Here is a (slightly more detailed) variant of what was pointed out by grp.
Let $E$ and $F$ be non-isogenous elliptic curves over $K$. Let $n$ be a positive integer. (If $p=char(K)>0$ and $p$ divides $n$ we assume additionally that both $E$ and $F$ are ordinary elliptic curves.) Then there are order $n$ cyclic subgroups $C_n \subset E(K)$ and $D_n \subset F(K)$. Fix a group isomorphism $\phi: C_n \cong D_n$. Let
$$\Gamma(\phi)=[\{(x,\phi x) \mid x \in C_n \}] \subset C_n \times D_n \subset E(K) \times F(K)$$
be the graph of $\phi$; it is an order $n$ cyclic subgroup of $(E\times F)(K)$. Let us consider the quotient $A:= (E\times F)/\Gamma(\phi)$ and denote by $\pi: E\times F \to A$ the corresponding degree $n$ isogeny of abelian surfaces. Clearly, the restrictions of $\pi$ to $E \times \{e_F\}$ and $\{e_E\}\times F$ give us isomorphisms of elliptic curves
$$E=E \times \{e_F\} \cong \pi(E \times \{e_F\})=: E^{\prime}\subset A,$$
$$F=\{e_E\}\times F \cong \pi(\{e_E\}\times F)=: F^{\prime} \subset A.$$
(Here $e_E$ (resp. $e_F$) is the zero of group law on $E$ (resp. on $F$).)
It is also clear that the intersection of $E^{\prime}$ and $F^{\prime}$ (in $A$) is a cyclic order $n$ subgroup that is the image under $\pi$ of
$$[\{(x,0) \mid x \in C_n \}] \subset C_n \times D_n \subset E(K) \times F(K).$$
Now let $Z$ be a 1-dim'l abelian subvariety of $A$ and let $Y$ be the identity component of its preimage $\pi^{-1}(Z)$ in $E\times F$. Clearly, $Y$ is a 1-dim'l abelian subvariety of $E\times F$ and $\pi(Y)=Z$. It is also clear that (at least) one of projection maps
$$Y \to E, \ Y \to F$$
is non-constant. If $Y \to E$ is non-constant then it is an isogeny of elliptic curves. Since $E$ and $F$ are non-isogenous, $Y$ is non-isogenous to $F$ and therefore $Y \to F$ is the constant map to $e_F$. It follows that $Y=E\times \{e_F\}$ and therefore
$Z=\pi(Y)=E^{\prime}\subset A$. The same arguments prove that if $Y \to F$ is non-constant then $Z=F^{\prime} \subset A$.