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raseiniai Area
history Museum
Contacts
Address: Muziejaus g. 3, LT-60123, Raseiniai.
Tel. (+370 ~ 428) 51 892.
Tel./ fax (+370 ~ 428) 51 191.
E-mail:
muziejus@raseiniai.lt,
raseiniumuz@gmail.com
http://www.raseiniumuziejus.lt/
Information for Visitor
Opening hours:
Tuesday to Friday 9–12; 13–17;
Saturday
11–17.
Admission:
adults
– 2 Lt;
child under 7, pupils, students – 1 Lt.
Additional services:
ordering excursions throughout the Museum;
ordering excursions throughout the Raseiniai region;
selling works of art and Museum publications.
Collection
The museum contains collections of coins, photographs and publications, art,
and ethnographic exhibits relating to the history of the area.
Expositions
The Museum was established in Raseiniai prison building, built in 1930. That
partly determines the theme of Museum Expositions.
Raseiniai region since the oldest times till mid-19th century;
Raseiniai since Mid-19th century till early 20th century;
Raseiniai region in the year of independence;
Raseiniai region in the year of occupations;
Cultivation;
Models of Valeras Kuzas;
Liturgy – cultural heritage;
Ethnography.
Exhibitions
At the Museum exhibits are created of fine arts, folk art, theme occasions
from the Museum’s fund.
Cultural, educational activity
Training programs for various age students are about ethno-culture, history,
geology and nature.
Management of lessons.
Organising conferences and seminars.
School of weaving art.
Branch
Museums
Pasandravys
Memorial Reservation (The Birthplace of Poet Maironis)
Address: Bernotų ir Pasandravio kaimas, LT-60474, Raseinių rajonas.
Tel. (+370 ~ 428) 41 335.
Opening hours: Tuesday to Saturday 9–17 val.
The museum was established in 1992 in the birthplace of Jonas
Mačiulis-Maironis (1862–1932), a priest, poet and doctor of theology. The
ethnographic display recreates the authentic environment in which the
Maironis family lived.
In 1993 the road to the birthplace was decorated by pillar-type wooden
crosses and miniature chapels.
A memorial room was opened in the Maironis Secondary School in Betygala
displaying the poet’s personal relics, books and the Mačiulis family
portraits.
In Pasandravys, an astonishing, amazing, unusual nature’s corner, many
regional cultural events take place. Poetry verses are sounding and music
created together with poetry of Maironis spreads throughout.
The Birthplace of Maironis is annually visited by the nation’s youngsters
who are members of Maironis Organisation, also by regional and nation’s
students and many others visitors who honour the creativity of Maironis.
Betygala Museum
Address: Vytauto g. 16, LT-60209, Betygala Raseinių rajonas.
Tel.: (+370 ~ 428) 51 892,
(+370 ~ 428) 54 985.
Opening hours: Tuesaday to Saturday 8–16; Sunday 8–15.
This museum was established in 1986 in the town famous for numerous castle
hills, legends and a sculpture of Vytautas the Great.
The museum has arranged exhibits of graphic artist Jonas Kuzmickis
(1906-1985), geology and history of Betygala area.
An interesting educational program is held at the museum, excursions are
organised to visit the Museum and all interesting places in the Betygala
area.
Public
Museums
The Raseiniai Area History Museum takes care of the regional schools’
history and ethnographic museums.
Other
news
The museum was opened in 1975.
Poet
Maironis
Maironis was the pen name of Jonas Mačiulis (1862–1932), the best-known poet
in what is known as the National Movement, which emerged in the late 19th
century and accompanied the rise in national consciousness which resulted in
the 1918 declaration of independence.
Maironis was a Catholic priest and taught theology in St Petersburg for 15
years before being appointed rector of the seminary in Kaunas. His work
deals with the concepts of national identity, the homeland and the national
revival. He associated true patriotism with the rural way of life. His book
of romantics verse Pavasario balsai (Voices of Spring), published in 1895,
is considered the start of modern Lithuanian poetry.
In 1910 he bought a large house behind the Town Hall in Kaunas, which he
shared with his sister and her family. After his death she turned the house
into a museum.
Six rooms on the ground floor are devoted to an extensive exhibition about
the history of Lithuanian literature, while the first-floor rooms show how
Maironis lived. The reception rooms are opulent, and newly restored, while
the study and the poet's bedroom at the back of the house are austere.
Raseiniai
Raseiniai, city in western Lithuania, 73 km Northwest of Kaunas, on the
Samogitia highway. The population in 1973 was 10,500 (6,217 in 1939, 6,242
in 1959). The city was a ceramics factory, a men's and children’s' clothing
factory, a butter diary, a 200-bed hospital, two secondary and several
vocational schools.
The history of the Raseiniai area goes back to the 13th century. Variants of
the name in historical documents include Raseyne, Rossein, Roszein and
Roscena. In 1253-54 King Mindaugas bequeathed this land in Samogitia to
Christian, the first bishop of Lithuania, and to the Livonian Order. But
neither was able to withstand the resistance of the Samogitians. Attempting
to subdue Samogitia, the Teutonic Order, which had established itself in
Prussia and Livonia, conducted frequent military expeditions; Raseiniai
suffered especially in 1322 and 1377. During the reign of Vytautas the
Great, the Samogitians were for a time (1405–09) given over to German rule,
although the Lithuanians secretly aided their resistance and revolts. After
the Battle of Tannenberg in 1410 the Samogitians were finally freed. With
the advent of Christianity, one of the first churches was built in Raseiniai
in 1416 or 1421. Some historians contend that at that time the town was
granted the privilege of self-rule according to the Magdeburg Law;
subsequently these privileges were expanded (in1592 and in 1643). From the
time of the Union of Liublin (1569) until Lithuania's last partition (1795),
Raseiniai served as the seat of the Samogitian eldership. All the regional
courts were located there, and the nobility assembled in the town for their
dietines. The oldest documents pertaining to landed property have been
preserved in court archives. In 1642 the Dominicans were established in the
town; they replaced the old church with a new Baroque edifice, built a
chapel and monastery, and maintained a school and large library. The
Carmelite monastery was founded in 1720 and the Piarist monastery in 1742.
The Piarists also maintained a school which in 1788 had 173 students.
Following the uprisings of 1831, the Russians closed the monasteries.
Raseiniai was one of the first towns to rebel against Russian rule in 1831,
and for a time served as headquarters of the rebel leaders (see Insurrection
of 1830-31). By mid-19th century the town had grown into an important
agricultural trade centre, exporting large quantities of grain to East
Prussia and Riga (Latvia). In 1857 the population numbered 8,516 (7,455 in
1897). Several agricultural societies and co-operatives were founded at the
end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries.
During the period of independence (1918–40) there were the county and
municipal administrative office, a courthouse, and local agencies of
forestry, agronomy, and veterinary; the town had 2 hospitals, 2 high
schools, 4 elementary schools; commercial enterprises included a sawmill,
dairy, slaughterhouse, leather tannery, banks and stores. The most noted
feature of the town is the Dominican Baroque church and monastery, which are
being preserved as architectural monuments.
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