à  alÃÂininkai (; ; Solechnik; ) is a city in Vilnius County, in south-eastern Lithuania, situated south-east of Vilnius, near the border with Belarus.
The name of the city derives from à  alÃÂia river, à ¡alta meaning cold in Lithuanian.
In the medieval period the region around à  alÃÂininkai was dominated by Lithuanians and it was the birthplace of many authors of the earliest Lithuanian-language texts (including Stanislovas Rapalionis, Jurgis Zablockis and ). In 1420, Lithuanian-speaking Nicholas of à  alÃÂininkai was born in à  alÃÂininkai and in 1453âÂÂ1467 he served as the Bishop of Vilnius, the capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
In the late 19th century many of the local inhabitants mixed with the neighbouring Belarusians and called themselves tutejszy ("the locals"), while staying Catholics, they didn't assign themselves to a single ethnic group.
The region is known for its uncodified Belarusian vernacular (also known as 'po prostu', meaning 'simply' or 'plainly') and the city itself is considered the provincial centre of Polish culture in Lithuania (the urban centre being Vilnius).
à  alÃÂininkai attained the town status in 1956 and is now a capital of the à  alÃÂininkai district municipality.
According to the latest census of 2021, à  alÃÂininkai had 6857 inhabitants and features a multi-ethnic population of 4930 Poles (71.9%), 920 Lithuanians (15.7%), 438 Russians (6.4%), 286 Belarusians (4.2%), 61 Ukrainians (0,9%) and 222 people of other background (3.2%). 12.2% of all inhabitants in à  alÃÂininkai district municipality, according to the 2021 census were born abroad, while 87.8% were born in Lithuania. This was a decrease from 14.3%, recorded by the previous â 2011 census. Out of 34.5 thousand inhabitants in 2011, 3711 or 10.7% of all the inhabitants were born in Belarus, 728 or 2.1% in Russia.
In 2000 coat of arms of à  alÃÂininkai was adopted by a decree of the President of the Republic of Lithuania, designed by Arvydas Kaà ¾dailis, coat of arms consists of three hazelnuts symbolizing solidarity.
à  alÃÂininkai is twinned with: