Upytàis a small village in PanevÃÂà ¾ys district municipality in northern Lithuania. It is situated some 12 km southwest of PanevÃÂà ¾ys on the banks of Veà ¡eta Creek. It is now the capital of an elderate. In 1987 it had 580 residents. In the Lithuanian language, Upytàis a diminutive form of the word upÃÂ, which means river.
In 2004 Upytàcelebrated its 750th anniversary by holding a conference UpytàLand: History and Culture. Upytàlinen museum is located in Stultià ¡kiai.
The name Upytàwas first mentioned in 1254 in a Livonian chronicle dealing with the divisions of the Upmala region. Upytàhad a wooden castle built on an island which later became a hillfort when Lake Veà ¡eta was drained. The castle was an important northern defence post against numerous incursions of the Livonian Order. Between 1353 and 1379 alone, it repelled ten such attacks. The castle was further expanded and fortified in the 15th century, when it served as the seat of the Starost of UpytÃÂ. It is believed that the abandoned castle collapsed in the 17th century after the seat of the starost was moved to PanevÃÂà ¾ys. The remnants of the castle survived into the 18th century.
Upytàwas a capital of the Upytàregion () in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The area was later made into an eldership, part of the Principality of Trakai. A document from 1556 states that PanevÃÂà ¾ys, along with 57 other towns and 359 villages was part of this eldership. In the 16th century, Upytàbegan to lose its prominence when the defensive castle became obsolete, and Krekenava became the capital of the UpytàEldership in 1548. At that time, PanevÃÂà ¾ys grew to become a center of economic importance and Upytàbecame eclipsed by this rival. Nevertheless, Upytàis one of the longest surviving regional capitals from earlier times.
The elders of Upytàincluded Konstanty Ostrogski, Stanislovas Goà ¡tautas, Michaà  Kazimierz Radziwià Âà  and Janusz Radziwià Âà Â. In 1652, one of its elders, a delegate to Warsaw Sejm, Wà Âadysà Âaw Sicià Âski (Polish name, in Lithuanian known as ÃÂiÃÂinskas), allegedly bribed by Janusz Radziwià Âà Â, was the first person to execute his Liberum veto rights in order to disrupt Sejm convention. The Liberum veto was believed to be one of the factors leading to the collapse of Polish-Lithuanian democracy, and eventually to the partition of the commonwealth by foreign powers.
According to a local legend the evil master ÃÂiÃÂinskas was struck by thunder god Perkà «nas for all his sins, and his estate sank in a sinkhole located near the Upytàhillfort, called now the "Hill of ÃÂiÃÂinskas". The legend has it that his dead body appeared since and haunted the Russians in the neighbourhood. Eventually, Mikhail Muravyov the Hanger ordered it to be exhumed and buried under the floor of the church in 1865. According to the legend this led to Muravyov's death soon after. The legend was reproduced by poets Adam Mickiewicz in his ballad The Stay in Upita and Maironis in his poem ÃÂiÃÂinskas. It was also mentioned by a number of other Lithuanian and Polish authors.
In 1938 archeologists excavated a graveyard near UpytÃÂ, dating from the 3-5th centuries, containing 51 graves of women, men, and children. The graves provided a number of findings: men's graves had iron tools and guns (bridles, axes, knives, etc.) and women's had bronze jewellery (bracelets, pins, pendants, beads, etc.)