Leonas Bistras

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Leonas Bistras
10th Prime Minister of Lithuania
In office
25 September 1925  31 May 1926
PresidentAleksandras Stulginskis
Preceded byVytautas Petrulis
Succeeded byMykolas Sleževičius
Minister of Education
In office
18 June 1923  4 February 1924
Prime MinisterAntanas Tumėnas
Preceded byPetras Juodakis
Succeeded byKazys Jokantas
In office
17 December 1926  3 May 1927
Prime MinisterAugustinas Voldemaras
Preceded byVincas Čepinskis
Succeeded byKonstantinas Šakenis
In office
28 March 1939  21 November 1939
Prime MinisterJonas Černius
Preceded byJuozas Tonkūnas
Succeeded byKazimieras Jokantas
Minister of Defence
In office
25 September 1925  31 May 1926
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byTeodoras Daukantas
Succeeded byJuozas Papečkis
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
21 April 1925  31 May 1926
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byMečislovas Reinys
Succeeded byMykolas Sleževičius
Personal details
Born(1890-10-20)20 October 1890
Died17 October 1971(1971-10-17) (aged 80)
Resting placePetrašiūnai Cemetery
PartyLithuanian Christian Democratic Party
Alma materUniversity of Freiburg

Leonas Bistras (20 October 1890 in Liepāja – 17 October 1971 in Kaunas) was one of the most prominent Lithuanian politicians of the interwar period. A Christian Democrat, he was appointed as Prime Minister of Lithuania in 1925. Bistras also headed the ministries of education, defense, and foreign affairs in several different governments throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and twice served as the speaker of the Lithuanian parliament, the Seimas. After the 1926 Lithuanian coup d'état and the subsequent fall of parliamentary democracy, Bistras led the Christian Democrats and, despite persecution, acted as an outspoken leader of the opposition to the authoritarian President Antanas Smetona.

After the Soviet occupation and annexation of Lithuania, Bistras was arrested, sentenced without a trial and deported from Lithuania. He only permanently returned after the death of Josef Stalin. Bistras lived the remaining years of his life in obscurity and poverty, supported only by the local people of Kaunas.

Bistras was born in 1890 to a working-class family in Liepāja, Courland Governorate of the Russian Empire (now in Latvia), where his father had emigrated. He graduated from the Liepāja Gymnasium in 1911.[1]

Bistras attempted to study medicine at the University of Geneva, switching to philosophy at the University of Freiburg a year later. He then returned to studying medicine in Dorpat (now Tartu), but was unable to finish due to the complex international environment leading up to World War I. When the war started, Bistras was conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army and served in Russia until the Bolshevik Revolution, initially as a private and later as a medic.[1][2] After the war, Bistras returned to Lithuania and helped to establish the Kaunas municipality, and worked for the press office in Lithuania and Switzerland.[3]

Bistras graduated from the University of Freiburg in 1921 with a PhD in philosophy. Between 1922 and 1940, he taught at the Faculty of Theology and Philosophy at Kaunas University. Throughout his life, Bistras did not publish a single article (other than his doctoral thesis), but was proud of his doctoral degree, signing his name "Dr. Leonas Bistras" throughout his political career.[4]

Political career

Later life and death

References

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