Population : 3 601 138 habitants (est. 2002)
Pays voisins : Russie, Lettonie, Biélorussie, Pologne
Densité : 55.23 hab./km²
Superficie : 65 200 km²
Capitale : Vilnius
Principales villes : Kaunas, Klaipeda, Siauliai, Panevezys
Point culminant : Juozapine Kalnas 292 m.
Langue(s) parlée(s) : Lituanien, Russe, Polonais
Langue(s) officielle(s) : Lituanien
Monnaie : Litas
Fête nationale : 16 février

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Pays voisins : Russie, Lettonie, Biélorussie, Pologne
Densité : 55.23 hab./km²
Superficie : 65 200 km²
Capitale : Vilnius
Principales villes : Kaunas, Klaipeda, Siauliai, Panevezys
Point culminant : Juozapine Kalnas 292 m.
Langue(s) parlée(s) : Lituanien, Russe, Polonais
Langue(s) officielle(s) : Lituanien
Monnaie : Litas
Fête nationale : 16 février

Registration for the "Directory" blog, are free.
Imperative to follow our blog to validate your registration.
Thank you for your understanding
The Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic (LSSR) was an early short-lived Soviet republic declared on December 16, 1918 by the provisional revolutionary government, led by Vincas Mickevičius-Kapsukas. It ceased to exist on February 27, 1919, when it was merged with the Socialist Soviet Republic of Byelorussia to form the Lithuanian–Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, commonly referred to as Litbel. While efforts were made to represent LSSR as a product of a socialist revolution supported by local residents, it was largely Moscow-orchestrated entity to justify the Lithuanian–Soviet War. As a Soviet historian, adhering to official propaganda, put it: "The fact that the Government of Soviet Russia recognized a young Soviet Lithuanian Republic unmasked the lie of the USA and British imperialists that Soviet Russia allegedly sought rapacious aims with regard to the Baltic countries." Lithuanians generally did not support Soviet causes and rallied for their own national state, declared independent on February 16, 1918, by the Council of Lithuania.
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