Paulava Republic (, ) was a farmer community and a micro-state in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth with its own parliament, army, and laws.
Located around the MerkinàManor (also Pavlovo Manor) in present-day à  alÃÂininkai District Municipality, Lithuania, it covered an area of and had about 800 residents.
Paulava Republic was a small self-governing farmer community founded in 1769 by the Catholic priest Paweà  Ksawery Brzostowski. The republic ceased to exist in 1795 when, due to the Third Partition of the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth, Brzostowski exchanged the manor with Fryderyk Józef Moszyà Âski for properties in Saxony and Dresden.
Moszyà Âski in turn sold the manor to Count de Choiseul-Gouffier in 1799. The new owners tolerated some of the freedoms until Brzostowski's death in 1827. The last freedoms were lost when farmers joined the failed November Uprising in 1830.
The community was governed by Paweà  Ksawery Brzostowski, who declared himself President, and Seimas (parliament), which was formed from the local peasants. The republic had its own constitution which was created before the Constitution of 3 May 1791.
The state was recognized by the Grand Duke and King Stanisà Âaw August Poniatowski himself. The Great Sejm (1788âÂÂ1792) also recognized the republic and approved its statute.
Brzostowski implemented various progressive policies â abolished serfdom and granted personal freedoms to the peasants, replaced corvée with a land tax paid in cash, established a school and a pharmacy, encouraged more profitable agricultural activities, e.g. fruit tree gardens and animal husbandry. Brzostowski's revenue from the manor more than doubled.