Palanga Explained

Palanga
Nickname:Vasaros sostinė (Summer Capital)
Settlement Type:City
Pushpin Map:Lithuania#Europe
Pushpin Relief:1
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Palanga
Coordinates:55.9167°N 25°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Ethnographic region
Subdivision Name1:Samogitia
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2: Klaipėda County
Subdivision Type3:Municipality
Subdivision Name3:Palanga city municipality
Parts Type:Elderships
Parts Style:para
P1:Šventoji eldership
Established Date:1161
Established Title:First mentioned
Established Date2:1791
Established Title2:Granted city rights
Population Total:18132
Population As Of:2023
Population Density Km2:auto
Area Total Km2:79
Population Footnotes:[1]
Elevation M:10
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:LT-00001
Area Code Type:Dialing code
Area Code:370
Timezone:EET
Utc Offset:+2
Timezone Dst:EEST
Utc Offset Dst:+3

Palanga (; Baltic languages: Palonga; Polish: Połąga; German: Polangen) is a resort city in western Lithuania, on the shore of the Baltic Sea.

Palanga is the busiest and the largest summer resort in Lithuania and has sandy beaches (18 km, 11 miles long and up to 300 metres, 1000 ft wide) and sand dunes.[2] [3]

Officially Palanga has the status of a city municipality and includes Šventoji, Nemirseta, Būtingė, Palanga International Airport and other settlements, which are considered as part of the city of Palanga.

Legend

See main article: Birutė. According to legend, there was a pagan shrine at the foot of a hill in Palanga where a beautiful priestess named Birutė used to tend the ceremonial fires.[4] Having heard of Birutė's beauty, Kęstutis, the Grand Duke of Lithuania, came to make her his wife.[4] The Lithuanian Bychowiec Chronicle records that Birutė "did not consent, and answered that she had promised the gods to remain a virgin as long as she lived.

Kęstutis then resorted to take her by force, and with great pomp brought her back to his capital, Trakai, where he invited his kinsmen and celebrated with a lavish wedding..."[5] Kęstutis was later murdered and Birutė returned to Palanga and resumed serving at the shrine until her death. The legend claimed that she was buried in the hill which is now named after her.

History

Not far from Šventoji, archaeologists discovered an encampment which indicates that the area was inhabited some 5,000 years ago. Between the 10th and 13th centuries Palanga had been one of the main settlements of Mēguva Land, inhabited by the Curonians. Situated upon the trail of the ancient Amber Road, it became a centre of trade and crafts.

In historical documents the name of Palanga was first mentioned in 1161 when King Valdemar I of Denmark disembarked there with his army and captured the castle of the Curonians.

Between the 13th and 15th centuries, the inhabitants of Palanga had to confront the Teutonic Knights in the south and the Livonian Brothers of the Sword in the north. Their adversaries were unable to achieve their goal of capturing the Lithuanian sea-coast from Klaipėda to Šventoji. Grand Duke Vytautas the Great considered granting Palanga to the Teutonic Knights, however Supreme Duke Jogaila prevented it.[6] Eventually in 1422 Palanga passed to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania under the Treaty of Melno.[7] In 1427 Jogaila saw sea for the first time in Palanga.[6]

The first small wooden Catholic church in Palanga was built in ~1540 at the behest of Grand Duchess Anna Jagiellon.[8]

The harbour of Šventoji gradually developed into a trading centre. British merchants established enterprises in Šventoji in 1685. During the Great Northern War, in which the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth allied with Saxony, Denmark and Russia against Sweden, the Swedish Army ravaged Palanga, destroyed the harbour at Šventoji, and blocked up the entrance with rocks in 1701.

After the Third Partition of Poland and Lithuania in 1795 Lithuania became a part of the Russian Empire. In 1819 Palanga was transferred from the Vilna Governorate to Grobin County (Latvian: Grobiņa) of the Courland Governorate.

In 1824, the manor of Palanga was purchased by Count Michał Tyszkiewicz (1761–1839). His grandson Józef Tyszkiewicz built a pier and engaged ships to transport passengers and bricks to nearby Liepāja. Palanga began to develop as a resort in the early 19th century. The pier has been a favourite spot for taking a stroll and other recreation since 1892. Józef Tyszkiewiczs's son, Feliks Tyszkiewicz, commissioned the construction of the neo-renaissance Tiškevičiai Palace, built by the famous German architect Franz Schwechten in 1897.

The French landscape architect Édouard André designed a large park around the palace, between 1897 and 1907. The palace became a favourite gathering place for concert performances. Amongst the good friends and associates of Feliks Tyszkiewicz was the notary, Jonas Kentra.

Following the Lithuanian press ban of 1864, Palanga became an important location for the smuggling of Lithuanian publications from the west. The Rev. Marcijonas Jurgaitis, physician Liudas Vaineikis, and notary Jonas Kentra, played significant roles in this activity. After Kentra obtained official permission, a public performance featuring the comedy, America in the Bathhouse (Amerika pirtyje), was performed in the Lithuanian language. This had previously not been permitted. However, later the Tsarist authorities deported Vaineikis and twenty-five other people to Siberia in 1901.[9]

In 1919, after the breakup of the Russian Empire, Palanga temporarily became a part of Latvia, like the rest of the Courland Governorate. In 1921, after Lithuanian exchange of its Aknysta town, Brunava Parish and some other villages with Latvia, Palanga was peacefully transferred to Lithuania following a Lithuanian-Latvian treaty and giving Lithuania access to the sea.[10] In 1926, there was still a significant Latvian minority. A popular among Lithuanians saying of the event at the time was “we exchanged our land with out land“.

Before World War II, nearly half the population of the town was Jewish. The production of decorative objects and jewellery made from amber found on the seashore, for which Palanga is famous, was formerly a Jewish industry. Many Jews also earned their livelihood by providing various services for summer vacationers. Between the world wars Jews were active in local government, serving on the city council as mayor or deputy mayor. The deteriorating economy resulting from antisemitism caused many to immigrate to South Africa, the United States, and Palestine. Soon after the outbreak of the German-Soviet war on June 22, 1941, Palanga was occupied by the Germans and all the Jews were concentrated at the bus station. The males aged 13 and above were taken outside the town and murdered in pits they were forced to dig. The women and children were held for a month in the synagogue, and then executed.

The Tiškevičiai Palace's park was converted into a botanical garden in 1960. Today it contains two hundred different types of trees and shrubs, including an oak tree planted by President Antanas Smetona. The palace, now the Palanga Amber Museum, has an extensive collection of amber jewellery and other artifacts. Symphonic concerts as well as other musical festivals and events take place in the summer, usually in the evening.

Location

Palanga is a resort city through which the Šventoji and Rąžė (Samogitian: Ronžē) rivers flow into the Baltic Sea. Rąžė was formerly known as Alanga and gave Palanga its name: Palanga, which literally means on the Alanga River. The Palanga municipality extends 24 kilometres from Nemirseta in the south to the Latvian border in the north. Palanga is subdivided into Nemirseta, Vanagupė, Kunigiškiai, Manciškiai, and Šventoji – five neighbouring fishing villages which were united into one city following administrative changes to the area. After the Klaipėda Region was ceded to Germany in March 1939, Nemirseta was the northernmost village of East Prussia; conversely Palanga was a border checkpoint between Russian-occupied Lithuania and Germany.

Transportation

The municipality is accessed by roads from Klaipėda and Šiauliai. There is no railway in the municipality (the closest rail connection is in Kretinga, the capital of the Kretinga district municipality). Palanga's International Airport, the third largest in Lithuania, offers connecting flights to Scandinavia, Germany, Ireland, United Kingdom, Poland and to the biggest city in Baltic States - Riga, Latvia. The airport is located between Palanga and Šventoji, and it handles more flights in the summer due to the resort nature of the municipality.

Places of interest

In the summer, many tourists come to visit and stay in Palanga, both for its beaches and to enjoy the maritime atmosphere. There is a carnival centred on Jonas Basanavičius Street, which is a pedestrian-only thoroughfare during the high season. There are dozens of restaurants, bars, rides, and other forms of entertainment. A new observation wheel opened in ~2021 scaling 40 meters. It is claimed its to be the tallest wheel in all of the baltic states.

The aforementioned Palanga Amber Museum is open to the public, as are as the museum's extensive botanical gardens. Anaičiai Ethnographic Cemetery holds a collection of 19th- and early 20th-century graves. In the Sculpture Garden, one can find 28 contemporary statues by artists from Armenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine.

Also found in Palanga is one of the oldest operating pharmacies in Lithuania. It was established in the mid-19th century.

The city is also home to a regional radio station, FM Palanga.

Of interest is Villa Anapilis built in 1898 and recently restoresd to its interwar state. Its name refers to the Anapilis mountain, allegedly ther lece of the afterlife in Lithuanian pagan mythology.[11]

Notable people

Twin towns – sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Lithuania. Palanga is twinned with:[12]

The city was previously twinned with:

Significant depictions in popular culture

See also

References

[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: GYVENTOJAI GYVENAMOSIOSE VIETOVĖSE. XLSX. Osp.stat.gov.lt. 23 July 2022.
  2. Web site: Palanga City . Randburg.com . 2012-07-31 . dead . https://archive.today/20120909143411/http://www.randburg.com/li/palangaci.html . 2012-09-09 .
  3. Web site: Palanga City in Lithuania . Adventures.com . 10 February 2023 . en.
  4. Web site: Grajauskienė . Livija . Legendomis apipintasis Birutės kalnas, Šv. Jurgio koplyčia ir Lurdas . Palangostiltas.lt . 11 February 2023 . lt.
  5. Web site: Birute . Pgm.lt . 2012-07-31 . 2016-10-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161017152826/http://www.pgm.lt/Istorija/Birute_en.htm . dead .
  6. Web site: Matutis . Vidmantas . Istorikai, kaip ir kunigaikščiai, nerado jūros . Kauno diena . 10 February 2023 . lt.
  7. http://www.old.historia.lv/alfabets/L/LI/Livonija/dokumenti/1426.00.06.latviesu.htm Dokuments par robežu starp Livoniju un Lietuvu no Dobeles apgabala līdz Sventājas grīvai
  8. Web site: Palangos Švč. Mergelės Marijos ėmimo į dangų bažnyčia ir apžvalgos aikštelė . Palangos turizmo informacijos centras . 11 February 2023 . lt.
  9. Web site: Palanga: History . Pgm.lt . 2012-07-31 . 2017-07-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170721042752/http://www.pgm.lt/Istorija/Palanga_history_en.htm . dead .
  10. http://neogeo.lv/?p=10101 Latvijas iegūtās un zaudētās teritorijas
  11. https://architekturalietuvoje.lt/en/lankytinos-vietos/palangos-vilos-pastatas-vad-anapiliu/ Villa Anapilis In Palanga
  12. Web site: Tarptautinis bendradarbiavimas. palanga.lt. Palangos miesto savivaldybė. lt. 2021-03-23.
  13. Web site: Lithuania (M2TW-K-TC faction) . wiki.totalwar.com . 27 November 2019.
  14. Web site: Palangos miesto savivaldybė. 7 March 2023.