Juminda
Juminda was first mentioned in 1290 as Jumentake. In the Middle Ages Juminda was inhabited by the Swedes. There's a 25 m lighthouse which was built in 1937.
In August 1941, one of the deadliest naval battles in the world took place near the Juminda peninsula. It was part of the Soviet evacuation of Tallinn when the Soviets planned to evacuate parts of the Baltic Fleet from Tallinn to Leningrad but were stopped by a 32 km long strip of mines placed by the Germans and Finns.
The convoys consisted of a few hundred ships, some of them being passenger ships carrying Estonian and Latvian citizens. According to historian Mati Õun, 52 ships were sunk with up to 25,000 people on board. In 1972 a memorial stone was established in Juminda.
Estonian-Swedish politician Enn Kokk (1937-2019) was born in Juminda.
Gallery
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Juminda lighthouse
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Monument to the victims of the naval battle
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coastline near Juminda
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households of Juminda, end 19th century
References
- ^ "Juminda küla" (in Estonian). eestigiid.ee. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
- ^ "Rahvastik" (in Estonian). Kuusalu vald. Archived from the original on 7 August 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
- ^ Classification of Estonian administrative units and settlements 2014 (retrieved 27 July 2021)
External links
- Juminda village association Archived 2013-06-06 at the Wayback Machine (in Estonian)