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Vilnius - Wikipedia The form Vilna made its way into Western European languages and for a long time served as the standard designation for the city of Vilnius, especially in historical and diplomatic texts
Vilna | Holocaust Encyclopedia Poland and Lithuania both claimed Vilna (Vilnius) after World War I Polish forces occupied Vilna in 1920, and before the outbreak of World War II, the city of Vilna was part of northeastern Poland
The Story of the Jewish Community of Vilna | Yad Vashem Approximately 60,000 Jews lived in Vilna at the time, constituting 30% of the total population The community of Vilna, which had flourished for centuries, was decimated during World War II
Vilna - Jewish History Once called the Jerusalem of Lithuania, the city of Vilna was a vibrant center of Jewish life for centuries until the Nazis wiped it out in the Holocaust
Vilnius | History, Map, Points of Interest | Britannica In 1795 Vilnius passed to Russia in the Third Partition of Poland, where it became the capital of Vilna Governorate During this time of Russian imperial rule, it became a locus of both Polish national aspirations and the nascent Lithuanian nationalist movement
Vilna - Jewish Virtual Library Vilna was a world center for Yiddish culture, and a Yiddish daily and evening press, numerous weekly and other political, literary, educational, and scientific journals were published there
Sites in Vilna — Association of Jews of Vilna and vicinity in Israel Below is a list of noteworthy historical sites in Jewish Vilna that no longer exist today: synagogues, the Strashun library, theatres, cemeteries etc There is also a list of sites that were built in Vilna after the war
Welcome to the Vilna Site - Eilat Gordin Levitan When the war broke out, in 1939, he fled from the invading German forces, ending up in Vilna (Vilna became part of independent Lithuania in 1939) While in Vilna he corresponded with his friend, Elsa, who had managed to leave Poland for British-controlled Palestine in 1938