Zervynos

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First mentioned1742
Zervynos
Village
Zervynos from the cemetery side
Zervynos from the cemetery side
Zervynos is located in Lithuania
Zervynos
Zervynos
Location of Zervynos
Coordinates: 54°7′0″N 24°30′0″E / 54.11667°N 24.50000°E / 54.11667; 24.50000
Country Lithuania
Ethnographic regionDzūkija
County Alytus County
MunicipalityVarėna district municipality
EldershipMarcinkonys eldership
First mentioned1742
Population
 (2021)[1]
  Total
36
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)

Zervynos is an ethnographic village in the Varėna district, Lithuania. It is situated within the territory of the Dzūkija National Park near the Ūla River. The Saint Petersburg–Warsaw Railway runs through this village. Zervynos has 48 homesteads; 8 homesteads and 32 separate buildings are officially declared ethnographic monuments.[2] The village was among the sites short-listed for nomination for the UNESCO World Heritage Site.[3] Though the village is isolated by the Dainava Forest, it is a busy place during summer as tourists kayaking in the Ūla River pass through the settlement.[4]

Zervynos village is located c. 17 kilometres (11 mi) from Varėna, 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from Marcinkonys, 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) from Pauosupė (the nearest settlement).

The name Zervynos is of uncertain origin. There are some lakes in southern Lithuanian called Zervynas, Zervylios. It may be of Sudovian origin and it is possibly a cognate to Lithuanian: žerventi 'to stream rapidly', Russian: жерело, romanized: zherelo 'a river mouth', Ukrainian: жерело, джерело, romanized: zherelo, dzherelo 'a source'. Otherwise, it may be a cognate to Lithuanian: gervė and Semigallian dzerve 'a crane'.[5]

History

YearPopulation[6]
1798104
1858133
1959190
1970169
1979133
1987139
200167[7]

Zervynos was first mentioned in written sources in 1742. However, 24 campsites, dating from the Stone and Iron Ages, show that people lived in the area for much longer time.[8] Inhabitants were mostly fishers, hunters, gatherers of many of the forest's goods. In the 18th century, the village was divided by the Ūla River: the right bank was in the Varėna eldership of Trakai Voivodeship while the left side was in the Kaniava eldership of Vilnius Voivodeship.[8] The right bank evolved from a village owned by a noble and the left bank from a settlement of forest workers. Combined, both sides had about 10 homesteads and a hundred inhabitants.[9]

Architecture

Culture

References

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