Pagėgiai

Pagėgiai
City

Flag

Coat of arms
Pagėgiai

Location of Pagėgiai

Coordinates: 55°8′0″N 21°55′0″E / 55.13333°N 21.91667°E / 55.13333; 21.91667Coordinates: 55°8′0″N 21°55′0″E / 55.13333°N 21.91667°E / 55.13333; 21.91667
Country  Lithuania
Ethnographic region Lithuania Minor
County Tauragė County
Municipality Pagėgiai municipality
Eldership Pagėgiai eldership
Capital of Pagėgiai eldership
Granted city rights 1923
Population (2005)
  Total 2,321
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Website http://www.pagegiai.lt

Pagėgiai ( pronunciation , German: Pogegen) is a city in the south western Lithuania. It is located in the region of the former prussian tribe of Skalvians. It is the capital of Pagėgiai municipality, and as such it is part of Tauragė County.

Name

The name of the town literally means "at Gėgė" (gegis: grove of alders, hay meadows, fields) and it is believed that the Gėgė river (also Gäge, Jäge) once flowed through the town.

History

Interwar period

When the Treaty of Versailles came in effect in January 1920, the Klaipėda Region located north of the Neman River was separated from Germany.

The northern trans-Neman parts of Kreis Ragnit and both Landkreis and Stadtkreis Tilsit, which had been established in 1818, as well as Gutsbezirk Perwallkischken were combined on 27 January 1920 to the new Kreis Pogegen, with Pagėgiai as capital.

When Lithuania assumed control of the region in 1923, it was renamed Pagėgiai Apskritis. In 1939 the area was reintegrated by Nazi Germany in March into East Prussia and renamed Landkreis Pogegen. It consisted of 164 Landgemeinden with less than 2,000 inhabitants, and 34 Gutsbezirke. The largest community was Schmalleningken with a pop. of 1,700. Pogegen and the community of Wischwill had 1,400 each.

Landkreis Pogegen was dissolved on 1 October 1939 in order to re-unite the area with the larger cities south of Neman, and structures similar to pre-1920 were established.

After World War II

Algimantas Mackus gymnasium

When Lithuania was occupied by the Soviet Union for the second time in 1944 and the Subdivisions of Lithuania were changed into that of districts, Pagėgiai became one of only a few towns that were interwar apskritis capitals which did not become district capitals. When the municipality reform took place in independent Lithuania in 2000, Pagėgiai municipality was carved out of Šilutė district and thus Pagėgiai became the capital of an administrative unit again.

The coat of arms of the town and the municipality depicts a bird with a key, which symbolises the border nature of the area (now with Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia). A Lithuanian border guard unit is stationed in Pagėgiai.

External links

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