The city is known as the smallest official city in Lithuania, despite its tiny population.
History
The area comprising today's Panemunė used to be the northern trans-Memel (Neman) suburb of Tilsit, then a Prussian and later also German town (as of 1871). Tilsit sat close to the border between Germany and Russia.
French administered the area pursuant to the Treaty of Versailles, establishing the League of Nations mandate of Memel/Klaipėda. In 1923 the restored Lithuania annexed the Memelland after the Klaipėda Revolt and Übermemel was given the name Panemunė. Germany re-acquired Panemunė (with all of Memelland) on 23 March 1939 – its last peaceful territorial gain before the Second World War. So Panemunė (Übermemel) was reintegrated into the city of Tilsit.
Following World War II, the whole area was seized by the Soviet Union and in 1947 Übermemel, renamed as Panemunė (like all the Klaipėda Region), was returned to then Soviet-occupied Lithuania. The town's German minority was expelled.
Border crossing
A new bridge over the Neman river with the bypass roads around the towns was built in 2015.[1] The existing border crossing over the historic Queen Louise Bridge will be for pedestrian use only.[2]