Three Crosses
Three Crosses (Template:Lang-lt) is a prominent monument in Vilnius, Lithuania, on the Hill of Three Crosses, originally known as the Bleak Hill (Template:Lang-lt), in Kalnai Park. According to a legend, seven Franciscan friars were beheaded on top of this hill. Wooden crosses were built in the location since the early 17th century. It soon became a symbol of the city and an integral part of the city's skyline. As wood rots, the crosses needed to be periodically replaced. In 1916, a concrete monument was designed by Polish–Lithuanian architect and sculptor Antoni Wiwulski. It was torn down in 1950 by order of the Soviet authorities. A new monument designed by Henrikas Šilgalis was erected in its place in 1989. The monument was depicted on 50 litas banknote. A spectacular panorama of the Vilnius Old Town can be observed from a small observation deck at the base of the crosses.
Legend
According to the Bychowiec Chronicle, fourteen Franciscan friars were invited to Vilnius from Podolia by Petras Goštautas.[1] The friars publicly preached the gospel and badmouthed Lithuanian gods. Angered city residents burned the monastery and killed all fourteen friars. Seven of them were beheaded on the Bleak Hill; the other seven were crucified and thrown into the Neris or Vilnia River.[1] Historians debate factual accuracy of the story. It could be an embellishment of a story from Chronica XXIV Generalium about two Franciscans murdered around 1340.[2] It could also be an embellishment of a story from De Conformitate Vitae B. P. Francisco by Bartholomew Rinonico about five Franciscans martyrs. If the latter is the case, the event most likely occurred in 1369.[3]
History
Regardless of whether the legend about the Franciscan martyrs is true or not, their cult spread from the early 16th century.[1] The original wooden Three Crosses were built on the Bleak Hill, the place where seven friars were beheaded, sometime before 1649. That is the year when the crosses were depicted in a panegyric to Bishop Jerzy Tyszkiewicz. Around the same time Tyszkiewicz began a case to canonize the fourteen friars.[4] There is some evidence that the crosses were built before 1636 as, according to Jan Nepomucen Fijałek, the crosses were also depicted on two silver portraits of St. Casimir that were made in 1636 and hung in Vilnius Cathedral.[4] However, the portraits did not survive and Fijałek's claim cannot be verified.
The wooden crosses collapsed in 1869 and Tsarist authorities did not allow to rebuilt them. The new monument from reinforced concrete designed by Antoni Wiwulski was erected in August 1916, while Vilnius was occupied by the Germans during World War I.[5] The monument was demolished by Soviet authorities on May 30, 1950. Residents of Vilnius wanted them restored. During the Lithuanian independence movement, the monument was rebuilt on the old foundations according to the project of sculptor Henrikas Šilgalis. The monument was unveiled on 14 June 1989.[5] The rebuilt crosses now are 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in) higher than those of 1916. Broken pieces of the old monument can be seen several meters below the rebuilt monument.
See also
References
- ^ a b c Gidžiūnas, Viktoras (1955). "Legendariškieji pranciškonų kankiniai Vilniuje". Aidai (in Lithuanian). 10. ISSN 0002-208X.
- ^ Nikžentaitis, Alvydas (1989). Gediminas (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija. pp. 55–57. OCLC 27471995.
- ^ Rowell, S. C. (1989). "Lithuania and the West, 1337–41—A question of sources". Journal of Baltic Studies. 4 (20): 312. doi:10.1080/01629778900000161. ISSN 0162-9778.
- ^ a b Baronas, Darius (2003). "Pranciškonų kankiniai Vilniuje: gyvoji atmintis ir kapų tyla". Istorinė tikrovė ir iliuzija: Lietuvos dvasinės kultūros šaltinių tyrimai. Acta Academiae artium Vilnensis (in Lithuanian). Vol. 31. Vilniaus dailės akademijos leidykla. pp. 51, 54. ISSN 1392-0316.
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: External link in
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Baužienė, Morta (2010). "Kiaunorių bažnyčios architektas Henrikas Kęstutis Šilgalis. (1944–2007)" (PDF). Žemaičių žemė (in Lithuanian). 2: 66. ISSN 1392-2610.