Zalavas: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 54°58′N 25°58′E / 54.967°N 25.967°E / 54.967; 25.967
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'''Zalavas''' is a village in [[Lithuania]], on the Mera river, close to [[Švenčionys]]. According to the 2001 census, it had approximately one hundred and seventy residents. It is the birthplace of [[Józef Piłsudski]], who later became Marshal and [[Naczelnik Państwa|Chief of State of Poland]].
'''Zalavas''' ({{lang-pl|Zułów}}) is a village in [[Lithuania]], on the Mera river, close to [[Švenčionys]]. According to the 2001 census, it had approximately one hundred and seventy residents. It is the birthplace of [[Józef Piłsudski]], who later became Marshal and [[Naczelnik Państwa|Chief of State of Poland]].


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 07:04, 22 October 2010

Zalavas (Polish: Zułów) is a village in Lithuania, on the Mera river, close to Švenčionys. According to the 2001 census, it had approximately one hundred and seventy residents. It is the birthplace of Józef Piłsudski, who later became Marshal and Chief of State of Poland.

History

The village, earlier known under the name of Mieciany, was first mentioned in the late 17th century as the private property of Aleksander Wojna-Jasieniecki, a Castellan of Navahrudak. It then passed to the Giedraičiai princely family, and in the 18th century the village was bought by the Rurikid Ogiński family, one of the notable magnate clans of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In the early 19th century the village was inherited by the Michałowskis. As part of the dowry of Helena Michałowska, it passed to her husband, Antoni Billewicz, who then bequeathed it to their daughter, Maria Billewiczówna. In 1863, after marrying Józef Wincenty Piłsudski, the village became the property of the Piłsudski family. It was there that both their sons were born, Bronisław Piłsudski, on November 2, 1866, and Józef Piłsudski, on December 5, 1867.

In July 1874, the local manor burned down and the family moved to Vilnius. Soon afterwards the family was forced to sell most of their property in Lithuania including Zalavas and nineteen other villages, in order to pay for legal expenses and fines for Bronisław, who was involved in an assassination attempt on the life of tsar Alexander III of Russia. In 1882 the village was bought by Michał Ogiński, an heir to the Ogiński family who had owned it in the 18th century. However, as the policies of Russification of former lands in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth forbade Poles to purchase any real estate, he was forced to sell it to a Russian merchant from Riga named Klim. The latter sold the village to a certain imperial officer named Kuronosov, who divided the property, sold most of the forests and was forced to abandon the area in 1915, during World War I. The Germans occupied the area later that year, and most of the remaining forests were cut down.

After the war, the area became part of the Second Polish Republic. Since the property had belonged to a Russian official who abandoned it, it was nationalized, and limited to the core of 65 hectares, and attached to a military base located nearby. In 1934 an association of veterans of the Polish-Bolshevik War purchased it from the army and a committee was created whose aim was to rebuild the manor of Piłsudski, who in the meantime had become the national hero and de facto dictator of Poland. The manor was reconstructed, and officially opened to the public as a museum on October 10, 1937. However, it was destroyed by the Soviets shortly after the Invasion of Poland in 1939.

After the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in 1939 Zalavas became part of Lithuania, then in 1940, part of the Lithuanian SSR. In 1990, it became part of independent Lithuania. An oak and a memorial stone mark the location of the former Piłsudski manor.

54°58′N 25°58′E / 54.967°N 25.967°E / 54.967; 25.967

References

External links