Labanoras
Labanoras, is a small town within the Labanoras Regional Park in Lithuania. It is situated on and is surrounded by the Labanoras Regional Park, the largest regional park in Lithuania. As a center of the Labanoras Park, the town attracts tourists. A hotel and restaurant were opened in a former school building in 2003. According to the Lithuanian census of 2011, the town had 59 residents.
History
In other languages, Labanoras is referred to as: Labanary, Labanoro,, and Labanore.The settlement is known from 1373. In 1386, Grand Duke Jogaila gifted Labanoras and other settlements to the newly established Diocese of Vilnius. In 1965 a hoard of about 470 coins was found near the town cemetery. It contained Prague groschen minted by Charles IV and Wenceslaus as well as early coins from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania by Vytautas and Casimir IV Jagiellon. It is believed that the treasure was buried during the 1470s. The first church was mentioned in 1522, folwark in 1539, manor in 1568, parish school in 1781. The town had 196 residents in 1866, 443 in 1923, 264 in 1959, and 186 in 1979.
During World War II, in the summer of 1941, Einsatzgruppen and their local Hiwis executed 6 Jews and 1 Lithuanian. In 1991 massgrave was surrounded by chain and plaque was installed with inscription in Yiddish and Lithuanian: “In memory of the Jews of Inturkė who were murdered by Hitler‘s executioners and their local helpers”.