{"id":4123,"date":"2018-09-06T06:17:13","date_gmt":"2018-09-06T08:17:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/datos.azuolynobiblioteka.lt\/kauno-miesto-istorine-apzvalga\/"},"modified":"2024-01-23T04:52:32","modified_gmt":"2024-01-23T06:52:32","slug":"overview-of-kaunas-history","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/datos.azuolynobiblioteka.lt\/en\/overview-of-kaunas-history\/","title":{"rendered":"Overview of Kaunas History"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: right;\"><strong>Dr. Rasa Varsackyt\u0117<\/strong><br \/>\n<strong>Dr. Mindaugas Balkus<\/strong><\/p>\n<h3>Overview of Kaunas History<\/h3>\n<p>Archeological excavations testify to the fact that people started settling at the confluence of the Nemunas and the Neris rivers as far back as the 7th\u20136th millenium BC; the most numerous collections of ceramics and other artefacts are from the 2nd\u20131st millenium BC. During that period people settled in the territory of the present day Kaunas: Eiguliai, Lamp\u0117d\u017eiai, Linkuva, Kani\u016bkai, Marvel\u0117, Pajiesys, Romainiai, Petra\u0161i\u016bnai, Sarg\u0117nai, Ver\u0161vai, the confluence area, \u017daliakalnis.<\/p>\n<p>Kaunas was first mentioned in annals in <strong><span id=\"1361\">1361<\/span><\/strong>, when the German Order was getting ready for an attack on Kaunas Castle. The history of Kaunas as a city, however, started in <strong><span id=\"1408\">1408<\/span><\/strong>, when Grand Duke Vytautas granted its citizens the privilege of self-government based on Magdeburg Law. Thus the community of free and economically-independent merchants and craftsmen was legalised, responsible directly to the ruler. Vytautas ceded Kaunas the right to own the scales, wax processing, and woolen cloth trimming facilities. The scales were used for weighing the goods brought to the city or packed on site, the wax manufactury checked the quality of wax and prepared it for export by moulding it into fixed-size pieces, while the wool trimming workshop was meant for finishing fabrics. Those were profitable, monopolistic enterprises.<\/p>\n<p>The legal and economic independence of Kaunas was further strengthened by privileges granted by Vytautas in 1415 and \u017dygimantas K\u0119stutaitis in 1432. The privilege by Kazimieras in 1440 permitted the city to have an annual 8-day fair starting on Virgin Mary Assumption Day (August 15). It was one of the first permissions to organise fairs in Lithuanian cities. Among other regulations, Kazimieras&#8217; privilege in 1449 banned retail trade by guest merchants. This ban was strengthened by Aleksandras&#8217; privilege in <strong><span id=\"1492\">1492<\/span><\/strong>, which was of special significance for the city economy: the ruler ordained that guest merchants had no right to sell their goods in Lithuanian towns and settlements which did not have Magdeburg rights. Guest merchants could trade only in Kaunas and only with Kaunas citizens; the latter being granted the right of middlemen; thus city guests were not allowed to trade among themselves, only via Kaunas citizens. The previously introduced stowage (sankrovos) right was ratified, according to which visiting merchants had to stay in Kaunas for at least three days and sell their goods to the local citizens before moving to other self-governing cities of the Great Duchy of Lithuania or abroad. For a long time, the customs-house was situated in Kaunas. In <strong><span id=\"1441\">1441<\/span><\/strong>\u20131532 an office of the Hanseatic league was open in Kaunas, however, the Hanseatic activities were substantially hindered by the local merchants. In addition to trade, crafts were also developing rapidly: the first four craft-workshops were set up in the second half of the 16th century, the number growing to twelve in the late 17th century, while at the end of the 18th century there were 10 workshops in the city. The total number of the workshops functioning in the 16\u201318th centuries was 23, representing 36 crafts, such as shavers, skippers, weavers, tailors, armourers, glaziers, etc.<\/p>\n<p>The power of the self-governing Kaunas was shared by three interrelated major institutions: vaitas (the Mayor), the Council or Magistrate (12 lay judges and 4 burgomasters) and the Benchers&#8217; Court (12 persons). The city\u2018s authorities operated in the Town Hall, the construction of which started in <strong><span id=\"1542\">1542<\/span><\/strong>.<br \/>\nIt is worth mentioning that the heraldic seal of Kaunas, introduced in the early 15th century during the reign of Grand Duke Vytautas, is the oldest city heraldic seal known in the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania; it is the widely accepted symbol of Auroch. Folowing the medieval European standards, Kaunas stressed its prosperity by building the city wall, the construction of which started in the early 17th century. Unfortunately, due to later wars and economic crises it was not finished. Besides, with the fast progress of military technologies and tactics in the 17th century, the city wall lost it defensive value. The erection of the wall, however, made the city life safer, at least for some time, since it put an end to the attacks by various plunderers.<\/p>\n<p>The Kaunas community embraced not only citizens, but also noblemen and clergy. Like in other cities, they formed separate adminstration units, the so called jurisdika, independent from the city rights. Kaunas Castle was an important state institution since it was the residence of the elder seni\u016bnas who was appointed by the head of the local nobility an administered Kaunas region (pavietas). After the reforms by the second Statute of Lithuania, self-government of nobility regions pavietai was introduced: noblemen would form their own governing bodies \u2013 seimeliai, elect their representatives to the Parliament (Seimas) and write instructions for them. Therefore Kaunas was a venue of numerous seimeliai or Castle Courts (for criminal cases)and Land Courts (for civil cases) residing there. Even though there were no big conflicts between citizens and nobility, the noblemen harmed the city by having obtained the right since the second half of the 16th century to produce goods for export and to export grain without customs.<\/p>\n<p>The Catholic church played an a significant role in the city life. One of the first churches in Kaunas was Blessed Virgin Mary&#8217;s Assumption Church (also called Vytautas the Great Church), funded by Grand Duke Vytautas around the year 1400 and passed on to Franciscans. The Parochial St. Peter and Paul&#8217;s Church was built early in the 15th century, first mentioned in <strong><span id=\"1413\">1413<\/span><\/strong>. The Parochial Church was mainly supported by the citizens, while other churches would frequently get support from noblemen. On the verge of the 15th and 16th centuries, the city was beautified by St. Michael&#8217;s Church (donated to Kaunas Parochial Church by Grand Duke Aleksandras in 1503, and passed on to the Benedictine Convent established by Kaunas Marshal (mar\u0161alka) A.Skorulskis in 1621), St. Gertrude&#8217;s Church (donated to the Parochial Church by the Duke in 1503, handed over to the Rochite monks in 1750), as well as St. George the Martyr&#8217;s Church and the adjacent Bernardine Monastery. A great number of monasteries and convents were established the 17th century under the influence of the Catholic Reform during the Baroque period. In addition to the above mentioned Benedictine convent, the Bernardine convent with the Holy Trinity Church was re-established by Kaunas region (pavietas) Marshal A.Masalskis, after an unsuccessful start at the beginning of the 17th century. In 1639, Vilnius bishop Abraomas Vaina permitted Jesuits to move to Kaunas, and they settled in the buildings donated by the three brothers Kojalavi\u010diai: Albertas, Kazimieras and Petras, while the first mass took place in Thunder House (Perk\u016bno namai) purchased by the Order. The year <strong><span id=\"1649\">1649<\/span><\/strong> marks the start of the Jesuit school (later college); but St. Francis Xavier Jesuit Church was built sometime after the mid-17th century wars. The ensemble of the Heart of Christ (St. Casimir, St. Dominic and Blessed Virgin Mary&#8217;s Assumption) Church and monastery was initiated around 1641. In <strong><span id=\"1667\">1667<\/span><\/strong>, the construction of Holy Mary Visitation Church and the Camaldulian Monastery began, funded by the Chancellor of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Kristupas Zigmantas Pacas. In 1707, the barefoot and reformed Carmelites arrived in Kaunas and setled in St. Eliah and St. Gertrude&#8217;s Church; in 1770, they were given the Church of Holy Cross (or Discovery of Holy Cross). The Parochial Church and the monasteries ran schools. The Catholic churches and monasteries, together with laymen, set up different religious fraternities.<\/p>\n<p>In 1682\u20131683, Evangelists-Lutherans, who had only had a prayer house before (the first Lutheran mass took place in 1577), built their own church in Kaunas. Following Jonas Kazimieras&#8217; resolution in 1655, Kaunas Lutherans were given one fourth of the city magistrate seats \u2013 approximately corresponding to the proportion of Lutherans in Kaunas. The majority of the local Lutherans were of German origin, and had their own school and a nursing home.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to Lithuanians, Germans and Poles, Jewish people started settling in Kaunas in the second half of the 17th century. They were not allowed to live in the city for a certain period in the 18th century, so most of them stayed in the Vilijampol\u0117 settlement owned by the Radvila family. There was also a small Tartar community there.<\/p>\n<p>Kaunas experienced its greatest economic boom in the late 16th \u2013 early 17th century. During that period, a great number of buldings were erected, many of them brick houses. A severe blow to the prosperity of Kaunas resulted from the mid-17th century wars and occupation, followed by the plague epidemic: many buildings were destroyed, trade and crafts declined. The almost restored city was badly devastated by the North War: in 1701\u20131707 the city was burned and destroyed; in 1708 it was desolated by famine and plague. In 1732, the recovering city was ravaged again by a fire. More favourable conditions for trade and crafts developed in the third quarter of the 18th century. In 1771, the renovation of the Town Hall and the Parochial Church began. The convalescing Kaunas, as one of the largest cities of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, gradually evolved in the period of the four-year Seym. Unfortunately, after the collapse of the state in <strong><span id=\"1795\">1795<\/span><\/strong>, Kaunas fell under the rule of tsarist Russia.<\/p>\n<p>The new authorities gradually introduced their own order. In <strong><span id=\"1808\">1808<\/span><\/strong> the Magistrate was replaced by the Duma consisting of 6 persons, valid until 1876. By that year the Duma, performing organisational functions, had grown up to 72 members who also elected the so-called City Council (the executive body consisting of the Head of the City and the Council members). In <strong><span id=\"1812\">1812<\/span><\/strong> Kaunas was drawn into the whirl of the Russian-French war: on June 23, Napoleon I with his army of about 220,000 started crossing the Nemunas by pontoon bridges. The Emperor stayed in Kaunas until June 27, with the Carmelite monastery as his headquarters. On December 7 of the same year, Napoleon visited Kaunas again: having lost the war in Russia, the Emperor was retreating to France. His withdrawing army reached the city on December 12, and two days later the Russian Cossacks took command, making Kaunas the site of the French army&#8217;s final catastrophy. The city itself suffered from both armies.<br \/>\n<span id=\"1843\"><br \/>\n<strong>1843<\/strong><\/span> was the year of great significance in the 19th century city history as Kaunas became the centre of the newly established Kaunas gubernija (province). In the same year the first Kaunas newspaper, Kovenskije gubernskije vedomosti, was published. Around that period Kra\u017eiai gimnazija (gymnasium, advanced secondary school) was moved to Kaunas and called Kaunas Boys\u2018 Gimnazija (the Jesuit College functioned in Kaunas until the Jesuit Order was closed in 1773, then it was reorganised into a secular school under the Education Commission). From 1843 to 1869 the city territory doubled. Around the year <strong><span id=\"1847\">1847<\/span><\/strong> the formation of the so-called Nikolaievski prospect, a boulvard-type street (present Laisv\u0117s al\u0117ja) started. In 1860 the street was stone-paved. The development of Kaunas was significantly enhanced by the railway line St Petersburg-Warsaw built in 1861\u20131862. The urban image started changing in the second half of the 19th century: new buildings were springing up in the new part of the city \u2013 the future administrative and commercial centre. Under the Tsarist Government Decree in <strong><span id=\"1864\">1864<\/span><\/strong>, the \u017demai\u010diai (Tel\u0161iai) Bishopric Centre was moved from Varniai to Kaunas. In 1866 the first concerts and literary programmes were held by music and literature fans; Kaunas had its Music Society. In 1870 Kaunas Readers&#8217; Society was set up, which established the first public library. However, more prominent cultural life activities were hindered by the Russian policies aimed at suppressing any national movement. In <strong><span id=\"1879\">1879<\/span><\/strong> Kaunas was granted the status of a 1st class military fortress of the Russian Empire frontier. From 1882 to the First World War Kaunas got surrounded by a ring of star-shaped fortifications, fortresses, and batteries (in <strong><span id=\"1895\">1895<\/span><\/strong>, the Kaunas Garrison Orthodox Church for Russian soldiers, Soboras, was consecrated). In 1892, under a contract with Swiss engineer E. O. Dupont, a horse tramway konk\u0117 was introduced, running from Town Hall square to the Railway Station. The number of cultural institutions was growing. In <strong><span id=\"1892\">1892<\/span><\/strong>, the City Theatre with 500 seats was built, and in 1898, the Kaunas City Museum was opened in the City Hall. After tsarist Russia lifted the ban on Lithuanian press, early in the 20th century Kaunas had a Lithuanian (J. Naujalis) bookshop, S. Banaitis Printing House, St. Juozapas and St. Zita Lithuanian societies, and the first Lithuanian Saul\u0117s Teachers&#8217; Gymnasium. During World War I, Kaunas was occupied by Germans in 1915\u2013<strong><span id=\"1918\">1918<\/span><\/strong> (despite the great efforts and expenses, Kaunas Fortress managed to resist for only 11 days). After the war, Vilnius was taken by Bolsheviks, and later by Poles, so Kaunas was a provisional capital of Lithuania from early January, <strong><span id=\"1919\">1919<\/span><\/strong> to October, 1939. The Constituent Assembly Seimas started its work here on May 15, <strong><span id=\"1920\">1920<\/span><\/strong>, all State institutions, embassies and consulates were operating here, too. Having become the political, cultural, and economic centre of the country, Kaunas revived and gained some modern European features. This is how Kaunas is described by Dr. Margeris-\u0160e\u0161tokas in his book \u201eAmerikie\u010dio \u012fsp\u016bd\u017eiai Lietuvoje\u201c (An American&#8217;s Observations in Lithuania, 1931):<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhen you come to Kaunas, you feel like you are in a big city (\u2026) Not only different types of people, rush, intrigues, scandals, sensations, hotels, restaurants, pubs, churches, the drama theatre, the opera house, cinema theatres, museums, large schools with a university, government offices, public squares, parks, some wide streets, numerous policemen, but also the air itself seems to be telling that this city is living the actual life of a metropolis\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>All through the 1920s, modernization of Kaunas was strongly encouraged and supported by the city&#8217;s Mayor (burmistras) Jonas Vilei\u0161is (holding office in 1921\u20131931). His work was continued by successors Antanas Gravrogkas (1932\u20131933) and Antanas Merkys (1933\u20131939). The city looked prettier thanks to new buildings and renovation of old ones, asphalted streets (some of which had not even been cobbled before), and modern bridges (Aleksotas and Vilijampol\u0117 bridges, built in 1929 and 1930, respectively). According to 1928 data, some 13% of Lithuania&#8217;s trade and 15% of its industrial enterprises were concentrated in Kaunas. In <strong><span id=\"1929\">1929<\/span><\/strong>, water and wastewater systems started operating in Kaunas. During the same year the horse-tramway konk\u0117 and was replaced by regular city bus lines. In 1931, the \u017daliakalnis funicular began to function, followed by the Aleksotas funicular in 1935. The city&#8217;s cultural life flourished. In 1920, the Opera house opened in Kaunas, and in <strong><span id=\"1921\">1921<\/span><\/strong>, the Military Museum was established (named after Vytautas the Great in 1930). In <strong><span id=\"1922\">1922<\/span><\/strong>, the State Theatre was opened and the Lithuanian University was established, named after Vytautas Magnus in 1930. In <strong><span id=\"1924\">1924<\/span><\/strong>, the first Song Festival of Lithuania took place. In 1925 the M. K. \u010ciurlionis Gallery was built. In 1938 the first National Olympic Games were held in Kaunas, while in <strong><span id=\"1939\">1939<\/span><\/strong> the European basketball championship took place in Kaunas, and a Sports Hall with 5,000 seats was erected for the event.<\/p>\n<p>Sadly, the welfare of Kaunas, as well as the whole state, was soon brutally shattered. The last meeting of the Ministers\u2018 Cabinet, which accepted the ultimatum of the USSR government, took place at the President&#8217;s office on the night of June 14\u201315, 1940. On June 15, <strong><span id=\"1940\">1940<\/span><\/strong>, the Soviet Union occupied Lithuania. In a year&#8217;s time, on June 22, the war between the Soviet Union and Germany broke out, and the following day an uprising was organised by the Lithuanian Activist Front (LAF), which soon spread across Lithuania. The activists, having taken the Kaunas radio station, declared restoration of independence and formation of a provisional government. Germans entered Kaunas on June 25, and on June 28 they ordered the Lithuanian troops to stand down and forced the Provisional Government to dissolve on August 5. In July <strong><span id=\"1941\">1941<\/span><\/strong>, 2977 Jews were shot in the 7th fort of the Kaunas Fortress. On August 15th, the ghetto district was established, and 9,200 prisoners from the ghetto were exterminated in the 9th fort in October. In November, another 5,000 Jews brought from different German cities were killed there. In 1943, the Kaunas ghetto was reorganised into an SS concentration camp. While withdrawing from Kaunas on July 8\u201313, 1944, the German troops liquidated the ghetto: five to six thousand Jews were moved to German concentration camps, about one thousand perished outright, and only some 300 ghetto prisoners managed to escape. The headquarters and publishing houses of the anti-Nazi, later anti-Soviet organisations, such as the Chief Committee of Lithuania\u2018s Liberation, Lithuanian Front, Union of Fighters for Lithuania\u2018s Freedom, and Lithuanian Freedom Army, were located in Kaunas.<\/p>\n<p>On August 1, <strong><span id=\"1944\">1944<\/span><\/strong>, Kaunas was re-taken by the Soviet Army, beginning the second Soviet occupation. Kaunas became the major centre of resistance. From the very start of the Lithuanian guerrilla war, the most important guerrilla districts \u2013 Tauro, Prisik\u0117limo, Did\u017eiosios Kovos \u2013 were based around Kaunas. In July 1945, the Declaration of the Lithuanian Nation was proclaimed in Kaunas, and the Address to the United Nations and the Whole Civilized World was published, reminding the world of the resolutions of the Atlantic Charter. Important underground publications were being disseminated in the city, conspiratory lodgings were set up, false documents were being issued, printing equipment storage was organised. On All Souls&#8217; Day in <strong><span id=\"1955\">1955<\/span><\/strong>, the first public anti-Soviet rally took place in Kaunas: citizens burned candles in the military cemetery and sang national songs, resulting clashes with the militia. On May 14, <strong><span id=\"1972\">1972<\/span><\/strong>, a nineteen-year-old Romas Kalanta, having exclaimed \u201eFreedom for Lithuania!\u201c, immolated himself in the garden of the Musical Theatre (in front of the then city Executive Committee building). The event led to new forms of resistance: total passive resistance all around Lithuania. On November 1, <strong><span id=\"1987\">1987<\/span><\/strong>, a non-sanctioned rally took place at Maironis tomb, where people gathered to mark Maironis&#8217; 125th birthday anniversary. Priest Robertas Grigas and other speakers denounced Soviet censorship and called for restoration of Lithuania&#8217;s statehood. On June 10, <strong><span id=\"1988\">1988<\/span><\/strong>, the initiating group of the Kaunas grassroot movement S\u0105j\u016bdis was formed; they published the newspaper Kauno aidas (Kaunas Echo). On October 9, 1988, the tricolour flag was raised above the tower of the Military Museum named after Vytautas the Great. On February 16, 1989, the Freedom Monument was re-unveiled, and a year later, rebuilding the Monument to those who Perished for Lithuania\u2018s Freedom was completed. On September 1, 1989, Vytautas Magnus University was re-established. <\/p>\n<p>Kaunas became the city of students in the revived Lithuania: during the academic year, the student population is approximately 60,000. In 1991, an international jazz festival, Kaunas Jazz, was initiated. Popes John Paul II (<strong><span id=\"1993\">1993<\/span><\/strong><span id=\"1993\">)\u00a0and Francis (<strong><span id=\"2018\">2018<\/span><\/strong><span id=\"2018\">) visited Kaunas and celebrated Holy mass at the confluence of the two rivers.<\/span>\u00a0Since 1996, the internationally-known Pa\u017eaislis Classical Music Festival has been held during the three summer months. Since 1997 The biennial of contemporary art \u201cKauno bienal\u0117\u201d is held every two years. Kaunas basketball team, \u017dalgiris, won the European Cup in 1998, as well as the titles of the Euroleague champions in <strong>1999<\/strong>. Since <span id=\"1999\">1999<\/span>, Kaunas City Day is celebrated on May 20. In <strong><span id=\"2000\">2000<\/span><\/strong> The 2nd Lithuanian Eucharistic Congress \u2013 the main event in Lithuania celebrating the Anniversary of Christianity \u2013 was held in Kaunas. The panorama of cultural events in Kaunas was filled with new festivals (in 2002 The festival \u201cOperetta in Kaunas Castle\u201d was started, in 2004 \u2013 The annual photo festival \u201cKaunas Photo\u201d). In <strong><span id=\"2011\">2011<\/span><\/strong> The final of the EuroBasket Championship took place in the new \u201c\u017dalgiris arena\u201d. Academic and business sectors combine in \u201cSantaka\u201d Valley: from 2014 The Newest Pharmacy and Health Technology Center, KTU Science and Technology Centre and Technological Business Incubator are operating here. Architectural heritage of Kaunas is recognized internationally \u2013 in <strong><span id=\"2015\">2015<\/span><\/strong> The European Commission awarded the interwar modernist architecture of Kaunas by the European Heritage Label. Kaunas remains the important transport and logistics center in Lithuania: in 2015 the European railway track \u201cRail Baltica\u201d reached the city.\u00a0In <strong><span id=\"2022\">2022<\/span><\/strong> Kaunas and Kaunas district were the capital of European culture. More than 1,500 events (exhibitions, spectacles, performances, festivals, discussions, forums, etc.) took place during the year, in which participated about 1.7 million people. In <strong><span id=\"2023\">2023<\/span><\/strong> the interwar architecture of Kaunas, located in Naujamiestis and \u017daliakalnis, was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List.<\/span><\/p>\n<h3 id=\"kaunas-population\">Kaunas population:<\/h3>\n<p>Mid-16th century: 7,000\u20138,000;<br \/>\nMid-17th century: ~15,000;<br \/>\n1667\u20131673: 4000\u20134500;<br \/>\n18th century: ~ 4000;<br \/>\n1812: 3000;<br \/>\n1843: 14 297;<br \/>\n1896: 67 794 (42 251 citizens, 19 238 soldiers and officers, 3137 noblemen, 1432 peasants, 1169 merchants, 493 foreigners, 74 clergymen);<br \/>\n1923: 92 446 (58,97% Lithuanians);<br \/>\n1959: 214 348;<br \/>\n1970: 305 100;<br \/>\n1980: 376 000;<br \/>\n1984: 400 000;<br \/>\n1990: 429 800;<br \/>\n2001: 378 943;<br \/>\n2005: 361\u00a0930;<br \/>\n2017: 292\u00a0691;<br \/>\nBeginning of 2023:\u00a0305 120.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Dr. Rasa Varsackyt\u0117 Dr. Mindaugas Balkus Overview of Kaunas History Archeological excavations testify to the fact that people started settling at the confluence of the Nemunas and the Neris rivers as far back as the 7th\u20136th millenium BC; the most numerous collections of ceramics and other artefacts are from the 2nd\u20131st millenium BC. During that [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"templates\/history-review.php","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-4123","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Kaunas History Overview \u2013 Kaunas: dates and facts. 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