Lietuvos nacionalinio muziejaus archeologams ant Gedimino kalno Vilniuje kol kas nepavyko rasti vieno 1863–1864 metų sukilimo dalyvių palaikų. Be to, laukiama Baltarusijos sprendimo, kad būtų galima patvirtinti Kosto Kalinausko tapatybę.
Konstantinas Kalinauskas EN
11 articles
A Lithuanian government commission has decided that the remains of participants of the 1863-1864 uprising against Tsarist Russia should be buried in Vilnius' old Rasos Cemetery next year.
Lithuanian researchers want to conduct genetic analyses to identify the remains of Konstantinas Kalinauskas (Konstanty Kalinowski), one of the leaders of the 1863 uprising against Tsarist Russia, among the remains of 17 people found on Vilnius' Gediminas Hill.
Sostinės Gedimino kalne rastus 1863 metų sukilimo prieš carinę Rusiją vadų palaikus tyrinėjantys mokslininkai siekia genetiniais tyrimais išsiaiškinti, kurie iš palaikų priklauso Konstantinui Kalinauskui.
Anthropologists will unveil on Thursday the latest findings of their research of human remains found on the Gediminas Hill in downtown Vilnius.
Specialists on Saturday decided to close the Gediminas Hill in downtown Vilnius to visitors after a landslide on its eastern slope.
Researchers expect to confirm after genetic testing that the remains of Žigmantas Sierakauskas (Zygmunt Sierakowski) and Konstantinas Kalinauskas (Konstanty Kalinowski), the leaders of the 1863 uprising against Tsarist Russia, are among those found on the Gediminas Hill in downtown Vilnius, but say ...
After a call from the Lithuanian National Museum to take additional security measures at the foot of the Gediminas Hill, the Vilnius municipality on Saturday imposed restrictions on pedestrian and bicycle traffic at the southeastern slope of the hill.
Archeologists are believed to have found the remains of the two most famous leaders of the 1863 uprising against Tsarist Russia -- Zigmantas Sierakauskas (Zygmunt Sierakowski) and Konstantinas Kalinauskas (Konstanty Kalinowski) -- on the top of the Gediminas Hill in downtown Vilnius.
Lithuanian archeologists discovered remains of four persons on the top of the Gediminas Hill in downtown Vilnius, guessing they could be the bodies of the participants of the 1863-1864 uprising.