Background After the
Third Partition of Poland–Lithuania in 1795, the
Vilnius region, like most of
Grand Duchy of Lithuania, was occupied by the
Russian Empire until
World War I. Russian rule in the region was unstable as evidenced by the
French invasion of Russia, the Uprisings of
1831 and
1863. In the
aftermath of World War I and Russia's internal weakness due to the
Russian Civil War, Lithuania and Poland re-established their independence. However, the
Polish–Lithuanian War began as a result of conflict between the two countries. In October 1920,
Józef Piłsudski, Poland's
Chief of State, in order to circumvent the
Treaty of Suvalkai, which left Vilnius on the Lithuanian side, organized
Żeligowski's Mutiny, to seize Vilnius for Poland. In this
false flag operation, the Polish goals of taking over Vilnius were achieved and the Polish puppet state of
Central Lithuania was created. In 1922, after a disputed
election to the Vilnius Sejm, the parliament voted to incorporate Central Lithuania into the
Second Polish Republic.
1920s and 1930s From 6 April 1922 to 20 January 1926, the territory was known as the
Wilno Land (). Wilno Voivodeship was created on 20 January 1926 from the territories of the Wilno Land. On 1 April 1927,
Mołodeczno county and was created from parts of
Wilejka (5
gminas),
Oszmiana (1 gmina),
Wołożyń (1 gmina) and
Stołpce (1 gmina) It was formed as the last of the
Polish voivodeships in the
interbellum. (The
Sandomierz Voivodeship was supposed to be created in late 1939, but never was).
World War II Following the
Soviet invasion in 1939, the Wilno Voivodeship was divided between the newly created
Vileyka Voblast of the
Byelorussian SSR and independent Lithuania (from 1940 this was known as the
Lithuanian SSR). This division was not internationally accepted. The
Polish government-in-exile nominated
Zygmunt Fedorowicz in 1942 as its representative for Wilno region. He was arrested by the
NKVD in 1944. Currently the former territory of Wilno Voivodeship is divided between the
Vilnius and
Utena counties in
Lithuania and the
Grodno,
Minsk and
Vitebsk Regions of Belarus. ==Location==