Green Bridge (Vilnius)

Green Bridge
Coordinates 54°41′29″N 25°16′47″E / 54.69139°N 25.27972°E / 54.69139; 25.27972Coordinates: 54°41′29″N 25°16′47″E / 54.69139°N 25.27972°E / 54.69139; 25.27972
Crosses Neris River
Locale Vilnius
Preceded by Mindaugas Bridge
Followed by White Bridge
Characteristics
Total length 102.9 metres (338 ft)
Width 24 metres (79 ft)

The Green Bridge (Lithuanian: Žaliasis tiltas) is a bridge over the Neris River in Vilnius, Lithuania, that connects the city center with the district of Šnipiškės. The original 16th-century bridge was the oldest bridge in Vilnius.

History

The first bridge dated from 1536. It stood closer to the present-day Mindaugas Bridge. It was a wooden covered bridge with brick and stone piers. It had a second floor with apartments for toll collectors.[1] Because its builder Ulryk Hozjusz wanted to recoup the cost by collecting tolls, Grand Duke Sigismund I of Poland granted him a privilege prohibiting others from building any other bridges between Kernavė and Bistrica (Быстрыца in Belarus) or to offer other crossing services between Verkiai and Paneriai.[1] The bridge was burned by retreating Lithuanian Army commanded by Janusz Radziwiłł after the Battle of Vilnius (1655).[2]

A new project was planned in 1673, which envisioned a span of 73 metres (240 ft) between piers — the longest known span at the time.[2] However, an early spring and ice jam destroyed the piers. Therefore, the old piers from the first bridge were reused and the second bridge was completed in 1679.

In 1739 another wooden bridge was erected and painted green.[2] Since then this crossing has been known as the Green Bridge. In 1789 a new plan for a brick bridge was prepared by Laurynas Gucevičius, but the builders selected another proposal.[1] The construction was supervised by Marcin Knackfus. The project was not successful as the bridge burned in 1791. It was rebuilt according to a plan by Michael Schulz in 1805, but it was burned again on orders from Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly during the French invasion of Russia of 1812.[2]

The bridge was rebuilt in 1827–1829. A steel bridge was designed by Nikolai Belelyubsky and completed in 1894.[2] It survived World War I, but was blown up by the Wehrmacht in 1944. The present-day bridge was completed in 1952 and named after Soviet General Ivan Chernyakhovsky. After Lithuania's declaration of independence in 1990, the bridge was returned to its historical name.[3]

Sculptures

The bridge long featured four sets of sculptures – prominent examples of so-called Soviet realism. Each featured two people, representing social classes idealized by the Soviet authorities (soldiers, workers, farmers, students). Three sculptures were 3.2 metres (10 ft) in height (including the pedestal); the soldiers reached 4 metres (13 ft) due to the raised flag.[2]

In 2013, a debate about the future of the Soviet-era statues pitted Lithuanian nationalists against those who view the statues as historically significant artifacts. The latter included Artūras Zuokas, then mayor of Vilnius, who in August 2013 announced a $200,000 plan to refurbish the statues without removing them from the bridge.[4]

However, in July 2015 the statues were removed, citing health and safety reasons. Vilnius Mayor Remigijus Šimašius stated: "The statues represent a lie. Their heroic portrayal of the Soviet people – that is all a lie ... The statues are a mockery of the real people who had to live during the Soviet period." [5]

In March 2016, the First Council of the Assessment of Immovable Cultural Heritage stripped the bridge and the statues of legal protection they enjoyed as artifacts of cultural value, making the restoration and return of the statues to the bridge unlikely. Members of the council expressed hope, however, that the statues would end up in a museum where they can be preserved and presented in the appropriate context.[6][7]

In August 2016, a Lithuanian official sharply criticized a newly issued Russian commemorative coin depicting one of the banished statues – "Guarding Peace" – in connection with the alleged Soviet "liberation" of Vilnius in 1944. Rolandas Kacinskas, director of the Foreign Ministry's Political Department, said: "We have no doubts about the role and place of the Red Army in the history of Lithuania. ... The issue of the coins proves once again that Russia is not ready for the historic truth about the Soviet occupation." Lithuania maintains the Soviet occupation merely substituted another tyranny for that of the Nazis.[8][9]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Green Bridge (Vilnius).
  1. 1 2 3 Drėma, Vladas (1991). Dingęs Vilnius (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vaga. p. 376. ISBN 5-415-00366-5.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jurgis Bielinis; et al., eds. (1988). Lietuvos TSR istorijos ir kultūros paminklų sąvadas (in Lithuanian). 1. Vilnius: Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija. pp. 126–127.
  3. Mičiulienė, Jūratė (1 April 2016). "Žaliasis tiltas: nuo A. Goštauto iki „balvonų"". lzinios.lt (in Lithuanian). Lietuvos Žinios. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  4. ^"Silent Sentinels at Center of Lithuanian Debate on Bygone Era." The New York Times. Nov. 11, 2013. Retrieved Nov. 16, 2008.
  5. "Last major Soviet statues come down in Lithuanian capital". Reuters. 20 July 2015. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  6. "Žaliojo tilto ir jo skulptūrų likimas nuspręstas" [The fate of the Green Bridge and its statues has been decided] (in Lithuanian). Delfi.lt. ELTA. 1 March 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  7. "Vilniaus vadovai neskubės priimti sprendimų dėl Žaliojo tilto skulptūrų" [Vilnius government will not rush to take decisions regarding the statues of the Green Bridge] (in Lithuanian). Delfi.lt. BNS. 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  8. "О выпуске в обращение монет из драгоценного и недрагоценных металлов". Bank of Russia Press Office. 1 August 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  9. "Lithuanians angered by new Russian coins with Soviet-era Green Bridge sculptures". The Baltic Times. 4 August 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
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