The article discusses the peculiarities of daily time management of people living in medium-sized Lithuanian towns. The prevailing concepts of everyday life are examined, focusing on the meanings of everyday life and time that emerge from the emic perspective of the respondents. Aspects of respondents’ daily routine rhythm, coordination of social time and planning of agendas are revealed. It shows how a resident of an average Lithuanian town organises their time in everyday life. The article analyses the data of the field survey conducted in the towns of Josvainiai and Ramygala from January 2020 to October 2020.
In the late eighteenth century, the distance between the changing norms and values and the unchanging material conditions of priests’ everyday lives grew rapidly. The aim of this article is to explore and understand the life and work of the bishop of Livonia, Józef Kazimierz Kossakowski. He was the author of Ksiądz pleban [The Parson], one of the most acknowledged parenetic books promoting new social obligations of priests, however his actions were far from the ideals he promoted. His case is especially interesting because he also wrote a diary describing his life from the childhood to becoming a bishop.