[Edit]

The geographical centre of Europe (54grad.51' north and 25grad.19' east) lies in Lithuania, 20 kilometres north of Vilnius.

The most beautiful part of Lithuania is the famous Curonian spit, Lithuania's "tiny Sahara". Registered as a Unesco world heritage site in December 2000, the Curonian lagoon and spit were formed 5000 years ago by the churning waves of the restless Baltic Sea: the northern part of the lagoon belongs to Lithuania and the southern part to the Russian Federation (Kaliningrad district). The Curonian spit is a remarkable natural phenomenon. The 50 km-long portion of the peninsula is as narrow as 400 meters is some sections. Now a national park, the Curonian spit is an ecological treasure and serves as an important resting spot for approximately 15 million birds during their annual migrations. There are five natural reserves in Lithuania, 30 regional parks and about 750 protected landscape objects. These protected areas encompass 16.9% of the country's total forest area.

Lithuania has a modern highway system, several international airports and a major ice-free seaport at Klaipeda. The country is relatively poor in natural resources.
The Lithuanian language is among the oldest in Europe and belongs to the Baltic group of Indo-European languages. Lithuanian, among all the living Indo-European languages has been the most successful in preserving its ancient system of phonetics and most of its morphological features. The history of the written Lithuanian language starts in Lithuania Minor (East Prussia) in the middle of the 16th century. The very first book written in Lithuania was the Catechismus of Martinas Mazvydas, published in 1547. Also of great importance were the 1599 book Postile of Mikalojus Dauksa and Konstantinas Sirvydas' trilateral (Polish-Latin-Lithuanian) dictionary in approximately 1620. The first Lithuanian grammar was published in 1653.
An interesting Lithuanian folk-art tradition is the carving of large wooden crosses, suns, weathercocks or figures of saints on tall poles that are placed at crossroads, in cemeteries, village squares or at the sites of extraordinary events. In the Soviet period, such work was banned, but it survived to amazing effect at the Hill of Crosses near Siauliai.

Last edited by Admin (16:53, 05 January 2006)
Add Your Tip