di Gianluca Procaccini
http://www.riga.lv/EN/Channels/Riga_today/default
.htm
The
Riga City history is more than eight hundred years long, and it has an abundance of dramatic events stored in countless volumes of works and monuments, legends, songs, memoirs and tales.
The archeological discoveries in the territory of Riga testify that a settlement existed there already in the
12th century. A broadening was formed in the place where the Rīdziņa
River ran into the
Daugava, which is the present region of
Albert's
Square; this was called Riga
Lake. This place was convenient for a harbor because settlements of local tribes -- the
Cours and the Livonians were formed in its vicinity.
At the end of the 12th century, crusaders came here as well when the
German merchants tried to widen and strengthen their area of activities along the eastern coast of the
Baltic Sea. Their first leader
Bishop Berthold in 1198 was killed in action near the Riga Old
Mountain. When the chronicler Indriķis recorded the word "Riga", it appeared for the first time in the written sources. The next bishop Albert in
1201 moved from
Ikšķile to Riga, and after negotiations with the local Livs started to build a fortification near the Riga Lake. 1201 became the official year of the foundation of Riga.
Already in 1202 the first colonists German landowners came here.
Little by little Riga became an aggression base against
the local Baltic tribes. In the
13th century trade boomed in Riga, and it became one of the main intermediaries between the
West and the
East.
Even by the end of the
16th century disagreements about governmental rights did not cease among inhabitants of Riga: --bishops,
Knights of the Sword (later - Livonian) and Riga's landowners.
Sometimes the disagreements grew into armed conflicts.
As a result of the
Livonia war (1558-1583), after a little state of Livonia failed, Riga fell under the subordination of
Poland. Later when
Poland waged a war with
Sweden (1600-1629), after fierce resistance Riga in 1621 fell under the
Swedish rule and became an administrative center of its
Baltic division.
The 18th century started with the
Northern War (1700-1721), in which
Russia and Sweden struggled for supremacy in the Baltic Sea. As a result, in 1710 after long-term siege and plaque epidemic Riga fell under the rule of Russia.
Industry rapidly grew in Riga during the second half of the
18th century. German guilds lost their monopoly position in manufacturing and trade
. In the 19th century Riga became one of the main seaports of the
Russian Empire and an important railway transport junction. During the second half of the 19th century and beginning of the
20th century the area of Riga increased 10 times, in 1913 the number of inhabitants was 80 times higher than in the beginning of the 18th century. Riga was the second largest city (after
St. Petersburg) in the western part of Russia.
1915-1917 was the breaking
point in the development of Riga when with the start of
World War I it became at the front line of the war. About
200,
000 workers and members of their families together with industrial enterprises were evacuated from Riga to the central part of Russia.
By the end of World War I the possibility emerged to establish an independent
Republic of Latvia, which through the complicated political situation, was proclaimed on
18 November 1918. The
Latvian liberation war broke out. Riga endured severe sufferings during this time (1918-1919), experiencing three different changes of political regimes. After August of
1920 the devastated Riga became the capital of equally devastated Republic of Latvia. During 1920-1930 Riga developed into the center of trade, light and food industries, as well as an important cultural and educational center.
Soviet tanks came to the streets of Riga on 17 June
1940.
The Soviet Union occupied
Latvia.
During the
World War II the
Old Town of Riga suffered hard, the port and railway junctions were destroyed.
After the war Riga became one of the biggest centers of the western part of the
Soviet Union, where according to the industrialization plans both light industry and significant enterprises of the military industrial complex were developed. Riga became also the center of the Baltic military district. In order to provide the newly built enterprises with manpower, extensive immigration from other
Soviet Republics started. As a result, the number of the inhabitants in Riga increased by seven times from
1950 till
1980.
Restoring Latvia' sovereignty, Riga became the center of the
Awakening Movement. In
January 1991, the population of Latvia gathered on barricades in Riga to face the possible attack from the
USSR military units.
The history of Riga over more than 800 years testifies that the city has vast experience being proud and rich and knowing how to rise once again after war, starvation and disaster. And how to be proud again.
- published: 05 Nov 2010
- views: 1670