Last modified: 2023-06-03 by zachary harden
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image by Virginijus Misiunas, 29 November 2009
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The flag and coat of arms of Bubiai were drawn according to
pictures, which was taken from booklet: "DISTRICT OF
SIAULIAI AND ITS CONTEMPORARY HERALDRY" [LaL02]. Here is information from this
booklet:
"Bubiai - In 1566 Bubiai was named as a settlement, although
archeological findings prove that it dates back to the 5-6 th
centuries. Dubysa (Dobitzen) castle, burned down in 1348 and 1358
by the Knights of the Sword, stood on Bubiai mound on the left
bank of the river Dubysa. Spearheads and arrowheads, knives,
keys, charred grains are among the findings of the 11 -14 th
century.
The sound produced by wood-grouses may have association with the
name of the settlement. Another version is that bogy men used to
live in the woods nearby.
In 1783 there were 13 households of 50 people. In 1825 building
works of the Dubysa-Venta cannal, which had to link the rivers
with the Baltic Sea, were started, however, were not completed by
1831.
Count Zubovas had a manor house there from the 18th to the
beginning of the 20th century. In 1899 a primary school was
founded, which later developed into a basic school. Dmitrijus
Zubovas was mainly engaged in cattle breeding, so in 1910 he
founded a 3 year agricultural school of cattle breeding and dairy
production which functioned until 1915. The Lithuanian language
was an oficial language of instruction in both schools. The
constructions of the farmstead have remained to the present days.
During the decades of Independence the number of the population
in Bubiai rose, a brick-yard, a saw-mill, a dairy, a school, a
post office and other institutions started working.
May Day festivals organised in Bubiai at the end of the 19th
century were part of the national revival movement, which led to
the national autonomy and independence.
Bubiai is situated 14 km south west from Siauliai. The number of
the population has increased from 259 in 1923 to 932 in 2002.
Since 1995 Bubiai has developed into the centre of the rural
municipality, which includes Bazilionai, Kurtuvenai and 110
villages with 3.900 inhabitants.
Bubiai is famous for Girnikai and Bubiai mounds, legends about
which are passed from generation to generation, and the beautiful
surrounding landscape. The church built in 1792 in Kurtuvenai and
some constructions of the manor are among the places of interest
and attraction. In 1998 one construction of the manor was
restored and presently houses the administration of the
Kurtuvenai Regional Park. Since 2001 International Outdoor
Theatre Festivals are being organised in Kurtuvenai.
Bubiai has never had its coat of arms. The Heraldry Commission
with the approval of the local community designed the coat of
arms for Bubiai: a black wood-grouse with a red head on a field
of gold (design by Rolandas Rimkunas). The Bubiai coat of arms
was confirmed by the President of the Republic of Lithuania on
March 23, 2000."
Anon., 24 June 2003
Bubiai village is in Siauliai district, Siauliai county,
Lithuania. It has a population of 878 and is a center of Bubiai
Eldership, which has 3937 inhabitants.
Bubiai "Dubysa castle, the strongest one in iauliai
region, stood in the 14th century on Bubiai mound. In the 19th
century, Bubiai manor belonged to the family of count Zubovas.
Preserved are the manor's sawmill, distillery, and the first
silo. The landlords educational activity goes back to the
elementary school founded in 1899 in Bubiai. In 1903, The Great
iauliai Maying was organised in Bubiai, which turned into
one of the first meetings of Lithuanian intellectuals involving
the considerations about the fate of Lithuanian nation. The
commemoration of struggles, which took place in Bubiai
surroundings, is embodied in the Cemeteries of Soldiers from the
1st and the 2nd World Wars and the Monument to the Resistance.
Source: :<www.kurtuva.lt>.
Valentin Poposki, 17 June 2007
Bubiai - On a golden field a black wood-grouse with red brow.
Flag proportions 10:11, free edges bordered with narrow red
stripe, finial is a golden knob. The charge reflects both
wood-grouses living in nearby woods and the local folk tale
originating the name of town from sounds of wood-grouses.
Virginijus Misiunas, 29 November 2009