Lithuania–Russia border
The Lithuania–Russia border is an international border between the Republic of Lithuania (EU member) and Kaliningrad Oblast, an exclave of the Russian Federation (CIS member). It is an external border of the European Union. The 274.9 km (170.8 mi) long border passes (from west to south-east clockwise) through the Curonian Spit and Curonian Lagoon, and then follows along the Neman River, Šešupė, Širvinta, Liepona, and Lake Vištytis.[1] The sea border is another 22.2 km (13.8 mi). There is a tripoint between Lithuania, Russia, and Poland with a stone monument at 54°21′48″N 22°47′31″E.
Lithuania–Russia border | |
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Characteristics | |
Entities | ![]() |
Length | 297.1 km (184.6 mi), including the 22.2 km (13.8 mi) sea border[1] |
History | |
Established | 1945 |
Current shape | 24 October 1997 |
Treaties | Treaty between the Republic of Lithuania and the Russian Federation concerning the State Border between Lithuania and Russia (1997)[2] |
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Most of the border follows rivers or lakes. On land, border stations are equipped with engineering and technical facilities (wired fences and the exclusion zone). Most other land areas have no fence, but some places near roads or villages have fences (e.g. at 54°27′11″N 22°42′08″E with Street View coverage). Crossing the border into Lithuania requires a Schengen visa, and into Russia requires a Russian visa.
In early 2017, with increasing military activity and political tensions in the region, the Lithuanian government announced plans to reinforce the Kaliningrad/Ramoniškiai area border crossing with a fence 2 m (6 ft 7 in) in height, funded by NATO.[3][4]
History
Historical borders between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Tsardom of Russia varied significantly throughout history, and at times bore little resemblance to the modern borders. The border between the countries runs along the line of the former Lithuanian–German border established in 1918. It bordered Lithuania and East Prussia. In 1923, the Klaipėda Region (Memelland) was transferred to Lithuania, but in 1939 Lithuania was forced to return it to Germany. The current Lithuanian–Russian border was established after World War II, when Königsberg and the territory around it was annexed by the Soviet Union. In 1945, following the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states, the boundary was an internal border of the Soviet Union between the Kaliningrad Oblast of RSFSR and the Lithuanian SSR.
In 1990, Lithuania restored its independence and the boundary became an international border again, making Kaliningrad Oblast an exclave. In 1997, the Russian Federation and the Republic of Lithuania signed a border agreement, intended to complete border demarcation and to reduce inconveniences of the border.[2] For example, at Lake Vištytis the border ran along the waterline of the beaches on the Lithuanian side, so anyone paddling in the water was technically crossing into Russia. In return, Russia received the appropriate territorial compensation in other areas. The treaty entered into force in 2003.
Border crossings
Image | Lithuanian name/road[5] | Russian name/road[5] | Type[5] | Status[6] | Coordinates[5] |
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Route 167 – Nida | 27A-015 – Morskoe | Road | Active | 55.279788°N 20.963893°E |
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Pagėgiai | Sovetsk | Railway | Active | 55.090763°N 21.886789°E |
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Road | Active | 55.083649°N 21.905818°E |
Route 184 – Ramoniškiai | 27K-105 – Pogranichnyy | Road | Active | 55.059609°N 22.591793°E | |
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Road and railway | Active | 54.641721°N 22.743941°E | |
Vytauto g. – Kudirkos Naumiestis | R509 – Širvinta | Road | Closed | 54.775988°N 22.855040°E | |
Route 200 (Dariaus ir Girėno g.) – Vištytis | 27K-210 – Malaya Belozernoye | Road | Closed | 54.453573°N 22.703110°E |
References
- "Valstybinės sienos demarkavimas" (in Lithuanian). National Land Service under the Ministry of Agriculture. 28 February 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
- "Lietuvos Respublikos ir Rusijos Federacijos sutartis dėl Lietuvos ir Rusijos valstybės sienos" [Treaty between the Republic of Lithuania and the Russian Federation concerning the State Border between Lithuania and Russia]. Office of the Seimas of the Republic of Lithuania (in Lithuanian). 24 October 1997.
- Woody, Christopher. "Lithuania is building a border fence amid Russia fears — even though it would do little to stop an invasion". Business Insider. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
- Boffey, Daniel (24 August 2017). "'We know how to live next to Russia': Lithuania builds border fence with Kaliningrad". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
- See Google Maps for respectively coordinate and OpenStreetMap.
- See Google Street View for respectively coordinate.
External links
Media related to the Lithuania–Russia border at Wikimedia Commons