Krasnolesye

Krasnolesye (Russian: Краснолесье, Krasnoles'e; German: Rominten, Groß-Rominten, Hardteck; Polish: Rominty Wielkie; Lithuanian: Raminta, Rominta) is a small town situated at the river Krasnoja (Rominta) in Russia's Kaliningrad Oblast close to the border to Poland. East of Krasnolesye lies Lake Vistytis. The village goes back to a hunting lodge which was first mentioned in a document of 1572. The village later became a colony of tar distillers. Rominten had already been a hunting place for Prince Elector Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg-Prussia in 1683. The region was elevated to an Imperial Court Hunting District by German Emperor Wilhelm II in 1890. The emperor's hunting castle was built in 1891. After World War I Rominten remained a state hunting district. In 1936 the hunting castle, now a "Reichsjgerhof", was remodeled to suit the desires of Hermann Gring who used it until the arrival of the Red Army in 1944. In 1938 Gro-Rominten was renamed Hardteck. When East Prussia was divided between Russia and Poland after World War II, Rominten became part of the Soviet Union. In 1947 it was renamed Krasnoles'e (Red Woods).

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
hms cheshire
hms cumberland
the waffle
hms curacoa
hms dryad
prince carl, duke of ostrogothia
cherry beach
alfred des cloizeaux
duke carl philip
den den town
taguchi methods
ren anglil
hanau
edward c. tolman
strathclyde
anrien
lossarnach
mark bowden
world association of girl guides and girl scouts
mogens lykketoft
lamedon
peter dawson
belfalas
toronto fringe festival
gnome hispano
jehoahaz of judah
loss function
edward felten
pigott street
football in lebanon
mary, crown princess of denmark
f. r. leavis
jehoiakim
ussr state prize
kin strife
limehouse town hall
sidney tushingham
battle of erui
jersey shore
peralta
dome of stars
blackwall
hambleton
x86 assembly programming in real mode