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Alternate names: Prienai [Lith], Pren [Yid, Rus], Preny [Pol], Prenen [Ger], Prieni [Latv], Priyenay, Prienų, Prėinā, Prenay, Priena, פּרען-Yiddish. 54°38' N, 23°57' E, 24 miles E of Marijampolė, 18 miles S of Kaunas (Kovno). Situated on the Neman River, the 2001 population was 11,353. 1900 Jewish population: 1,100. Yizkor: Lite (vol. 1) (New York, 1951). ShtetLink. Pren, located in southern Lithuania on both sides of the river Neiman. First mentioned in 1502, Pren received Magdeburg rights in 1609. In 1623-1764, the Jewish community was subordinate to the Grodno "Va'ad Medinath Lita". In 1766, 597 Jews lived in the town. By 1766 about 1,000 people lived there.After Napoleon's defeat in Russia in 1815, Pren along with all of Lithuania was annexed by Russia. In 1868 a famous brewery was established. In 1827, 1,972 people lived in Pren with 1,479 Jews of 2,304 total in 1856. Pren suffered a pogrom by Polish youth on August 15, 1882. Germany occupied Pren during WWI . In April 1915, Russian military authorities expelled Pren Jews. Some settled in Vilna, but returned home after the German army occupied Pren to find their houses, synagogue, mikvah, and cemetery ruined. Thirty families needed support by welfare institutions. During the Republic of Lithuania (1918-1940), Pren was in Marijampole district with its population increasing and light industries and workshops established. 1923 Jewish population: 650 out of 3,260. In June 1941, the retreating Red Army blew up the concrete bridge over the Neiman, but the town itself was undamaged.From then until autumn 1944, Germany occupied Pren. Many young people left Pren and Suwalki area with the Russians. The Germans drove remaining Jews out of their homes in Suwalki area, robbed them, and sent them to the Lithuanian border. The Lithuanians did not allow them to enter Lithuania; and the Germans did not allow them to return. They stayed in a swampy area in cold and rain for several weeks until Jewish youths from border villages smuggled about 2,400 into Lithuania. [March 2009]

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Parent Category: EASTERN EUROPE