Kutuzovo, Krasnoznamensky District, Kaliningrad Oblast

It is notable for being the easternmost settlement of the old German Reich, before the region was annexed into the Soviet Union after World War II.

Being the easternmost settlement of Prussia, it was the country's first town to see sunrise, a fact that was incorporated into its former coat of arms, which featured a Prussian eagle atop a rising sun.

Unfortunately, being a border town, Schirwindt also stood directly in the line of fire between the German and Russian armies in both World Wars.

It suffered extensive damage during the ultimately unsuccessful Russian invasion of East Prussia in World War I — as did its cross-border sister city Kudirkos Naumiestis – but was quickly rebuilt under the supervision of the Königsberg architect Kurt Frick.

The few German inhabitants still remaining in the shelled-out town were expelled[citation needed] in accordance to the Potsdam Agreement, and Schirwindt was renamed Kutuzovo in honour of the Napoleonic era Russian general Mikhail Kutuzov, who crushed the invading forces of Imperial France in 1812.

Former Saint Immanuel church