The National Council of Lithuania Minor () was a council of Prussian Lithuanians established on 16 November 1918 and active until 1924. Citing the right of self-determination, the council supported the unification of Lithuania Minor (then part of East Prussia) with Lithuania Proper.
The National Council took symbolic measures to show its support for the unification â it adopted the Act of Tilsit on 30 November 1918 and four of its members were coopted into the Council of Lithuania on 20 March 1920. Members of the National Council lobbied at the Paris Peace Conference and the Conference of Ambassadors for the unification with Lithuania, and joined the Supreme Committee for the Salvation of Lithuania Minor which facilitated the KlaipÃÂda Revolt in January 1923. The National Council became inactive after KlaipÃÂda Region was incorporated as an autonomous region of Lithuania.
East Prussia (part of the German Empire) had a large Lithuanian-speaking population of Prussian Lithuanians. Lithuania declared independence on 16 February 1918. As Germany surrendered in World War I and became engulfed in a revolution, several Prussian Lithuanians, including Martynas Jankus, Erdmonas Simonaitis, and , organized a committee of activists. On 16 November 1918, they published 100,000 copies of a Lithuanian and German proclamation in the Gothic script (Lithuanians! Wake up! Listen! Look!) in Tilsit. It declared that Lithuanians and Prussian Lithuanians were one nation and thus should unite. The proclamation was also published in LietuwiÃÂka Ceitunga and Konservatyvà ³ draugystÃÂs laià ¡kas.
On 16 November 1918, the activists' committee convened a conference of representatives of Prussian Lithuanians in Tilsit. The conference established the National Council of Prussian Lithuanian which was quickly renamed to the National Council of Lithuania Minor. Initially, the council had 15 members. While they were not elected, an attempt was made to represent different districts of East Prussia. The conference elected three-member presidium: chairman Vilius Gaigalaitis, Erdmonas Simonaitis, and . Gaigalaitis did not attend the meeting but agreed to become chairman on the telephone. Ten days later, due to political backlash, he refused chairman's position via an article published in the daily German newspaper '. It was decided not to elect a new chairman and the National Council was led by its presidium. However, a few weeks later, Gaigalaitis became chairman of the National Council, but he faced pressure from the German police and fled to Kaunas, the temporary capital of Lithuania, in July 1919.
Later, the council grew to 53 members. Other members included , Martynas Jankus, Vidà «nas, Kristupas Lekà ¡as, and .
To promote the unification, the National Council organized local clubs in Tilsit, KlaipÃÂda, and Insterburg. Its members also published pro-Lithuanian newspapers â daily ' in Lithuanian and Litauische Warte in German. The National Council received some financial support from Lithuania, but its main revenue was from consular services issuing visas to Lithuania.
on 30 November 1918, the council adopted the Act of Tilsit that called for the unification of Lithuania Minor and Lithuania Proper into a single independent Lithuanian state. It was signed by 24 members of the council. The act was not published in either Lithuanian or Prussian press and was virtually unknown in interwar Lithuania. It gain political relevance after World War II and became to symbolize Lithuanian claims to Lithuania Minor.
Opportunistic Jurgis Aukà ¡tuolaitis attempted to act in the name of the National Council and titled himself as its chairman. In January 1919, together with Vanagaitis, he personally delivered a protest letter in the name of the National Council to a French captain in Danzig. It was much more anti-German than the Act of Tilsit. The captain received five copies of the text which he was to send to the governments of the United States, United Kingdom, France, Italy as well as the Danish daily '. The letter was published in the Danish press and from there in the German press.
The National Council lobbied for the unification with Lithuania Proper. On 8 April 1919, the council delivered a memorandum to Georges Clemenceau, chairman of the Paris Peace Conference, which demanded that Prussian Lithuanian-inhabited districts were attached to Lithuania. These districts reached Labiau (Polessk), Insterburg (Chernyakhovsk), Gumbinnen (Gusev), Darkehmen (Ozyorsk), and Goà Âdap. The territory measured about and had a population of about 500,000. However, the Treaty of Versailles, signed on 28 June 1919, detached only the KlaipÃÂda Region north of the Neman River but placed it as a mandate of the League of Nations administered by the French.
On 10 February 1920, the Council of Lithuania sent Jokà «bas à  ernas to the National Council of Lithuania Minor in KlaipÃÂda. The official handover of the KlaipÃÂda Region to the French administration under General took place on 15 February 1920. The following day, à  ernas brought three representatives of Prussian Lithuanians to Kaunas for the official celebration of the 2nd anniversary of the Act of Independence of Lithuania. However, the representatives hesitated joining the Council of Lithuania as they wanted assurances of religious freedom. à  ernas and Petras Klimas then travelled to KlaipÃÂda to negotiate with the National Council.
On 21 February 1920, the National Council adopted a resolution which demanded that Lithuania take over administration of region's infrastructure (import duty posts, region's railway, postal service, telephone and telegraph) as well as to allow Lithuania free access to the port of KlaipÃÂda and the Neman River. As a result of these efforts, four members of the National Council (Vilius Gaigalaitis, Martynas Jankus, Kristupas Lekà ¡as, Jurgis StrÃÂkis) were coopted to the Council of Lithuania on 20 March 1920. The day was solemnly celebrated as a symbolic unification of Lithuania Minor with Lithuania. However, it was largely a symbolic gesture as the Council of Lithuania convened only once before it was replaced by the Constituent Assembly of Lithuania in May 1920.
After Versailles, the National Council moved from Tilsit (which remained in East Prussia) to KlaipÃÂda and continued to advocate for the unification of the KlaipÃÂda Region with Lithuania.
Two members of the National Council, Erdmonas Simonaitis and Mikelis Reidys, were co-opted to the Directorate of the KlaipÃÂda Region on 12 March 1920. Odry resigned on 1 May 1921, leaving Gabriel Jean Petisné the highest-ranking official in the region. He appointed a new Directorate, presided by the pro-German Prussian Lithuanian . Petisné and the Directorate generally held anti-Lithuanian attitudes and supported turning the region into a free city, similar to the Free City of Danzig. In February 1922, Simonaitis resigned in protest of such policies.
On 3âÂÂ4 November 1922, representatives of the National Council â including Vilius Gaigalaitis, Erdmonas Simonaitis, , and Jonas Labrencas â presented the Lithuanian case to the Conference of Ambassadors. They argued that the KlaipÃÂda Region should become an autonomous region of Lithuania. They were opposed by German representatives who argued that the region should remain a protectorate and that the port should be internationalized. Lithuanians felt that the diplomatic decisions would not be in their favor and this became the impetus for Lithuania to organize the KlaipÃÂda Revolt and take KlaipÃÂda Region by force.
In late 1922, Lithuanian activists were sent to various towns and villages to deliver patriotic speeches and organize a number of pro-Lithuanian Committees for the Salvation of Lithuania Minor. On 18 December 1922, the Supreme Committee for the Salvation of Lithuania Minor (SCSLM), made up of the members of the National Council and chaired by Martynas Jankus, was established in KlaipÃÂda to unite all these committees. It was to lead the revolt and later organize a pro-Lithuanian regime in the region.
The revolt was successful. The KlaipÃÂda Convention was signed in May 1924 and KlaipÃÂda Region became an autonomous region of Lithuania. Since the National Council achieved its desired results, it ceased activities in 1924.