Abschwangen massacre

Abschwangen (now Tishino, in Bagrationovsky District) was a small village near Preussisch Eylau in East Prussia some 30 km south of Königsberg, today Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia and the scene of a massacre of German civilians on 29 August 1914.

Abschwangen Massacre
LocationAbschwangen, East Prussia
Date29 August 1914
TargetGerman civilians in Prussia
Attack type
Massacre
Deaths65
Perpetrators Imperial Russian Army

Prelude

After Russian troops started their first World War I offensive in East Prussia in August 1914, they reached the small village of Abschwangen on August 27, 1914, without struggle, and marched through. On August 29, 1914, a German Cavalry reconnaissance unit of four soldiers came to the unoccupied village, confronted a Russian car crossing through and opened fire on this automobile. One Russian officer, a member of the Trubetskoy family, was killed, and the car returned to the village of Almenhausen (now Kashtanovo), some 5 km east of Abschwangen.

The massacre

After the return of the car to Almenhausen, the Russian troops executed nine civilians (Mayor Prang, Farmer Stadie, Hermann Marienberg and six unknown refugees), who were by chance standing next to them and burned down 70 buildings out of 81 existing houses. At the same time some other troops marched to Abschwangen, where they started to execute the male inhabitants and burned down houses and farm buildings. In Abschwangen 78 buildings out of 101 existing were destroyed. During the massacre, 65 people (28 locals, 37 refugees from southern East Prussia) were killed:

  • from Abschwangen: Brüderlein, Fritz; Dombrowski, Fritz; Dunkel, Franz; Eggert, Johanna; Freimuth, Karl; Friedel, Walter; Frisch, Hermann; Gendatis, Franz; Großmann, August; Heinrich, Richard; Hochwald, Albert; Judel, Lina; Kemmer, Julius; Kösling, Friedrich; Krause, Ernst; Küßner, Karl; Lange, Christoph; Naujoks, Friedrich; Oppermann, Albert; Packheiser, Gustav; Regotzki, Karl; Riemann, August; Riemann, Franz; Riemann, Karl; Rosenbaum, Franz; Schröder, Friedrich; Waschkau, Gottfried; Witt, Elisabeth;
  • from Allenau: Burblies, Gustav; Hinz, Friedrich; Hinz, Karl; Reimer, Albert;
  • from Bönkeim: Barteleit, Johanna;
  • from Böttchersdorf: Gawlick, Richard; Gawlick, Rudolf; Hensel, Franz;
  • from Budweitschen: Schippel, Wilhelm; Willuhn, Karl;
  • from Darkehmen: Forstreuter, Karl;
  • from Dettmitten: Arndt, Franz; Arndt, Wilhelm; Arnswald, Otto; Ewert, Friedrich; Grube, Richard; Mischke, Friedrich; Naujok, Gustav; Petschkuhn, Karl; Petschkuhn, Otto;
  • from Dommelkeim: Nelson, Emil;
  • from Korschen: Diester, Ewald;
  • from Kortmedien: Görke, Ernst; Holz, Ernst; Motzkau, Gustav; Saul, Gustav; Schirrmacher, Johann; Schoen, Gustav;
  • from Langendorf: Czibold, Fritz; Dudda, Michael; Marwinski, Paul; Rogowski, Christian; Wicesanski, Michael;
  • from Löwenhagen: Hollstein, Leopold;
  • from Schlangen: Marquardt, Bernhard
  • one Unidentified;

Aftermath

Due to the German success at the Battle of Tannenberg, Russian troops retreated from the Abschwangen region, and the village was recaptured without a struggle by German troops on September 3, 1914. A memorial was built to the 74 killed civilians in 1924, but it, like the whole village, was destroyed during World War II in 1945.

gollark: I don't; I'm just not going out ever.
gollark: I think it has happened at least in the country fairly often, I don't know about *here*.
gollark: In places which definitely haven't done that well people still do it, though.
gollark: No, I mean people will just go to parties and stuff in the middle of a pandemic.
gollark: Even in situations when it *isn't* that they'll lose all their money, I mean.

References

  • Horst Schulz, Preußisch Eylau - eine Kreisstadt in Ostpreußen, Lübeck 1998 (German)
  • Horst Schulz, Der Kreis Preußisch Eylau, Verden 1983 (German)

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