Kudirkos Naumiestis
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Kudirkos Naumiestis | |
---|---|
Town | |
Coordinates: 54°46′0″N 22°52′0″E / 54.76667°N 22.86667°E | |
Country | Lithuania |
Ethnographic region | Suvalkija |
County | Marijampolė County |
Municipality | Šakiai district municipality |
Eldership | Kudirkos Naumiestis eldership |
Capital of | Kudirkos Naumiestis eldership |
First mentioned | 1561 |
Granted city rights | 1643 |
Population (2020) | |
• Total | 1,480 |
Time zone | UTC+2 (EET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+3 (EEST) |
Kudirkos Naumiestis () is a town in southern Lithuania. It is located 25 km (16 mi) south-west of Šakiai.
History
[edit]The settlement was first mentioned in 1561 as a village called Duoliebaičiai. In 1639 the town was renamed Vladislavovas (Polish: Władysławów) by Cecilia Renata of Austria after her husband Władysław IV Vasa. He granted the town Magdeburg rights in 1643. However, the name did not achieve popular usage, and the settlement became known as "a town" or "a new town" instead. It was annexed by Prussia in the Third Partition of Poland in 1795. In 1807, it became part of the short-lived Polish Duchy of Warsaw, and after its dissolution in 1815, it became part of newly formed Russian-controlled Congress Poland. The German name Neustadt Schirwindt is derived from the former town of Schirwindt, today a small military village called Kutuzovo, which lay just across the border. In 1900 the town began being referred to as Naumiestis (New Town).
Following World War I, it formed part of reborn independent Lithuania. In 1934 the town was renamed Kudirkos Naumiestis in honor of the Lithuanian patriot and composer of the Lithuanian national anthem, Vincas Kudirka, who lived there from 1895 to his death in 1899 and is buried there.
A well-organized Jewish community also lived in there and produced a number of prominent rabbis and Jewish scholars. Its names in Yiddish were נײַשטאָט־שאַקי (Nayshtot-Shaki) and נײַשטאָט־שירווינט (Nayshtot-Shirvint). Before World War II the town had about 700-800 Jewish residents.[1] Journalist and writer Herman Bernstein was born here in 1876 and Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, who would become a prominent American Jewish leader, was born here in 1893. The Shubert family, which later became prominent in building the American Broadway theatre district, also has its origins here.
During World War II, the town was occupied by the Soviet Union from 1940, then by Nazi Germany from 1941. In 1941, an Einsatzgruppen of Germans and Lithuanian collaborators murdered the local Jewish population in mass executions.[2][3][4] Hundreds of people were massacred. The Gestapo also carried out executions of ethnic Jewish prisoners of war from the nearby Oflag 60 POW camp in Schirwindt/Širvinta (now Kutuzovo) in the nearby forest.[5]
Notable people
[edit]- Sammy Marks - (Neustadt, 1844–1920), Lithuanian-born industrialist and financier in South Africa. (See Randlord). Born the son of a Jewish tailor.
- Adolph Moses Radin (1848–1909), rabbi
- Pranas Sederevičius (1905-1979), who, from 1951, created concrete sculptures in the garden of his home 'Kudirkos Naumiestis'.
- Max Band (1901-1974), artist.
References
[edit]- ^ "Technical Problem Form".
- ^ "Holocaust Atlas of Lithuania". www.holocaustatlas.lt.
- ^ "Holocaust Atlas of Lithuania". www.holocaustatlas.lt.
- ^ "Holocaust Atlas of Lithuania". www.holocaustatlas.lt.
- ^ Megargee, Geoffrey P.; Overmans, Rüdiger; Vogt, Wolfgang (2022). The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933–1945. Volume IV. Indiana University Press, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-253-06089-1.