Telšiai

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Telšiai
Coat of arms of Telšiai
Coat of arms
Location of Telšiai
Location of Telšiai
Coordinates: 55°59′0″N 22°15′0″E / 55.98333, 22.25
Country Flag of Lithuania Lithuania
Ethnographic region Samogitia
County Telšiai County
Municipality Telšiai district municipality
Elderate Telšiai town elderate
Capital of Samogitia (unofficial)
Telšiai County
Telšiai district municipality
Telšiai town elderate
Telšiai rural elderate
First mentioned 1450
Granted city rights 1791
Population (2001)
 - Total 31,460
 - Rank 12th
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Telšiai in the evening
Telšiai in the evening

Telšiai (pronunciation , Samogitian: Telšē) is a city in Lithuania, with about 35,000 inhabitants. It is the capital of Telšiai County, and it is located on Lake Mastis.

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[edit] Names

Name of Telšiai has also been known to be written in different forms in different languages throughout its history, mostly derivatives of Samogitian dialect Telšē. Some foreign names for the city include German: Telsche, Telschi; Polish: Telsze; Russian: Тельшяй, Тельши, Тяльшяй.

[edit] History

Mastis lake is mentioned in various legends and myths. The city was named after the very small rivulet, Telšė which flows into Lake Mastis. A legend has it that a Knight named Džiugas founded the city. Telšiai was first mentioned in written sources around 1450. During November Uprising in 1831 Telšiai became a sanctuary for Polish-Lithuanian partisans fighting the Russians.

During the years of Lithuanian independence, 1918 to 1940, Telšiai grew rapidly. Several girls’ and boys’ high schools, a crafts school and a teacher’s seminary were founded. The Alka museum was built, and several cultural societies were operated.[1]

During the first Soviet occupation, as a result of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, Telšiai became infamous for the nearby Rainiai massacre, the mass murder of 79 Lithuanian political prisoners perpetrated by the Red Army in a nearby forest, during the night of June 24-25 1941.

Present day architectural monuments include Telšiai Cathedral.

[edit] Jews in Telšiai

The Jewish community was proud of its renowned yeshiva, or rabbinical college. In 1941, the Telshe yeshiva was resettled in Cleveland, Ohio by a group of faculty members who escaped the holocaust. The original yeshiva building still stands in Telšiai.

Under the subsequent Nazi German occupation in World War II, Telšiai's large Jewish population was almost completely annihilated.

[edit] Geography

Nearby Šatrija hill (227 m), is a nature preserve.[2]

[edit] Twin city

[edit] Famous people

[edit] External links

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[edit] References