Berà ¼niki (; , ) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sejny, within Sejny County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Lithuania.
Berà ¼niki's name originates from the Sudovian language.
In 1524, the Berà ¼niki manor founded by , the deputy of the Przeà Âom forest, is mentioned. Berà ¼niki was built in 1547âÂÂ57 by order of Queen of Poland Bona Sforza. Berà ¼niki was granted town rights by Queen Bona Sforza in 1551. The town had 70 houses in 1560. At that time, Pac built the first church. A distillery, a mill, and a brickyard operated near the manor.
After the Deluge in the mid-17th century, Jews, Masovians, and Old Believer Russians began living in Berà ¼niki alongside the native Lithuanians. Until 1795, Berà ¼niki belonged to the Trakai Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania within the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth.
In 1795, as a result of the Third Partition of Poland, the village became part of the New East Prussia of the Kingdom of Prussia. In 1797, there were 69 houses in the village. Berà ¼niki was part of the Polish Duchy of Warsaw from 1807 to 1815, and then part of the Russian-ruled Congress Poland. Berà ¼niki lost its town rights after 1810. From 1837, Berà ¼niki was in the Augustów, later Suwaà Âki Governorates. lived in Berà ¼niki in 1856âÂÂ64.
On 25 June 1863, the rebel squads of Feliks Koà Âyszko, V. Hlaska and L. ÃÂempinskis clashed with the Imperial Russian Army near Berà ¼niki.
Until the early 20th century, most of the parishioners (about 6,000 people) were Lithuanian, but due to the influence of the manors, the church and the Polish schools, the population began to be rapidly Polonized.
In 1904, at the request of the Lithuanians, services were held in the church in Lithuanian and Polish, but the Lithuanians were forcefully expelled from the church by Poles and Polonized Lithuanians, leading to 18 injured people. After these events, the church was closed for 3 years.
On September 22, 1920, a major battle between the Lithuanian and Polish armies took place here. The Lithuanians were forced to retreat by the much larger Polish forces, but the further Polish attack was stopped. In Berà ¼niki and its surroundings, there are quite a few cemeteries and graves of Polish and Lithuanian soldiers, the latter being looked after by local Lithuanians.
According to the 1921 Polish census, there were 373 inhabitants in Berà ¼niki, exclusively Polish by nationality and Roman Catholic by confession.
During the German occupation (World War II), the Germans arrested the local Polish parish priest Józef à Âledzià Âski in April 1940 and then imprisoned him in Suwaà Âki and the Soldau and Sachsenhausen concentration camps. He died after being beaten by the Germans in Sachsenhausen in August 1940 (see Nazi crimes against the Polish nation). Works of art and vital records were looted by the Germans from the local church and taken to Königsberg.
In 1988 and 1989, Lithuanian linguists organized expeditions to Berà ¼niki.