Dieveniškės

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Dieveniškės
Town
Dieveniskes church.jpg
Coat of arms of Dieveniškės
Dieveniškės is located in Lithuania
Dieveniškės
Dieveniškės
Location of Dieveniškės
Coordinates: 54°11′40″N 25°37′30″E / 54.19444°N 25.62500°E / 54.19444; 25.62500Coordinates: 54°11′40″N 25°37′30″E / 54.19444°N 25.62500°E / 54.19444; 25.62500
Country Lithuania
Ethnographic regionDzūkija
CountyVilnius County flag.svg Vilnius County
MunicipalityŠalčininkai district municipality
EldershipDieveniškės eldership
First mentioned1385
Population
 (2011)
 • Total720
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)

Dieveniškės (in Lithuanian literally: "Gods' place"; Polish: Dziewieniszki, Belarusian: Дзевянішкі Dzevyanishki) is a town in the Vilnius County of Lithuania, about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) from the Belarusian border in the so-called Dieveniškės appendix. It is surrounded by the Dieveniškės Regional Park.

History[]

Jewish cemetery of the town.

The estate of Dieveniškės was first mentioned in 1385 as a village of a Lithuanian noble Mykolas Mingaila, possibly the son of Gedgaudas, later ruled by the Goštautai family. Stanislovas Goštautas visited Dieveniškės with his wife Barbara Radziwill (Lithuanian: Barbora Radvilaitė), who used to pray in Dieveniškės church, built in the 16th century. According to the 1897 census, 75% of the village population were Jewish. The shtetl had 2 synagogues. The Jews were murdered during the Holocaust in Lithuania.[1] [2]

The people living in the Dieveniškės were ethnically mixed (Lithuanian, Polish, Belarusian), who happened to fall under Belarus’ authority, as this region was inside Belarus post-1945. After many requests by only the Lithuanian residents of the area (and not the others since majority of residents were Lithuanians), Belarus gave this area voluntarily to Lithuania in 1956. As the result, Dieveniškės becomes a 207-square-kilometre Lithuanian peninsula surrounded by and intruding some 30 kilometres into the Belarusian territory. At its neck, the “Lithuanian appendix” is barely 3 kilometres wide. And it remains part of Lithuania to this date. According to 1989 census, a little over 60 percent of people there considered they were Polish.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ https://iajgscemetery.org/eastern-europe/lithuania/dieveniskes
  2. ^ https://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/dieveniskes/dieveniskes.html
  3. ^ "Lithuanian-Belarusian border: Divided villages, divided lives". 15min.lt. 19 October 2012.
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