Zalavas (, ) is a small village in à  venÃÂionys district municipality, Lithuania. It is located on the Mera River near the Lithuanian state border with Belarus. According to the Lithuanian census of 2011, it had 140 residents. It is the birthplace of Marshal Józef Pià Âsudski, who later became Chief of State of Poland.
In 1920âÂÂ1922 the village was located in the Republic of Central Lithuania, and then in Poland until 1939.
The village's earliest known name is Micià «nai. At some later point, the name was changed to Zalavas (). The village was first mentioned in the late 17th century as the private property of Aleksander Wojna-Jasieniecki, a Castellan of Navahrudak. It then passed to the GiedraiÃÂiai princely family, and in the 18th century, the village was bought by the Rurikid Ogià Âski family, one of the notable magnate clans of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
In the early 19th century the village was inherited by the Michaà Âowskis. As part of the dowry of Helena Michaà Âowska, it passed to her husband, Antoni Billewicz, who then bequeathed it to their daughter, Maria Billewiczówna. In 1863, after marrying Józef Wincenty Pià Âsudski, the village became the property of the Pià Âsudski family. It was in the manor house located near the village, called Zuà Âów, that both their sons were born, Bronisà Âaw Pià Âsudski, on November 2, 1866, and Józef Pià Âsudski, on December 5, 1867.
In July 1874, the local manor burned down and the family moved to Vilnius. Soon afterward the family was forced to sell most of their property in Lithuania including Zalavas and nineteen other villages, to pay for legal expenses and fines for Bronisà Âaw, who was involved in an assassination attempt on the life of Tsar Alexander III of Russia. In 1882 the village was bought by Michaà  Ogià Âski, an heir to the Ogià Âski family who had owned it in the 18th century. However, as the policies of Russification of former lands in the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth forbade Poles to purchase any real estate, he was forced to sell it to a Russian merchant from Riga named Klim. The latter sold the village to a certain imperial officer named Kuronosov, who divided the property, sold most of the forests, and was forced to abandon the area in 1915, during World War I.
The Germans occupied the area in 1916, and most of the remaining forests were cut down.
In 1920 following the PolishâÂÂLithuanian War, the area became part of the Republic of Central Lithuania. In 1922, after a disputed election, Central Lithuania was annexed by the Second Polish Republic, and Zalavas was incorporated into the Wilno Voivodeship. Since the former Pià Âsudski's property had belonged to a Russian official who abandoned it, it was nationalized, and limited to the core of 65 hectares, and attached to a military base located nearby. In 1934 an association of veterans of the PolishâÂÂSoviet War purchased it from the army and a committee was created whose aim was to rebuild the manor of Marshal Pià Âsudski, who by then was regarded by many Poles as the country's national hero. The manor was reconstructed, and officially opened to the public as a museum on October 10, 1937. However, it was destroyed by the Soviets shortly after the Invasion of Poland in 1939. An oak and a memorial stone still mark the location of the former manor.
According to the SovietâÂÂLithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty of 1939, Zalavas was returned to Lithuania.