Šiauliai
Šiauliai is a city in northern Lithuania, the country's fourth largest city and the sixth largest city in the Baltic states, with a population of 112,581 in 2024. From 1994 to 2010, it was the capital of Šiauliai County.
Names
Šiauliai is referred to by various names in different languages: Samogitian Šiaulē; Latvian Saule and Šauļi ; Polish Szawle ; German Schaulen ; Belarusian Шаўляй ; Russian Шавли and Шяуляй ;.History
The city was first mentioned in written sources as Soule in Livonian Order chronicles describing the Battle of Saule. Thus the city's founding date is now considered to be 22 September 1236, the same date when the battle took place, not far from Šiauliai. At first, it developed as a defence post against the raids by the Teutonic and Livonian Orders. After the Battle of Grunwald in 1410, the raids stopped and Šiauliai started to develop as an agricultural settlement. In 1445, a wooden church was built. It was replaced in 1625 with the brick church, which can be seen in the city center today.Šiauliai was granted Magdeburg city rights in the 16th century when it also became an administrative centre of the area. However, in the 16th to 18th centuries, the city was devastated by The Deluge and epidemics of the Bubonic plague.
The credit for the city's rebirth goes to Antoni Tyzenhaus who, after a violent revolt of peasants of the Crown properties in Northern Lithuania, started the radical economic and urban reforms. He decided to rebuild the city according to the Classicism ideas; at first, houses were built randomly in a radial shape, but Tyzenhaus decided to build the city in an orderly rectangular grid. Šiauliai grew to become a well-developed city, with several prominent brick buildings. In 1791, Stanisław August Poniatowski, king of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, confirmed once again Šiauliai's city rights and granted it a coat of arms which depicted a bear, the symbol of Samogitia, the Eye of Providence, and a red bull, the symbol of the Poniatowski family. The modern coat of arms has been modelled after this version.
After the Partitions of Poland, Šiauliai received a new coat of arms. The city grew and became an important educational and cultural centre. Also, infrastructure was rapidly developing; in 1836–1858, a road connecting Riga and Tilsit was built, while in 1871, a railroad connecting Liepāja with Romny was built. Šiauliai, being on the crossroad of important merchant routes, started to develop as an industrial town. Already in 1897, it was the third-largest city in Lithuania, with a population of about 16,000. The demographics changed also; 56.4% of the inhabitants were Jewish in 1909. Šiauliai was known for its leather industry. Chaim Frenkel owned the biggest leather factory in the Russian Empire.
World War I and independent Lithuania
During World War I, about 85% of the buildings were burned down and the city centre was destroyed. After the war and re-establishment of Lithuania, the importance of Šiauliai grew. Before Klaipėda was attached to Lithuania, the city was second after Kaunas by population size. By 1929, the city centre was rebuilt. Modern utilities were also included; streets were lit and there was public transportation, telephone and telegraph lines, a water supply network and a sewer.The first years of independence were difficult because the industrial city lost its markets in Russia. It needed to find new clients in Western Europe. In 1932, a railroad to Klaipėda was built and it connected the city to the Western markets. In 1938, the city produced about 85% of Lithuania's leather, 60% of footwear, 75% of flax fibre, and 35% of candies. Culture also flourished as many new periodicals were printed, new schools and universities opened, a library, theatre, museum, and conventional school opened.
World War II
In 1939, one-fifth of the city's population was Jewish. German soldiers entered Šiauliai on June 26, 1941. The first mass murder of Šiauliai Jews was perpetrated in the Kužiai forest, about 12 kilometres outside Šiauliai, on June 29, 1941. According to one of the Jewish survivors of Šiauliai, Nesse Godin, some 700 people were shot in nearby woods during the first weeks of occupation after having been forced to dig their own graves. Beginning on July 29, 1941, and continuing throughout the summer, the Germans murdered about 8,000 Jews from Šiauliai and the Šiauliai region in the Kužiai forest. One hundred twenty-five Jews from Linkuva were also murdered there, along with ethnic Lithuanian and Russian members of the Communist Party and the Communist Youth.The Šiauliai Ghetto was established in July 1941. There were two Jewish ghetto areas in Šiauliai, one in the Kaukas suburb, and one in Trakų. During World War II, the Jewish population was reduced from 8,000 to 500. Approximately 80% of the buildings were destroyed.
Soviet era
The city was largely rebuilt anew in a typical Soviet fashion during the years of subsequent Soviet occupation.Mayors
The Mayor of Šiauliai, officially the Mayor of the municipality of the city of Šiauliai, is the head of the Lithuanian municipality of the city of Šiauliai. The current incumbent is Artūras Visockas, who has been mayor since 2015.- 1990–1991: Kazimieras Šavinis
- 1991–1995: Arvydas Salda
- 1995–2000: Alfredas Lankauskas
- 2000–2002: Vida Stasiūnaitė
- 2002–2003: Vaclovas Volkovas
- 2003–2007: Vytautas Juškus
- 2007–2011: Genadijus Mikšys
- 2011–2015: Justinas Sartauskas
- 2015–present: Artūras Visockas
Geography
Altitude: Lake Rėkyvos water level – above sea level, Talsos lake level – in the city center –, Salduvės Hill – above sea level.
Water
The total water area – 1,280 ha, 15.7% in urban areas.- Šiauliai Lakes
- * Lake Rėkyva, 1,179 ha
- * Lake Talkša, 56.2 ha
- * Lake Ginkūnai, 16.6 ha
- Rivers
- * Kulpė
- * Rūdė
- * Vijolė
- * Švedė
- * Šimša
- * Tilžė
- * Šventupis
Climate
In 1942, the city recorded the lowest Lithuanian year mean temperature.
Demographics
In 1795, there were 3,700 people living in Šiauliai, rising to 16,128 by 1897, when it was the third-most populous city in Lithuania after Kaunas. The Jewish population of Šiauliai rose steadily through the second half of the nineteenth century, from 2,565 in 1847 to around 7,000 by the century's end. By the outbreak of World War I, 12,000 of the town's inhabitants were Jews, making Šiauliai majority Jewish. A battlefield during World War I, Šiauliai saw thousands of its Jewish citizens flee, never to return. In 1923, Šiauliai population's was third to that of Kaunas and Klaipėda.According to the 2021 census, the city population was 100,653 people, of which:
- Lithuanians – 94.12%
- Russians – 3.15%
- Ukrainians – 0.43%
- Belarusians – 0.25%
- Poles – 0.14%
- Others / did not specify – 1.92%
Economy
During the Soviet years, the city produced electronics, mechanical engineering, wood processing, construction industry. Most of the industrial enterprises were concentrated in urban areas.
According to 2005 data, the city has:
- Manufacturing and service companies – 3195
- Commercial enterprises – 781
- Shopping centres – 30, including
- * Akropolis, opened March 2009
- * Saulės Miestas, opened March 2007
- * Bruklinas, opened November 2007
- * Tilžė, opened February 2008
- * Arena, opened November 2007.
Education
- 1851 - Boys' Gymnasium was opened
- 1898 - Girls' Gymnasium was opened
- 1920 - Jewish Gymnasium was opened
- 1920 - Šiauliai Teachers seminary was founded
- 1928 - Primary education became compulsory
- 1930 - Vincas Kudirka primary school was opened
- 1939 - The Institute of trade was moved from Klaipėda, it was the first Higher Education school in Šiauliai
- 1948 - Šiauliai Teachers Institute was founded. In 1954, it became the Pedagogical Institute, and since 1996, when the Šiauliai faculty of Kaunas Polytechnic Institute was connected, it is Šiauliai University. In 2021, Šiauliai University was reorganised to Vilnius University Šiauliai Academy.
- In Šiauliai University – 10,440
- In Šiauliai College – 2,770
- In Northern Lithuania College – 700
- In Šiauliai region College of Management and Languages – 517
- In Šiauliai Conservatory – 149
- In Šiauliai Vocational Training Center – 2,663