Lyduvėnai

Lyduvėnai

Lyduvėnai

Town in Samogitia, Lithuania


Lyduvėnai is a small town in the Šiluva Eldership [lt], Raseiniai District Municipality, Kaunas County in central Lithuania.[1] The town is 15 km north of Raseiniai and is near the confluence of the Dubysa and Dratvuo [lt] rivers.[1] Lyduvėnai is the home of the longest (599 metres) and highest railway bridge in Lithuania, the Lyduvėnai Bridge. The town possesses the eldership's center, has a railway stop, a school, a library, in addition to post. The town's postal code is LT-60046. Lyduvėnai is situated in the Dubysa regional park [lt] and has its information center in the town's school. The railway line ŠiauliaiTilžė and the highways to Raseiniai and Šiluva pass through Lyduvėnai.[1] Lyduvėnai is in the Dubysa valley, in contrast to other towns in the Dubysa basin.[2]

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In 2011, it had a population of 99.[3]

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Etymology

The town used to be known as Lydavėnai, with the name arising from the local river Lýduva.[4] According to Jonas Basanavičius, Lyduvėnai comes from Lýda, which meant a field after the forests were cut down and the swamps drained.[5]

History

Lyduvėnai area was inhabited at the first millennium's beginning. The Lyduvėnai Hillfort I [lt] known as Danutė hill, Lyduvėnai Hillfort II [lt] known as Barsukalnis, and Lyduvėnai Hillfort III [lt] called Kaukuris, in addition to the Lyduvėnai stone [lt], are from those times.

15th century

Lyduvėnai was first mentioned in 1499.[1][4] From the 15th century's end, Lyduvėnai were owned by the Chodkevičiai, and later by the Rudzinskai, Šemetos and Stanevičiai.[6][7] The Lyduvėnai manor used to be called Padubysiai.[8]

Lyduvėnai church

16th century

In 1558, Sigismund II Augustus gave Lyduvėnai the privilege to create a town near the manor, to organize markets, and to keep taverns.[6][7] The Church in Lyduvėnai was always Catholic, dating from the late 16th century, although first mentioned in 1593.[1][7] In 1594, the Lyduvėnai valsčius and town are mentioned.[1]

17th and 18th centuries

The town expanded from the 17th to 18th centuries.[1] Lyduvėnai are marked on a Dutch map about Lithuania from 1613.[6] In 1668, there were just eight Jews in the town.[9] The Church of the St. Apostles Peter and Paul was built in Lyduvėnai in 1761[1] or 1764.[7]

19th century

At the time of the November Uprising in 1830–31, Ezechielis Stanevičius, the Raseiniai county's nobility's Maršalka, lived in Lyduvėnai manor.[7] Due to his involvement in the unsuccessful rebellion, the estate was confiscated and a Jewish colony was formed near it.[1][7] During the rule of the Russian Empire, from the 19th century to the 20th century's beginning, Lyduvėnai was the center of the valsčius.[1] During Motiejus Valančius' life, there was a parochial school, which was attended by 17 pupils in 1853.[7] The school was closed by the Russian government after the 1863 rebellion and later Russified.[1] In 1863, the local rebels supporting the January Uprising destroyed the Lyduvėnai valsčius office's documents,[1] in addition to appropriating its chest, which contained 150 rubles.[7] The local Catholic priest, Antanas Opulskis, who supported the insurgents, was arrested, interrogated and exiled to Tunka, where he died in 1872.[7]

20th century

World War I

In 1916, during the German occupation of Lithuania during World War I, the railway line TilžėRadviliškis was built through Lyduvėnai.[1] The Lyduvėnai bridge, originally named in Hindenburg's honour, was one of the largest wooden bridges ever built.[10][11] The bridge was built by 2,000 prisoners of war.[12] Initially the bridge was wooden, but it was remade in reinforced concrete in 1919.[1]

World War II

In June 1941, the 1st Panzer Division crossed the Dubysa at Lyduvėnai during the Battle of Raseiniai.[13] During summer 1941, 300 Jews and Communists from the village and its environs were executed on the occupying Nazi administration's orders on the slopes of the Dubysa.[1][11][14] The mass execution was done by five to seven members of the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union and some local volunteers.[14] The Lyduvėnai bridge was destroyed by the retreating German Army in 1944, in hopes of slowing the Red Army's advance.[1][11]

Lithuanian partisans

After the Second World War, the P. Markevičius (Pranckus) platoon of Lithuanian partisans, subordinated to the Vėgėlė Rinktinė, operated near the town.[1]

The occupying Soviet government deported eight residents of Lyduvėnai in 1940–1941 and 1944–1953.[1]

Buildings

During the interwar, there was a primary school, post, windmill with saw, several stores, and craft workshops.[11] In the 1950s, there was a school, a house for Bolshevik propaganda, surgeon and midwife station, library, and a single shop.[11] The Lyduvėnai bridge was re-built in 1952 and restored in 2005.[1]

The koplytstulpis [lt] for the 440 year anniversary of the town's founding and also the 175th anniversary of the school was rebuilt in 1998, by the master craftsman R. Ramanauskas.[1]

Notable people

The following people were born in Lyduvėnai or its surroundings:[citation needed]

Geology

The lithographic composition of the Middle Jurassic is similar in Lyduvėnai, Kaunas, and Klaipėda.[15]


References

  1. Lietuviškoji enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vol. T. 7: Drugiai – Fazmos. Kaunas: Spaudos Fondas. 1939. p. 83.
  2. "2011 census". Statistikos Departamentas (Lithuania). Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  3. Basanavičius, Jonas (1893). Etnologiškos smulkmenos (in Lithuanian). Tilžė. p. 25.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. Kviklys 1968, p. 550.
  5. Kviklys 1968, p. 549.
  6. Richter, Klaus (2020). Fragmentation in East Central Europe: Poland and the Baltics, 1915–1929. Oxford University Press. p. 111. ISBN 9780198843559. In the Lithuanian town of Lyduvėnai, German engineers constructed one of the largest wooden bridges ever built (55 metres high and almost 700 metres long).
  7. Lietuvos TSR aukštųjų moklų mokslo darbai: Istorija (in Lithuanian). Vol. 21–23. Valstybinis aukštojo ir specialiojo vidurinio mokslo komitetas. 1981. p. 70.
  8. "Mass Mureder of the Jews in Lyduvėnai". Holocaust Atlas of Lithuania.
  9. Moksliniai pranešimai. Vol. 7–8. Lietuvos TSR Mokslų akademija. Geologijos ir geografijos institutas. 1958.

Sources


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