Online Encyclopedia

MEMEL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 104 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MEMEL  , a

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town of Germany, in the
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kingdom of Prussia, the most northerly town of the German
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empire, 91 m. by
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rail N.E. of Konigsberg, at the mouth of the Dange, and on the
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bank of a sound, called the Memeler Tief, which connects the Kurische Haff with the Baltic . Pop . (1905), 20,687 . On the side next the sea the town is defended by a citadel and other fortifications, and the entrance to the harbour is protected by a lighthouse . Memel has been largely rebuilt since a destructive fire in 1854 . It possesses iron-foundries,
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shipbuilding yards, breweries, distilleries, and manufactories of chemicals,
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soap and
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amber wares . By far the most important
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interest of the town, however, is its transit trade in
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timber and the grain and other agricultural products of Lithuania, and also herrings and other kinds of fish . The timber is brought by
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river from the forests of Russia, and is prepared for export in numerous saw-mills . The
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annual value of timber exported is above £1,000,000 . A Prussian
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national memorial was unveiled here in the presence of the emperor William II. in September 1907 . Memel was founded in 1252 by Poppo von Osterna,
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grand master of the Teutonic order, and was at first called New
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Dortmund and afterwards Memelburg . It soon acquired a considerable trade, and joined the Hanseatic
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League .

During the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries it was repeatedly burned by its hostile neighbours, the

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Lithuanians and Poles, and in the 17th century it remained for some time in the possession of Sweden . In 1757, and again in 1813, it was occupied by
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Russian troops . After the
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battle of
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Jena, King Frederick William III. retired to Memel; and here, in 1.807, a treaty was concluded between England and Prussia . The poet Simon Dach was a native of Memel . See J . Sembritzki, Geschichte der koniglich preussischen See- and Handelsstadt Memel (Memel, 1900) ; and Memel in I9 Jahrhundert (Memel, 1902) .

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