Povilas Matulionis
Povilas Matulionis | |
|---|---|
Matulionis in Lithuania Album (1921) | |
| Born | 17 September 1860 |
| Died | 15 March 1932 (aged 71) Aleksandrija, Lithuania |
| Alma mater | Saint Petersburg Forestry Institute |
| Occupations | Forester, professor |
| Board member of | Lithuanian Mutual Aid Society of Vilnius |
| Awards | Order of the Three Stars Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas |
Povilas Matulionis (17 September 1860 – 15 March 1932) was a Lithuanian forester, often named as the "father" of scientific forestry in Lithuania. He was an activist of the Lithuanian National Revival and vice minister of agriculture and state resources from July 1919 to January 1924.
Educated at the Forestry Institute in Saint Petersburg, Matulionis worked for the Foresters' Corps of the Russian Empire from 1889 to 1918. He lived in Vilnius in 1894–1907 which allowed him to join Lithuanian cultural life and became a member of the Twelve Apostles of Vilnius and later the Lithuanian Mutual Aid Society of Vilnius. He directed the first Lithuanian theater performances in the city and organized the first legal five-year co-ed Lithuanian school.
When Lithuania regained independence, Matulionis led the country's Forestry Department (1918–1921) and was vice minister of agriculture and state resources (1919–1924). In March–April 1919, he was effectively the minister as no minister was selected in the short-lived government of the prime minister Pranas Dovydaitis. In 1921, Matulionis started teaching forestry at the agricultural technical school in Dotnuva. He officially became professor and director of the Forestry Department of University of Lithuania in January 1923. Agricultural and forestry subjects were transferred to the dedicated Agriculture Academy in Dotnuva (present-day Vytautas Magnus University Agriculture Academy). Matulionis was the first rector of the Agriculture Academy (1924–1928). The forestry section of the academy was closed and Matulionis retired in December 1928.
Matulionis published more than 150 works, which included a number of articles and books on forestry, a dictionary of about 3,000 Lithuanian plant names, and a color poster with a calendar indicating the breeding seasons of various fish species. He compiled a topographic map of Lithuania and made a plaster model of the topography of Lithuania and Latvia in 1922. He also co-authored the first Lithuanian math textbook in 1885 and published a poetry collection in 1888.