Central Lithuania
Central Lithuania (Polish Republika Litwy Środkowej, Lithuanian Vidurine Lietuva) was a semi-independent state, created in 1920 by allegedly rebellious soldiers of the Lithuanian-Belarussian division of the Polish army.
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2 Culture 3 Conflict 4 Central Lithuania 5 Mediation 6 Resolution 7 Links 8 External links |
50 years after January Uprising 1864, the historical Grand Duchy of Lithuania was under military government of Imperial Russia. Poles and Lithuanians were discriminated: Polish and Lithuanian languages were forbidden in public, Poles were forbidden to buy real estates and special tax (contribution) had to be paid only by Poles.
In the aftermath of WWI, the area was divided onto 3 parts.
Background
The national composition of the latter area is difficult to measure as many Lithuanian historians claim that both Russian, Polish and Soviet censuses are not reliable. The only source acceptable for both Poland and Lithuania seems to be the German 1916 census and, to some extent, the Nazi 1942 census. According to the first census of the Russian Empire, 1897, the inhabitants of the city of Wilno were distributed by nationality (determined basing on the declared native language) as follows.
- Russians — 20.9%
- Ukrainians — 0.3%
- Belarusians — 4.3%
- Poles — 30.1%
- Lithuanians — 2.1%
- Germans — 1.4%
- Jews — 40.0%
- Tatars — 0.5%
- Others — 0.4%
- Russians — 4.9%
- Ukrainians — 0.1%
- Belarusians — 56.1%
- Poles — 8.2%
- Lithuanians — 17.6%
- Germans — 0.2%
- Jews — 12.7%
- Tatars — 0.1%
- Others — 0.1%
Culture
Conflict
Following the start of the Polish-Soviet war, in 1919 the territory was occupied by the Red Army which defeated and pushed back Polish self-defence units, but shortly afterwards the Bolsheviks were pushed back by the Polish Army. 1920 saw Central Lithuania occupied by the Red Army for the second time, although Russia officially recognized the sovereignty of Lithuanian Soviet Republic over the city. Lenin was probably waiting for the capture of Warsaw, to occupy the remainder of Lithuania. However, when the Red Army was defeated in the Battle of Warsaw, the Soviets made the decision to hand over the city back to Lithuania. Despite the agreements, Lithuania seized the southern Suwalki region as well. When the Polish army reached Lithuanian lines (August 26, 1920), a local war was started that lasted for several days until the Lithuanians were pushed back.
This made the compromise even harder to achieve and the newly-established state of Lithuania declined any negotiations on the status of the Vilnius area, claimed it as its capital city and denied any Polish influence over it whatsoever. A cease-fire agreement was signed on November 7 1920, but it did not solve the issue. Polish commander Jozef Pilsudski ordered his subordinate, General Lucjan Zeligowski, to defect with his '1st Lithuanian-Byelorussian Division' and capture the city, without declaring war on Lithuania.
General Zeligowski entered the city on November 8 1920, almost unopposed.
Central Lithuania
The symbols of the state were a red flag with Polish White Eagle and Lithuanian Vytis and with a coat of arms being a mixture of Polish, Lithuanian and Vilnian symbols.
There were extensive diplomatic negotiatiations behind the scenes. Lithuania proposed creating a confederation of baltic Western Lithuania (with Lithuanian as an official language) and Central Lithuania (with Polish as an official language). Poland added a condition, that the new state must be also federated with Poland. There was no approval from the Lithuanian side for this.
The general elections had been decreed on January 9 1921, and the voting law was to be issued prior to November 28 1920. However, due to the League of Nations mediation and the boycott of the voting, the elections were postponed.
Mediation
- Both sides guarantee each other's independence.
- Central Lithuania is incorporated into the Federation of Lithuania, composed of two cantons - the Lithuanian-inhabitated Samogitia and Polish-inhabitated Wilno area. Both cantons will have separate governments, parliaments, official languages and a common federative capital in Vilnius/Wilno.
- Lithuanian and Polish governments will create interstate commissions on both foreign affairs, trade and industry measures and local policies.
- Poland and Lithuania will sign a defensive alliance treaty.
- Poland will gain usage of ports in Lithuania.
A new plan was presented to the governments of Lithuania and Poland in September 1921. It was basically a modification of "Hymans' plan", with the difference that the area of Klaipeda was to be incorporated into Lithuania while Central Lithuania was to be granted a certain level of internal autonomy instead of a cantonal status. However, both Poland and Lithuania openly criticized it and finally this turn of talks came to a halt as well.
After the talks in Brussels failed, the tensions in the area grew. The most important issue was the huge army Central Lithuania fielded (27,000). General Zeligowski decided to pass the power to the civil authorities and confirmed the date of the elections (January 8 1923.
There was a significant propaganda campaign over the issue of the elections as both Poles and Lithuanians tried to win the support of other ethnic groups present in the area. Eventually, Lithuania decided to boycott the elections and only the Socialist Party of Lithuania and Byelorussia took part in it.
Most of the parties that took part in the voting were supporting the idea of incorporation of the area into Poland - with different grades of autonomy.
63,9% of the entire population took part in the voting, but among different ethnic groups the attendance was lower (41% of Byelorussians, 15,3% Jews and 8,2% of Lithuanians). The 2 biggest political groups in the newly-elected parliament were the Polish Voting Committee (43 seats) and the Popular Councils (34 seats). All the other groups gained 29 seats altogether.
The parliament gathered on February 1 1922 and on February 20 after a fierce discussion incorporation into Poland had been passed. The Polish Sejm passed the law proposed by the Central Lithuanian parliament on March 22 1922 and two days later Central Lithuania ceased to exist.
Lithuania declined to accept the Polish authority over the Vilnius area and it wasn't until the 1938 ultimatum, when the Lithuanian authorities resolved diplomatical relations with Poland and de facto accepted the borders of its neighbour. After the Soviet-Nazi pact (1939) Lithuania was given the Vilnius County.Resolution