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Nida, Lithuania

Nida, Lithuania

FieldValue
nameNida
settlement_typeSettlement
pushpin_mapLithuania#Baltic states
pushpin_relief1
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Nida
pushpin_label_positionleft
image_skyline{{multiple image
borderinfobox
total_width275
image_styleborder:1;
perrow1/2/2/1
image1Nida from bird's-eye view.jpg
caption1Aerial view of Nida
image2Evangelical Lutheran Church in Nida 02.jpg
caption2Evangelical Lutheran Church
image3Kurische Nehrung Wimpel der Kurenfischer in Nida 1.JPG
caption3Curonian pennants and traditional houses
image4Kurische Nehrung Küste in Nida 2.JPG
caption4Coast of the Curonian Lagoon
image5Typical house in Nida, Lithuania, 2004.jpg
caption5Traditional wooden house
image6Hohe Düne Nida (2022).jpg
caption6Parnidis Dune
image_blank_emblemSymbols of Neringa (Nida).svg
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2[[Image:LIT okręg kłajpedzki COA.svg17px]] Klaipėda County
subdivision_type3Municipality
subdivision_name3Neringa Municipality
subdivision_type4Eldership
subdivision_name4Juodkrantė eldership
established_titleFirst mentioned
established_date1358
population_total1500 permanent residents
population_as_of2025
population_demonymnidiečiai (Lithuanian)
timezoneEET
utc_offset+2
timezone_DSTEEST
utc_offset_DST+3
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom11
mapframe-wikidatayes
footnotes

| mapframe-zoom = 11 | mapframe-wikidata = yes

Nida (, Kursenieki: Nīde) is a resort settlement in Lithuania, the administrative centre of Neringa municipality. Located on the Curonian Spit between the Curonian Lagoon and the Baltic Sea, it is the westernmost point of Lithuania and the Baltic states, close to the border with the Russian Kaliningrad Oblast exclave. In 2025, it had around 1500 permanent residents.

History

Exposition of ancient life in Nida

A settlement area of the Baltic Curonians, the original place called nida ("fluent" in the Old Prussian language) was first mentioned in 1385 documents issued by the Teutonic Knights, who ruled the lands within their Monastic State. The original settlement on the road along the Curonian Spit from Königsberg to Memel was located about 5 km south of its today's position near the Hohe Düne (High Dune) at Cape Grobštas (from Old Prussian: grabis, "hill"). In 1454, King Casimir IV Jagiellon incorporated the region to the Kingdom of Poland upon the request of the anti-Teutonic Prussian Confederation. After the subsequent Thirteen Years' War (1454–1466), the fishing village became a part of Poland as a fief held by the Teutonic Knights until 1525, and by Ducal Prussia afterwards, and thus was located within the Polish–Lithuanian union and Commonwealth.

From 1701, it was part of the Kingdom of Prussia. In 1709 nearly all of the population died from a bubonic plague epidemic. Continuously threatened by sand drifts, the village was moved away from the approaching dune to today's position in the 1730s. Incorporated into the Prussian Province of East Prussia in 1773, it became part of the German Empire upon the German unification of 1871. In 1874 a lighthouse on Urbas hill was built, later destroyed in the war and rebuilt in 1945 and 1953. In 1878, the village had a population of 655, mostly living off fishing, with fish being sold mainly to nearby Klaipėda and other coastal settlements.

Artists' colony

"A view to Purvynė Pier" (circa 1938, by Carl Knauf) nicknamed by contemporaries as the "Italian view"

From the late 19th century, the dune landscape became popular with landscape and animal painters from the Kunstakademie Königsberg arts school. The local inn of Herman Blode was the nucleus of the expressionist artists' colony (Künstlerkolonie Nidden). Lovis Corinth sojourned there, as did Max Pechstein, Alfred Lichtwark, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, and Alfred Partikel. Painters from Königsberg such as Julius Freymuth and Eduard Bischoff visited the area, as did poets such as Ernst Wiechert and Carl Zuckmayer. Other guests included Ernst Kirchner, Ernst Mollenhauer, Franz Domscheit, and Hermann Wirth. The painters usually took accommodations at Blode's hotel, and left some of their works with him. Some also built their own residences in the vicinity.

After World War I Nidden, together with the northern half of the Curonian Spit, became part of the Klaipėda Region under the 1919 Treaty of Versailles, but was subsequently incorporated to Lithuania in 1923. Renamed Nida, the village nevertheless remained a predominantly German settlement; the border with the remaining German (East Prussian) half of the spit lay only a few kilometers to the south.

In 1929 Nobel Prize-winning writer Thomas Mann visited Nida while on holiday in nearby Rauschen and decided to have a summer house erected on a hill above the lagoon; it was mocked by locals as Uncle Tom's Cabin. He and his family spent the summers of 1930–32 in the cottage, and parts of the epic novel Joseph and His Brothers were written there.

Threatened by the Nazis due to his political views, Mann left Germany after Hitler's Machtergreifung in 1933 and eventually emigrated to the United States. After the Klaipėda Region was again annexed by (now Nazified) Germany in 1939, his house was seized at the behest of Hermann Göring and designated a recreation home for Luftwaffe officers.

Post-war

Beach and dunes near Nida in 2023
Traditional homesteads in 2023

In 1939 the town had 736 inhabitants. Like all of the Curonian Spit, Nida became nearly uninhabited as a result of the advancing Red Army, the Evacuation of East Prussia and the eventual expulsion of surviving German inhabitants. After the end of World War II, Nida again became part of then Soviet-occupied Lithuania. In the early postwar period, Nida was a little-visited fishing village. Later during the Soviet occupation, together with three other villages of the Neringa Municipality (Juodkrantė, Preila and Pervalka), Nida was a controlled-entry holiday resort reserved for the Communist party officials and elite (nomenklatura).

Since Lithuania restored its independence in 1990, the area has been open to all and the tourism has flourished. However, as Curonian Spit is a national park and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, there are various restrictions to protect its ecosystem and the unique architecture of settlements like Nida.

Mann's summer cottage survived the war and was preserved on the initiative of the Lithuanian poet Antanas Venclova. A first memorial site was inaugurated already in 1967. During the Soviet occupation, it hosted a library open in summer only, with residential quarters of the visiting librarian posted from Klaipėda upstairs and public areas downstairs. In 1995/96 the house was restored according to the original architectural design and reopenend as a cultural center dedicated to the writer, with a memorial exhibition and an annual festival.

Climate

Klaipėda's climate is considered to be humid continental, (Köppen Dfb), although it borders quite closely to oceanic, (Köppen Cfb), when using the -3 °C isotherm, because of the proximity to the Baltic Sea, which is less prone to extreme weather events than the climate inland. |Jan record high C = 10.5 |Feb record high C = 12.9 |Mar record high C = 20.5 |Apr record high C = 26.2 |May record high C = 29.4 |Jun record high C = 32.0 |Jul record high C = 32.8 |Aug record high C = 31.2 |Sep record high C = 27.8 |Oct record high C = 20.6 |Nov record high C = 14.1 |Dec record high C = 10.9 |year record high C = 32.8 |Jan record low C = -30.2 |Feb record low C = -31.2 |Mar record low C = -22.0 |Apr record low C = -5.9 |May record low C = -1.5 |Jun record low C = 1.4 |Jul record low C = 7.8 |Aug record low C = 5.7 |Sep record low C = 2.9 |Oct record low C = -5.5 |Nov record low C = -19.1 |Dec record low C = -22.4 |year record low C = -31.2 | access-date = March 22, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230430002529/https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/pub/data/normals/WMO/1961-1990/RA-VI/LU/26603.TXT | archive-date = 2023-04-30}}}}

Coastal temperature data for NidaMonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYearAverage sea temperature °C (°F)Source 1: Seatemperature.org
-12.7}}"3.2
(37.76)-15.3}}"2.4
(36.32)-18.0}}"1.6
(34.88)-9.3}}"4.2
(39.56)8.7}}"9.6
(49.28)18.2}}"15.0
(59.00)23.9}}"18.5
(65.30)25.0}}"19.2
(66.56)21.4}}"17.0
(62.60)14.3}}"12.6
(54.68)7.0}}"9.1
(48.38)-4.0}}"5.8
(42.44)9.5}}"9.9
(49.73)

Tourism

nudist beach

The settlement is an upmarket holiday resort, hosting about 200,000 to 300,000 tourists each summer, mostly Lithuanians, Germans, Latvians, and Russians. It is characterized by low-key entertainment and a distinct family focus. However, during recent years it has become a decent point of interest for fine electronica music and modern art shows at an eclectic forest retreat.

Since 2001, Nida Jazz Festival has been held every year. A local radio station Neringa FM streams live beats over FM and online. There are also interesting places to see nearby, including some of the highest sand dunes in Europe, a large sundial (which has been restored after being damaged by a Baltic gale), Fisherman's Ethnographic Homestead, gallery-museum of amber and a German Protestant (Evangelische) Brick Gothic church (built in 1888). There is also a campsite.

The settlement is known for Nidden Kurenwimpel — German for "Curonian pennants" — ornate carved flags particular to local families resident on the Curonian Spit. The flags, replicas of which can be seen around Nida, feature animal and human figures as pictograms reminiscent of a pagan writing tradition. At the local cemetery, examples of krikštas (pl. krikštai), pagan burial markers in place of tombstones, can still be seen.

Nida's beach participates in the Blue Flag Programme. Nudists make use of parts of the beach near Nida for nude bathing. Nida's nudist beach is frequently featured in various rankings of world's best nudist beaches.

Transportation

Bus station in Nida

Nida Airport is located in the settlement, but it has no scheduled routes and only capable of handling small aircraft. Nida also has a seaport which is used for ferries and fishing boats.

The only road which runs along the whole length of the Curonian Spit, connecting Zelenogradsk and Smiltynė (where a ferry connection to Klaipėda exists), passes through the edge of Nida. An hourly bus runs between Nida and Smiltynė ferry terminal on that road, and intercity buses to various cities like Kaliningrad, Klaipėda, Kaunas and Vilnius exist.

Notable people from Nida

  • Tadas Sedekerskis (born 1998), Lithuanian basketball player

Notes

References

References

  1. (2025-04-17). "Apie Neringą".
  2. (2024-08-11). "Nida".
  3. (2023-10-19). "Kuršių nerijos nacionalinio parko direkcija".
  4. (2023-10-19). "Nidos akmens amžiaus istorija".
  5. (2025-04-17). "Apie Neringą".
  6. Górski, Karol. (1949). "Związek Pruski i poddanie się Prus Polsce: zbiór tekstów źródłowych". Instytut Zachodni.
  7. Górski, pp. 96–97, 214–215
  8. . (1886). "Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom VII".
  9. Weise, p. 159
  10. "Klimato duomenys 1991-2020".
  11. (2023-04-30). "Nida Sea Temperature".
  12. Vaige, Laima. (3 June 2009). "Nudist bathers fight for rights". [[The Baltic Times]].
  13. Yogerst, Joe. (2018-05-24). "Dare to bare: 25 of the world's best nude beaches".
  14. "Autobusų tvarkaraštis Nida - Smiltynė - Nida".
  15. "timetables".
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