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LATVIA, Republic of Latvia, a state in Eastern Europe. Located in the eastern Baltic. It borders on Estonia in the north, Lithuania in the south, and Russia and Belarus in the east. In the west it is washed by the Baltic Sea. Latvia first gained statehood on November 18, 1918, separating from Russia, and in 1940 it was incorporated into the USSR. In August 1991, the country regained independence during the collapse of the Soviet Union. The capital and largest city of Latvia is Riga (population in 1998: 826 thousand people); 118 thousand people live in Daugavpils.

The territory is divided into four cultural and historical regions: Kurzeme in the west, Zemgale in the south, Vidzeme in the center and northeast, and Latgale (Latgale) in the southeast.

NATURE Latvia is located in the extreme west of the East European Plain. The relief is slightly hilly, with heights of 100200 m above sea level. There are more than 700 rivers and streams on the territory of Latvia; they all belong to the pool Baltic Sea. Main river Daugava (in Russia Western Dvina), flows for 357 km through the territory of Latvia; its length from its source in Russia (Tver region) to its mouth in the Gulf of Riga is 1020 km. Other important rivers Gauja, Lielupe and Venta. Agricultural land is interspersed with wetlands, lakes (especially in Latgale) and mixed (near sea ​​coast pine) forests. The highest point of the relief of Gaizinkalns (in Vidzeme) has a height of 312 m above sea level. The country's proximity to the Baltic Sea softens the climate (average January temperature 5° C, July 17° C), the growing season is 170-180 days. The most fertile soils are located in Zemgale, the poorest along the sea coast. About 70% of agricultural land is waterlogged.

POPULATION In 1935, 1951 thousand inhabitants lived in Latvia; the share of indigenous nationalities was 76%, Russians 12%. In 2003, the population of Latvia was 2349 thousand people. Latvians make up only approx. 58% of the total population of their country. The remaining minorities are Russians (29.6%), Belarusians (4.1%), Ukrainians (2.7%), Poles (2.5%), Lithuanians (1.4%) and others (2%). This situation arose as a result of the policy of the Soviet state, which, by creating new factories in Latvia, recruited labor from different regions of the USSR. Most non-Latvians came to Latvia in the 1960s and 1980s. Many of them settled in Riga, the capital and most industrialized city of the country, so that in 1989 only a third of its inhabitants were Latvians.

During the Northern War (17001721), accompanied by a plague epidemic, the total population decreased to 230 thousand people. In the 20th century Latvia suffered significant population losses during the world wars due to emigration and deportations. It is estimated that during most of the 20th century. OK. 10% of the Latvian population lived outside Latvia. In the early 1990s, Latvia had similar demographic characteristics to Western European countries: a relatively late age at marriage, low fertility and mortality rates (8.55/1000 and 14.7/1000, respectively), a high percentage of people who never got married, and there was a high divorce rate. In 2003, the average life expectancy was 63.46 years for men and 75.45 years for women.

According to estimates, 55% of believers consider themselves Lutherans, 24% Catholics and 9% Orthodox. Other religious groups include Judaism, Baptists and Old Believers.

GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS In 1918, the administrative system of government of the Russian Empire was replaced by the institutions of a parliamentary republic. The Constitution of 1922 introduced the post of president, a unicameral parliament (Sejm) and a cabinet headed by the prime minister. In the 1920s and early 1930s, the center-left Social Democratic Party and the center-right Peasant Union enjoyed the greatest sympathy among voters, although several dozen parties and political groups participated in parliamentary elections. The Social Democrats regularly won a significant number of seats in the Sejm, while the Peasant Union succeeded in creating coalitions and government cabinets. This system was liquidated in May 1934, when Prime Minister Kārlis Ulmanis, leader of the Peasant Union and member of numerous former cabinets, carried out a coup d'etat. Ulmanis suspended the constitution and parliament, abolished political parties and introduced direct presidential rule. Ulmanis' personal dictatorship lasted until the summer of 1940, when Latvia was incorporated into the Soviet Union.

The subsequent Sovietization of Latvian state institutions and politics was stopped by the German attack on the USSR and the occupation of the Baltic states (1941–1944). During this period, more than 100 thousand people died in the Salaspils concentration camp. Sovietization resumed after 1945, although the “forest brothers” partisan movement actively fought against it until 1957. By the end of the 1940s state institutions in the Latvian SSR were the same as in all other Soviet republics. Their main function was to implement decisions made by the leadership of the USSR in Moscow. The only legal political party was the Communist Party of Latvia, whose members occupied all important government posts.

The political system that emerged in the Latvian SSR at the end of the 1940s remained essentially unchanged until the end of the 1980s during the period of glasnost and perestroika, when broad political movements called “popular fronts” arose in the Baltic republics. The first protest demonstration in Latvia took place on August 23, 1987. The Latvian Popular Front began its activities in October 1988 and soon surpassed the Communist Party in its numbers. At the same time, the KPL was rapidly losing its members. The Supreme Council, elected in March 1990, was dominated by members of the Latvian Popular Front (2/3 of the seats) and other public organizations that advocated secession from the Soviet Union. On May 4, 1990, the Supreme Council of the LSSR adopted the Declaration of Restoration of Independence and changed the name of the country to the Republic of Latvia.

On August 21, 1991, the Supreme Council declared the independence of Latvia, and on August 23, the Communist Party was banned. On September 6, 1991, the Soviet Union officially recognized the independence of Latvia.

After the restoration of independence, the Supreme Council remained the legislative body of power, and its chairman was the official head of state. Executive power was vested in the Council of Ministers, headed by the Prime Minister. This system remained in force until parliamentary elections in June 1993, which brought the Sejm back to life. The Declaration of Independence, adopted in May 1990, was confirmed and the 1922 constitution was restored. The system of government provided for an elected parliament (Sejm), a president elected by the Sejm, and a multi-party political system with proportional representation. During the transition period of 1991–1993, the Supreme Council passed reform laws to eliminate remnants of the Soviet system and restored many of the legal principles of the first republic, including those relating to private property, personal rights, and freedom of speech and assembly. In addition, the Supreme Council began to create border and customs services and a small armed force. The task of completing all this work fell to the new Sejm.

By 1993, the political structure of the republic had stabilized. The Sejm reformed the government ministries the country inherited from the Soviet period and developed civil service principles for government officials. An agreement was reached with the Russian Federation on the withdrawal of former Soviet troops. In August 1998, the last Russian military unit left Latvia after the closure radar station in Skrunda. In 1994, the Sejm adopted a new Law on Citizenship, which determined the status of various population groups, and in 1995 adopted a Law on Naturalization. However, as the 1995 elections approached, the political situation became increasingly unstable. The political situation stabilized in June 1999 when new line-up The Seimas elected a new President of Latvia.

Latvia refused to join the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), the successor to the Soviet Union, but entered into bilateral agreements with individual members of this commonwealth, in particular with Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. In September 1991, Latvia became a member of the UN, in 1992 a member of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, and in 1995 a member of the Council of Europe. In the late 1990s, Latvia applied for membership in NATO and the EU. In May 2004, Latvia became a member of the EU, and in the same year it was admitted to NATO.

ECONOMY Since 1991, a temporary currency was introduced into circulation - the so-called. Latvian ruble (popularly called “repshik” after the name of the President of the State Bank of Latvia, Einar Repse). In 1992–1993, the structure of the Latvian economy began to be restructured on the principles of a market economy. A number of its sectors (trade, services, banks) were freed from state control; in other sectors (education, health care) this control was maintained. The same applied to prices (state prices for some consumer goods remained, while market prices appeared for others). To mitigate the impact of rising prices, the government established a minimum wage level and provided support to low-income segments of the population. Until 1993, Latvia continued to use the ruble as its main currency (along with foreign currency). In the spring of 1993, its own currency, lats, pegged to the German mark, was introduced, and by the end of summer this currency replaced the entire money supply in circulation. By the spring of 1994, the strict monetarist policy of the Central Bank of Latvia had reduced inflation in the country to 37% compared to 109% in 1993, and in 2002 it dropped to 2%.

Privatization of state property and its return to previous owners (after nationalization in the 1940s) has been slow. Factories and collective farms are often transformed into worker-owned cooperative enterprises. The number of enterprises with private owners is gradually growing (in 1997 their share in GDP was 60%). Many of them have established partnerships with investors from other countries, especially Sweden, Germany and Poland. In 1994 and 1995, economic reforms produced their first results. The inflation rate continued to decline (to 26% in 1995). The ten-year decline in gross domestic product (GDP) slowed in 1993 and began to rise in 1994. By 1994, more than half of all agricultural land had been transferred to farmers, while the rest of the land had passed into the hands of agricultural cooperatives. Privatization of city property proceeded more slowly, and the incomes of city residents remained low (in 1997, the incomes of 66% of residents remained below the subsistence level).

In 1997, GDP increased by 6.5%, inflation remained at 8.5%. Production growth in 1998 slowed due to the economic crisis in Russia, but still reached 4.5%, and inflation dropped to 3.5% (one of the lowest rates in the countries of Eastern Europe). Country's GDP began to be valued at 20.99 billion dollars or per capita at 8900 US dollars (as of 2002). The agricultural share in GDP was 4.5%, industrial 26% and other services 69.5%.

Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia signed an agreement on the establishment customs union, and the volume of trade between these countries began to increase rapidly. Economic ties with members of the CIS (especially Russia, Ukraine and Belarus) also developed. The volume of Latvia's foreign trade with Western European countries, especially with the Scandinavian countries and Germany, has also increased. Latvia's membership in the IMF and the World Bank provided the country with the necessary investment capital.

SOCIETY Until the end of the 19th century. Latvian society was dominated by the Baltic German elite. The Baltic Germans retained their privileged position in the 17th century, when the Baltic states were under the rule of Sweden and Poland, and in the 18th–19th centuries. under Russian rule. Some of them came from families of crusaders and traders who settled in the Baltic states in the 12th-13th centuries; however, most German families settled here much later. Among the German population, the greatest power was held by aristocrats (barons), who owned most of the land, as well as wealthy townspeople (burghers), who dominated the life of centers such as Riga and Jelgava. In addition to the Germans, the upper strata of society included Russian officials, and in the southeast, Polish landowners. The overwhelming majority of the rural population (approx. 85-90%) were Latvian-speaking peasants (freed from serfdom at the beginning of the 19th century).

Latvian nationalism, the growth of industry and the Russification policy pursued by the tsarist government destroyed this system at the end of the 19th century. With Latvia gaining independence (in 1918), Russians and Germans lost their privileged position, and Latvians began to control the country's political institutions. However, even in the 1920s and 1930s, almost a quarter of Latvia's population was made up of national minorities, the largest of which were Russians (10.6%), Jews (4.8%) and Germans (3.2%).

The Second World War and the deportations of the 1940s significantly reduced the population of Latvia. 120 thousand Latvian collaborators left with the retreating Germans in 1944-1945; The Soviet authorities deported approx. 16 thousand in 1940, approx. 140 thousand in 19441945 and approx. 100 thousand people in 1949. According to estimates, the number of Latvians in Latvia in 1949 was 435 thousand people (a third of the Latvian population) less than in 1935.

Changes in the social and ethnic structure of the population destroyed the pre-war middle class (officials, intellectuals, entrepreneurs). Therefore, in the post-war period, the leadership of Soviet Latvia filled official positions with Russified Latvians who grew up in the pre-war Soviet Union, or representatives of other ethnic groups. After 1991 social structure is undergoing a reverse transformation the returning descendants of Latvian emigrants are beginning to play an increasingly important role.

Since the end of 1990, unemployment began to rise, reaching 7.6% in September 1998, and unemployment benefits lagged significantly behind the subsistence level. In January 1997, the government increased the official retirement age to 65 for both men and women (previously 62 for men and 55 for women). The proportion of the population below the poverty line is constantly increasing, and many people are forced to work multiple jobs to feed their families.

CULTURE Since the territory of Latvia was under the rule of German barons for centuries, the first written monuments of Latvian culture were initially created in Latin and German. Latvian folklore during the Middle Ages and up to the 19th century. remained oral, the Latvian peasantry created original oral traditions, songs and epics in their own language, they were passed down orally from generation to generation, and in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. took their final form. They were recorded in the 60-90s of the 19th century. Therefore, Latvian folk songs bear the stamp of the enslavement of the people by German merchants, the Roman church and feudal landowners, reflecting the struggle with the German barons and class contradictions in Latvian society. They also reflect the views, opinions and sentiments of the poorest and most oppressed sections of the peasantry from the late 18th to early 19th centuries. These folk songs collected by Chr. Baron (18351923), and folk tales, collected by A. Lerhis-Puskaitis (1859–1903), published by the Russian Academy of Sciences, constitute the only monument of Latvian literary creativity until the mid-19th century.

Before this, in 1526, the first translation of the prayer appeared Our Father, which became generally the first written document in the Latvian language, forty years later the entire catechism. During the period of Swedish rule, psalms were translated, and at the beginning of the 18th century. Pastor Ernst Gluck, famous for the fact that Martha Skavronskaya, the future Russian Empress Catherine I, once lived in his house as a servant, translated the Bible into Latvian. At the very end of the 18th century. Under the influence of Western Europe, Lutheran German pastors initiated secular literature in the Latvian language, which they considered a counterweight to Latvian folk songs. The most prominent exponent of this period in Latvian literature was Stender the Elder (1714-1796), who wanted to overcome the influence of folk songs with his creativity and introduce peasants to German culture.

In the middle of the 19th century. in Latvia, a rapid process of the emergence of a national bourgeoisie begins, the first writers appear, substantiating the rights of the Latvian bourgeoisie in the struggle against feudal landowners and the urban German bourgeoisie (Chr. Valdemars (1825-1891), A. Spagis (1820-1871), K. Bezbardis and etc.). The young national bourgeoisie sought to justify its role in the history of the Latvian people, which was allegedly forcibly interrupted seven hundred years ago by the invasion of German colonialists. Latvian mythology is being resurrected and partially artificially created. The development of the Latvian language begins, liberating it from Germanisms (A. Kronvald, J. Allunans, etc.).

IN fiction This period of Latvian farming corresponds to the appearance of poetry that was artistic in form, nationalist-romantic in content, the outstanding representatives of which were Auseklis (1850-1879), A. Pumpurs (1841-1902), Chr. Baron (18351923), Yu. Allunans (18321864), etc.

In the mid-1880s, the Latvian bourgeoisie experienced its first economic crisis. Due to the fall in grain prices on the world market, farmers and the urban bourgeoisie, who invested their capital in trade and home ownership, are going bankrupt, and opposition to nationalism is growing due to the crisis. The organ of the opposition was the newspaper “Dienas Lapa”, the editors of which were J. Pleksan-Rainis (1865-1929) and P. Stuchka (1865-1932). New era proclaims his Thoughts on the latest literature(1893) one of the first Latvian Marxists J. Janson-Brown (1870-1917), who opposed romanticism and conservatism. In fiction, representatives of the new trend are Eduard Veidenbaum (1867-1892), Eduard Zvargulis-Treymans (1865) and Aspasia (1865). Weidenbaum's poems could not be published during his lifetime due to censorship conditions; the first legal collection of them, and then with cuts, appeared only after 1905. They were sold in manuscripts, their author became the most beloved poet of national democracy.

The greatest poet of the 1905 revolution was I( (eld(\*(HYPERLINK "http://feb-web.ru/feb/litenc/encyclop/le9/le9-5073.htm" ))((. Rainis))))(1865-1929), one of the greatest national poets, editor of the newspaper Dienas Lapa. In 1897 Rainis was arrested and deported to the Vyatka province. From exile he writes his famous Distant Chords, published as a separate book in 1903 and became the literary gospel of the eve of 1905. In this symbolic-impressionist collection, Heine’s caustic satire on the sleeping winter sleep the homeland, its bourgeoisie and provincial-philistine morals and way of life is combined with a call to fight, for “a new time will not come if people do not bring it.”

Another prominent Latvian writer of the 20th century. was Andrei Upit (1877), novelist, short story writer, playwright, critic. As an artist he was very prolific; he wrote over ten large novels, a large number of short stories and short stories, and over a dozen major dramas. Starting with a realistic description of the life of the village, at the end creative path became close to the fascist literature of Latvia.

During the years of the fascist occupation of Latvia (1941-1944), no notable writers and poets appeared. As a result, by the end of the twentieth century, three layers of Latvian culture had developed in the country. The first layer is Latvian literature and traditions before Soviet times. The second layer was formed after 1945 outside Latvia among approximately 120 thousand emigrants who created Latvian communities in Sweden, Germany, the USA, Canada and Australia. The third layer was the cultural life in Latvia after 1945, which was created by both the pro-Soviet intelligentsia and the anti-Soviet opposition.

see also LATVIAN.

The inclusion of Latvia into the Soviet Union changed all areas of cultural life, including the education system. The main direction was socialist realism in literature and fine arts. All levels of the education system developed in two language directions - Latvian and Russian, Latvians became acquainted with the international culture of the peoples of the USSR and other countries. However, in the mid-1980s, radical changes occurred in Latvian culture. With the advent of glasnost, publishers and writers began to publish previously prohibited works. The leading figures of the Latvian Popular Front were cultural figures such as Jānis Peters (b. 1939), who for some time served as the Latvian ambassador to Russia, and the composer Raimonds Pauls (b. 1936), later Minister of Culture.

STORY It is not possible to determine the ethnicity of the oldest inhabitants of Latvia. According to archaeological data, in the middle of the 3rd millennium BC. The culture of pit-comb ceramics spreads throughout Latvia. (The dishes were covered with an ornament resembling a comb imprint). The carriers of this culture came from the east; perhaps they were the ancestors of the Finnish tribes. At the beginning of 2 thousand BC. a “culture of corded pottery” appeared (a new pottery ornament was obtained by pressing a cord into soft clay) and boat-shaped battle axes. It is believed that the above-mentioned cultures gave rise to the culture of the ancestors of the Baltic tribes who came to the south and southwest of Latvia.

Through modern territory country at the beginning of the 1st century. AD passed the border of settlement of the Baltic and Finnish tribes; they were separated by the Daugava. The closest people to the Finns lived were the Curonians, Semigallians, Selo and Latgalians. The languages ​​of all four tribes were influenced by Finno-Ugric.

The population of ancient Latvia lived in wooden castles (feudal lords), suburbs (craftsmen), villages and farmsteads. Posads, the number of inhabitants of which reached several hundred, were usually located at large castles. Strengthening the settlements with palisades turned them into shelter during wars. In the area of ​​the lower reaches of the Daugava there were settlements with an ethnically mixed population, where, along with agriculture, crafts and trade developed. These settlements mark the transition to early cities. The settlements, called in Latin sources civitas, urbs, locus, were called pilsats by local residents. Rural residents lived in villages, in wooded and swampy areas and on farmsteads. Several settlements made up the community of pagasts. Several pagasts united into a castle district, in the center of which was the feudal lord's castle with a settlement. Castle districts were united into “lands” or “edges”.

The Curonians lived on the coast of the Baltic Sea. Their southern border extended far into present-day Lithuania, reaching Kaunas. In sources, the Curonians are first mentioned when describing the events of 675. In the 9th-12th centuries. they were already known as excellent sailors, traders and pirates. Saxo Grammar in his Scandinavian history writes that they reached the shores of Denmark and Sweden. The most famous local feudal lord in Kurzeme was Lamekins he bore the title rex.

To the east of the Curonians, in the Lielupe basin, lived the Semigallians. In the south, their border entered present-day Lithuania; they were separated from the Finnish tribes by the Daugava. Semigallians were first mentioned in sources in 870. Highest value in Zemgale had Tervet Castle, in which at the beginning of the 13th century. lived Viestarts (Viesturs), called the Semigallian leader (dux).

The villages lived to the east of the Semigallians, on the left bank of the Daugava. Their name was first mentioned in the chronicle of Henry Latvian in the 13th century. There were at least 5 castles in Selia, the main one being Selpils.

In the 13th century the lands of the Curonians, Semigallians and villages became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

On the right bank of the Daugava, north of the villages, were the lands of the Latgalians. They were first mentioned in the Riga Chronicle of the 11th-12th centuries. The Latgalians created state formations of a higher type - principalities, the largest of which were Jersika, Koknese, Talava. Living in a territory through which important trade routes passed, the Latgalians came under the influence of Russian lands and paid tribute to the Polotsk and Pskov princes. Orthodoxy spread in the lands of the Latgalians.

On the coast of the Gulf of Riga at the beginning of the 13th century. Finnish Liv tribes lived. Of the leaders of the Daugava Livs, the most famous is Ako, who was called leader and elder.

In the 2nd half of the 12th century. German merchants appear here. Using the trade route along the Daugava, they move deeper into the territory. Local residents willingly trade with them. The Livs allow merchants to build warehouses in their settlement of Ikskile. Around 1164, the Augustinian monk Maynard arrived with German traders, preached Christianity to the local residents, and achieved such significant success in this that he was appointed the first bishop of the city founded in 1186. "Ikshkile Bishopric in Rus'."

Bishop Maynard built in 118586 in the settlement of Ikskile on the banks of the Daugava with the help of stonemasons from the island. Gotland stone castle and church the first stone buildings mentioned by historical sources in the Baltics. Since 1198, the territory of Latvia became the object of a crusade declared by the Pope. The new Bishop of Ikskile Bertold defeated the Livs who lived in the lower reaches of the Gauja River, but he himself died at the hands of the Liv leader Imant (Imauta). His follower, Bishop Albert, founded Riga in 1201, which became an outpost of crusader aggression in the Baltic states and moved the episcopal throne here, becoming the first bishop of Riga. In 1206, Cesis Castle was built (in those days the castle was called Wenden) - a stronghold for the conquest of Northern Latgale and Southern Estonia.

In 1207, the Livonians submitted to the bishop and were baptized according to the Catholic rite. The conquered lands were divided between the bishop and the Order of the Sword, founded in 1202. The conquered lands were called Livland. In 12061224 the crusaders conquered the Latgalians, in 1208 the villages.

In 1223, the conquest of Prussia began by the troops of the Teutonic Order, which advanced from the lower reaches of the Vistula to the east. The Order of the Swordsmen was moving towards him from the Daugava and the Gulf of Riga in a western direction. In 1237, after the defeat from the Lithuanians at the Battle of Saul (1237), the orders were forced to unite, and the Order of the Sword, as a local branch of the Teutonic Order, began to be called the Livonian Order.

Conquering the lands of the Curonians turned out to be more difficult. Only in 1231 did the Order manage to capture part of the Northern and Middle Courses, and the entire region was conquered only in 1252. However, in 1260, in the battle between the Lithuanians and the crusaders at Durbe, the Curonians and Estonians went over to the side of the Lithuanians, as a result of which the German knights were defeated and the rebels The Curonians had to be pacified for another 6 years. In 1267 the Curonians were forced to conclude a peace treaty with the crusaders. By 1290 Zemgale was finally conquered.

Livonia so from the second quarter of the 13th century. called the entire territory of Latvia and Estonia. The most powerful were the lands of the Livonian Order and the Archbishopric of Riga. The Livonian Order, the Archbishop of Riga and the Livonian bishops were subordinate to the Pope.

The most centralized management was on the lands of the Livonian Order. The Order was headed by a Master, elected for life. The entire territory was divided into regions led by commanders or Vogts who lived in fortified castles. According to his official position in the 13th century. Vogts stood below commanders, but by the 14th century. this difference has disappeared. Commanders, Vogts and the highest ranks of the Order were part of the convention - an advisory body on administrative and military-political affairs.

In the Archbishopric of Riga, administration was in the hands of the archbishop and the chapter of cathedral canons (a council of 12 senior clergy). In the second half of the 14th century. Mantags began to gather - meetings of all the vassals of the archbishopric. In the 15th century An archbishopric council was formed, consisting of 6 members of the chapter and 6 vassals. The territory of the archbishopric was divided into three parts: the domain (the property of the archbishop), the lands of the chapter of cathedral canons and the fiefs of the vassals. Vassals enjoyed almost unlimited economic independence on their lands. In the 14th-15th centuries. estates appeared, and vassals from knights turned into landowners. Thus, in 1257, vassals received privileges from Archbishop Sylvester Stoddewesher (“Sylvester’s favor”), by which feudal estates actually turned into the private property of the vassals.

Livonian peasants settled in villages united in pagasts, headed by elders appointed by the feudal lord. The Pagasts also had their own courts, where the older peasants were the judges. Gradually, the rural system was replaced by the farm system, because When new landowners' estates were established, entire villages were demolished, and peasants settled in farmsteads on less fertile lands. The farm system completely destroyed the rural community. In the 13th century The main form of exploitation of peasants was food rent, which was not particularly difficult for the peasants. The conquering crusaders preferred to plunder neighboring lands, robbing the vanquished of livestock, silver, food, and jewelry. By the end of the 15th century. There was a legal formalization of the enslavement of the peasantry, which, in particular, was reflected in the agreement of 1494, which was concluded between the Bishop of Riga and his vassals on the mutual extradition of fugitive peasants. A special court was established to settle cases of runaway peasants - gackengericht (plow court). Judges established the belonging of peasants to one or another owner on the basis of the land register.

The intermediate layer between the feudal lords and the peasants was made up of the laymans, small vassals of the Livonian Order and the Archbishop of Riga, Latvians by origin. For the use of lands they were obliged to participate in military campaigns.

Relations between the Livonian Order and the Archbishopric of Riga were complex and confusing. In the 13th century The Order actually managed to free itself from vassal dependence on the bishops, and a long struggle for hegemony in Livonia began. The main object of struggle between them was Riga. At first, the supreme head of Riga was Bishop Albert, who later renounced his rights to Riga in favor of the Danish king. In 1221, the people of Riga rebelled against the new overlord, and power passed into the hands of an assembly of townspeople who elected the city council (magistrate). From the second half of the 13th century. the council was replenished by co-optation; the magistrate himself appointed his new members. In the 14th century the number of members of the magistrate was 20 people, including 16 ratmans and 4 burgomasters; the position of ratman became lifelong. Having entered at the end of the 13th century. In the Hanseatic League, Riga adopted Hamburg city law. The Riga Statutes, revised with minor changes, were in force until the 17th century.

At the end of the 13th century. strained relations between Riga and the Livonian Order escalated into an armed conflict that lasted more than 30 years. In 1330, after a long siege, the resistance of the townspeople was broken and the city surrendered to the Order. According to the agreement of March 23, 1330, Riga recognized the authority of the Livonian Order over itself, and was dependent on it until the beginning of the 15th century.

The defeat of the Teutonic Order in 1410 at the Battle of Grunwald had a significant impact on political relations in the Eastern Baltic. Gradually, the Teutonic Order fell into fief dependence on Poland, and in 1525 its final secularization occurred, turning Prussia into a vassal duchy. The Livonian Order, although not directly affected in this battle, gradually began to lose its political significance. In order to neutralize the Order, the Archbishop of Riga in 1419 convened the first Livonian Landtag (a meeting of representatives of all Livonian territories) in Valka. The Landtag, which consisted of four curiae, was not very efficient, because a unanimous decision of all chambers was required; however, he was very useful to the archbishop in order to paralyze the influence of the Order.

The heyday of the Moscow state in the second half of the 15th century. and his policy aimed at unifying the Russian lands changed the balance of power in Europe. The Livonian Order began to actively intervene in Russian affairs and support Novgorod in its struggle against Moscow. In 1471, the Order's troops invaded the territory of Pskov, an ally of Moscow. In response, Ivan III sent a 20,000-strong army to the borders of Livonia, which forced the Master of the Order to make concessions. The peace treaty concluded between Livonia and Moscow back in 1469 was renewed.

Subsequently, after the capture of Novgorod, Ivan III repeatedly took military action against Livonia. In 1492, the Russians began to build a powerful fortress, Ivan-Gorod, on the eastern bank of the Narova River, which could be used for both defense and attack. The Master of the Order, Walter Plettenberg, believed that a clash with Moscow was inevitable, and began to seek help from neighboring states. The regent of Sweden, Sten Sture, agreed to help the Order, and in 1501 an agreement was concluded with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In response to these actions, Ivan III again sent an army to Livonia, where the Russians managed to win a number of victories and even reach Cesis. In 1503, a truce was concluded between Moscow and Livonia for a period of 6 years, which was then extended several times.

A long period of peace with the Russian state (more than 50 years) contributed to the fact that in the first half of the 16th century. Livonia entered a period of economic recovery. Trade with Russian cities was of great importance, where Livonian merchants supplied salt and from where they received furs and timber, which they then profitably resold to Western Europe. Favorable conditions also developed for the grain trade. In turn, this led to the establishment of new estates and the expansion of lordly farming in old ones, accompanied by a massive expulsion of peasants from their plots. The feudal lords also sought to earn money as intermediaries, buying bread and other products from the peasants. The highest levels were also involved in grain speculation. officials Catholic Church. Number of corvée days in the mid-16th century. reached 300 days a year. All peasants, even the poor, were subject to a wide variety of taxes. Peasants did not have the right to engage in trade or leave their lands without permission. The landowners arrogated to themselves the right to sell and give gifts to the peasants. “Our dogs live much better than the poor peasants of this land,” wrote the Hamburg professor Kranz in 1519.

In the 20s of the 16th century. ideas of the Reformation began to spread in Livonia. Their forerunners were Andrei Knopken and Sylvester Tegetmeyer. The beginning of the Reformation was a dispute in St. Peter's Church between Knopken and the Catholic priests. Against the will of the bishop, the Riga council appointed Knopken and Tegetmeyer as priests in the churches of St. Peter and St. James (Jekab). In 1523, a preacher of Anabaptism, Melchior Hoffman, appeared in Riga and was soon expelled.

Lutheran preachers in Riga sought to find a common language with the Latvians. A. Knopken, in particular, joined the Riga Brotherhood of Latvian Longshoremen. Joachim Müller became a member of the beer peddling fraternity. In 1524, the first Latvian Lutheran parish arose at the Church of St. James, where services were conducted in the Latvian language. In 1530 the first church hymns were written down in Latvian. By the middle of the 16th century. The Reformation in Livonia as a whole was victorious; only large feudal lords remained Catholics.

In the second half of the 16th century. The territory of the fragmented Livonian states was claimed by Russia, Sweden, Denmark and Lithuania. In 1558, the Livonian War began, which ended only in 1583. The immediate cause of the war was the conclusion of a military alliance between Lithuania and Livonia in 1557, which contradicted the Russian-Livonian peace treaty of 1551. In January 1558, Russian troops entered Livonian territory, took Narva on May 11, July 19 Yuryev (now Tartu). In January of the following year, the Russian army besieged Riga. Elected Master of the Order in February 1559, Gotthard Ketler was forced to turn to the Polish king Sigismund II Augustus for help. The king agreed to take the territories of the Order and the Archbishopric of Riga under his protectorate and pledged to achieve peace with the Moscow state. In September 1559, Bishop of Kurzeme and Saaremaa John IV Munchausen sold his bishopric to Denmark. In 1560, the Russian army again entered the territory of Livonia, Aluksne Castle (Marienburg) and the Viljandi Fortress (Fellin) were taken. The leading Russian regiments marched all the way through northern Vidzeme, encountering almost no resistance, and captured and burned a number of castles. At the same time, since the accession of Eric XIV to the throne in Sweden, the activities of Swedish diplomacy intensified in Livonia, which managed to achieve the subordination of Northern Estonia and Tallinn by Sweden. Due to fear of competition from the Swedes, Sigismund II Augustus sent his representatives to Riga to prepare a new treaty with Livonia. On November 28, 1561, the Master of the Order, the Archbishop of Riga and representatives of the Livonian estates swore allegiance to Sigismund II Augustus. The Lithuanian Chancellor Nikolai Radziwill the Black was appointed the highest military commander of all Livonia. The final treaty was signed on March 5, 1562, the Livonian Order and the Livonian state ceased to exist. Ketler was proclaimed Duke of Courland and Semigall and appointed governor of the Duchy of Zadvina (Pardaugava). Riga retained its independence until 1581.

However, the Livonian War continued, the Moscow state fought with Lithuania and Poland, and later with Sweden. In the west there was a struggle between Denmark and Sweden. In 1576, when Stefan Batory became the Polish king, the army of Ivan IV invaded Livonia and began a successful advance, occupying Daugavpils, Rezekne, Cesis and other cities. Then the counter-offensive of the Polish troops began in the direction of Polotsk and Pskov, and the Swedish troops in the direction of Narva. The Swedes managed to recapture Estonian cities previously occupied by the Russian army and occupy Ingermanland. In 1583, Ivan IV recognized the Swedish conquests. Stefan Batory in 1581 concluded an agreement with Riga on the subordination of the city to the Polish-Lithuanian state while maintaining a number of privileges for it and introducing new ones related to peasants. On January 15, 1582, the Yam-Zapolsky Peace Treaty was concluded between the Moscow state and the Polish king, according to which Ivan IV renounced Livonia. The political map in the center of Europe again began to resemble what it was in 1561. Estonia remained part of Sweden, Vidzeme and Latgale part of the Polish-Lithuanian state, the Duchy of Courland and Zemgale the possessions of Ketler and a duchy dependent on Poland.

In the territories that became part of Poland, the Duchy of Zadvina, the privileges of the Livonian nobility were preserved and confirmed. Probably on November 28, 1561, King Sigismund II Augustus signed the so-called Privilege (Privilegium Sigismundi Augusti), according to which German administration and German laws, the Lutheran faith were preserved, officials were to be appointed only from local nobles, the rights of nobles to their estates and to peasants, and the judicial power of landowners over their peasants were secured. Although the original of this document has not survived and therefore doubts about its existence were repeatedly expressed, the Livonian nobility considered these privileges valid and subsequent conquerors were more or less forced to recognize them.

The duchy was headed by a governor appointed by the Polish king. In 1566, the Lithuanian hetman Jan Chodkiewicz was appointed to this position, instead of the too independent Ketler. In 1582, Stefan Batory issued the so-called Livonian Constitutions (Constitutiones Livonie), which determined the state structure of the duchy. The duchy was divided into voivodeships, voivodeships and districts headed by elders. The former Landtag was renamed the Sejmik, which consisted of elected representatives of the nobles.

In the second half of the 16th century. The counter-reformation won in the Polish-Lithuanian state, which also affected the Livonian territories. A Catholic bishopric was formed in Cesis, and Jesuits settled in Riga. The latter managed to exploit the national contradictions between the German nobility, on the one hand, and the Latvian and Estonian peasants, on the other. In Riga and Dorpat (Tartu) they founded educational colleges, where access was open to the local population and where teaching was conducted in Latvian and Estonian. In 1585 the Catholic Catechism was published in Latvian. Under the influence of the activities of the Jesuits, the images of traditional Latvian deities and Catholic saints merged in the minds of Latvian peasants. Thus, the characteristics of the earth mother Mara and the goddess of fate Laima were attributed to the Mother of God Mary.

At the suggestion of Pope Gregory XIII, Stefan Batory ordered the introduction of a new calendar, including in the Duchy of Transdvina. Riga residents regarded this as a “cunning of the Catholics” and in 1584 unrest began in the city, called “calendar riots.” The leaders of the movement were the wine merchant Brinken, the tinsmith Zengeisen and the lawyer Giese. On January 23, 1585, the warring parties entered into an agreement that prohibited the activities of the Jesuits in Riga, canceled the introduction of a new calendar, and limited the powers of the magistrate. When Stefan Batory ordered the restoration of the previous situation, the uprising acquired an openly anti-Polish character. However (after the death of Stefan Batory and the accession of Sigismund III to the throne), many townspeople began to tend to an agreement with the Polish king. In July 1589, when the main city privileges were confirmed, the demands of the royal side were fulfilled. The power of the magistrate was restored, the leaders of the uprising were executed.

At the end of the 16th century. Polish-Swedish contradictions sharply escalated, which led to a war between these states (1600–1629). In 1600 the Swedes invaded Vidzeme and reached the banks of the Daugava. The Swedish fleet began the blockade of Riga in 1604, but already in 1605, at the Battle of Salaspils, the Swedish army was defeated; King Charles IX escaped capture with great difficulty. In connection with the Polish-Swedish intervention in Russia, military operations near Riga were suspended and resumed again in 1617. The new king of Sweden, Gustav II Adolf, led the attack of the military and transport fleet with an amphibious army on Riga and on September 15, 1621 the city surrendered to the Swedes. According to the terms of the Altmark Truce of 1621, Riga and most of Vidzeme up to the Aiviekste River passed to Sweden, the south-eastern part, which the Poles called Inflanty Polskie, and the Latvians called Latgale, remained in the hands of Poland. Until 1920 Latgale was separated from the rest of the Latvian lands. While Courland and the territories that were part of Sweden were Protestant, Latgale became a Catholic region. After Gustav Adolf expelled the Jesuits from Riga, they moved to Daugavpils. The Jesuits paid great attention to the printing of church books in the Latvian language. The Catholic catechism of Georg Elger was published in several editions. In 1683, a Polish-Latin-Latvian dictionary compiled by the Jesuits was published. Catholic books were printed in the Latgalian dialect using Polish orthography and font. The Latgalian nobility gradually became Polish and only the peasants retained the Latvian language.

Under Swedish rule Livonia was located from 1629 to 1710. For both countries, this was a generally positive period of interaction. Livonia and Riga were of great importance for Swedish foreign policy, being a constant source of government revenue. The new permanent tax, paid in kind, provided the Swedes with a significant amount of bread and other products. “Livonia is the grain barn of Sweden” was a widespread saying of the time.

At the head of the administration of Livonia was a governor-general, appointed by the king and considered his governor. In 1634 the Swedish government acted as authorities local government The Landtags convened by the Livlandian nobility were recognized, and in 1643 the government allowed the establishment of a board of landrat (land councilors), who were supposed to represent the interests of the population of Livlandia before the governor-general. The position of land marshal was also established, who was a permanent representative of the Livonian nobility. In 1630–1632, a judicial reform was carried out: zemstvo courts, a castle court and a court court (Hofgericht) were established. The Livonian nobility lost the right to try peasants in criminal cases; peasants could now file complaints against their landowners. At the same time, the same laws sanctioned serfdom in Livonia.

The numerous wars waged by the Swedish kings required funds, and therefore Charles X began, and Charles XI continued, the reduction of landowners' estates. The lands distributed to the Livonian nobles under Gustav II Adolf and Queen Christina again became state lands. Former owners in most cases remained in their previous tenure as tenants. The new land audit, the order for which was issued in 1680, was aimed at determining the size of corvee and peasant taxes, as well as increasing state revenues. In 1696 it was published Economy mode regulating the relationship between the state, tenants and peasants. The document preserved the serfdom, but somewhat limited the arbitrariness of the landowners in relation to the peasants. In general, the land reform somewhat improved the situation of the peasantry, creating the preconditions for the capitalist development of the countryside. A reform of the administration of the Duchy of Livonia was also carried out (1694), which virtually eliminated local autonomy. The Landtag turned into an insignificant meeting of noble owners of estates, convened and led by the governor.

The Swedish kings cared about the development of education in Livonia. In 1632, Gustav II Adolf founded the University of Dorpat, and a gymnasium was established in Riga to train officials and pastors. Schools were created for the Latvian population.

During the Northern War of 17001721, Livonia immediately became a theater of military operations. In 1700, the Saxon troops of Augustus II, an ally of Russia, suddenly attacked Riga. It was not possible to occupy the city and the war dragged on. In the fall of 1700, Swedish troops appeared in Livonia. Having won a victory over the Russian army near Narva, the Swedes defeated the Saxons and invaded Poland through Courland. However, in 1701-1703, the troops of Peter I took revenge for the defeat near Narva; at the end of 1701, troops under the command of Boris Sheremetev defeated an eight-thousand-strong detachment of Swedes under the command of General Schlippenbach at Erestfer (Errastfera), 50 km from Dorpat. This was followed by victory on July 17, 1702 in the battle of Gummelshof Manor. In August 1702, the Marienburg (Aluksne) fortress was taken by storm. Among the residents of Marienburg taken prisoner was Marta Skavronskaya, a pupil of pastor Ernst Gluck, later Russian Empress Catherine I. In 1706, Augustus II made peace with the Swedes. However, the victory of Peter I at Poltava radically changed the situation. In 1610, virtually all of Vidzeme was already in Russian hands. According to the terms of the capitulation of Riga, signed on July 14-15, 1710, the city was guaranteed all its previous rights and benefits, and the privileges of the Livonian nobles and Riga patricians, abolished by the Swedish government, were restored. According to the Nystad Peace Treaty of 1721 with Sweden, Livonia and Estland were part of Russia. Livonia received a well-known self-government: the class bodies of the nobility were restored - the Landtag, the College of Landrat. The Restitution Commission, which began its work after the conclusion of the peace treaty, returned their estates to the former owners - the nobles. In just 25 years, 75% of Vidzeme estates were returned.

Duchy of Courland and Zemgale, at first it was in fief dependence on Lithuania, after the signing of the Polish-Lithuanian union (1659) it swore allegiance to the Polish crown.

In the very first years of his reign, Gotthard Ketler encountered disobedience from a number of magnates who refused to recognize him as sovereign. The Duke was forced to constantly fight to strengthen his power and preserve the throne for his offspring. In 1570, at the insistence of the nobility, he signed the “Gotthard Privilege”, according to which the noble estates were turned into private property. The Duke had no right to interfere in the internal affairs of noble estates.

Ketler's will contributed to the strengthening of feudal fragmentation: after his death, the duchy was divided into two parts, which were ruled by his sons Frederick and Wilhelm. The nobles, in turn, sought to seize all political power in the duchy into their own hands and sabotaged all of William’s events. The opposition was led by the Nolde brothers, who appealed to the Polish king with a complaint against the duke. The Polish king satisfied part of the demands of the nobility. In 1615, the Nolde brothers were killed while trying to resist arrest. The commission of inquiry of the Polish king found Wilhelm guilty of the murder of Nolde and in 1617 the duke was removed from power. Kurzeme and Zemgale were again united under the rule of one duke, who became Frederick. The capital of the duchy became Mitava (Jelgava).

In 1617, a special commission developed the basic laws of the duchy “Formula of Government” and a set of criminal and civil laws Courland statutes. To resolve all the most important issues, a special council was created under the duke, which included 4 representatives from the nobility and two doctors of law. The Council and 4 Oberghauptmanns constituted the highest court court. The territory of the duchy was divided into 4 Oberghauptmanships and 27 Landtag districts. The Oberghauptmanns were also judges. The Duke did not have the right to remove senior officials. Supreme body The class representation of the nobility was the Landtag, which met at least once every two years and considered all the most important internal political issues.

The laws of 1617 gave the Courland nobles enormous power in the state. The nobles were exempt from all taxes, had their own troops and their own ambassadors in Warsaw and St. Petersburg. Within their estates, nobles could make special laws for their serfs. The only duty of the nobles was to field 200 armed horsemen in case of war.

The Courland statutes actually equated serfs with slaves. Peasants could be sold, donated, exchanged, mortgaged, or moved from one yard to another. They were forbidden to have weapons, trade in their yards, or hunt large animals. The main form of exploitation of the peasantry was corvée.

The Polish-Swedish War of 1600-1629 caused significant damage to the duchy. Upper Zemgale and the capital Jelgava, occupied by the Swedes in 1621, suffered especially. Despite the truce concluded in 1629, Swedish and Polish troops continued to plunder the territory of the duchy until 1635. Entire areas were completely devastated, the economy was on the verge of complete collapse.

Duke Jacob (Jecab), who reigned in 1642-1682, partially managed to improve the situation. Jacob, the son of Duke William, who was removed from power, traveled a lot, visited Holland and France, where he became acquainted with the ideas of mercantilism. During the lifetime of his uncle, Duke Frederick, Jacob invited Dutch shipbuilders to Courland, who were tasked with supervising the construction of ships in Ventspils, as well as training new craftsmen in shipbuilding. During Jacob's reign, 79 merchant ships and 44 warships were built.

The Duke paid great attention to the development of agricultural production, sought to introduce rational cultivation of fields, sow crops that were previously rare in Courland, and developed livestock farming. Money received from trade in agricultural products was invested in the development of manufactories and shipbuilding. 17 ironworks, 11 forges for forging anchors and nails, 10 foundries, weaving workshops, tar mills, sawmills, and sail making plants were founded. Special industries such as the production of wallpaper, brocade and tapestries were also created. Courland ships plied the ocean, appearing off the coasts of Africa and America. A fortress and trading post was built on the island of St. Andrew at the mouth of the Gambia River, which existed from 1651 to 1661. A part of the island of Tobago was acquired from the English trading company, where a colony was also founded (1639-1693), later captured by the Dutch . Pepper, tobacco, ginger and cinnamon were imported from the island to Courland. Jelgava became the main center for intermediary trade in overseas goods in Eastern Europe.

In foreign policy, the Duke sought to maintain neutrality and avoid involvement in international conflicts. In 1647 he concluded an agreement on eternal neutrality with the Swedish Queen Christina, and in 1655 with the Russian Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich. However, during the Polish-Swedish War (1658–1660), Courland again became a theater of war. In 1658 the Swedes invaded Courland and took the Duke prisoner. According to the Treaty of Oliwa, Yakov was released, but Courland lost a number of its territories.

Jacob's son, Duke Frederick Casimir (1682-1698), tried to continue his father's policies, but spent too much money on entertainment and luxury. An Italian opera, luxurious stables, and greenhouses appeared in Jelgava. To cover expenses, the Duke mortgaged and sold estates to anyone who paid the most. The Duke's relations with the nobility, dissatisfied with this policy, sharply worsened. After his death, three governments were formed, and the duchy was on the verge of collapse.

During the Northern War, Russia intervened in the fate of the duchy. During a meeting between Peter I and the Prussian king Frederick I, it was decided that the young Duke Frederick William should marry one of the Russian Tsar’s relatives. In 1710, the wedding of Friedrich Wilhelm took place on the niece of Peter I, Anna Ioannovna. She actually ruled the duchy after the sudden death of her husband, which happened on the way from St. Petersburg to Jelgava. Having become the Russian Empress, she placed her favorite, Ernst Johann Biron, on the Courland throne. The latter, while remaining in St. Petersburg, invested a lot of money in Courland. By order of Biron, the architect Rastrelli built luxurious palaces in Jelgava and Rundale. In 1740-1763 Biron was in exile and during this time Poland managed to place its candidate Charles (1759-1763) on the Courland throne. However, Catherine II again recognized E. Biron’s rights to Courland.

The last Duke of Courland was Peter Biron (1769–1795). In Jelgava, he founded the Petrine Academy and presented it with a library of 15,000 volumes. However, during his reign, relations with the nobility deteriorated again. Russia's influence in the duchy increased. Under these conditions, delegates of the Courland nobility began negotiations on the possibility of subordinating Courland to Russia. On March 28, 1795, the Duke signed an act of abdication. On May 27, the former Duchy of Courland became the Governorate of Courland of the Russian Empire. Earlier, in 1792, after the first partition of Poland, Latgale became part of Russia.

As part of the Russian Empire. In 1783, the reform of provincial government, carried out in the rest of Russia in 1775, was extended to Livonia. The essence of the reform was to strengthen the power of the governor-general and limit the autonomy of the Livland nobility. By Decree of 1786 the College of Landrat was liquidated and the position of Landrat itself was abolished.

In 1786, City Regulations were introduced in Riga. The magistrate was liquidated. Administrative power was transferred to the General Duma, the Six-Party Duma and the mayor. Citizens who were able to pay a tax of at least 50 rubles a year to the city treasury took part in the elections. Nationality was no longer taken into account. This management system existed in Livonia until 1796, until on October 28, 1796, Emperor Paul I restored the previous order in the province.

In 1801, the Livonia, Courland and Estland provinces were united into one general government with the center of Riga (this order remained until 1876), and in 1845 a certain self-government was assigned to these provinces, which gave an advantage to the German nobility. German was recognized as the main language. Landtags retained their role as representatives of the nobility, as well as church parishes as local government bodies.

After joining Russia, Latgale was renamed the Dvina province of the Pskov province. To manage the province, a provincial office was opened in Daugavpils, headed by a provincial governor. The province's territory was divided into three districts. In 1796 Latgale became part of the Belarusian province. Until 1831, Latgale was governed on the basis of the Lithuanian Statute of 1831, but after the Polish uprising of 1830-1831, the same administrative order was introduced here as in the rest of the provinces of Russia.

The peasant uprisings that swept through Livonia and Courland in the second half of the 18th century, as well as the difficult situation of the peasantry, forced the best representatives of the local nobility and intelligentsia to think about the possibility of changing their lives ordinary people. Thus, the owner of the Aizkraukle estate, K. Schultz, issued for his serfs Peasant law, where he recognized the right of peasants to movable property. Garlib Merkel, who worked for some time as a pastor in Livonia, published a book in 1796 Latvians, where he clearly revealed the shortcomings of the serf system and demanded the liberation of Latvians from serfdom.

After peasant unrest in Kaugury in 1802, which had to be suppressed with the help of artillery, Alexander I ordered representatives of the Livonian nobility to discuss the situation of the peasants at the nearest Landtag. In 1804, the tsar approved the law “Regulations on Livland Peasants” developed by a special commission. In accordance with this law, peasants were divided into two categories: courtyard workers and cultivators. The landowner did not have the right to give, sell, or mortgage farmers without the land on which they lived. The obligations of peasants towards landowners were strictly regulated. However, the landowners sabotaged the implementation of this law and even achieved the adoption of amendments to it in their favor (1809), thanks to which the seizure of peasant lands by the landowners became possible. At the same time, additional clauses also had a positive meaning: they determined the amount of wages for farm laborers and limited corvee labor to 12 hours a day.

After the defeat of Napoleon and the lifting of the continental blockade of England, favorable market conditions arrived in Europe, which prompted landowners to expand their holdings. However, this was prevented by the law of 1804, which prohibited the liquidation of peasant farms. Therefore, Alexander I went to meet the Estonian nobility, which back in 1810 raised the issue of freeing peasants without land. In 1816, the tsar approved the corresponding project developed by the Estonian nobility. In 1818, a similar law was adopted for Courland, and in 1819 for Livonia. The peasants received personal freedom, but lost their land, which they were now forced to rent from landowners.

During the reign of Nicholas I, the gradual Russification of Latvian lands began. The Minister of Education, Count S.S. Uvarov, developed a special project providing for the phased Russification of schools and the University of Dorpat. The first step was to change the leadership of schools. In 1832, a law was passed that included the Lutheran Church of the Baltic provinces in the general church system of the Russian Empire and recognized only the right of a religious minority for it. The Orthodox episcopate established in 1836 in Riga began to actively promote the transition of Latvian peasants to Orthodoxy. This was facilitated by rumors spread among the peasants that those who accepted the new faith would receive a piece of “good land” in the south of the empire.

With the coming to power of Alexander II, the Russification policy weakened somewhat; in 1867, a law was passed introducing Russian as the main language in all government institutions in the Baltic provinces. The new Russian emperor, Alexander III, upon ascending the throne, for the first time refused to confirm the rights and privileges of the provinces. In 1885-1890, teaching in Russian was introduced in all schools, and from 1891 all parish books of the Lutheran Church were also required to be kept in Russian. Return to Lutheranism from the Orthodox Church was prohibited. In 1888 the Russian police system was transferred to the Baltic provinces, and in 1889 the judicial system.

At the same time, in the second half of the 19th century. the rise of the Latvian national movement begins, associated with the activities of the so-called “Young Latvians” K. Biesbardis, K. Baron, A. Kronvald, K. Valdemar and others. In 1888, the “Young Latvians” founded the Riga Latvian Society in Riga, which dealt with issues of culture and enlightenment. In addition, K. Valdemar contributed to the formation of Latvian national capital, popularizing the creation of savings and loan banks, trade and industrial enterprises, development of navigation in the Baltic. In the early 80s, circles of the People's Will type appeared in Riga, setting themselves the goal of seizing power.

Latvia's participation in the revolution of 1905-1907 was caused by a number of social and national problems. Most of the uprisings were directed against the privileges of the German feudal lords, but tsarism suppressed all protests with the help of punitive Cossack detachments. At the same time, after the revolution, the pressure on Latvian schools was eased, the circulation of books in the Latvian language increased, and wages for hired workers were increased.

World War I. During the First World War, the territory of Latvia was occupied by German troops. To delay the advance of the Germans, national Latvian units were created - battalions of Latvian riflemen, which in 1916 were reorganized into regiments, united into two brigades (4,000 people in total). The riflemen held the front until September 1917, when, by order of General Kornilov, Riga was surrendered to the Germans. The Latvian riflemen, heading to Petrograd, took part in the October armed uprising of the Bolsheviks.

In November 1917, Soviet power was proclaimed in the part of Latvia free from German occupation. Valka became the capital of Soviet Latvia. In December 1917, the Soviet government transferred Latgale to Soviet Latvia, but in February 1918 the Germans occupied all of Latvia, and Soviet power was overthrown. After the signing of the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty, an occupation regime was introduced in the Baltic states. The conquerors planned to settle 2.7 million German colonists on the territory of former Livonia. These plans were supported by the local nobility; their implementation was thwarted by the November revolution in Germany and the defeat of this country in the world war.

On November 18, 1918, the People's Council of Latvia, created the day before by the Democratic Bloc, which had been underground during the years of occupation, proclaimed the independence of the new state. Kārlis Ulmanis was elected head of the provisional government (minister-president). However, the power of the German command remained everywhere on the ground.

On November 18-19, a conference of Latvian Social Democrats was held in Riga, at which a decision was made to prepare an uprising. In December, the Provisional Soviet Government of Latvia was created, headed by Peter Stuchka. From Soviet Russia, at his request, the Red Latvian Rifles began an offensive in Latvia. Soviet power was proclaimed in Daugavpils on December 17, 1918, and the Central Executive Committee of Soviet Latvia was elected on January 3, 1919 in Riga. Ulmanis's government was in Liepaja at that time.

However, German landowners, with the support of parts of the German army, intended to create their own state on the territory of Latvia. General von der Goltz, commander of German troops in the Baltics, carried out a coup in Liepaja in April 1919, and occupied Riga in May. Latvian units supporting the Ulmanis government were able to drive the Germans out of Riga at the end of June, but von der Goltz, who remained in Kurzeme, entered into an agreement with the White Guard general P. Bermont-Avalov, and the united army again began an attack on Riga. On November 10, 1919, Bermont's army was defeated by Latvian units.

On November 11, 1920, a peace treaty was concluded between Latvia and Soviet Russia, as a result of which Latvia became an independent state for the first time. In January 1921, Latvia was recognized de jure by England, France, Italy, and Japan. Latvia's relations with its neighbors gradually stabilized. In 1921, the border with Lithuania was established by arbitration. On September 12, 1934, a cooperation agreement was signed between Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.

According to the constitution of 1922, Latvia became a democratic republic. Legislative power was in the hands of parliament (Sejm), executive power was exercised by the president and the cabinet of ministers headed by the minister-president. J. Cakste became the first president.

However, the instability of Latvia's internal political situation led to a coup d'etat in May 1934. A dictatorship was established led by President Kārlis Ulmanis. All political parties were banned, the Sejm was dissolved, Ulmanis became the sole ruler of the country.

At the beginning of World War II, Latvia signed a treaty of friendship and mutual assistance with the USSR (October 5, 1939), according to which Soviet military units were located in Kurzeme. On June 16, 1940, Latvia was asked to create a government friendly to the USSR and allow a new contingent of troops into the country. Ulmanis accepted these demands, and on June 20 a new government was formed in Latvia, headed by A. Kirchensteins. On July 14-15, 1940, the People's Seimas was elected, which proclaimed the creation of the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic and adopted the Declaration of Entry into the USSR. On August 6, 1940, Latvia became one of the socialist republics within the USSR.

In 1940, a land reform was carried out: land was transferred for free and indefinite use to peasants. However, the norms for the supply of agricultural products entrusted to the peasants turned out to be high, and peasant unrest began. The unrest caused repression and deportation of the politically active population.

During the Great Patriotic War, the territory of Latvia was occupied by German troops and included in the “Eastern Territories” of Germany. Part of the Latvian population supported the fascist occupiers, and in February 1943 the “Volunteer Latvian SS Regiment” was formed. At the same time, there was also an anti-fascist underground, which included various political forces. After the arrival of Soviet troops, anti-Soviet forces (“forest brothers”) organized armed resistance, which was suppressed only in the late 40s.

In 1949, forced collectivization of agriculture was carried out in the country. During collectivization, more than 41 thousand of its opponents were repressed (deported to the Urals). In 1953, the industrialization of the republic began, many new industries appeared, including chemical, electromechanical, instrument-making, and oil refining. Kegums and Riga hydroelectric power stations were built. Structural changes in the national economy contributed to changes in the social and national composition of the population. In the early 90s, more than 70% of the population lived in cities.

Gaining independence. The period of national awakening in Latvia began during the years of “perestroika” initiated by Gorbachev. In 1988 the Latvian Popular Front and the Movement for the National Independence of Latvia were created. The Social Democratic Party also emerged. On May 4, 1990, the Supreme Council of the Latvian SSR adopted the “Declaration on the restoration of the independence of the Latvian Republic.” The main provisions of the 1922 constitution were also restored. On September 6, 1991, the USSR recognized the independence of Latvia.

In accordance with the constitution of 1922, the country's political, economic and judicial institutions were restored. On June 5-6, 1993, elections for a new parliament, the Sejm, were held. Twenty-three political parties and electoral coalitions vied for seats in the 101-seat Sejm, but only eight of them received enough votes to be represented in the Sejm (this required at least 4% of the votes). The largest number of seats (37) was won by the centrist electoral coalition “Latvian Way”, which included reformist members of the old Supreme Council and Latvian re-emigrants. The second number of seats (15) went to the right-wing Movement for National Independence of Latvia (founded in 1988), and the third (13) to the left-wing electoral coalition “Party of People's Harmony,” which expressed the interests of the Russian-speaking population. The right-wing Peasant Union, which won 12 seats, acted as the direct successor to Kārlis Ulmanis's party of the same name. Other parties that received representation in the Sejm included Equality (left, 7 seats), Fatherland and Freedom (right, 6 seats), Christian Democrats (center-right, 6 seats) and Democratic Center (centrist, 5 seats ). The Latvian Popular Front lost in the elections, which never crossed the electoral threshold. Since none of the parties and no bloc received an absolute majority of seats, a center-right coalition government was formed in July 1993. Guntis Ulmanis, a member of the Peasant Union and the great-nephew of Karlis Ulmanis, was elected president. The cabinet formed by Latvian Way and its coalition partners lasted until the end of the summer of 1994. After the cabinet lost the support of the parliamentary majority, Latvian Way presented a minority cabinet, approved by Ulmanis. New parliamentary elections (September 1995) created a deadlock in relations between the right and left parties, and the president in December 1995 appointed a compromise candidate, Andris Skele, to the post of prime minister. The coalition government remained in power until April 1998 (from July 1997, led by Guntars Krasts). In June 1996, parliament re-elected Ulmanis as president for a second three-year term.

After the collapse of the ruling coalition in April 1998, a minority government was formed led by Prime Minister Krasts. At this time, relations with the Russian Federation deteriorated due to the beating by the police of Russian-speaking pensioners who demonstrated against poverty, as well as explosions in the synagogue and the Russian embassy in Riga. Following threats of economic sanctions from Russia and pressure from the international community, the government agreed to change the Citizenship Law, eliminating annual quotas for new non-Latvian citizens and guaranteeing automatic citizenship for all children born in the country after 1991. These changes were passed by parliament in June 1998 and approved in a referendum (53% of voters voted in favor) in October 1998.

The referendum on the citizenship law was held simultaneously with new parliamentary elections. The radical nationalists and the Democratic Party were defeated. The People's Party, led by former Prime Minister Andris Skele, won the elections, gaining 24 of the 100 seats in parliament. The center party Latvian Way took second place (21st place). The right-wing coalition “Fatherland and Freedom”/Movement for National Independence of Latvia collected only 14% of the votes and lost 5 seats. Left parties, on the contrary, improved their position: the pro-Russian Party of People's Harmony received 14% of the vote (16 seats), and the moderate nationalist Social Democratic Party 13% (14 seats). Despite the fact that the political platforms of the two largest parties ( People's Party and the Latvian Way parties) are very similar, the enmity between the leaders of both parties prevented the creation of a majority coalition. After negotiations, a minority government was formed from three center-right parties led by Vilis Kristopans (Kristopans' Latvian Way, the Fatherland and Freedom coalition/Latvian National Independence Movement and the New Party). These three parties together controlled 46 of the 100 seats in the Sejm and counted on the support of the opposition Social Democratic Party.

In 1999, before the next presidential elections of the republic, the chairman of the New Party, Raimonds Pauls, had good chances of winning, famous composer And public figure. However, before the second round of voting, he withdrew his candidacy, and as a result of a new vote, re-emigrant from Canada, director of the Institute of Latvia Vaira Vike-Freiberga, won in the Seimas. Vike-Freiberga was born in 1937 in Riga, studied in Canada, and has a doctorate in psychology. In political views, she is focused on the European Union and NATO. The Prime Minister of the country is Aigar Kalvitis (since 2004).

Latvia's foreign policy officially proclaims values ​​such as democracy, the rule of law, human rights and freedoms and respect for national minorities. However, according to various estimates, over 450 thousand Russian-speaking people living in it have the status of “non-citizens” in their country and are deprived of basic human rights. Latvian foreign policy aimed at joining the military and economic organizations Europe European Union into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Latvia officially joined NATO in March 2004, and the European Union in May 2004.

M., 1968
History of the Latvian SSR. Short course. Riga, 1971
Wittram R. Baltische Geschichte. Die Ostseenlande Livland, Estland, Kurland 11801918. Darmstadt, 1973
Soviet Latvia. Encyclopedia. Riga, 1985
Latvia on the brink of eras. Riga, 1987
Keninsh I. History of Latvia. Riga, 1990
Butkus A. Mūsų broliai latviai. Vilnius, 1990
Schmidt A. Geschichte des Baltikums. Munich, 1992
From Livonia to Latvia. M., 1993

Find "LATVIA" on

Latvia(Latvia), the Republic of Latvia is a small country in Northern Europe and belongs to the so-called Baltic countries. For the first time in its history it became independent on November 18, 1918. In the summer of 1940, Latvia was occupied by Soviet troops, which was a consequence of the Soviet-German non-aggression pact signed in 1939, known as the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. From then until August 1991, the country was part of the Soviet Union (USSR) as the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic.

  • Currently, the Republic of Latvia is a sovereign state. It is a member of the UN (since 1991), the European Union (since 2004) and the North Atlantic Alliance (NATO). The country shares land borders with Estonia in the north, Lithuania in the south, and Russia and Belarus in the east. In the west, the coast is washed by the waters of the Baltic Sea.

Basic information

  • Total territory area: 64,589 km2
  • Population: about 2,000,000 people. The population of Latvia is not very homogeneous: only a little about 62% are Latvians, the Russian diaspora makes up up to 26% of all residents
  • Capital of Latvia: Riga. About a third of the country's total population lives in Riga
  • Official language: Latvian, the second most commonly spoken language is Russian, although it is not recognized as official
  • Official currency: Euro

The flag of Latvia is considered the second oldest in the world after the Danish one. It was already used at the beginning of the 13th century by residents of the city of Cesis, when they went to fight the Livonian knights. According to legend, during one of the battles the commander of the Latgalian tribe was wounded and he was laid on a white canvas. The middle of the fabric remained white, and the edges were painted red - on the next campaign a banner was already made in these colors


St. Peter's Church, Riga, pixabay.com

According to its political structure, Latvia is a parliamentary unitary republic. The head of state is the president, who is elected by the Sejm (a unicameral parliament consisting of 100 deputies) for a term of 4 years. The Sejm (legislative branch) is also elected once every 4 years, but in direct elections by the citizens of the country. The executive branch is represented by the cabinet of ministers, headed by the prime minister, appointed to this post by the president.

Latvia is a country lying on a vast plain. Its highest point, the Gaizinkalns hill, located almost in the geographical center, has a height of only 312 meters. The lowlands are mainly located on the coast, famous for its long sandy beaches. A significant part of the territory is occupied by low hills, such as Vidzemskaya (in the northeast), Latgale, Curonian - all just over 200 meters high.

  • The most significant lowland, Primorskaya, stretches along the entire Baltic coast (531 km long). In terms of the total length of sandy beaches, the Baltic country could be among the top five in the world. But, alas, Latvia has only one seaside resort - Jurmala

Jurmala, Latvia, photo Roquai

Latvia is very rich in forests: they occupy about 50% of the entire territory; most of them are pine. By proportion forest areas Regarding the total area of ​​the territory, the Baltic state is second only to Sweden, Finland and... Slovenia.

  • Someone calculated that Latvia is simply a record holder for the number of rivers: there are more than 12,000 here! However, only 17 of them have a length comparable to or greater than 100 km. Home and most deep river country, the Daugava (Western Dvina), flows not only through Latvia, but also through Belarus, Russia, Lithuania and Estonia and flows into the Baltic Sea (Gulf of Riga) near Riga

The total length of the Daugava is 1,020 km, only within Latvia: about 352 km. The longest river is named Gauja (452 ​​km). On its banks there is a vast National Park, which, due to the beauty of the landscape (chalk cliffs and pine trees), is called “Livonian Switzerland” by many. The Venta River in the northern part of the country is famous for its waterfall, the widest in Europe! Its height, however, does not exceed 2.2 meters.

The situation with lakes in Latvia is not as good as with rivers: there are only... just over 2,000 of them! Most of them, however, are quite miniature and their size does not exceed 10 square kilometers. The largest lake is Lubans, whose area during spring floods can be up to 100 km2: it is located in the center of the East Latvian Plain. Lake Raznas (57 km2) and Engures (40 km2) occupy second third positions.

Latvia has a temperate climate with a significant influence of the warm Atlantic Gulf Stream, one of the “arms” of which extends into the Baltic Sea. Average January temperatures range from -7 °C in continental Daugavpils to -3 °C in southern Liepaja, July: about +17 °C. The proximity to the Baltic Sea also determines relatively high humidity: about 550-600 mm per year. Approximately half the days of the year (about 180) are stormy. The rainiest month is usually August, which has a detrimental effect on harvests.

  • The dampness of the climate, coupled with a large number of lakes and rivers, by the way, determines the predominance of livestock farming in Latvian agriculture: growing grain crops is associated with significant difficulties due to insufficient drainage of agricultural areas

Latvian cheeses and dairy products are well known outside the country for their high quality and exceptional naturalness.

Big cities


House of the Blackheads in Riga pixabay.com
  • Riga is the capital and largest city of Latvia. It is home to more than 640 thousand inhabitants (2017), which puts it in 3rd place in terms of population among all Baltic cities (after St. Petersburg and Stockholm)
  • Daugavpils - the second largest city (108,000 inhabitants) is located on the other end of the country, 230 kilometers southwest of Riga
  • Liepaja, with a population of approximately 85 thousand inhabitants

Attractions

The main architectural attractions of Latvia are concentrated in its capital, Riga. The entire center of the Old Town is included in the UNESCO World Heritage List: literally every building here can tell a lot about the history of Europe: the House of the Blackheads, the Dome Cathedral, the Church of St. Peter and St. John, the Three Brothers, the House of Black Cats, Riga Castle, once the residence of the master of the Livonian Order, and today - the president of the republic.

  • Riga was founded in 1201, was part of the trading Hanseatic Union, and then for a long time was the capital of the rich and powerful Livonian Order of Knights. The local Lutheran Dome Cathedral on the right bank of the Daugava (in the Middle Ages they tried to build on the right banks of the rivers first - obviously they are higher) - almost the same age as the city and is famous for its organ - the largest in Europe

Dome Cathedral in Riga, Koos van den Beukel

70 kilometers south of Riga is the elegant Rundāle Palace, built for the Duke of Courland, Ernst Johann von Biron. Its author is the famous architect Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli, who wrote his name in golden letters in the history of Russia (Smolny Cathedral, Winter Palace and Catherine's Palaces in St. Petersburg), and therefore the palace, both in color and style, is extremely similar to another creation of the Russified Italian, the Great Peterhof Palace.


Rundāle Palace, pixabay.com

Of the country's natural attractions, the first thing that comes to mind is Jurmala. The largest resort in Latvia and the Baltic states in general, it is located literally next door to Riga (25 kilometers to the west) and is famous for its beaches with fine, very pleasant sand, as well as pine groves, which have a truly life-giving effect on any organism.

You can also relax in national park Gauja, not far from Valmiera. The cities of Sigulda and Cesis, located on the territory of the park, are not only considered resorts, but also famous for their castles (Sigulda, Turaida and Cesis-Venden).


Turaida Castle, Dmitry Staroverov

Latvian republic.

The country was named after the ethnonym of the people - Latvieshi.

Capital of Latvia. Riga.

Area of ​​Latvia. 64500 km2.

Population of Latvia. 2386 thousand people

Location of Latvia. Latvia is a state in the northeast. In the north it borders with, in the east - with Russia, in the south - with and. In the west it is washed.
Administrative divisions of Latvia. Latvia is divided into 26 districts (counties) and 7 municipalities.

Form of government of Latvia. Parliamentary republic.

Head of State of Latvia. President, elected by parliament for 3 years.

Supreme legislative body of Latvia. A unicameral Sejm whose term of office is 4 years.

Supreme executive body of Latvia. Government.

Major cities in Latvia. Daugavpils, Liepaja.

Official language of Latvia. .

Religion of Latvia. Evangelical Lutherans, Orthodox.

Currency of Latvia. Lat = 100 centimes.

Sights of Latvia Latvia. Dome Cathedral of the 13th century, St. John's Church, St. Peter's Cathedral, old town - in Riga. There are also 21 museums here, including the history of the city and navigation, the history of medicine, and foreign art. In Cesis there is a castle of the 14th century, in Liepaja there is a cathedral of the 18th century, in Jelgava there is a cathedral of the 17th century, in Jurmala there is a climatic balneological mud resort center.

Useful information for tourists

Latvians are very attentive to their guests - and this cannot be taken away from them. For a foreigner, medical care is expensive. Although medical certificates are not required to enter the country, it is recommended to have one. In Latvia there are also no problems with the availability of medicines in pharmacies, but it is wiser to purchase them before traveling.

Latvia is one of the Baltic countries. This is a very small state located on the shores of the Baltic Sea; it borders on land with Lithuania, Estonia, Belarus and Russia. Area - about 64.5 thousand km2, population - 2.4 million people (2003), mainly Latvians, Russians, Belarusians, Ukrainians, Poles.

The climate in Latvia is mild and humid (from 500 to 800 mm of precipitation per year). average temperature January from –2 to –7 °C, July from +16 to +18 °C.

The nature of Latvia is very beautiful. A ribbon of magnificent sandy beaches stretches along the coast (the most famous are on the Riga seaside in Jurmala). The pearl of Latvia is Sigulda, it is also called “Latvian Switzerland”. Sigulda and its surroundings are famous for their medieval castles and fabulous caves, scattered along the most beautiful stretch of the Gauja River valley. There are many forests in Latvia, in which all kinds of living creatures live: hares, squirrels, roe deer, moose, red deer, foxes, badgers, martens, many forest songbirds and waterfowl.

Latvia is a developed industrial country, but also Agriculture can boast of his achievements. Latvians supply many countries (including Russia) with their excellent dairy products, and Latvian livestock farmers have even developed their own breeds of cows and pigs. Latvians are excellent fishermen, it’s not for nothing that they live on the seashore. Latvian sprats are known all over the world.

The capital of Latvia is Riga with a population of about 1 million people. This is one of the most beautiful cities in the Baltics, located on the banks of the Daugava. The core of Riga is an ancient medieval city with the ancient Dome Cathedral (13th century) in the central square of the city.

Already about four thousand years ago, Baltic tribes came to the territory of modern Latvia - cattle breeders and farmers, the ancestors of modern Latvians and Lithuanians. In the 10th-13th centuries, the first principalities were formed on the territory of Latvia, which were later conquered by the German crusaders.

In 1562, part of the territory of Latvia was divided between Poland and Sweden. By the beginning of the 17th century, the Latvian nationality had emerged. In 1721 and 1795. part of Latvia was annexed to the Russian Empire. In the years 1920-1940, there was an independent Latvia, but in the summer of 1940, by agreement between the USSR and Germany, Soviet troops entered Latvia, and it soon became part of the Soviet Union. In 1991, Latvia regained its independence. In 2004 it joined the European Union.

Latvia is a parliamentary republic. The head of state is the president, elected by parliament. The post is currently occupied by Andris Berzins, Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis.

The official language is Latvian. The monetary unit is lat.

Latvian republic

Latvia- a state in northeastern Europe. In the north it borders with Estonia, in the east with Russia, in the south with Belarus and Lithuania. In the west it is washed by the Baltic Sea.

The country was named after the ethnonym of the people - Latvieshi.

Capital

Square

Population

2386 thousand people

Administrative division

Latvia divided into 26 districts (counties) and 7 municipalities.

Form of government

Parliamentary republic

Head of State

President, elected by parliament for 3 years.

Supreme legislative body

A unicameral Sejm whose term of office is 4 years.

Supreme executive body

Government.

Big cities

Daugavpils, Liepaja.

Official language

Latvian.

Religion

Evangelical Lutherans, Orthodox.

Ethnic composition

51.8% are Latvians, 33.8% are Russians, 4.5% are Belarusians, 3.4% are Ukrainians, 2.3% are Poles.

Currency

Lat = 100 centimes.

Climate

The climate of Latvia is transitional from maritime to continental. The average July temperature is 4-16-18 °C. In January, on the Baltic Sea coast - 2°C, in the eastern regions - 7°C. The sunniest and driest month is May. In Latvia 150-170 cloudy days per year. Precipitation is 550-800 mm per year.

Flora

Deciduous and coniferous tree species are widely represented in the forests of Latvia: pine, birch, aspen, alder, oak. Meadows occupy 7.5% of the country's territory.

Fauna

The fauna of Latvia is not very diverse, but in the forests there are a large number of deer, hares, roe deer, foxes, squirrels, wild boars. The Black Crane is quite common. Commercial fish species are found in coastal waters: herring, sprat, eel, etc.
Rivers and lakes. Latvia has a developed river network, all rivers belong to the Baltic Sea basin and are characterized by spring floods. The largest of them are Daugava, Lielupe, Venta, Gauja. There are many lakes, most of them of glacial origin. The most deep lake- Drizda. 4.8% of the territory is occupied by swamps.

Attractions

Dome Cathedral of the 13th century, St. John's Church, St. Peter's Cathedral, old town - in Riga. There are also 21 museums here, including the history of the city and navigation, the history of medicine, and foreign art. In Cesis there is a castle of the 14th century, in Liepaja there is a cathedral of the 18th century, in Jelgava there is a cathedral of the 17th century, in Jurmala there is a climatic balneological mud resort center.

Useful information for tourists

Latvians are very attentive to their guests - and this cannot be taken away from them. For a foreigner, medical care is expensive. Although medical certificates are not required to enter the country, it is recommended that you have insurance. In Latvia there are also no problems with the availability of medicines in pharmacies, but it is wiser to purchase them before traveling.



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