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Visit the Lonely Planet website for travel to Lithuania information
Visit the Lonely Planet website for travel to Lithuania information
Hostels in Vilnius
Vilnius Old Town Hostel
Excellent location, 100 meters from the heart of the Old Town. Internet access, parking, Vilnius maps, Coffee and tea are for free.
VB Sleep Inn
VB Sleep Inn is a 24-bed hostel on a cobbled lane in the heart of mediaeval Vilnius.
Filaretai Youth Hostel
Filaretai Youth Hostel - Your home away from home! Great location in the leafy outskirts of the Old Town...
Paupio Namai
Paupio Namai is established within the Old Town. It's near St.Annes church and river Vilnele.
JNN Hostel
This hostel is close to the city center where you where you can enjoy total comfort at a low price...
regional info

Vilnius was first mentioned as the capital of Lithuania in 1323, in the letters of the Grand Duke Gediminas to the Roman Pope. An old legend tells us that Grand Duke Gediminas got tired after hunting fell asleep and had a dream. The Iron Wolf was standing on the hilland howling loudly. In the morning Gediminas asked the senior pagan priest what the dream meant. The priest said: "You will build a city at the place where the wolf was howling and the fame of the city will spread as the howling of the wolf. So this was the beginning of Vilnius. But archaeologists say that people were living here as early as the 5th century. Gediminas, the first famous Vilnius ruler, invited craftsmen and educated people from all over Europe to come and enjoy the city and to stay here. Vilnius became one of the largest trade, industrial and cultural centres of Europe in the 16th century. Throughout the ages it used to be one of the major Polish townships.
In 1579, Vilnius witnessed the foundation of its university which became the first higher school of thought in the Grand Principality of Lithuania and the whole region. Vilnius developed into a centre of European culture and opened itself to the nations of the East and West. Initially, it was the home of Polish, Jewish and Karaime communities. The houses, squares and churches of Vilnius sustain the spirit of a once-powerful state and its rulers. Though invaded, destroyed and burnt down many times, the town would always recover. Before World War II, over 90% of the population was Polish and Jewish. Today it is about 25% only, but the remains of the old Vilnius culture are still visible thoughout the town. The historical centre of Vilnius, its 360-hectare old city, is among the largest in Eastern Europe. In 1994, the old city, one of the largest ones in Europe, was included on the UNESCO list of World Heritage Cities. The city is definitely worth a longer visit.
Please add to this at:http://www.world66.com/europe/lithuania/vilnius
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