Information
for visitors
Opening
hours:
Tuesday to Saturday 10.00-18.00.
Admission:
Charge - Lt 2;
Pupil / student / pensioner - Lt 1;
Child under 7 / disabled - free.
Additional services
Ordering excursions throughout the Museum.
Ordering excursions to the writer's Birthplace.
Permission to use the Memorial Literary for study needs.
Possibility to carry on educational lessons at the Museum.
Museum's collection
The Museum's collection is made up of writer's I. Simonaityte (1897-1978) furniture, clothing, dishes, books, paintings and other items.
Expositions
The permanent exposition reflects the writer's life and her literary work.
Writer's I. Simonaityte summer-house's memorial exposition
In the two story summer-house, in visitors' and writer's rooms is created an authentic environment, where the writer spent her summers from 1961 to 1978.
In the dinning room, writer's work room and living room are exhibited her furniture, clothing, dishes, personal library, various gifts: souvenirs and pictures.
Exposition of Literature
This is set up in the remaining veranda. There visitors are introduced to separate life and creativity moments of the writer, which reflect in photos. Authentic first editions published in foreign languages are also
exhibited. There are the writer's several memorial items - eye glasses and typewriter.
The exposition is carried out with new articles from the Museum's funds.
Exhibitions
Exhibitions organized from Museum's funds, photos are exhibited.
Other news about the Museum
The museum opened in 1984 in a house where the writer Ieva Simonaityte (1897-1978) spent her summer holidays for nearly two decades (1961-1978).
Museum's establisher - Lithuanian Republic's Ministry of Culture, Klaipeda Region Municipality's Cultural Department.
Museum's director - Laima Lemeziene.
Ieva Simonaityte
I. Simonaityte (1897-1978), writer, born in Vanagai, district of Klaipeda (then under German rule).
Self-educated, she earned her living as a secretary and translator, contributing poems and stories to periodicals of Lithuania Minor. She came to sudden prominence with her novel Aukstuju Simoniu likimas (the Fate of the Upper Simonys, 1935), awarded the first Lithuanian state literary prize. The novel earned her extraordinary critical and popular acclaim and appeared in numerous editions. A family chronicle, it traces the destinies of the Simonis clan between the 18th and 20th centuries, in a mosaic of colorful episodes. The novels historic content is not the product of detailed research but an imaginary reconstruction filtered through a largely romantic temperament, alive with emotion and lyricism. Nevertheless, the author presents much ethnographic data and deftly adapts the linguistic peculiarities of the Klaipeda area for her literary purposes. Her protagonists succumb to their own flaws, but even more so to the retentless encroachment of German colonization of Lithuania Minor, which imbues the novel with an aura of fatalistic resignation.
Similar in stature is her novel Vilius Karalius (Vilius the King). Epic and monumental, spanning the lives of several generations, the novel is also distinguished by its psychological insight and social observation. Of lesser importance are her novels Pavasariu audroj (In the Storm of Springs, 1938); the largely autobiographical Be tevo (Without a Father, 1941); and Pikciurniene, the portrait of a woman consumed by greed.
Six volumes of her collected writings appeared during 1956-1958. She also wrote several authobiographic books:
O buvo taip (It Was Thus, 1960); Ne ta pastoge (A Different Home, 1962); Nebaigta knyga (The Unfinished Book, 1965).
PRIEKULE, town in western Lithuania, 21 km southeast of Klaipeda, on the Minija river. It had 1,823 inhabitants in 1959 (921 in 1923, ca 2,000 in 1939). The town has a high school, 75-bed hospital, a veterinary hospital, and a Dutch tile factory. There is an old park with rare European, Canadian, and Asian trees. The village and the estate of Priekule are first mentioned in historical records from the early 16th century. Then under German rule, the area was inhabited almost entirely by Lithuanians. A Lutheran church, one of the oldest in the territory of Klaipeda, was built in 1587. A number of the parish priests were noted men of letters, both in Lihuanian religious and secular literature; Rev. Kristupas Jurksaitis, pastor during 1879-82 published his collection of Lithuanian folk tales and texts illustrating different dialects; from 1903-15 the pastor was Vilius Gaigalaitis, an outstanding activist of Lithuania Minor, who headed the Sandara (Concord) youth society and published the monthly Pagalba (Assistance). Lithuanian books and newspapers were published at the Schroeder printing house, established in 1866. The towns growth accelerated after the building of the Klaipeda-Tilze railroad in 1875. The town had a population of 400 in 1897 and was known for its large horse markets. After World War I, the town held annual summer festivals which featured horseback riding by girls in national costumes. In 1923, Priekule, as part of the Klaipeda Territory, joined to Lithuania and made the township seat. There were two brishworks, a dairy, an electric power station, a forestry center, and two primary schools.
Photo by D. Aleknas