Senieji Trakai


Senieji Trakai is a historic Lithuanian village located east of Trakai. According to the Lithuanian census of 2011, it has 1,396 inhabitantsLithuanians, Poles and Russians. The Saint Petersburg–Warsaw Railway passes through Senieji Trakai.
The central part of the village is proclaimed an architectural reserve. The main street is dominated by uniform wooden houses, facing it with two-windowed sides.

History

Sometime before 1321, Grand Duke Gediminas transferred the capital of Lithuania from Kernavė to Trakai and erected his brick castle. In 1337 it became a seat of the newly established Duchy of Trakai. Gediminas' son Kęstutis erected a new castle in New Trakai. Kęstutis' son Vytautas was born in Old Trakai ca. 1350.
The castle in Senieji Trakai was destroyed by the Teutonic Order in 1391. The ruins of the castle were gifted to Benedictine monks by Vytautas in 1405. It is supposed that the present monastery building dating from the 15th century incorporates the remains of the Gediminas' castle.
The Trakai name, derived from trakas - "the glade", suggests that the castle was built in a hollow area after deforestation.