wyborcy Litwy znow wola prawice in Kurier Wilenski 28 03 1995 Makarczyk 2022 p 77 Zwrot ziemi najnowsze statystyki in Miryna Kutysz Joanna Hyndle Monitor Litewski 9 Osrodek Studiow Wschodnich bulletin Warszawa 1996 p 4 e g Trumtransa the transport expedition company based in Medininkai was registered in 1996 see the certificates presented at the corporate web page Registravimo pazymejimas Makarczyk 2022 p 160 Makarczyk 2022 p 161 Makarczyk 2022 p 162 Miedniki Medininkai Labiszki Laibiskesi Podwarance Padvarionys Sloboda Slabada i Slobodka Slabadka 1 level admin unit is apskritis 2 level unit is savivaldybe 3 level is seniunija and 4 level is seniunaitija the last Soviet data from 1989 recorded 586 inhabitants in Medininkai early data from the 2021 census shows 413 inhabitants 1 136 2021 vs 1 093 2022 Rekordowy przyrost ludnosci w rejonie wilenskim w ciagu dziesieciolecia in service of the Medininkai Eldership in the Vilnius Area County the share of minors is 21 9 in Medininkai Eldership it stands at 19 6 In the county the share of pensioners is 18 7 in Medininkai it stands at 26 8 third after Bujwidze and Rukojnie Vilniaus apskrities kaimo gyvenamosios vietoves ir ju gyventojai Vilnius 2003 ISBN 9955 588 04 7 p 113 52 3 are females in the Vilnius country the share is 51 8 53 4 Vilniaus apskrities 2003 p 113 https web archive org web 20110722153132 http www vilniaus r lt get php f 10052 bare URL The most important day in a year in Medininkai is the harvest festival see the mayor of Medininkai speaking Rozmowa Dnia Wywiad z Renata Bogdanowicz starosta Miednik in service YoutTube 6 30 See the Trumtransa website available tutaj see the Hegvita Agro website available tutaj see the Durga website available tutaj Vilniaus apskrities 2003 p 123 Makarczyk 2022 p 79 2022 2023 mokslo metais gimnazijoe dirbanciu mokytoju sarasas in the official school website Makarczyk 2022 pp 83 85 here are 7 hours of Polish vs 5 hours of Lithuanian per week in the curriculum see Tvarkarasciai in the official school website Internal school documentation and its official website are in Lithuanian though It maintains 2 language groups a Lithuanian and a Polish one Rozmowa Dnia Wywiad z Renata Bogdanowicz starosta Miednik in service YoutTube 2 10 6 5 km covered with bitumen 35 5 km gravel ones Vilniaus rajono savivaldybes administracijos Medininku seniunijos 2010 m veiklos programa p 1 Gediminas Kazenas Vilniaus rajono savivaldybe stokoja ambiciju II dalis in Voruta 08 04 2021 Apie Pasienieciu mokykla in official website of the Lithuanian government Mano vyriausybe in 1994 the Lithuanian parliamen adopted a law which permitted only political parties to participate in elections Since ZPL was registered as a generic type of organisation its members set up AWPL On its domination in the Poles inhabited regions see Gediminas Kazenas Lithuanian Polish Political Party in Parliamentary Election 2016 in Lithuania in Political Preferences 14 2017 pp 93 94 mayors were are people related to ZPL and AWPL Czeslaw Ancukiewicz 1995 1997 Janina Noniewicz 1997 2000 Stanislaw Boroszko 2000 2014 and Renata Bogdanowicz since 2014 Makarczyk 2022 p 77 Medininku Nr 26 rinkimu apylinke Savivaldybiu tarybu rinkimu rezultatai in service Vyriausioji rinkimu komisija after Bujwidze Buivydziai 85 and Sawiczuny 84 Vilniaus rajono Nr 58 savivaldybe in service Vyriausioji rinkimu komisija various Lithuanian juridical instances keep ordering that bilingual placename signs mounted by municipal authorities be dismantled see e g Stanislaw Tarasiewicz Litwa nie odpuszcza polskim nazwom in Kurier Wilenski 02 10 2013 Anna Pieszko Polskie tabliczki tylko na prywatnych posesjach lub jako informacja turystyczna in Kurier Wilenski 15 11 2016 Litwinow niepokoja proby podzegania do nienawisci in service TVN24 24 06 2011 see e g Kazimieras Garsva Vilniaus ir Salcininku rajonu vietovardziu kilme in Voruta 22 09 2022 see e g Sonda Wilenska Mieszkancy Miednik o budowie elektrowni w Ostrowcu in service YouTube 20 04 2017 Lithuania officially closing Medininkai migrant centre in service LRT 22 09 2022 por Lituanie le calvaire des migrants in service YT 02 03 2022 Djamel Belayachi African women protest against discrimination poor conditions in Lithuanian migrant camp in service France24 02 11 2021 zob np Dominyka Buksaityte Dar vienas skandalas Medininku uzsienieciu registracijos centre psichologas seksualiai isnaudojo migrantus in Lietuvos rytas 26 04 2022 The largest number of migrants trying to enter Lithuania Medininkai Foreigners Registration Centre service YouTube 04 02 2022 Ziniop Oficialiai uzdarytas Medininku uzsienieciu registracijos centras in service LRT 02 09 2022 Krzysztof Wojczal Armia Nowego Wzoru Warszawa 2021 ss 43 However latest news suggest that there is far greater chance of deploying a Bundeswher brigade in Medininkai Lidia Gibadlo Joanna Hyndle Hussein Kontrowersje wokol rozmieszczenia niemieckiej brygady na Litwie in Analizy OSW 04 05 2023 40 metį svencianti Katazina Zvonkuviene atvirai apie vaikyste pazintį su vyru ir netiketus gyvenimo vingius in service LRT 03 05 2020 Senuju amatu svente kviecia į Medininku pilį in service alkas lt 16 09 2022 Mokyklos istorija in official school web page Mokyklos istorija in official school web page see also the FB profile Gimnazjum im sw Kazimierza w Miednikach na FB a b zob Radio Wilno Rozmowa Dnia Wywiad z Renata Bogdanowicz i o Piotrem Stroceniem in service YouTube zob profil Medininku Svc Trejybes ir Sv Kazimiero Parapija na serviceie FB Makarczyk 2022 p 131 at 3 30 PM at 8 30 AM 11 30 AM i 3 30 PM Miedniki Krolewskie in service Msze swiete za granica Makarczyk 2022 pp 142 164 zob Jozef Makarczyk in service Czasopisma Humanistyczne Makarczyk 2022 p 164 Makarczyk 2022 p 165 Makarczyk 2022 pp 170 172 see e g Medininku pilyje Vilnijos vietos bendruomeniu diena in Voruta 08 06 2016 Stanislovas Buchaveckas Jonas Rimantas Glemza Medininku pilis in Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija vol XIV Vilnius 2008 ISBN 978 5 420 01646 6 p 571 currently the Medininkai castle is a branch of the Traku istorijos muziejus see its website tutaj see castle FB profile Juozapines kalnas in service Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija Romualdas Ozolas Ir vel in Voruta 11 04 1994 Lietuvoje naujas auksciausias kalnas in service Delfi 22 05 2006Further reading editJozef Makarczyk Miedniki Krolewskie wczoraj i dzis Miedniki Krolewskie 2022 ISBN 978 609 95291 5 8 Aldona Prasmantaite Kanonicy regularni od pokuty prowincji litewskiej na ziemiach bylego Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego w pierwszych latach po rozbiorach Rzeczypospolitej in Andrzej Bruzdzinski Tomasz Graff ed Duchowe korzenie blogoslawionego Michala Giedroycia Krakow 2021 ISBN 978 83 8138 583 1 pp 55 85 Tadeusz M Trajdos Kanonicy regularni od pokuty w Miednikach w ostatnim stuleciu Rzeczypospolitej 1695 1795 w Nasza Przeszlosc 127 2017 pp 21 52 Tadeusz M Trajdos Najstarsze fundacje dla kanonikow regularnych od pokuty w diecezji wilenskiej in Nasza Przeszlosc 119 2013 pp 21 66 Tadeusz M Trajdos Odnowa i wytrwalosc Kanonicy regularni od pokuty w Miednikach od polowy XVI do schylku XVII wieku in S Gorzynski M Nagielski ed Studia z dziejow Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego XVI XVIII wieku Warszawa 2014 ISBN 978 83 7181 850 9 pp 425 434External links editeldership profile at FB Medininkai entry in Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija online Jozef Makarczyk OFMConv about Medininkai at YT Retrieved from https en 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