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Courland Governorate

Courland Governorate,[a] also known as the Province of Courland or Governorate of Kurland,[1][2] and known from 1795 to 1796 as the Viceroyalty of Courland,[b] was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) and one of the Baltic governorates of the Russian Empire. Its area roughly corresponded to parts of modern-day Latvia.

Courland Governorate
  • Курляндская губерния (Russian)
  • Kurzemes guberņa (Latvian)
  • Kurländisches Gouvernement (German)
Governorate of the Russian Empire
1795–1918

Location in the Russian Empire
CapitalMitau
Population 
• 1897
674,034
History 
• Partition of Poland
28 March 1795
1918
• Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
1918

Subdivisions or uyezds of Courland Governorate
Political subdivisions9
Today part ofLatvia
Lithuania
German and Russian map of the Courland Governorate

The governorate was created in 1795 out of the territory of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, which was incorporated into the Russian Empire as the Viceroyalty of Courland with its capital at Mitau (now Jelgava) following the third partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

After a failed post-World War I attempt to create a United Baltic Duchy as a client state of the German Empire, Courland and Livonia were united to form the Republic of Latvia on 18 November 1918.

Geography edit

The governorate was bounded in the north by the Baltic Sea, the Gulf of Riga and the Governorate of Livonia; west by the Baltic Sea; south by the Vilna Governorate and Prussia and east by the Vitebsk Governorate and Minsk Governorate. The population in 1846 was estimated at 553,300.[1]

It was situated between 55°41' and 57°4512' N. Of its total border of 1,260 versts (1,344 km), the sea border is 320 versts (341 km). The border with Prussia is only 6 versts (6.4 km) long and lacks natural boundaries.

The surface area of the province is 23,977 square versts (27,290 km2).

Subdivisions edit

After the annexation to the Russian Empire, the Kurzeme Governorate united the lands of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia and the Piltene district, both of which retained their previous administrative divisions.

After the administrative reform of 1819, the area of Pilten was incorporated into the territory of the province as the district of Windau (Hauptmannschaft Windau) and the district of Hasenpoth (Hauptmannschaft Hasenpoth). After the reform of 1819, the castle lord of Kandava moved to Talsi. The area of Palanga up to the Prussian border was also added to the Kurzeme province from the Vilna Governorate. The province was divided into ten districts, or Hauptmannschaft, whose administrative authorities were located in the towns of the same name, with the exception of Talsi and Ilūkste, which had only the rights of towns. Each district had its own court with a local police force. Until 1864, every two districts were merged into Oberhauptmannschaft, which contained the Oberhauptmann and the Evangelical Lutheran Church dean's districts under the authority of the Oberhofgericht (Court of the Governor's Court).

The counties of the governorate were:

County County Town Arms of County Town Area Population
(1897 census)[3]
Name in German Name in Russian
Bauske Баускій Bauske
(Bausk)
 
2,097.4 km2
(809.8 sq mi)
50,547
Windau Виндавскій Windau
(Vindau)
 
3,136.4 km2
(1,211.0 sq mi)
48,275
Hasenpoth Газенпотскій Harsenpoth
(Gazenpot)
 
2,506 km2
(968 sq mi)
53,209
Goldingen Гольдингенскій Goldingen
 
3,276.4 km2
(1,265.0 sq mi)
66,335
Grobin Гробинскій Grobin
 
4,685.4 km2
(1,809.0 sq mi)
110,878
Illukst Иллукстскій Illukst 2,249.7 km2
(868.6 sq mi)
66,461
Doblen Митавскій
(Добленскій)
Mitau
(Mitava)
 
2,847.2 km2
(1,099.3 sq mi)
101,310
Talsen Тальсенскій Talsen 3,151.1 km2
(1,216.6 sq mi)
61,148
Tukkum Туккумскій Tukkum
 
2,262.6 km2
(873.6 sq mi)
51,076
Friedrichstadt Фридрихштадтскій Friedrichstadt
(Fridrikhshtadt)
 
3,504.2 km2
(1,353.0 sq mi)
64,795

Law edit

The highest court is the Courts of Kurland (Kurländisches Oberhofgericht), the courts of appeal are the Higher Hauptmanns Courts (Oberhauptmannsgericht), The courts of first instance are the Hauptmannsgericht, the county courts (kreisgericht) for the peasantry, and the lowest level of the court system for the peasantry are the parish courts (Gemeindegericht).[4]

Administration edit

 
Unofficial flag of Courland Governorate

The province of Courland was governed by a governor appointed by the emperor. The representative body of local government was the Landtag (Kurländischer Landtag), which consisted of parish commissioners (Kirchspielsbevollmächtigter, Konvokant) elected by the parishes (Landtagskirchspiel, Parochie) by parish assemblies (Kirchspielsversammlung), In the parish meetings (Kirchspielsversammlung) all large landowners of the parish could participate, the executive body - a noble committee headed by a land commissioner (Landesbevollmächtige) was elected to conduct its sessions.

The residence of the governors was in Jelgava Castle, where the governorate's administrative offices were also located. During the existence of the Baltic Governorate (1801-1876, 1906–1909), the governors of Kurzeme were subordinate to the governor-general of the Baltic Provinces (German: Generalgouverneur der Ostseeprovinzen)., who resided in the Riga Castle.[5]

Until Russification, almost all governors of Courland were German-Baltic noblemen. Until then, the language of administration in the highest authorities and courts of the province was German, but in the parish courts, according to the Courland peasant laws, the records were also kept in Latvian.[6]

  • 1795 – 1796 Baron Peter Ludwig von der Pahlen (temporary governor-general of Courland and Pilten)
  • 1796 – 1798 Count Gustav Matthias Jakob von der Wenge genannt Lambsdorff
  • 1798 – 1800 Baron Wilhelm Carl Heinrich von der Oest genannt Driesen
  • 1800 – 1808 Nikolay Ivanovich Arsenyev
  • 1808 Jakob Maximilian von Brieskorn (acting governor on 18–21 May 1812)
  • 1808 – 1811 Baron Jan Willem Hogguer
  • 1811 Jakob Maximilian von Brieskorn (acting governor in August–September 1812)
  • 1811 – 1816 Count Friedrich Wilhelm von Sivers (1748–1823) (in exile in Riga during Napoleonic invasion of Courland in July–December 1812)
  • 1812 Jules de Chambaudoin and Charles de Montigny (French intendants of Courland, Semigallia and Pilten on 1 August-8 October 1812)
  • 1812 Jacques David Martin (French governor-general of Courland on 8 October-20 December 1812)
  • 1816 – 1824 Emannuel von Stanecke
  • 1824 – 1827 Paul Theodor von Hahn (1793–1862)
  • 1827 – 1853 Christoph Engelbrecht von Brevern
  • 1853 Aleksandr Petrovich Beklemishev (acting governor on 10 May–14 June 1853)
  • 1853 – 1858 Pyotr Aleksandrovich Valuyev
  • 1858 Julius von Cube [de] (acting governor on 10–21 May 1858)
  • 1858 – 1868 Johann von Brevern
  • 1868 – 1885 Paul Frommhold Ignatius von Lilienfeld-Toal
  • 1885 Aleksandr Alekseyevich Manyos
  • 1885 – 1888 Konstantin Ivanovich Pashchenko
  • 1888 – 1891 Dmitry Sergeyevich Sipyagin
  • 1891 – 1905 Dmitry Dmitriyevich Sverbeyev
  • 1905 – 1906 Woldemar Alexander Valerian von Boeckmann
  • 1906 – 1910 Leonid Mikhailovich Knyazev
  • 1910 Nikolay Dmitriyevich Kropotkin
  • 1910 – 1915 Sergey Dimitriyevich Nabokov [ru]
  • 1915–1917 Tatishchev, Pyotr Vasilyevich Gendrikov, Strakhov (in exile in Tartu after the German invasion of Courland in July 1915).

Economy edit

In the 19th century the province was predominantly agrarian. In 1817, serfdom was abolished in the province and peasants were granted personal freedom, but all land remained the property of landlords. In 1863 the peasants received the right to buy land as personal property, and a class of land owning peasants began to form. The land owning peasants, along with the German landlords, were the main suppliers of commercial agricultural products. The main crops grown in the province were rye, wheat, barley, peas, oats, and potatoes. Horticulture and gardening are well developed.

Industry of the province is mostly manufacturing. In 1912 there were about 200 factories and plants (mills, vodka mills, sawmills, tanneries, brick mills, flax-spinning factories, etc.) and about 500 cottage industries.

Railway construction was developing on the territory of the province. The Riga - Mitava railroad was built in 1867 and in 1871-76 a section of the Libava - Romena railroad. All in all the length of the railway lines in the province was over 560 versts.

Education in the province was better than the Russian average. In the 1910s there were 8 secondary schools (over 3 thousand students), 13 special secondary schools (over 460 students), 790 lower secondary schools (36.9 thousand students) in the province. In the province in 1913 there were 33 hospitals with 1,300 beds.[7]

Language edit

  • By the Imperial census of 1897.[8] In bold are languages spoken by more people than the state language.

See also edit

References and notes edit

  1. ^ a b The English Cyclopaedia By Charles Knight
  2. ^ The Baltic States from 1914 to 1923 By LtCol Andrew Parrott 19 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Первая Всеобщая перепись населения Российской империи 1897 года. Курляндская губерния
  4. ^ "Система управления Прибалтикой — Студопедия". studopedia.ru. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  5. ^ Kolbuszewski, Stanislaw Franciszek (18 July 2011). "Viļņas Valsts universitātes Zinātniskās bibliotēkas XVIII. gs. Poļu-latviešu vārdnīcas rokraksts F₁-D₁₁". Baltistica. 15 (1). doi:10.15388/baltistica.15.1.1259. ISSN 2345-0045.
  6. ^ Materialy dli︠a︡ geografii i statistiki Rossii : Kurli︠a︡ndskai︠a︡ gubernii︠a︡ (in Russian). Tip. Departamenta generalʹnago shtaba. 1862.
  7. ^ Симонян, Р.З. (2018). История медицины: с древнейших времен до современности. Издательский дом Академии Естествознания. doi:10.17513/np.296 (inactive 16 February 2024). ISBN 978-5-91327-518-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of February 2024 (link)
  8. ^ Language Statistics of 1897 (in Russian)
  9. ^ Languages, number of speakers which in all gubernia were less than 1000
  1. ^
  2. ^
    • Russian: Курляндское наместничество, romanizedKurlyandskoye namestnichestvo
Livonian ConfederationTerra MarianaLatvian SSRDuchy of Livonia (1721–1917)Duchy of Livonia (1629–1721)Duchy of Livonia (1561–1621)Courland GovernorateDuchy of Courland and SemigalliaLatviaHistory of Latvia

56°39′08″N 23°43′28″E / 56.6522°N 23.7244°E / 56.6522; 23.7244

courland, governorate, also, known, province, courland, governorate, kurland, known, from, 1795, 1796, viceroyalty, courland, administrative, territorial, unit, guberniya, baltic, governorates, russian, empire, area, roughly, corresponded, parts, modern, latvi. Courland Governorate a also known as the Province of Courland or Governorate of Kurland 1 2 and known from 1795 to 1796 as the Viceroyalty of Courland b was an administrative territorial unit guberniya and one of the Baltic governorates of the Russian Empire Its area roughly corresponded to parts of modern day Latvia Courland GovernorateKurlyandskaya guberniya Russian Kurzemes guberna Latvian Kurlandisches Gouvernement German Governorate of the Russian Empire1795 1918Coat of armsLocation in the Russian EmpireCapitalMitauPopulation 1897674 034History Partition of Poland28 March 1795 German occupation1918 Treaty of Brest Litovsk1918Subdivisions or uyezds of Courland GovernoratePolitical subdivisions9Preceded by Succeeded byDuchy of Courland and Semigallia Duchy of Courland and Semigallia 1918 Today part ofLatviaLithuania German and Russian map of the Courland GovernorateThe governorate was created in 1795 out of the territory of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia which was incorporated into the Russian Empire as the Viceroyalty of Courland with its capital at Mitau now Jelgava following the third partition of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth After a failed post World War I attempt to create a United Baltic Duchy as a client state of the German Empire Courland and Livonia were united to form the Republic of Latvia on 18 November 1918 Contents 1 Geography 2 Subdivisions 3 Law 4 Administration 5 Economy 6 Language 7 See also 8 References and notesGeography editThe governorate was bounded in the north by the Baltic Sea the Gulf of Riga and the Governorate of Livonia west by the Baltic Sea south by the Vilna Governorate and Prussia and east by the Vitebsk Governorate and Minsk Governorate The population in 1846 was estimated at 553 300 1 It was situated between 55 41 and 57 451 2 N Of its total border of 1 260 versts 1 344 km the sea border is 320 versts 341 km The border with Prussia is only 6 versts 6 4 km long and lacks natural boundaries The surface area of the province is 23 977 square versts 27 290 km2 Subdivisions editAfter the annexation to the Russian Empire the Kurzeme Governorate united the lands of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia and the Piltene district both of which retained their previous administrative divisions After the administrative reform of 1819 the area of Pilten was incorporated into the territory of the province as the district of Windau Hauptmannschaft Windau and the district of Hasenpoth Hauptmannschaft Hasenpoth After the reform of 1819 the castle lord of Kandava moved to Talsi The area of Palanga up to the Prussian border was also added to the Kurzeme province from the Vilna Governorate The province was divided into ten districts or Hauptmannschaft whose administrative authorities were located in the towns of the same name with the exception of Talsi and Ilukste which had only the rights of towns Each district had its own court with a local police force Until 1864 every two districts were merged into Oberhauptmannschaft which contained the Oberhauptmann and the Evangelical Lutheran Church dean s districts under the authority of the Oberhofgericht Court of the Governor s Court The counties of the governorate were County County Town Arms of County Town Area Population 1897 census 3 Name in German Name in RussianBauske Bauskij Bauske Bausk nbsp 2 097 4 km2 809 8 sq mi 50 547Windau Vindavskij Windau Vindau nbsp 3 136 4 km2 1 211 0 sq mi 48 275Hasenpoth Gazenpotskij Harsenpoth Gazenpot nbsp 2 506 km2 968 sq mi 53 209Goldingen Goldingenskij Goldingen nbsp 3 276 4 km2 1 265 0 sq mi 66 335Grobin Grobinskij Grobin nbsp 4 685 4 km2 1 809 0 sq mi 110 878Illukst Illukstskij Illukst 2 249 7 km2 868 6 sq mi 66 461Doblen Mitavskij Doblenskij Mitau Mitava nbsp 2 847 2 km2 1 099 3 sq mi 101 310Talsen Talsenskij Talsen 3 151 1 km2 1 216 6 sq mi 61 148Tukkum Tukkumskij Tukkum nbsp 2 262 6 km2 873 6 sq mi 51 076Friedrichstadt Fridrihshtadtskij Friedrichstadt Fridrikhshtadt nbsp 3 504 2 km2 1 353 0 sq mi 64 795Law editThe highest court is the Courts of Kurland Kurlandisches Oberhofgericht the courts of appeal are the Higher Hauptmanns Courts Oberhauptmannsgericht The courts of first instance are the Hauptmannsgericht the county courts kreisgericht for the peasantry and the lowest level of the court system for the peasantry are the parish courts Gemeindegericht 4 Administration edit nbsp Unofficial flag of Courland GovernorateThe province of Courland was governed by a governor appointed by the emperor The representative body of local government was the Landtag Kurlandischer Landtag which consisted of parish commissioners Kirchspielsbevollmachtigter Konvokant elected by the parishes Landtagskirchspiel Parochie by parish assemblies Kirchspielsversammlung In the parish meetings Kirchspielsversammlung all large landowners of the parish could participate the executive body a noble committee headed by a land commissioner Landesbevollmachtige was elected to conduct its sessions The residence of the governors was in Jelgava Castle where the governorate s administrative offices were also located During the existence of the Baltic Governorate 1801 1876 1906 1909 the governors of Kurzeme were subordinate to the governor general of the Baltic Provinces German Generalgouverneur der Ostseeprovinzen who resided in the Riga Castle 5 Until Russification almost all governors of Courland were German Baltic noblemen Until then the language of administration in the highest authorities and courts of the province was German but in the parish courts according to the Courland peasant laws the records were also kept in Latvian 6 1795 1796 Baron Peter Ludwig von der Pahlen temporary governor general of Courland and Pilten 1796 1798 Count Gustav Matthias Jakob von der Wenge genannt Lambsdorff 1798 1800 Baron Wilhelm Carl Heinrich von der Oest genannt Driesen 1800 1808 Nikolay Ivanovich Arsenyev 1808 Jakob Maximilian von Brieskorn acting governor on 18 21 May 1812 1808 1811 Baron Jan Willem Hogguer 1811 Jakob Maximilian von Brieskorn acting governor in August September 1812 1811 1816 Count Friedrich Wilhelm von Sivers 1748 1823 in exile in Riga during Napoleonic invasion of Courland in July December 1812 1812 Jules de Chambaudoin and Charles de Montigny French intendants of Courland Semigallia and Pilten on 1 August 8 October 1812 1812 Jacques David Martin French governor general of Courland on 8 October 20 December 1812 1816 1824 Emannuel von Stanecke 1824 1827 Paul Theodor von Hahn 1793 1862 1827 1853 Christoph Engelbrecht von Brevern 1853 Aleksandr Petrovich Beklemishev acting governor on 10 May 14 June 1853 1853 1858 Pyotr Aleksandrovich Valuyev 1858 Julius von Cube de acting governor on 10 21 May 1858 1858 1868 Johann von Brevern 1868 1885 Paul Frommhold Ignatius von Lilienfeld Toal 1885 Aleksandr Alekseyevich Manyos 1885 1888 Konstantin Ivanovich Pashchenko 1888 1891 Dmitry Sergeyevich Sipyagin 1891 1905 Dmitry Dmitriyevich Sverbeyev 1905 1906 Woldemar Alexander Valerian von Boeckmann 1906 1910 Leonid Mikhailovich Knyazev 1910 Nikolay Dmitriyevich Kropotkin 1910 1915 Sergey Dimitriyevich Nabokov ru 1915 1917 Tatishchev Pyotr Vasilyevich Gendrikov Strakhov in exile in Tartu after the German invasion of Courland in July 1915 Economy editIn the 19th century the province was predominantly agrarian In 1817 serfdom was abolished in the province and peasants were granted personal freedom but all land remained the property of landlords In 1863 the peasants received the right to buy land as personal property and a class of land owning peasants began to form The land owning peasants along with the German landlords were the main suppliers of commercial agricultural products The main crops grown in the province were rye wheat barley peas oats and potatoes Horticulture and gardening are well developed Industry of the province is mostly manufacturing In 1912 there were about 200 factories and plants mills vodka mills sawmills tanneries brick mills flax spinning factories etc and about 500 cottage industries Railway construction was developing on the territory of the province The Riga Mitava railroad was built in 1867 and in 1871 76 a section of the Libava Romena railroad All in all the length of the railway lines in the province was over 560 versts Education in the province was better than the Russian average In the 1910s there were 8 secondary schools over 3 thousand students 13 special secondary schools over 460 students 790 lower secondary schools 36 9 thousand students in the province In the province in 1913 there were 33 hospitals with 1 300 beds 7 Language editBy the Imperial census of 1897 8 In bold are languages spoken by more people than the state language Language Number percentage males femalesLatvian 507 511 75 29 240 672 266 839German 51 017 7 56 23 372 27 645Yiddish 37 689 5 59 18 137 19 552Great Russian Russian 25 630 3 8 16 319 9 311Polish 19 688 2 92 9 985 9 703Lithuanian 16 531 2 45 8 833 7 698White Russian Belarusian 12 283 1 82 6 356 5 927Romani 1 202 0 17 581 621Persons that didn t name their native language 5 gt 0 01 4 1Other 9 2 478 0 36 1 993 485Total 674 034 100 326 252 347 782See also editReval Governorate Riga Governorate Saint Petersburg Governorate CourlandReferences and notes edit a b The English Cyclopaedia By Charles Knight The Baltic States from 1914 to 1923 By LtCol Andrew Parrott Archived 19 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Pervaya Vseobshaya perepis naseleniya Rossijskoj imperii 1897 goda Kurlyandskaya guberniya Sistema upravleniya Pribaltikoj Studopediya studopedia ru Retrieved 6 June 2022 Kolbuszewski Stanislaw Franciszek 18 July 2011 Vilnas Valsts universitates Zinatniskas bibliotekas XVIII gs Polu latviesu vardnicas rokraksts F D Baltistica 15 1 doi 10 15388 baltistica 15 1 1259 ISSN 2345 0045 Materialy dli a geografii i statistiki Rossii Kurli a ndskai a gubernii a in Russian Tip Departamenta generalʹnago shtaba 1862 Simonyan R Z 2018 Istoriya mediciny s drevnejshih vremen do sovremennosti Izdatelskij dom Akademii Estestvoznaniya doi 10 17513 np 296 inactive 16 February 2024 ISBN 978 5 91327 518 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of February 2024 link Language Statistics of 1897 in Russian Languages number of speakers which in all gubernia were less than 1000 Russian Kurlya ndskaya gube rniya romanized Kurlyandskaya guberniyaGerman Kurlandisches GouvernementLatvian Kurzemes gubernaLithuanian Kurso gubernijaEstonian Kuramaa kubermang Russian Kurlyandskoe namestnichestvo romanized Kurlyandskoye namestnichestvo 56 39 08 N 23 43 28 E 56 6522 N 23 7244 E 56 6522 23 7244 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Courland Governorate amp oldid 1209529521, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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