Antanas Kriščiukaitis

Antanas Kriščiukaitis
Official portrait, 1931
Chairman of the Supreme Tribunal of Lithuania
In office
10 December 1918  30 October 1933
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byLiudas Ciplijauskas
Personal details
Born(1864-07-24)24 July 1864
Paežeriai, Suwałki Governorate, Congress Poland
Died30 October 1933(1933-10-30) (aged 69)
Kaunas, Lithuania
Resting placePetrašiūnai Cemetery
NationalityLithuanian
Alma materUniversity of Moscow
OccupationJudge, university professor, writer
AwardsOrder of Vytautas the Great (1931)
Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas
Pen nameAišbė
Member ofSociety of Lithuanian Jurists

Antanas Kriščiukaitis, also known by the pen name Aišbė (24 July 1864 - 30 October 1933) was a Lithuanian writer and judge who served as the chairman of the Supreme Tribunal of Lithuania from 1918 until his death in 1933. A Lithuanian Society of Jurists member, Kriščiukaitis greatly influenced the development and modernisation of Lithuanian law.

Kriščiukaitis was born in Suvalkija to a family of well-off Lithuanian farmers. Already as a student at the Marijampolė Gymnasium, he started contributing articles to the Lithuanian press. He studied law at the University of Moscow and joined a secret society of Lithuanian students, chaired by Petras Leonas. After his graduation in 1890, he worked as interrogator and judge in Moscow, Mitau (Jelgava), Tikhvin and Novgorod raising to the rank of State Councillor. He returned to Lithuania in 1918 and became chairman of the Lithuanian Tribunal. He became a professor of criminal law at the newly established University of Lithuania in 1922 and advisor to the State Council of Lithuania in 1929. He edited various legal texts, working to create new Lithuanian legal terms and standardize terminology. He received the Order of Vytautas the Great (1st class), the highest state award in Lithuania, in 1931. Kriščiukaitis died suddenly in 1933.

As a writer, Kriščiukaitis is known for his short stories that moved away from didacticism (which was prevalent in contemporary Lithuanian literature) to literary realism as well as satires and feuilletons. He published his works, articles, and translated texts in various Lithuanian periodicals, including Aušra and Varpas.