From German Königsberg to Soviet Kaliningrad

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11th Guards Army
16th Guards Rifle Corps
A01=Jamie Freeman
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Author_Jamie Freeman
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Baltic regional identity
Castle Ruins
Category1=Non-Fiction
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City's Urban Fabric
City’s Urban Fabric
Cold War borderlands
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Disengaging
East Prussia
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Estonian Soldier
Foundational Pillars
German East Prussian city
German Konigsberg
Great Patriotic War
heritage destruction studies
identity formation in Kaliningrad region
Kaliningrad Oblast
Kaliningrad Regional
Language_English
Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic
Lithuanian SSR
memory politics Eastern Europe
Molotov Ribbentrop Pact
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postwar population resettlement
Pregel River
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Red Army Soldiers
Royal Castle
RSFSR Council
Russian Federation
Societal transformation
softlaunch
Soviet Kaliningrad
Soviet modernity
Soviet Nationality Policy
Soviet Patriots
Soviet urban transformation
Teutonic Order
Teutonic Order Castle
Valdis Zatlers
World Cup Host City

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367621704
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 May 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book explores how the Soviet Union, after capturing and annexing the German East Prussian city of Königsberg in 1945 and renaming it Kaliningrad, worked to transform the city into a model of Soviet modernity. It examines how the Soviets expelled all the remaining German people, repopulated the city and region with settlers from elsewhere in the Soviet Union, destroyed the key remaining German buildings and began building a model Soviet city, a physical manifestation of the societal transformation brought about by communism. However, the book goes on to show that over time many of the model Soviet buildings were uncompleted and that the citizens, aware of their Polish and Lithuanian neighbours to both the east and the west and appreciating their place in the wider Baltic region, came to view themselves as something different from other Soviet and Russian citizens. The book concludes by assessing present developments as the people of Kaliningrad are increasingly rediscovering the city’s pre-Soviet past and forging a new identity for themselves on their own terms.

Jamie Freeman completed his doctorate at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.

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