Smalininkai
Smalininkai | |
---|---|
City | |
Piers on the Nemunas River in Smalininkai | |
Nickname(s): Smolnis | |
Smalininkai Location of Smalininkai | |
Coordinates: 55°5′0″N 22°34′0″E / 55.08333°N 22.56667°ECoordinates: 55°5′0″N 22°34′0″E / 55.08333°N 22.56667°E | |
Country | Lithuania |
Ethnographic region | Lithuania Minor |
County | Tauragė County |
Municipality | Jurbarkas district municipality |
Eldership | Smalininkai eldership |
Capital of | Smalininkai eldership |
First mentioned | 15th century |
Granted city rights | 1945 |
Population (2007) | |
• Total | 621 |
Time zone | EET (UTC+2) |
• Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) |
Smalininkai ( pronunciation ) is a small city in Lithuania. It is situated in the former samogitian part of Memelland on the right-hand shore of the Neman River, 12 km (7.5 mi) west from Jurbarkas. It was part of German East Prussia and was called Schmalleningken. Between 1923 - 1939 and since the World War II it is part of Lithuania.
Name
The name describes a place of tar and pitch burners ("smala": tar, pitch; -ingken: village).
History
Since 1422 (Treaty of Melno) Schmalleningken was a border-village at the Lithuanian-German customs frontier. 1792 it was appointed to a market town. 1845 the village became a parish and 1878 a church was built. 1902 a light railway was built from Pogegen to Schmalleningken. The village had in 1925 1,741 inhabitants and was incorporated into the Landkreis Tilsit-Ragnit in 1939.
Literature
- Kurschat, Heinrich A.: Das Buch vom Memelland, Siebert Oldenburg 1968
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