Vilnius

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Introducing Vilnius

Bizarre, beautiful and bewitching, Lithuania's capital seduces visitors with its astonishing Old Town charm. Its chocolate-box baroque skyline littered with the spires of Orthodox and Catholic churches are intoxicating, decadent and fragile - so much so that Unesco has declared this, Europe's largest baroque old town, a World Heritage site. But there's more to this devilishly attractive capital than meets the eye. There is an underlying oddness that creates its soul.

Where else could there be the world's only statue of psychedelic musician and composer Frank Zappa? Or a self-proclaimed, unofficial, independent republic inhabited by artists and dreaming bohemians? Where else is there the spirit of freedom and resistance that existed during Soviet occupation? There are reminders of loss and pain everywhere, from the horror of the KGB's torture cells to the ghetto in the centre of all this beauty where the Jewish community lived before their mass wartime slaughter.

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People gathering in front of Vilnius Cathedral and the belfry in old town Vilnius on a bright sunny day with puffy white clouds.
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People gathering in front of Vilnius Cathedral and the belfry in old town Vilnius on a bright sunny day with puffy white clouds.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Brent Winebrenner
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Statue of three muses created by sculptor S. Kuzma standing outside the National Drama Theatre on Gedimino prospektas, old town Vilnius.
  • Woman in the rain under an umbrella visiting the black granite tomb of Polish military general and hero, Jozef Pilsudski, buried in Rasu Cemetery.
  • Interior of All Saints Church.
  • Lithuanian pastries.
  • Kiosk selling Lithuanian baked goods.
  • Portrait of three young local girls in their traditional dress.
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