The Nemmersdorf stone church was constructed on the orders of
Albert,
Duke of Prussia, but it was completed after his death, in 1589. It was a simple rectangular bay near the Angrapa River, with sacristy facing east. In 1769, the church was renovated with an altar from the workshop of Isaac of
Riga. Despite the damage in 1944, the church has survived two world wars. The nave has been preserved, now with a flat ceiling, but the tower is missing. After 1945, the church was used for other purposes and as a business building. In the early 1960s, it was rebuilt and now serves as a cultural center and library. Until 1945, Nemmersdorf was predominantly
Protestant with thirty Protestant clergy. During the Soviet period, church life was discouraged. Only in the 1990s was the new
Kaliningrad Oblast Evangelical Church established. The Parish belongs to the Provost's Kaliningrad Evangelical Lutheran Church in European Russia. ==References==