fbpx
Wikipedia

Liepāja

Liepāja (pronounced [liepaːja] (listen); Livonian: Līepõ; see other names) is a state city in western Latvia, located on the Baltic Sea. It is the largest-city in the Kurzeme Region and the third-largest city in the country after Riga and Daugavpils. It is an important ice-free port. The population in 2020 was 68,535 people.[3]

Liepāja
State city
Anthem: Pilsētā, kurā piedzimst vējš [lv]
Liepāja
Location of Liepaja in Latvia
Liepāja
Liepāja (Europe)
Coordinates: 56°30′42″N 21°00′50″E / 56.51167°N 21.01389°E / 56.51167; 21.01389Coordinates: 56°30′42″N 21°00′50″E / 56.51167°N 21.01389°E / 56.51167; 21.01389
Country Latvia
Town rights1625
Government
 • MayorGunārs Ansiņš (Liepājas partija)
Area
 • Total68.03 km2 (26.27 sq mi)
 • Land51.33 km2 (19.82 sq mi)
 • Water16.7 km2 (6.4 sq mi)
Elevation
14 m (46 ft)
Population
 (2022)[2]
 • Total67,360
 • Density990/km2 (2,600/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
LV-34(01-13); LV-3414; LV-34(16–17)
Calling code+371 634
Number of city council members15
ClimateCfb
Websitewww.liepaja.lv

In the 19th and early 20th century, it was a favourite place for sea-bathers and travellers, with the town boasting a fine park, many pretty gardens and a theatre.[4] Liepāja is however known throughout Latvia as "City where the wind is born", likely because of the constant sea breeze. A song of the same name (Latvian: "Pilsētā, kurā piedzimst vējš") was composed by Imants Kalniņš and has become the anthem of the city. Its reputation as the windiest city in Latvia was strengthened with the construction of the largest wind farm in the nation (33 Enercon wind turbines) nearby.

The coat of arms of Liepāja was adopted four days after the jurisdiction gained city rights on 18 March 1625.[5] These are described as: "on a silver background, the lion of Courland with a divided tail, who leans upon a linden (Latvian: Liepa) tree with its forelegs". The flag of Liepāja has the coat of arms in the center, with red in the top half and green in the bottom.[5]

One of the very few surviving films documenting the mass murder of Jews during the first stages of the Holocaust is a short film by a German soldier who witnessed the massacre of Liepāja Jews in July 1941 near the city's lighthouse.[6]

Liepāja is chosen as the European Capital of Culture in 2027.[7]

Names and toponymy

The name was derived from the Livonian word Liiv meaning "sand". The oldest written text mentioning Līva village (Villa Liva) is the treaty of bishop of Courland and the Master of the Livonian Order dated 4 April 1253. In 1263, the Teutonic Order established a town which they called Libau in German and this was used until 1920. The Lettish name Liepāja was mentioned for the first time in 1649 by Paul Einhorn in his work Historia Lettica. A Russian name in Cyrillic from the time of the Russian Empire was Либава[8] (Libava) or Либау (Libau), although Лиепая (Liepaya), a transliteration of Liepāja, has been used since World War II.

Some other names for the city include Liepoja in Lithuanian,[8] the nearest neighbour, and Libow in English.[9]

History

Early history

It is said that the original settlement at the location of modern Liepāja was founded by Curonian fishermen from Piemare as Līva, but Henry (Henricus Lettus) of Livonia, in his famous Chronicle, makes no mention of the settlement. The Teutonic Order established a village which they called Libau here in 1263, followed by Mitau two years later. In 1418 the village was sacked and burned by the Lithuanians.[citation needed][10]

Livonian confederation

During the 15th century, a part of the trade route from Amsterdam to Moscow passed through Līva, where it was known as the "white road to Lyva portus". By 1520 the river Līva had become too shallow for easy navigation, and development of the city declined.

Duchy of Courland and Semigallia

 
Panorama of Liepāja in 1701, looking from the Baltic Sea

In 1560, Gotthard Kettler, first Duke of Courland and Semigallia, loaned all the Grobiņa district, including Libau, to Albert, Duke of Prussia for 50,000 guldens. Only in 1609 after the marriage of Sofie Hohenzollern, Princess of Prussia, to Wilhelm Kettler did the territory return to the Duchy. During the Livonian War, Libau was attacked and burnt by the Swedes.

In 1625, Duke Friedrich Kettler of Courland granted the town city rights, which were affirmed by King Sigismund III of Poland in 1626, although under what legal authority Sigismund had is debatable. Under Duke Jacob Kettler (1642–1681), Libau became one of the main ports of Courland as it reached the height of its prosperity. In 1637 Couronian colonization was started from the ports of Libau and Ventspils (Windau). Kettler was an eager proponent of mercantilist ideas. Metalworking and ship building became much more developed, and trading relations developed not only with nearby countries but also with Britain, France, the Netherlands and Portugal.

In 1697–1703 a canal was cut to the sea and a more modern port was built.[11] In 1701, during the Great Northern War, Libau was captured by Charles XII of Sweden, but by the end of the war, the city had returned to titular Polish possession.[12] In 1710 an epidemic of plague killed about a third of the population. In 1780 the first Freemasonry lodge, "Libanons," was established by Provincial Grand Master Ivan Yelagin on behalf of the Provincial Lodge of Russia; it was registered as number 524 in the Grand Lodge of England.[13]

Russian Empire

 
The Emigrants’ House of the Russian East-Asian Steamship Company. About 500,000 people from the Russian Empire emigrated to the United States through Liepāja.[14]

Courland passed to the control of the Russian Empire in 1795 during the third Partition of Poland and was organized as the Courland Governorate of Russia. Growth during the nineteenth century was rapid. During the Crimean War, when the British Royal Navy was blockading Russian Baltic ports, the busy yet still unfortified port of Libau was briefly captured on 17 May 1854 without a shot being fired, by a landing party of 110 men from HMS Conflict and HMS Amphion.[15]

In 1857 an Imperial Decree provided for a new railway to Libau.[16] That year the engineer Jan Heidatel developed a project to reconstruct the port. In 1861–1868 the project was realized – including the building of a lighthouse and breakwaters. Between 1877 and 1882 the political and literary weekly newspaper Liepājas Pastnieks was published – the first Latvian language newspaper in Libau.[17] In the 1870s the further rapid development of Russian railways, especially the 1871 opening of the Libava-Kaunas and the 1876 Liepāja–Romny Railways, ensured that a large proportion of central Russian trade passed through Libau.[18] By 1900, 7% of Russian exports were passing through Libau. The city became a major port of the Russian Empire on the Baltic Sea, as well as a popular resort. During this time of economic expansion, the city architect Paul Max Bertschy provided the design for many of the city's both public and private buildings, making an imprint on the architecture which can still be seen today.[19]

 
Electric tram in Liepāja, circa 1900

On the orders of Alexander III, Libau was fortified against possible German attacks. Fortifications were subsequently built around the city, and in the early 20th century, a major military base was established on the northern edge. It included formidable coastal fortifications and extensive quarters for military personnel. As part of the military development, a separate port was excavated exclusively for military use. This area became known as Kara Osta (War Port) and served military needs throughout the twentieth century.

Early in the twentieth century, the port of Libau became a central point of embarkation for immigrants travelling to the United States and Canada. By 1906 the direct ship service to the United States was used by 40,000 migrants per year. Simultaneously, the first Russian training school of submarine navigation was founded. In 1912 one of the first water aerodromes in Russia was opened in Libau.[20] In 1913, 1,738 ships entered Libau, with 1,548,119 tonnes of cargo passing through the port. The population had increased from 10,000 to over 100,000 within about 60 years.

World War I and War of Independence

 
Bombardment of port Liepāja by German cruiser SMS Augsburg, 2 August 1914
 
Libau's 5 rubles (1915)

Following the outbreak of World War I, the German cruiser SMS Magdeburg shelled Libau (then part of Russia), and other vessels laid mines off the approaches to the port.[21] Libau was soon occupied by the German Army, on 7 May 1915, and in memory of this event, a monument was constructed on Kūrmājas Prospect in 1916 (removed in 1919 by the new Latvian State). Libau's local government issued its own money for a while in this period – Libaua rubles. An advanced German Zeppelin base was constructed at Vaiņode, near Libau, with five hangars, in August 1915.[22] On 23 October 1915, the German cruiser SMS Prinz Adalbert was sunk by the British submarine HMS E8, 37 km (23 mi) west of Libau.

 
German Army in Liepāja, 1915

With the collapse of Russia and the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, the occupying German forces had a quiet time, but the subsequent defeat in the West of the German Empire and the Allied denunciation of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty changed everything. Independence of the Republic of Latvia was proclaimed on 18 November 1918, and the Latvian Provisional Government under Karlis Ulmanis was created. Bolshevik Russia now advanced into Latvian territory and met little resistance here. Soon the Provisional Government and remaining German units were forced to leave Riga and retreated all the way to Libau, but then the Red offensive stalled along the Venta river. The Bolsheviks announced a Latvian Soviet Republic. Latvia now became the main theatre of Baltic operations for the remaining German forces in 1919. In addition, a Landeswehr was formed to work in conjunction with the German forces.

In Libau, a coup organized by Germans took place on 16 April 1919 and Ulmanis government was forced to flee and was replaced by Andrievs Niedra.[23] The Ulmanis government found shelter on the steamship "Saratov" in Libau port. In May a British cruiser squadron arrived at Libau to support Latvian independence and requested the Germans to leave.[24]

During the war, the words of "The Jäger March" were written in Libau by Heikki Nurmio.

The German Freikorps, having recaptured Riga from the Bolsheviks, departed in late 1919 and the Bolsheviks were driven out of the Latvian hinterlands in early 1920.

1920–1940

 
Soldiers of the Latvian National Armed Forces in Liepāja in 1920

During the interwar period, Liepāja was the second major city in Latvia. In an attempt to put Libau 'on the map', on 31 January 1922, the Libau Bank was founded with significant new capital, transforming the old Libau Exchange Bank which had belonged to the Libau Exchange Association, and it eventually became the fourth-largest of Latvia's joint stock banks. However, when a Riga branch of the bank was opened, the business centre of gravity shifted from Liepāja so that by 1923 its Riga 'branch' was responsible for 90% of the turnover. The German consul in Liepāja reported at the time that "Riga, the economic heart of the country, draws all business to itself." The Latvian government ignored the pleas of the Libau Exchange Association to frustrate this.[25] In 1935 KOD (Latvian: Kara ostas darbnīcas) started to manufacture the light aircraft KOD-1 and KOD-2 at Liepāja. However it became evident in this year that trade with the new Soviet Union had virtually collapsed.[26]

World War II

 
Top secret USSR document about creating a closed military port in Liepāja. Signed by Stalin (note: there is a spelling mistake in the word "Liepāja" – Russian: Лепая) (1951)

The ports and human capital of Liepāja and Ventspils were targets of Joseph Stalin. He signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop pact in part to gain control of this territory. When the Soviet Union occupied and annexed Latvia in 1940, it nationalized private property. Many thousands of former owners were arrested and deported to the gulag camps in Siberia.

In 1941 Liepāja was among the first cities captured by the 291st Infantry Division of Army Group North after Nazi Germany began Operation Barbarossa, its war against the Soviet Union. German Nazis and Latvian collaborators virtually exterminated the local Jewish population, which had numbered about 7,000 before the war. Film footage of an Einsatzgruppen execution of local Jews was taken in Liepāja.[27][6] Most of these mass murders took place in the dunes of Šķēde north of the city. Fewer than thirty Jews survived in Liepāja by the end of the war.

During the war, the German navy's U-boat crews received their torpedo training at Liepāja.

During the period 1944–1945, as the Soviet Union began its offensive to the Baltic Sea, Liepāja was within the "Courland Pocket". It was occupied by the Red Army on 9 May 1945. Thousands of Latvians fled as refugees to Germany. The city had been devastated during the war, and most of the buildings and industrial plant were destroyed.

Latvian SSR

 
Soviet rally in the city park, 1963

On 25–29 March 1949, the Soviet Union organized a second mass deportation to Siberia from Liepāja. In 1950 a monument to Stalin was erected on Station square (Latvian: Stacijas laukums). It was dismantled in 1958 after the Party Congress that discussed his abuses.

During 1953–1957 the city center was reconstructed under the direction of architects A. Kruglov and M. Žagare.[11] In 1952–1955 the Liepāja Academy of Pedagogy building was constructed under the direction of A. Aivars. In 1960 the Kurzeme shopping centre was opened. During the Soviet administration, Liepāja was a closed city; even local farmers and villagers needed a special permit to enter it.

The Soviet military set up its Baltic naval base and nuclear weapon warehouses there; The Beberliņš sandpit was dug out to extract sand used for constructing underground warehouses. In 1967 the Soviets completely closed the port to commercial traffic. One-third of the city was taken up with a Soviet naval base; its military staff numbered 26,000. The 14th Submarine Squadron of the USSR's Baltic Fleet (Russian: 14 эскадрилья ЛиВМБ ДКБФ, call sign "Комплекс") was stationed there with 16 submarines (Types: 613, 629a, 651); as was the 6th group of Rear Supply of the Baltic Fleet, and the 81st Design Bureau and Reserve Command Center of the same force.

In 1977 Liepāja was awarded the Order of the October Revolution for heroic defense against Nazi Germany in 1941. Five residents were awarded the honorary title Hero of Socialist Labor: Anatolijs Filatkins, Artūrs Fridrihsons, Voldemārs Lazdups, Valentins Šuvajevs and Otīlija Žagata. Because of the rapid growth of the city's population, a shortage of apartment houses resulted. To resolve this, the Soviet government organized development of most of the modern Liepāja districts: Dienvidrietumi, Ezerkrasts, Ziemeļu priekšpilsēta, Zaļā birze and Tosmare. The majority of these blocks were constructed of ferro-concrete panels in standard projects designed by the state Latgyprogorstroy Institute (Russian: Латгипрогорстрой). In 1986 the new central city hospital in Zaļa birze was opened.[28]

 
Soviet-era apartment blocks in Liepāja

1990–present

After Latvia regained independence after the fall of the Soviet Union, Liepāja has worked hard to change from a military city into a modern port city (again appearing on European maps after the secrecy of the Soviet period). The commercial port was re-opened in 1991, and in 1994 the last Russian troops left Liepāja. Since then, Liepāja has engaged in international co-operation, has been associated with 10 twin and partner cities, and is an active partner in several co-operation networks. Facilities are being improved. The city is the location of Latvia's largest naval flotilla, the largest warehouses of ammunition and weapons in the Baltic states, and the main supply centre of the Latvian army.

The former closed military town has been transformed into the northern neighbourhood of Karosta, occupying a third of the area of the city of Liepāja and attracting tourists to the remains of the military era.[29]

At the beginning of the 21st century, many ambitious construction projects were planned for the city, including a NATO military base,[30] and Baltic Sea Park, planned as the biggest amusement park in the Baltic states. Most of the projects have not yet been realised due to economic and political factors. Liepāja's heating network was renovated with the cooperation of French and Russian companies: Dalkia and Gazprom, respectively. In 2006, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, a direct descendant of Jacob Kettler visited Liepāja. In 2010 the coal cogeneration 400 MW power plant was built in Liepāja with the support of the government.

Geography

 
Beach in Liepāja

Liepāja is situated on the coast of the Baltic Sea in the south-western part of Latvia. The westernmost geographical point of Latvia is located approximately 15 km (9 mi) to the south thus making Liepāja Latvia's furthest west city. The city occupies a 1.5-6.5 km wide coastal dune embankment and a foothill plain in the Bartau Plain of the Seaside Lowland. Liepaja is surrounded by the Dienvidkurzeme Region, and is bordered to the north by Medze Parish, to the east by Grobiņa Parish, and to the south by Nīca Parish, with its western border following the Baltic Sea coast. The Trade Channel (Tirdzniecības kanāls) connects the lake to the sea dividing the city into southern and northern parts, which are often referred to as Vecliepāja (Old Town) and Jaunliepāja (New Town) respectively. Along the coast, the city extends northwards until it reaches the Karosta Channel (Karostas kanāls). North of the Karosta Channel is an area called Karosta which is now fully integrated into Liepāja and is the northernmost district of the city. Liepāja's coastline consists of an unbroken sandy beach and dunes. Natural areas cover about one third of the territory of the city. These areas are mostly located on the outskirts of the city and are not connected to the small green areas in the central part of the city.[31][32]

Forests

Liepaja's urban forest covers 1368.9 ha, of which 83% are forest stands, the rest is covered by swamps (4.7%), meadows and sandhills (9.5%), flood plains and infrastructure sites (less than 3% in total). Private landowners own 109.6 ha, while 92% of the forest land area, or 1259.3 ha, belongs to the municipality. The urban forest consists of five separate forest massifs: the largest one is in the northern part of the city - the Karosta Forest. Other forests include Reiņu Forest, the forests near the regional hospital, the south-western forest and the Zaļā birze Forest. The city is characterised by a wide variety of forest growth types, determined and influenced by the geological and hydrological conditions of the area. Dry forests cover 39% of the forest area, forests on wet mineral soils 13%, swamp forests 22% and drained forests 26%.[32]

 
Liepāja Lake

Surface waters

The water areas cover 1009 ha (17% of the total area of the city). The hydrological system of the City of Liepāja consists of various elements, including the Liepāja and Tosmare Lakes, which border the city to the east and are Natura 2000 sites (¼ of the lake is located in the city, the rest is located in the Otanķi and Nīca municipalities). There are also rivers - the Vērnieku River, Kalējupīte and Ālande, canals: Tirdzniecības, Karostas, Cietokšņa and Pērkones (former river), as well as the artificial reservoir Beberliņi. The city is located on the Baltic Sea coast. According to the Latvian classification of river basin districts, the territory of the city of Liepāja falls within the Venta river basin district.[32]

Soils

The prevailing soil type and the prevailing geographical landscape of the area are determined by the low-fertility sandy loams and difficult natural drainage conditions characteristic of the Seaside Lowland. In terms of mechanical composition, sandy soils predominate, with typical podzols in the uplands and peaty podzolic gley vegetation in the depressions, as well as turf gley vegetation and turf podzolic gley vegetation. Due to the high humidity, the area is characterised by waterlogging.[32]

Climate

 

The climate in Liepaja is strongly influenced by the close proximity to the sea and is therefore located in the temperate semi-continental climate zone noted as "Dfb" in the Köppen classification. The outflow of sea air creates relatively low summer and high winter temperatures for these latitudes. Liepaja has the highest average air temperature in Latvia at +7.0 °C. In terms of hours of sunshine, Liepāja has one of the highest averages of 1940 hours of sunshine per year.[33] Winter is characterised by frequent thaws, so snow cover in the Seaside Lowlands is usually very patchy, rarely exceeding 5–10 cm in depth.[32] During the winter the sea around Liepāja is virtually ice-free. Although occasionally some land-fast ice may develop, it seldom reaches a hundred meters from the shore and does not last long before melting. The sea warms up fully only at the beginning of August. Summers are more affected by the maritime climate than east-facing cities on similar latitudes in opposite Sweden, but winters are milder than inland areas to the east. The number of windy days is high compared to inland areas of Latvia. The prevailing winds in the area tend to be all westerly and southerly. Their average speed is 6.1 m/s. Maximum wind speeds (greater than 20 m/s) are usually observed in autumn and winter, in most cases from the west. On 17–18 October 1967, the strongest storm in the history of the country occurred, and on 18 October the highest wind gust ever recorded in Latvia - 48 m/s - was recorded in Liepāja. The city has on average the most stormy days of the year - 7.9, when the average wind speed reaches 10.8 m/s. In 1971, this figure was as high as 36 days. The long-term trends indicate a very significant decrease in the number of stormy days.[34]

Climate data for Liepaja (1991–2020 temp and precipitation, 1961–1990 sun and humidity, extremes 1895-present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.3
(57.7)
15.5
(59.9)
19.0
(66.2)
27.0
(80.6)
32.3
(90.1)
36.5
(97.7)
36.9
(98.4)
36.1
(97.0)
30.7
(87.3)
24.9
(76.8)
16.5
(61.7)
13.7
(56.7)
36.9
(98.4)
Mean maximum °C (°F) 5.7
(42.3)
5.9
(42.6)
10.8
(51.4)
20.5
(68.9)
25.7
(78.3)
26.9
(80.4)
29.1
(84.4)
28.2
(82.8)
23.2
(73.8)
17.2
(63.0)
10.9
(51.6)
7.2
(45.0)
30.4
(86.7)
Average high °C (°F) 0.9
(33.6)
1.1
(34.0)
4.2
(39.6)
10.4
(50.7)
15.4
(59.7)
18.6
(65.5)
21.6
(70.9)
21.6
(70.9)
17.1
(62.8)
11.2
(52.2)
5.9
(42.6)
2.6
(36.7)
11.0
(51.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) −1.0
(30.2)
−1.2
(29.8)
1.3
(34.3)
6.5
(43.7)
11.2
(52.2)
14.8
(58.6)
17.9
(64.2)
17.7
(63.9)
13.8
(56.8)
8.5
(47.3)
4.1
(39.4)
0.9
(33.6)
8.0
(46.4)
Average low °C (°F) −3.0
(26.6)
−3.4
(25.9)
−1.6
(29.1)
2.5
(36.5)
7.0
(44.6)
11.0
(51.8)
14.1
(57.4)
13.8
(56.8)
10.3
(50.5)
5.8
(42.4)
2.2
(36.0)
−0.8
(30.6)
4.9
(40.8)
Mean minimum °C (°F) −14.8
(5.4)
−13.2
(8.2)
−9.2
(15.4)
−3.6
(25.5)
0.2
(32.4)
4.5
(40.1)
8.3
(46.9)
7.8
(46.0)
3.3
(37.9)
−2.2
(28.0)
−5.2
(22.6)
−10.2
(13.6)
−18.0
(−0.4)
Record low °C (°F) −32.9
(−27.2)
−31.6
(−24.9)
−23.8
(−10.8)
−10.1
(13.8)
−4.3
(24.3)
0.5
(32.9)
4.0
(39.2)
3.0
(37.4)
−1.7
(28.9)
−7.3
(18.9)
−17.5
(0.5)
−25.8
(−14.4)
−32.9
(−27.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 61.0
(2.40)
43.3
(1.70)
42.3
(1.67)
42.9
(1.69)
38.8
(1.53)
51.5
(2.03)
70.9
(2.79)
83.4
(3.28)
77.5
(3.05)
89.0
(3.50)
83.5
(3.29)
79.7
(3.14)
755.6
(29.75)
Average precipitation days 13.51 9.80 10.04 7.05 7.15 8.24 8.51 9.95 11.11 13.68 15.04 15.15 127.69
Average relative humidity (%) 87.2 85.8 82.8 76.3 75.7 77.4 78.9 78.5 80.5 82.9 87.4 86.9 81.7
Average dew point °C (°F) −2
(28)
−3
(27)
−2
(28)
2
(36)
6
(43)
10
(50)
14
(57)
13
(55)
10
(50)
6
(43)
2
(36)
−1
(30)
5
(40)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 34 64 130 187 273 295 279 248 173 103 43 28 1,857
Source 1: NOAA (sun 1961–1990)[35]
Source 2: Weatherbase (humidity)[36] Source #3: Météo Climat[37] Source #4: Time and Date (dewpoints, 1985-2015)[38]

Closest cities

The closest city to Liepāja is Grobiņa, located about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) away towards Riga. Other main cities in the region are Klaipėda (approx. 110 km (68 mi) to the south), Ventspils (approx. 115 km (71 mi) to the north) and Saldus (approx. 100 km (62 mi) to the east). The distance to Riga (the capital of Latvia) is about 200 km (124 mi) to the east. The nearest point to Liepāja across the Baltic sea is the Swedish island of Gotland approximately 160 km (99 mi) to the north-west. The distance to Stockholm is 216 nautical miles. The closest major airports to Liepāja are Palanga International Airport - 60 km (37 mi) and Riga International Airport - 210 km (130 mi).

Architecture

Liepāja's architecture features buildings from different centuries: classical wooden buildings from the 17th century, highly regarded brick architecture, Eclecticism and Art Nouveau buildings at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, as well as some buildings of the interwar period, Soviet-era functionalism and contemporary architecture. Many buildings were destroyed during World War II, which resulted in the destruction of almost the entire city built-up area between the Trade Canal and the Rose Square - more than 100 buildings. The development of Liepāja was entirely determined by economic conditions - initially the establishment of the port, and later, from the late 19th century, the expansion of industry.[39]

Early architecture

 
Building on 26 Kungu Street

Liepāja reached its first period of construction and architectural prosperity in the 17th and 18th centuries. The development of the architecture and artistic styles of the buildings was reflected in the houses of the wealthier inhabitants, where Mannerism, Baroque, Classicism and other styles can be found. The common people built their homes using traditional building methods typical of the countryside.[40] The oldest type of building in Liepāja is a wooden log house on a low stone plinth with a steep tiled roof. This type of building can be found on Kungu Street, which was the main street of the town in the 17th century.[41] The building on 24 Kungu Street is notable for the visit of Tsar Peter I of Russia in 1697, while the neighbouring building on 26 Kungu Street was visited by King Charles XII of Sweden in 1700.[42] Other notable buildings are those at 6 Lielā Street, 3 Kungu Street, 13 Stendera Street, and the warehouses at 1 and 2 Jāņa Street and 4/6 and 10/12 Zivju Street.[39] After several unsuccessful attempts to build a harbour during the previous century, the Trade Canal was dug in 1703, which contributed to the growth of the city. At this time, the port warehouses were built out of wood, characterised by a high plinth created as a semi-basement. Most of the older warehouses were concentrated in Jūras Street, one of which was moved to the Open-Air Museum in the 1930s, while the others have not survived. Residential buildings in the harbour area were very small and densely distributed.[42] In 1848 there were 664 buildings in the town, of which only 46 were stone-built. Although wooden buildings were constructed, the most luxurious were built with roof extensions and ornate doors, panelling and beautifully painted pot stoves. The most ornate building in 18th century Liepāja was the Holy Trinity Cathedral[39]

 
Building on 12 Kūrmāja Prospect. Architect: Paul Max Bertchy

Bertchy

With the construction of the Grobiņa highway in 1841 and the Liepāja-Romny railway in the 1870s, the city took on a different character. This was further marked by the appointment of Paul Max Bertchy as the city's first architect in 1871. The houses built by Bertchy form the most notable part of Liepāja's historic buildings. The wide range of Bertchy's diverse works includes the oil extraction plant and linoleum factory, mansions at 14 and 16 Krišjāņa Valdemāra Street, 15 Peldu Street, tenement houses on 44 Peldu Street, the Peldu Institution (bath house) in Jūrmala Park, the hospital complex on Dārtas Street, the gymnasium building at 4 Krišjāņa Valdemāra Street, the café at 2 Krišjāņa Valdemāra Street, the St. Anne's Church, the Rome Hotel and others. His red brick buildings are also well known. The architecture of this period uses high-quality woodwork, such as doors. The painted staircases are remarkable, not only in the luxurious houses, but also in the workers' tenements on 6 Palmu Street, 9 Avotu Street, 28 Republikas Street and 21 Kuršu Street.[39]

Art Nouveau

 
Building on 5 Lielā Street. Architect: Ludwig Melville

Liepaja is home to examples of the Art Nouveau style of architecture on a European scale. There are dozens of Art Nouveau buildings in the city, which in absolute numbers is more than in other European cities. Graudu Street is almost entirely defined by Art Nouveau along its entire length.[43] Most of the buildings are built in the restrained and laconic style of Northern National Romanticism.[44] Paul Max Bertchy designed several Art Nouveau buildings, but also significant are those by Theodor Max Bertchy (Bertchy junior), Ludwig Melville, Charles Carr, Lars Sonke, Pauls Kampe, Adolf Kucner, Gustav Janicek, William Losow, Max Kuhn, Alexander Zehrensen and Vasily Kosyakov. The Art Nouveau in Liepāja reflects mostly Latvian – German and partly also Russian as well as other interchanges.[45]

The most outstanding examples of Art Nouveau are the buildings on 2/6 Kūrmājas Prospect, 9 Ausekļa Street, 28, 34, 36/38, 44, 46, 27/29 and 45 Graudu Street, 3, 9, 16 and 23 Dzintaru Street, 8 Krišjāņa Barona Street, 23 Liepu Street, 33/35 Peldu Street, 1 and 11 Pasta Street, 4 and 5 Lielā Street, 2 Teātra Street, 18 Baznīcas Street, 21A Bāriņu Street, 22 Tirgoņu Street, 1, 5, 17 and 21 Kuršu Street, 8/10 and 16 Rožu Street , 6 Alejas Street (yard), 43 Toma Street, 11 Dīķa Street, 4 and 11 Avotu Street, 19 and 28 Republikas Street, 5, 13, 15/17, 19, 25 and 66 Uliha Street , 1 Raiņa Street, 10/12 Kroņu Street etc.[43]

 
View in Karosta

Karosta

In the northern part of the city, under the guidance of the best Russian military architects and engineers, the Karosta complex was built, which was and is completely different from the rest of the city, both in function and in the character and traditions of its buildings. The Karosta is still an outstanding example of a militarised complex in Latvian architectural history. The district was built for the Russian army and is dominated by the Orthodox cathedral in the centre. The most important objects of the Karosta are the officers' meeting house and the residential complex, as well as the unique fortification system that encircled the entire city and connected the different parts of the city with underground passages. During World War I, the fortifications were partially blown up.[39]

Interwar period

During the interwar period, architect Jānis Blaus designed the project for the Latvian Society House in Liepāja. The building was erected in 1934 on the Rose Square. The Army Economic Store building was built in 1934-1935 according to the design of architect Aleksandrs Rācenis, but was destroyed during the Second World War. The pawnshop and savings bank building at 3 Teātra Street was built in 1936-1937.[40] During this period, the Friendly Vocation Primary School (now the 5th Secondary School; K. Bikše) and the Jaunliepāja Lutheran Church (K. E. Strandmann) were also built.[39]

Soviet era

 

Liepaja's city centre was devastated by the Second World War, and new development master plans were needed. The architecture and urban planning of Latvia, which was part of the USSR, was regulated by the uniform urban planning and building regulations of the Soviet Union. New centres for cities destroyed during the war were planned according to standardised formal principles - International Modernism, where streets had to be wide and squares regular, symmetrical, with a Lenin monument in the centre. Public buildings were designed to be representative - in line with Soviet architectural principles - large, spacious, imposing. In 1957, the building that now houses the University of Liepāja was built in a heavy eclectic style, designed by the architect Andrejs Aivars. An almost identical building is located in Daugavpils. The Kurzeme department store was built with large windows on the exterior walls and shop windows on the ground floor. During the Soviet period, the historical buildings of Liepāja's Old Town were eliminated over a wide area by the construction of a tram line from Kurzeme to Peldu Street. Changes also affected Lielā Street.[40] Due to the military port, Liepaja was a closed city, and thus construction in the city was rather slow until the 1970s, when the construction of new factories (Lauma, agricultural machinery factory, Hidrolats) and residential areas were built, the most important of which is the Ezerkrasts district.[39]

Contemporary architecture

After the restoration of independence, an artificial ice rink (architect U. Pīlēns), a Catholic monastery (A. Kokins) in Jaunliepāja, the "Māja" shop (reconstruction; A. Padēlis-Līns), new market pavilions in the city centre (U. Pīlēns) were built. The most remarkable building of the 21st century is the Great Amber Concert Hall. New-age construction is characterised by the use of new materials and technologies, as well as rationalism and functionalism.[39]

Administration

 
Current mayor Gunārs Ansiņš and former mayor Uldis Sesks

Fourteen deputies and a mayor make up the Liepāja City Council. City's voters select a new government every four years, in June. The Council selects from its members the Chairman of City Council (also called City Mayor), the two Vice chairmen (Deputy Mayors)

which are full-time positions. City Council also appoints the members of four standing committees, which prepare issues to be discussed in the Council meetings: Finance Committee; City Economy and Development Committee; Social Affairs, Health Care, Education and Public Order Committee; Culture and Sports Committee. The City of Liepāja had an operating budget of 104 million euros in 2022.[48] Traditionally, political leanings in Liepāja have been right-wing. In recent years the Liepāja Party has dominated the polls.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1638 1,000—    
1800 4,500+350.0%
1840 11,000+144.4%
1881 29,600+169.1%
1897 64,500+117.9%
1907[49]81,000+25.6%
1914 94,000+16.0%
1921 51,600−45.1%
1940 52,900+2.5%
1950 64,200+21.4%
1959[11]71,000+10.6%
1970 92,900+30.8%
1975[50]100,000+7.6%
1989 114,500+14.5%
1995 100,300−12.4%
2000 89,100−11.2%
2007 85,300−4.3%
2011[51] 83,400−2.2%
2019[52]68,945−17.3%

Liepaja's population structure has been multicultural and this impacted city's social life, economy and administration. Liepaja's population structure started to change after the abolition of serfdom in 1817. The number of inhabitants in 1800 is 4500, but in 1840 there already were 11 000 citizens. The number of city inhabitants has doubled in 40 years. It continued to grow and in 1881 Liepāja already had 29 600 inhabitants.[53] Liepāja's population grew fastest before World War I, almost tenfold in 50 years. It doubled during the 50 years of Soviet occupation, when population growth was hampered by the existence of the closed military port. Until World War I there was a high proportion of Baltic Germans, until World War II there was a high proportion of Jews, and during the Soviet occupation the number of Russians increased. The proportion of Latvians increased from 16% in 1863 to 85% in 1943 until World War II, but decreased again after the war.[39]

With 68,945 inhabitants in 2019, Liepāja is the third-largest city in Latvia. Its population has declined since the withdrawal of Soviet military forces; the last of which left in 1994. In addition, many ethnic Russians emigrated to Russia in 1991–2000. More recent causes include economic migration to Western European countries after Latvia joined the EU in 2004, and lower birth rates. The demographic situation in Liepāja is unfavourable, as the natural population growth is negative.[39] However, the trend of people leaving Liepāja is gradually decreasing, and in 2018 a positive migration balance was achieved for the first time in many years. Favourable migration trends are more and more significantly compensating for the negative natural increase, so the overall population decline trend has been significantly reversed in 2017 and 2018. The dependency load is 690 children, adolescents and pensioners per 1000 inhabitants, which is the highest value among the major cities.[54] The population decreased by an average of 750 inhabitants per year between 2012 and 2018.[55]

Religion

 
St. Anne's Church

Liepāja has a number of churches. As elsewhere in central and western Latvia, Protestant churches, mostly Lutheran, are predominant. Holy Trinity Cathedral houses the seat of the Lutheran Bishop of Liepāja. Other Lutheran congregations are St. Anne, Church of the Cross and Church of Luther. There are four Baptist congregations in the city, among them are St. Paul church and Church of Zion.

Owing to the regional importance of Liepāja during the last decades of the Russian Empire, a number of Russian Orthodox churches were established in the city early in the twentieth century. Their congregations are chiefly drawn from the Russian-speaking population.

The Catholic faith is represented in Liepāja by a St. Joseph Cathedral – the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Liepāja, Catholic primary school and the Catholic centre. The structure of the Catholic centre was used to represent the Vatican in Expo 2000 in Hanover and was transferred to Liepāja after the event.

Other Christian sects include Old Ritualists, Adventist, Pentecostal, Latter-day Saints and Jehovah's Witnesses, who have single congregations and churches.

Economy

 
Dry docks of the Liepāja Northern Shipyard, established in 1900[56]

After the collapse of USSR's centrally planned economy, Liepāja had to deal with issues of rundown infrastructure. To provide business incubation and development for the city, Liepaja Special Economic Zone (Liepaja SEZ) was established. According to the law, Liepāja SEZ was established on March 1, 1997 and it will exist until December 31, 2035. The purpose of the Liepāja SEZ is to develop a business environment, manufacturing, shipping and air traffic, as well as international trade through Latvia. The aim of the Liepāja SEZ is to attract investment for expanding of manufacturing and infrastructure, and to create new work places and to ensure the development of the region. In the beginning, investment growth remained slow due to a shortage of a skilled labour force, but the scheme proved to be successful as positive tendencies can be seen with formation of new businesses.[53]

After joining the European Union in 2004, many companies were faced with strict European rules and tense competition. In 2007 Liepājas cukurfabrika and Liepājas sērkociņi closed down; Līvu alus, Liepājas maiznieks and Lauma have been sold to European investors. in 2013, the steel production company Liepājas Metalurgs went bankrupt, which was one of the largest economic disasters in modern Latvian history, costing the state around 230 million LVL (327 million EUR).[57][58] Today, the City's economic development is mainly driven by Liepāja Special Economic Zone, Trade Port and the companies placed there. In 2021, the companies in Liepāja with the largest turnover are TOLMETS, AE Partner, and Jensen Metal[59]

Transport

 
Public transport in Liepāja

Liepaja's transport system consists of 31 bus lines (5 of which are connected to Grobiņa), as well as one Liepaja tram line, which is 7 kilometres long. The tram line was founded after the opening of the first Liepāja power plant in 1899, which makes it the oldest electric tram line in the Baltic states;[60] it is now operated by the municipal company Liepājas tramvajs. In 2013, the tram line was extended by 1.7 km from the Dienvidrietumu residential area (Klaipėda Street) to the Ezerkrasts residential area with a turnaround at the end of Mirdzas Ķempes Street. Liepāja has direct bus connections to Riga, Riga International Airport, Ventspils, Jelgava, Klaipėda and other destinations.

Liepāja has a railway connection to Jelgava and Riga and through them to the rest of Latvia's railway network. There is just one passenger station in the New Town, but the railway extends further and links to the port. There is also a northward railway track leading to Ventspils, but in recent decades it has fallen into disuse for economic reasons. The railway provides the main means of delivering cargo to the port. Two main highways, the A9 and A11, connect the city and its port to the rest of the country. The A9 leads north-west towards Riga and central Latvia and the A11 leads south to the border with Lithuania and its only port Klaipėda and to Palanga International Airport.[61] The city also hosts Liepāja International Airport, one of three international airports in Latvia; it is located outside the city limits, north of the Lake of Liepāja near Cimdenieki. The airport is serviced by charter flights and an Air Baltic connection to Riga International Airport. Liepaja airport serviced 6,043 commercial (scheduled and non-scheduled) passengers in 2017[62]

The Port of Liepāja has a wide water area and consists of three main parts. The Winter harbour is located in the Trade channel and serves small local fishing vessels as well as medium cargo ships. Immediately north of the Trade channel is the main area of the port, separated from the open sea by a line of breakwaters. This part of the port can accommodate large ships and ferries. Further north is Karosta harbour, also called Karosta channel, which was formerly a military harbour but is now used for ship repairs and other commercial purposes. Liepāja also welcomes yachts and other leisure vessels which can enter the Trade channel and moor almost in the center of the city.

Education

History

The idea to open a school was born in 1560 during a church survey, and schools existed in Liepāja before 1625. However, it was the granting of city rights that encouraged the further development of schools, as the maintenance of schools was considered one of the city's responsibilities. Both German and Curonian children were encouraged to attend the newly founded school. It was announced to the "non-Germans" that those children who were sent to the school would be freed from all servitude and even freed from serfdom; they would also be given help for further education. At the beginning the school was a one-class school; the second class was opened in 1638; from 1650 the school had 3 classes, and in 1750 the 4th class was opened. In 1788 a new school building was built, and in 1806 the town school was transformed into the county's highest school after 250 years of existence. This county school was attended by Krišjānis Valdemārs and Kronvaldu Atis. In 1866, the county school was converted into the Nikolai Gymnasium. In 1861, a maritime class was opened at the county school, which was added to the Liepāja Maritime School in 1876. The first girls' high school was opened in 1871, and by 1874 there were already 2 girls' high schools, one of which was turned into a gymnasium in 1886. In the following years, the Russification of schools, which started with the law of 1889, turned all schools into Russian schools, however, there were schools attended by Latvian children in their majority, where Latvian was taught as a subject and religious studies were taught in Latvian. Schools with Latvian as the only language only appeared after Latvia gained independence.[63]

 
Liepāja State Gymnasium No.1

During the First Free State there were three secondary schools, 25 primary schools, two technical schools, a trade school, a secondary school of applied arts, a trade institute, a technical evening craft school, a Jewish craft school, a fishing and fish farming school. There was also a folk conservatory and various evening courses. In December 1919, a separate children's section was opened in the library - the first in Latvia.

After World War II, Liepāja was home to the Liepaja Pedagogical Institute (founded in 1954; in 1945 as the Pedagogical School, in 1950 as the Liepaja Teachers' Institute), the General Technical Faculty of the Riga Polytechnic Institute, a maritime school, a medical school, a polytechnic, the Liepaja Applied Arts High School (founded in 1926), a music school, ten comprehensive schools, two vocational-technical high schools and two technical schools.[39]

Today

 
Liepāja Maritime College

Liepāja has wide educational resources. In March 2019, the Liepaja City Council decided to merge Secondary School No. 2 with Secondary School No. 12 to form a new secondary school, taking full advantage of the modernised learning environment of Secondary School No. 2,[64] In 2022, the city has 21 kindergartens, twelve general education institutions and two private schools, 2 music schools and two boarding schools providing education in the city's largest residential districts.[65] Interest education for children and youth is available in 8 municipal institutions: Children and Youth Centre, Youth Centre, Centre for Young Technicians, Art and Creation Centre "Vaduguns", Complex Sport School, Gymnastics School, Tennis Sports School, Sports School "Daugava" (football, track-and-field athletics) and Basketball Sports School. Liepāja Central Library has six branches and audio record library. Literature fund consists of about 460,000 copies and online catalogue.[66] Average annual number of visitors – 25000.

Liepāja also has several higher education institutions represented by[67]:.

Culture

 
Rome Garden

Liepāja is known as a city rich in deep cultural and historical traditions, and has a very important place in the cultural landscape of Latvia and the region. Liepāja is home to both state and municipal institutions, as well as the University of Liepāja and privately funded artistic groups and departments. The city has a remarkable legacy in terms of its historical cultural environment, buildings, monuments, visual art collections, museums and libraries. Liepāja has a strong tradition of performing arts and intangible cultural heritage - crafts, folk art, traditional culture - in both Latvian and minority groups. Cultural tourism and creative industries are developing. There is a strong cultural education base (in its professional forms). Certain sectors are relatively underdeveloped in Liepāja (fine arts, literature, declining cinema, etc.).

Liepāja took part in the competition for the European Capital of Culture (ECOC) status in 2014, but on 15 September 2009 the European Commission jury recommended that Riga be awarded the status.[69] Having taken part in the competition for the European Capital of Culture status in 2027, on 10 May 2022 the jury awarded the status to Liepāja.[7]

Symbols

 
"Spoku koks" (Ghost tree), an object dedicated to the Latvian rock group Līvi.

Liepāja has three officially approved symbols: a coat of arms, a flag and an anthem. The coat of arms was adopted in 1625, while the flag was first officially proclaimed in 1938 with the "Law on the Flag of the City of Liepaja". The anthem "The City where the Wind is Born" (Pilsētā, kurā piedzimst vējš) was approved in 1999 and premiered in the first hour of 2000. Imants Kalniņš wrote the song "In the City where the Wind is Born" in 1973, dedicating it to Liepāja and the people of Liepāja, with lyrics by Māris Čaklais. It was first performed by Austra Pumpure, and even then the song gained the status of an unofficial anthem of Liepāja residents. Liepāja also has its own special dish - 'Liepājas menciņi' (smoked, dried cod with potatoes, onions and dill in heavy cream, fried in a ceramic pot), which is based on an ancient recipe from South Courland[70] Dried, smoked or lightly dried codfish was used in the diet of the coastal inhabitants of Courland - Livonians and Curonians - even before the arrival of German settlers in the 13th century.

The use of Liepāja's symbols is regulated by the Binding Regulations adopted by the City Council on 25 February 1999.

Music

 
Interior of the Holy Trinity Cathedral

Liepāja is known as the music capital of Latvia[15]. The Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, the oldest orchestra in the Baltic States, performs in Liepāja. It remains the only professional orchestra in Latvia outside Riga.[71] Liepāja is home to bands such as Līvi, Credo, 2xBBM and Tumsa, as well as composers such as Zigmars Liepiņš, Jānis Lūsēns and Uldis Marhilēvičs. Music festivals such as Summer Sound, International Star Festival, VIA Baltica Festival, International Organ Music Festival and others are organised.[55] From 1964 to 2006, Liepājas Dzintars, the longest-running and most tradition-rich popular music festival in Latvia, was held in the Pūt, vējiņi concert garden.[72]

Visual arts

Liepāja's art scene has a long and rich tradition. The oldest and most outstanding work of art in Liepāja is the altar of St Anne's Church, built in 1697. The most significant work of art of the 18th century is the organ of the Holy Trinity Cathedral The interior decoration of the Old Catholic Church is also noteworthy - ornamental formations in plaster (1762) and the altar retable - a typical late Baroque work, paintings of columns, walls and ceilings, stained glass windows. Works of applied art masters are in the Liepāja Museum. There are 18th-century door sashes from the house at 13 Stendera Street and works by tin foundrymen. The most outstanding sculpture of the 19th century is the sculpture by Fabiani for the chapel in the Old Cemetery, but the sculpture in the city is mainly memorial works. In the Northern Cemetery there is a monument to the memory of the soldiers who died in the Latvian War of Independence, there is also a memorial marker to Colonel Oskars Kalpaks at his first burial site, and in the Jewish burial section of the Līva Cemetery there is a monument to the memory of the Jewish soldiers who died in the Latvian War of Independence near Liepāja. In Jūrmala Park, there is a monument to the sailors and fishermen perished in the sea and to the 16 January 1905 rally. Nearby is a monument to the poet Mirdza Ķempe. Until the restoration of independence, the city had several monuments created during the Soviet occupation, of which the monument to the 1941 defenders of Liepāja remains in place,[39] but it is being dismantled in 2022.[73] Since 1996, the town has been decorated with memorial sculptures to the bed of the River Līva, created in a plenary workshop led by Ģirts Burvis. The Liepāja anthem "In the City where the Wind is Born" is reproduced in bronze sculptures along the entire length of Kūrmāja Prospect.[74] There is a rich tradition of painting.[39]

Theatre

In 1907 the Liepāja Latvian Dramatic Society was founded. Together with other societies, in March 1907 it established and maintained the Liepāja Latvian Theatre (now Liepāja Theatre), which is the oldest Latvian professional theatre still in existence. In 1918 the theatre moved to its present premises - the City Theatre on the then Hagedorna (now Teātra) Street.[75]

Sports

 
Liepāja's Olympic Centre

In 1998, the first ice hockey rink built in Latvia during the years of independence was opened in Liepāja which has since hosted regular ice hockey games including two youth World championship games. HK Liepājas Metalurgs became the home team of the Olympic Ice Arena. The team won eight Latvian championship gold medals, and also won the 2002 Eastern European Hockey League tournament. Due to problems at the metallurgical company, the hockey team ceased operations in the summer of 2013. In 2014, the HK Liepāja was founded and they became champions of the Latvian Hockey Higher League in 2015–16 season.

In January 2014, the FK Liepājas Metalurgs ceased operations and was replaced by the FK Liepāja, who became Latvian champions in 2015. Their home stadium is the Daugava Stadium. Liepāja is home to Latvian Basketball League club Betsafe/Liepāja.

On 2 August 2008, a new multipurpose sports arena – Liepāja Olympic Centre was officially opened. It has been established as one of the most modern multipurpose sports and cultural complexes in Latvia. Liepāja regularly hosts various sporting events, such as the World and European Basketball Championships, and the 2009 Women's European Basketball Championship Subgroup A and B matches were played at the Liepāja Olympic Centre. The European Rally Championship stage "Rally Liepāja", the International Windsurfing Competition and others are also held.[76]

Media

Liepāja has a regional newspaper Kurzemes vārds and a regional TV channel TV Kurzeme. The city also has several regional Internet portals; there is an amateur radio community[77] and a citywide wireless video monitoring system. As of 2010, digital terrestrial television is fully operational; mobile television and broadband wireless networks are implemented. All four Latvian mobile operators have stable zones of coverage (GSM 900/1800, UMTS, 2100 CDMA450) and client service centers in Liepāja.

Representation in other media

  • In 1979 a part of the film Moonzund was filmed in the town.

Notable people

Twin towns – sister cities

Liepāja is twinned with:[79]

Gallery

See also

  Liepaja travel guide from Wikivoyage

References

  1. ^ "Reģionu, novadu, pilsētu un pagastu kopējā un sauszemes platība gada sākumā". Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Iedzīvotāju skaits pēc tautības reģionos, pilsētās, novados, pagastos, apkaimēs un blīvi apdzīvotās teritorijās gada sākumā (pēc administratīvi teritoriālās reformas 2021. gadā) 2021 - 2022". Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  3. ^ "ISG020. Population number and its change by statistical region, city, town, 21 development centres and county". Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia. 1 January 2020. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  4. ^ Murray, John, Russia, Poland, and Finland, etc., Third Revised Edition, London, 1875, p.85.
  5. ^ a b "Liepājas vēsture". liepaja.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  6. ^ a b Mass murder of Jews in Liepaja (Yad Vashem channel, YouTube)
  7. ^ a b "Liepāja wins the title of European Capital of Culture 2027". 10 May 2022. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  8. ^ a b "KNAB, the Place Names Database of EKI". Eki.ee. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  9. ^ SAURUSAITIS, Peter P. "Thirty days in Lithuania in 1919: Being an account of personal experiences and observations encountered in a trip extending from August 30, 1919, to February 16, 1920". Project Gutenberg. p. 9. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  10. ^ Turnbull, Stephen, Tannenberg 1410, Osprey Publishing, Oxford UK, 2003, p.82: Certainly Poland & Lithuania invaded Prussia again in 1422, but no mentions of Libau.
  11. ^ a b c "Лиепая". Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Moscow: Советская Энциклопедия. 1969–1978. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  12. ^ "Liepaja". Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica.com Inc. 1997.
  13. ^ "Masonicum". masonicum.lv. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  14. ^ Žemaitis, Augustinas. "History of Liepāja". OnLatvia.com. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  15. ^ Colomb, Philip Howard. "Memoirs of Admiral the Right Honble. Sir Astley Cooper Key". ebooksread.com. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  16. ^ Palmer, Alan, Northern Shores, London, 2005, p.215.
  17. ^ "Liepājas Pastnieks". Latvijas Enciklopēdiskā vārdnīca (in Latvian). {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  18. ^ Либаво-Роменская железная дорога. Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). 1907. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  19. ^ "Paul Max Bertschy". Visit Daugavpils. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  20. ^ Гидроаэродром. Great Soviet Encyclopedia (in Russian). 1969–1978. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  21. ^ Palmer, 2005, p.255
  22. ^ Palmer, 2005, p.258.
  23. ^ Šiliņš, Jānis (18 April 2019). "The republic on the sea: The 1919 coup that exiled the Latvian government to a steamboat". Public Broadcasting of Latvia. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  24. ^ Hiden, John, and Salmon, Patrick, The Baltic Nations and Europe, Longman Group UK Ltd., 1991, p.32-6.
  25. ^ Hiden, John, The Baltic States and Weimar Ostpolitik, Cambridge University Press, UK, 1987, p.101-3.
  26. ^ Hiden & Salmon, 1991, p.78.
  27. ^ "Crimes of Einsatzgruppen in Liepāja". 1941. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  28. ^ "Site of Liepājas slimnica" (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  29. ^ "Liepāja Naval Port".
  30. ^ "Liepāja to host military base with NATO-standard docks". Lsm.lv. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  31. ^ "Letonika.lv - Liepāja". 2002.
  32. ^ a b c d e SIA „GRUPA 93” (2012). "STRATĒĢISKAIS IETEKMES UZ VIDI NOVĒRTĒJUMS. Vides pārskats" (PDF).
  33. ^ "4. Latvijas klimats un tā mainības raksturs". edu.lu.lv. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  34. ^ Avotniece, Zanita; Aņiskeviča, Svetlana; Maļinovskis, Edgars (2017). "KLIMATA PĀRMAIŅU SCENĀRIJI LATVIJAI. Ziņojums" (PDF).
  35. ^ "Liepaja Climate Normals 1961–1990". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
  36. ^ "Weatherbase: Historical Weather for Griuzupe, Latvia". Weatherbase. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  37. ^ "Liepaja Climate Normals 1981–2010". Météo Climat. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
  38. ^ "Climate & Weather Averages in Liepāja". Time and Date. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Caune, Māra; K̦īsis, Aleksis (1999). Latvijas pilsētas : enciklopēdija. Preses nams. Riga. ISBN 9984-00-357-4. OCLC 50383143.
  40. ^ a b c dzejaprozamaterialiberniem (13 August 2017). "Liepājas arhitektūra gadsimtu griežos". Mani raksti (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  41. ^ "Koka apbūve". Koka apbūve (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  42. ^ a b Sāne-Alksne, Līga (1991). Ceļvedis Liepājas arhitektūrā (in Latvian). Liepāja: Liepājas pilsētas arhitektūras un pilsētbūvniecības pārvalde.
  43. ^ a b "Jūgendstils kā Liepājas arhitektūras īstā rota". building.lv (in Latvian). 29 October 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  44. ^ "Jūgendstils". Jūgendstils (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  45. ^ "Jānis Krastiņš Cosmopolitan Atmosphere and Latvian Jugendstil in Liepāja - PDF Free Download". docplayer.net. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  46. ^ "Site of the Liepaja museum" (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  47. ^ "Site of Karosta prison museum". karostascietums.lv. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  48. ^ "Budžets 2022. gadam". Budžets 2022. gadam (in Latvian). Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  49. ^ Либава. Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). St. Peterburg: Брокгаузъ-Ефронъ. 1907. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  50. ^ Город родной на семи ветрах (in Russian). Liesma. 1976. p. 263. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  51. ^ "PASTĀVĪGO IEDZĪVOTĀJU NACIONĀLAIS SASTĀVS REĢIONOS UN REPUBLIKAS PILSĒTĀS GADA SĀKUMĀ". csb.gov.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 August 2011.[permanent dead link]
  52. ^ Platība, iedzīvotāju blīvums un pastāvīgo iedzīvotāju skaits reģionos, republikas pilsētās un novados gada sākumā. Centrālās statistikas pārvaldes datubāzes. Retrieved 12 June 2017
  53. ^ a b Eglins-Eglitis, Atis; Lusena-Ezera, Inese (1 January 2016). "From Industrial City to the Creative City: Development Policy Challenges and Liepaja Case". Procedia Economics and Finance. 3rd Global Conference on Business, Economics, Management and Tourism. 39: 122–130. doi:10.1016/S2212-5671(16)30256-8. ISSN 2212-5671.
  54. ^ "ESOŠĀS SITUĀCIJAS RAKSTUROJUMS LIEPĀJAS PILSĒTĀ - EKONOMIKA" (PDF).
  55. ^ a b "ESOŠĀS SITUĀCIJAS RAKSTUROJUMS LIEPĀJAS PILSĒTĀ - KULTŪRA" (PDF).
  56. ^ "Liepāja Northern Shipyard". Lzk.lv. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  57. ^ . 12 November 2013. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  58. ^ курс, The Baltic Course-Балтийский. "Liepajas metalurgs bankruptcy – the greatest economic disaster since Parex collapse". The Baltic Course | Baltic States news & analytics. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  59. ^ "Uzņēmumi ar lielāko apgrozījumu pa gadiem, Statistika Latvijas novadu/pilsētu griezumā, Liepāja, Latvijas rajoni un novadi, Lursoft statistika,Lursoft". statistika.lursoft.lv. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  60. ^ catchsmartsolution.com, CatchSmart |. "Liepājas tramvajs" (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  61. ^ . 13 May 2013. Archived from the original on 13 May 2013. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  62. ^ Lagzdina, Daiga; Kristaps, Gatis (2018). "Baltics". European State Aid Law Quarterly. 17 (1): 119–123. doi:10.21552/estal/2018/1/15. JSTOR 26694216 – via JSTOR.
  63. ^ "Liepājas 300 gadu jubilejas piemiņai, 1625-1925". 1925.
  64. ^ "Lēmums pieņemts. Apvienošanas process ir sācies". irliepaja.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  65. ^ "Vispārizglītojošās skolas". Vispārizglītojošās skolas (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  66. ^ . liepajasczb.lv (in Latvian). Archived from the original on 24 February 2008. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  67. ^ "Augstākā izglītība". Augstākā izglītība (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  68. ^ "Liepājas Jūrniecības koledža". Ljk.lv. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  69. ^ "Press corner". European Commission - European Commission. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  70. ^ catchsmartsolution.com, CatchSmart |. "Liepājas īpašais ēdiens ar Kurzemes smeķi – "Liepājas menciņi"" (in Latvian). Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  71. ^ "Liepājas simfoniskais orķestris". lso.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  72. ^ ""Liepājas dzintars"". enciklopedija.lv. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  73. ^ "Liepājā demontēs trīs padomju okupācijas laika pieminekļus". liepajniekiem.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  74. ^ catchsmartsolution.com, CatchSmart |. "Liepājas himnas tēlu skulptūras" (in Latvian). Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  75. ^ "Liepājas teātris :: Teātra iela 4, Vecliepāja , Liepāja , Kurzemes reģ. :: Vietas.lv". Vietas.lv - Latvijas ceļvedis, Latvijas karte, pilsētas, rajoni, tūrisma un citi interesanti objekti, pasākumi. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  76. ^ "Par sporta dzīvi Liepājā". Par sporta dzīvi Liepājā (in Latvian). Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  77. ^ "Site of Liepājas radio amatieru grupa". lrg.lv. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  78. ^ Tālivaldis Ķeniņš 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine, Latvijas Mūzikas informācijas centrs.
  79. ^ "Sadraudzības pilsētas". liepaja.lv (in Latvian). Liepāja. Retrieved 30 August 2019.

Cite error: A list-defined reference named "kur23102001" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "kafija" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "lur2005" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "teatris" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "bur" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "kur17091999" is not used in the content (see the help page).
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "urbanaudit" is not used in the content (see the help page).

Bibliography

  • Мелконов, Юрий (2005). Пушки Курляндского Берега. Riga, LV: GVARDS. ISBN 9984-19-772-7.
  • Кондратенко, Р. В. (1997). "Военный порт Александра III в Лиепае". Saint-Peterburg, RU: Исторический альманах "Цитадель", №2(5), изд. "ОСТРОВ". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Вушкан, Янис Владиславович (1976). "Город родной на семи ветрах". Riga, LV: Liesma. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Tooms, Viljars (2003–2007). "Liepājnieku biogrāfiskā vārdnīca". Riga, LV: Tilde Letonika. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Sāne (Alksne), Līga (1991). "Ceļvedis Liepājas arhitektūrā". Liepāja, LV: Liepājas pilsētas TDP IK Arhitektūras un pilsētbūvniecības pārvalde. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Jāņa sēta. (2003). Liepājas pilsētas plāns. Riga, LV: Karšu izdevniecība Jāņa sēta. ISBN 9984-07-330-0.
  • Gintners, Jānis (2004). "Liepājas gadsimti". Liepāja, LV: Liepājas muzejs. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Gintners, Jānis, Uļa (2008). Liepāja Latvijas sākotnē. Liepāja, LV: Liepājas muzejs. ISBN 978-9984-39-723-8.
  • Gintnere, Uļa (2005). Liepāja laikmetu dzirnavās. Liepāja, LV: Kurzemes Vārds. ISBN 9984-9190-4-8.
  • Lancmanis, Imants (1983). "Liepāja no baroka līdz klasicismam". Rīga, LV. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • "Liepājas 300 gadu jubilejas piemiņai: 1625–1925". Liepāja, LV. 1925. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Wegner, Alexander (1970) [1878]. Geschichte der Stadt Libau. Libau: v. Hirschheydt. ISBN 3-7777-0870-4.
  • Tīre, Irina (2007). Liepāja in graphics. Latvia: Poligrāfijas infocentrs. ISBN 978-9984-764-92-4.
  • Dorenskis, Jaroslavs (2007). "Liepājas Metalurgs: Anno 1882". Liepāja, LV: Fotoimidžs: 364. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Корклыш, С. (1966). Лиепая (in Russian). Rīga: Liesma. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Evans, Nicholas J. (2006). "The Port Jews of Libau, 1880–1914". In David Cesarani; Gemma Romain (eds.). Jews and Port Cities: 1590–1990: Commerce, Community and Cosmopolitanism. London, UK: Vallentine Mitchell & Co Ltd. pp. 197–214. ISBN 978-0-85303-681-4.
  • Eberstein, Ivan H. The Amber Land: Libava's Tragic Fate and the Fall of the Russian Empire. New York.

External links

  • www.liepaja.lv – Liepāja City Council official website
  • History of Liepāja
  • www.liepajniekiem.lv – Liepāja news in Latvian and Russian (in Latvian and Russian)
  • www.portofliepaja.lv – Port of Liepaja
  • – Liepaja Symphony orchestra
  • Kurzemes Vārds – Liepāja regional newspaper (in Latvian)
  • – Liepāja district newspaper (in Latvian)
  • Rožu laukums – Webcam showing "Rose square" in Liepaja
  • The murder of the Jews of Liepāja during World War II, at Yad Vashem website
  • Liepaja Info – Mobile Application

liepāja, pronounced, liepaːja, listen, livonian, līepõ, other, names, state, city, western, latvia, located, baltic, largest, city, kurzeme, region, third, largest, city, country, after, riga, daugavpils, important, free, port, population, 2020, people, state,. Liepaja pronounced liepaːja listen Livonian Liepo see other names is a state city in western Latvia located on the Baltic Sea It is the largest city in the Kurzeme Region and the third largest city in the country after Riga and Daugavpils It is an important ice free port The population in 2020 was 68 535 people 3 LiepajaState cityFlagCoat of armsAnthem Pilseta kura piedzimst vejs lv LiepajaLocation of Liepaja in LatviaShow map of LatviaLiepajaLiepaja Europe Show map of EuropeCoordinates 56 30 42 N 21 00 50 E 56 51167 N 21 01389 E 56 51167 21 01389 Coordinates 56 30 42 N 21 00 50 E 56 51167 N 21 01389 E 56 51167 21 01389Country LatviaTown rights1625Government MayorGunars Ansins Liepajas partija Area 1 Total68 03 km2 26 27 sq mi Land51 33 km2 19 82 sq mi Water16 7 km2 6 4 sq mi Elevation14 m 46 ft Population 2022 2 Total67 360 Density990 km2 2 600 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal codeLV 34 01 13 LV 3414 LV 34 16 17 Calling code 371 634Number of city council members15ClimateCfbWebsitewww wbr liepaja wbr lvIn the 19th and early 20th century it was a favourite place for sea bathers and travellers with the town boasting a fine park many pretty gardens and a theatre 4 Liepaja is however known throughout Latvia as City where the wind is born likely because of the constant sea breeze A song of the same name Latvian Pilseta kura piedzimst vejs was composed by Imants Kalnins and has become the anthem of the city Its reputation as the windiest city in Latvia was strengthened with the construction of the largest wind farm in the nation 33 Enercon wind turbines nearby The coat of arms of Liepaja was adopted four days after the jurisdiction gained city rights on 18 March 1625 5 These are described as on a silver background the lion of Courland with a divided tail who leans upon a linden Latvian Liepa tree with its forelegs The flag of Liepaja has the coat of arms in the center with red in the top half and green in the bottom 5 One of the very few surviving films documenting the mass murder of Jews during the first stages of the Holocaust is a short film by a German soldier who witnessed the massacre of Liepaja Jews in July 1941 near the city s lighthouse 6 Liepaja is chosen as the European Capital of Culture in 2027 7 Contents 1 Names and toponymy 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Livonian confederation 2 3 Duchy of Courland and Semigallia 2 4 Russian Empire 2 5 World War I and War of Independence 2 6 1920 1940 2 7 World War II 2 8 Latvian SSR 2 9 1990 present 3 Geography 3 1 Forests 3 2 Surface waters 3 3 Soils 3 4 Climate 3 5 Districts 3 6 Suburbs 3 7 Closest cities 4 Architecture 4 1 Early architecture 4 2 Bertchy 4 3 Art Nouveau 4 4 Karosta 4 5 Interwar period 4 6 Soviet era 4 7 Contemporary architecture 4 8 Monuments and memorials 4 8 1 Former monuments 4 9 Museums 4 10 Churches 4 11 Notable buildings 5 Administration 6 Demographics 6 1 Religion 7 Economy 8 Transport 9 Education 9 1 History 9 2 Today 10 Culture 10 1 Symbols 10 2 Music 10 3 Visual arts 10 4 Theatre 10 5 Sports 10 6 Media 11 Representation in other media 12 Notable people 13 Twin towns sister cities 14 Gallery 15 See also 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 External linksNames and toponymy EditSee also Names of Liepaja in different languages The name was derived from the Livonian word Liiv meaning sand The oldest written text mentioning Liva village Villa Liva is the treaty of bishop of Courland and the Master of the Livonian Order dated 4 April 1253 In 1263 the Teutonic Order established a town which they called Libau in German and this was used until 1920 The Lettish name Liepaja was mentioned for the first time in 1649 by Paul Einhorn in his work Historia Lettica A Russian name in Cyrillic from the time of the Russian Empire was Libava 8 Libava or Libau Libau although Liepaya Liepaya a transliteration of Liepaja has been used since World War II Some other names for the city include Liepoja in Lithuanian 8 the nearest neighbour and Libow in English 9 History EditEarly history Edit It is said that the original settlement at the location of modern Liepaja was founded by Curonian fishermen from Piemare as Liva but Henry Henricus Lettus of Livonia in his famous Chronicle makes no mention of the settlement The Teutonic Order established a village which they called Libau here in 1263 followed by Mitau two years later In 1418 the village was sacked and burned by the Lithuanians citation needed 10 Livonian confederation Edit During the 15th century a part of the trade route from Amsterdam to Moscow passed through Liva where it was known as the white road to Lyva portus By 1520 the river Liva had become too shallow for easy navigation and development of the city declined Duchy of Courland and Semigallia Edit Panorama of Liepaja in 1701 looking from the Baltic Sea In 1560 Gotthard Kettler first Duke of Courland and Semigallia loaned all the Grobina district including Libau to Albert Duke of Prussia for 50 000 guldens Only in 1609 after the marriage of Sofie Hohenzollern Princess of Prussia to Wilhelm Kettler did the territory return to the Duchy During the Livonian War Libau was attacked and burnt by the Swedes In 1625 Duke Friedrich Kettler of Courland granted the town city rights which were affirmed by King Sigismund III of Poland in 1626 although under what legal authority Sigismund had is debatable Under Duke Jacob Kettler 1642 1681 Libau became one of the main ports of Courland as it reached the height of its prosperity In 1637 Couronian colonization was started from the ports of Libau and Ventspils Windau Kettler was an eager proponent of mercantilist ideas Metalworking and ship building became much more developed and trading relations developed not only with nearby countries but also with Britain France the Netherlands and Portugal In 1697 1703 a canal was cut to the sea and a more modern port was built 11 In 1701 during the Great Northern War Libau was captured by Charles XII of Sweden but by the end of the war the city had returned to titular Polish possession 12 In 1710 an epidemic of plague killed about a third of the population In 1780 the first Freemasonry lodge Libanons was established by Provincial Grand Master Ivan Yelagin on behalf of the Provincial Lodge of Russia it was registered as number 524 in the Grand Lodge of England 13 Russian Empire Edit The Emigrants House of the Russian East Asian Steamship Company About 500 000 people from the Russian Empire emigrated to the United States through Liepaja 14 Courland passed to the control of the Russian Empire in 1795 during the third Partition of Poland and was organized as the Courland Governorate of Russia Growth during the nineteenth century was rapid During the Crimean War when the British Royal Navy was blockading Russian Baltic ports the busy yet still unfortified port of Libau was briefly captured on 17 May 1854 without a shot being fired by a landing party of 110 men from HMS Conflict and HMS Amphion 15 In 1857 an Imperial Decree provided for a new railway to Libau 16 That year the engineer Jan Heidatel developed a project to reconstruct the port In 1861 1868 the project was realized including the building of a lighthouse and breakwaters Between 1877 and 1882 the political and literary weekly newspaper Liepajas Pastnieks was published the first Latvian language newspaper in Libau 17 In the 1870s the further rapid development of Russian railways especially the 1871 opening of the Libava Kaunas and the 1876 Liepaja Romny Railways ensured that a large proportion of central Russian trade passed through Libau 18 By 1900 7 of Russian exports were passing through Libau The city became a major port of the Russian Empire on the Baltic Sea as well as a popular resort During this time of economic expansion the city architect Paul Max Bertschy provided the design for many of the city s both public and private buildings making an imprint on the architecture which can still be seen today 19 Electric tram in Liepaja circa 1900 On the orders of Alexander III Libau was fortified against possible German attacks Fortifications were subsequently built around the city and in the early 20th century a major military base was established on the northern edge It included formidable coastal fortifications and extensive quarters for military personnel As part of the military development a separate port was excavated exclusively for military use This area became known as Kara Osta War Port and served military needs throughout the twentieth century Early in the twentieth century the port of Libau became a central point of embarkation for immigrants travelling to the United States and Canada By 1906 the direct ship service to the United States was used by 40 000 migrants per year Simultaneously the first Russian training school of submarine navigation was founded In 1912 one of the first water aerodromes in Russia was opened in Libau 20 In 1913 1 738 ships entered Libau with 1 548 119 tonnes of cargo passing through the port The population had increased from 10 000 to over 100 000 within about 60 years World War I and War of Independence Edit Bombardment of port Liepaja by German cruiser SMS Augsburg 2 August 1914 Libau s 5 rubles 1915 Following the outbreak of World War I the German cruiser SMS Magdeburg shelled Libau then part of Russia and other vessels laid mines off the approaches to the port 21 Libau was soon occupied by the German Army on 7 May 1915 and in memory of this event a monument was constructed on Kurmajas Prospect in 1916 removed in 1919 by the new Latvian State Libau s local government issued its own money for a while in this period Libaua rubles An advanced German Zeppelin base was constructed at Vainode near Libau with five hangars in August 1915 22 On 23 October 1915 the German cruiser SMS Prinz Adalbert was sunk by the British submarine HMS E8 37 km 23 mi west of Libau German Army in Liepaja 1915 With the collapse of Russia and the signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk the occupying German forces had a quiet time but the subsequent defeat in the West of the German Empire and the Allied denunciation of the Brest Litovsk Treaty changed everything Independence of the Republic of Latvia was proclaimed on 18 November 1918 and the Latvian Provisional Government under Karlis Ulmanis was created Bolshevik Russia now advanced into Latvian territory and met little resistance here Soon the Provisional Government and remaining German units were forced to leave Riga and retreated all the way to Libau but then the Red offensive stalled along the Venta river The Bolsheviks announced a Latvian Soviet Republic Latvia now became the main theatre of Baltic operations for the remaining German forces in 1919 In addition a Landeswehr was formed to work in conjunction with the German forces In Libau a coup organized by Germans took place on 16 April 1919 and Ulmanis government was forced to flee and was replaced by Andrievs Niedra 23 The Ulmanis government found shelter on the steamship Saratov in Libau port In May a British cruiser squadron arrived at Libau to support Latvian independence and requested the Germans to leave 24 During the war the words of The Jager March were written in Libau by Heikki Nurmio The German Freikorps having recaptured Riga from the Bolsheviks departed in late 1919 and the Bolsheviks were driven out of the Latvian hinterlands in early 1920 1920 1940 Edit Soldiers of the Latvian National Armed Forces in Liepaja in 1920 During the interwar period Liepaja was the second major city in Latvia In an attempt to put Libau on the map on 31 January 1922 the Libau Bank was founded with significant new capital transforming the old Libau Exchange Bank which had belonged to the Libau Exchange Association and it eventually became the fourth largest of Latvia s joint stock banks However when a Riga branch of the bank was opened the business centre of gravity shifted from Liepaja so that by 1923 its Riga branch was responsible for 90 of the turnover The German consul in Liepaja reported at the time that Riga the economic heart of the country draws all business to itself The Latvian government ignored the pleas of the Libau Exchange Association to frustrate this 25 In 1935 KOD Latvian Kara ostas darbnicas started to manufacture the light aircraft KOD 1 and KOD 2 at Liepaja However it became evident in this year that trade with the new Soviet Union had virtually collapsed 26 World War II Edit See also Liepaja massacres Top secret USSR document about creating a closed military port in Liepaja Signed by Stalin note there is a spelling mistake in the word Liepaja Russian Lepaya 1951 The ports and human capital of Liepaja and Ventspils were targets of Joseph Stalin He signed the Molotov Ribbentrop pact in part to gain control of this territory When the Soviet Union occupied and annexed Latvia in 1940 it nationalized private property Many thousands of former owners were arrested and deported to the gulag camps in Siberia In 1941 Liepaja was among the first cities captured by the 291st Infantry Division of Army Group North after Nazi Germany began Operation Barbarossa its war against the Soviet Union German Nazis and Latvian collaborators virtually exterminated the local Jewish population which had numbered about 7 000 before the war Film footage of an Einsatzgruppen execution of local Jews was taken in Liepaja 27 6 Most of these mass murders took place in the dunes of Skede north of the city Fewer than thirty Jews survived in Liepaja by the end of the war During the war the German navy s U boat crews received their torpedo training at Liepaja During the period 1944 1945 as the Soviet Union began its offensive to the Baltic Sea Liepaja was within the Courland Pocket It was occupied by the Red Army on 9 May 1945 Thousands of Latvians fled as refugees to Germany The city had been devastated during the war and most of the buildings and industrial plant were destroyed Latvian SSR Edit Soviet rally in the city park 1963 On 25 29 March 1949 the Soviet Union organized a second mass deportation to Siberia from Liepaja In 1950 a monument to Stalin was erected on Station square Latvian Stacijas laukums It was dismantled in 1958 after the Party Congress that discussed his abuses During 1953 1957 the city center was reconstructed under the direction of architects A Kruglov and M Zagare 11 In 1952 1955 the Liepaja Academy of Pedagogy building was constructed under the direction of A Aivars In 1960 the Kurzeme shopping centre was opened During the Soviet administration Liepaja was a closed city even local farmers and villagers needed a special permit to enter it The Soviet military set up its Baltic naval base and nuclear weapon warehouses there The Beberlins sandpit was dug out to extract sand used for constructing underground warehouses In 1967 the Soviets completely closed the port to commercial traffic One third of the city was taken up with a Soviet naval base its military staff numbered 26 000 The 14th Submarine Squadron of the USSR s Baltic Fleet Russian 14 eskadrilya LiVMB DKBF call sign Kompleks was stationed there with 16 submarines Types 613 629a 651 as was the 6th group of Rear Supply of the Baltic Fleet and the 81st Design Bureau and Reserve Command Center of the same force In 1977 Liepaja was awarded the Order of the October Revolution for heroic defense against Nazi Germany in 1941 Five residents were awarded the honorary title Hero of Socialist Labor Anatolijs Filatkins Arturs Fridrihsons Voldemars Lazdups Valentins Suvajevs and Otilija Zagata Because of the rapid growth of the city s population a shortage of apartment houses resulted To resolve this the Soviet government organized development of most of the modern Liepaja districts Dienvidrietumi Ezerkrasts Ziemelu priekspilseta Zala birze and Tosmare The majority of these blocks were constructed of ferro concrete panels in standard projects designed by the state Latgyprogorstroy Institute Russian Latgiprogorstroj In 1986 the new central city hospital in Zala birze was opened 28 Soviet era apartment blocks in Liepaja 1990 present Edit After Latvia regained independence after the fall of the Soviet Union Liepaja has worked hard to change from a military city into a modern port city again appearing on European maps after the secrecy of the Soviet period The commercial port was re opened in 1991 and in 1994 the last Russian troops left Liepaja Since then Liepaja has engaged in international co operation has been associated with 10 twin and partner cities and is an active partner in several co operation networks Facilities are being improved The city is the location of Latvia s largest naval flotilla the largest warehouses of ammunition and weapons in the Baltic states and the main supply centre of the Latvian army The former closed military town has been transformed into the northern neighbourhood of Karosta occupying a third of the area of the city of Liepaja and attracting tourists to the remains of the military era 29 At the beginning of the 21st century many ambitious construction projects were planned for the city including a NATO military base 30 and Baltic Sea Park planned as the biggest amusement park in the Baltic states Most of the projects have not yet been realised due to economic and political factors Liepaja s heating network was renovated with the cooperation of French and Russian companies Dalkia and Gazprom respectively In 2006 Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands a direct descendant of Jacob Kettler visited Liepaja In 2010 the coal cogeneration 400 MW power plant was built in Liepaja with the support of the government Geography Edit Beach in Liepaja Liepaja is situated on the coast of the Baltic Sea in the south western part of Latvia The westernmost geographical point of Latvia is located approximately 15 km 9 mi to the south thus making Liepaja Latvia s furthest west city The city occupies a 1 5 6 5 km wide coastal dune embankment and a foothill plain in the Bartau Plain of the Seaside Lowland Liepaja is surrounded by the Dienvidkurzeme Region and is bordered to the north by Medze Parish to the east by Grobina Parish and to the south by Nica Parish with its western border following the Baltic Sea coast The Trade Channel Tirdzniecibas kanals connects the lake to the sea dividing the city into southern and northern parts which are often referred to as Vecliepaja Old Town and Jaunliepaja New Town respectively Along the coast the city extends northwards until it reaches the Karosta Channel Karostas kanals North of the Karosta Channel is an area called Karosta which is now fully integrated into Liepaja and is the northernmost district of the city Liepaja s coastline consists of an unbroken sandy beach and dunes Natural areas cover about one third of the territory of the city These areas are mostly located on the outskirts of the city and are not connected to the small green areas in the central part of the city 31 32 Forests Edit Liepaja s urban forest covers 1368 9 ha of which 83 are forest stands the rest is covered by swamps 4 7 meadows and sandhills 9 5 flood plains and infrastructure sites less than 3 in total Private landowners own 109 6 ha while 92 of the forest land area or 1259 3 ha belongs to the municipality The urban forest consists of five separate forest massifs the largest one is in the northern part of the city the Karosta Forest Other forests include Reinu Forest the forests near the regional hospital the south western forest and the Zala birze Forest The city is characterised by a wide variety of forest growth types determined and influenced by the geological and hydrological conditions of the area Dry forests cover 39 of the forest area forests on wet mineral soils 13 swamp forests 22 and drained forests 26 32 Liepaja Lake Surface waters Edit The water areas cover 1009 ha 17 of the total area of the city The hydrological system of the City of Liepaja consists of various elements including the Liepaja and Tosmare Lakes which border the city to the east and are Natura 2000 sites of the lake is located in the city the rest is located in the Otanki and Nica municipalities There are also rivers the Vernieku River Kalejupite and Alande canals Tirdzniecibas Karostas Cietoksna and Perkones former river as well as the artificial reservoir Beberlini The city is located on the Baltic Sea coast According to the Latvian classification of river basin districts the territory of the city of Liepaja falls within the Venta river basin district 32 Soils Edit The prevailing soil type and the prevailing geographical landscape of the area are determined by the low fertility sandy loams and difficult natural drainage conditions characteristic of the Seaside Lowland In terms of mechanical composition sandy soils predominate with typical podzols in the uplands and peaty podzolic gley vegetation in the depressions as well as turf gley vegetation and turf podzolic gley vegetation Due to the high humidity the area is characterised by waterlogging 32 Climate Edit The climate in Liepaja is strongly influenced by the close proximity to the sea and is therefore located in the temperate semi continental climate zone noted as Dfb in the Koppen classification The outflow of sea air creates relatively low summer and high winter temperatures for these latitudes Liepaja has the highest average air temperature in Latvia at 7 0 C In terms of hours of sunshine Liepaja has one of the highest averages of 1940 hours of sunshine per year 33 Winter is characterised by frequent thaws so snow cover in the Seaside Lowlands is usually very patchy rarely exceeding 5 10 cm in depth 32 During the winter the sea around Liepaja is virtually ice free Although occasionally some land fast ice may develop it seldom reaches a hundred meters from the shore and does not last long before melting The sea warms up fully only at the beginning of August Summers are more affected by the maritime climate than east facing cities on similar latitudes in opposite Sweden but winters are milder than inland areas to the east The number of windy days is high compared to inland areas of Latvia The prevailing winds in the area tend to be all westerly and southerly Their average speed is 6 1 m s Maximum wind speeds greater than 20 m s are usually observed in autumn and winter in most cases from the west On 17 18 October 1967 the strongest storm in the history of the country occurred and on 18 October the highest wind gust ever recorded in Latvia 48 m s was recorded in Liepaja The city has on average the most stormy days of the year 7 9 when the average wind speed reaches 10 8 m s In 1971 this figure was as high as 36 days The long term trends indicate a very significant decrease in the number of stormy days 34 Climate data for Liepaja 1991 2020 temp and precipitation 1961 1990 sun and humidity extremes 1895 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 3 57 7 15 5 59 9 19 0 66 2 27 0 80 6 32 3 90 1 36 5 97 7 36 9 98 4 36 1 97 0 30 7 87 3 24 9 76 8 16 5 61 7 13 7 56 7 36 9 98 4 Mean maximum C F 5 7 42 3 5 9 42 6 10 8 51 4 20 5 68 9 25 7 78 3 26 9 80 4 29 1 84 4 28 2 82 8 23 2 73 8 17 2 63 0 10 9 51 6 7 2 45 0 30 4 86 7 Average high C F 0 9 33 6 1 1 34 0 4 2 39 6 10 4 50 7 15 4 59 7 18 6 65 5 21 6 70 9 21 6 70 9 17 1 62 8 11 2 52 2 5 9 42 6 2 6 36 7 11 0 51 8 Daily mean C F 1 0 30 2 1 2 29 8 1 3 34 3 6 5 43 7 11 2 52 2 14 8 58 6 17 9 64 2 17 7 63 9 13 8 56 8 8 5 47 3 4 1 39 4 0 9 33 6 8 0 46 4 Average low C F 3 0 26 6 3 4 25 9 1 6 29 1 2 5 36 5 7 0 44 6 11 0 51 8 14 1 57 4 13 8 56 8 10 3 50 5 5 8 42 4 2 2 36 0 0 8 30 6 4 9 40 8 Mean minimum C F 14 8 5 4 13 2 8 2 9 2 15 4 3 6 25 5 0 2 32 4 4 5 40 1 8 3 46 9 7 8 46 0 3 3 37 9 2 2 28 0 5 2 22 6 10 2 13 6 18 0 0 4 Record low C F 32 9 27 2 31 6 24 9 23 8 10 8 10 1 13 8 4 3 24 3 0 5 32 9 4 0 39 2 3 0 37 4 1 7 28 9 7 3 18 9 17 5 0 5 25 8 14 4 32 9 27 2 Average precipitation mm inches 61 0 2 40 43 3 1 70 42 3 1 67 42 9 1 69 38 8 1 53 51 5 2 03 70 9 2 79 83 4 3 28 77 5 3 05 89 0 3 50 83 5 3 29 79 7 3 14 755 6 29 75 Average precipitation days 13 51 9 80 10 04 7 05 7 15 8 24 8 51 9 95 11 11 13 68 15 04 15 15 127 69Average relative humidity 87 2 85 8 82 8 76 3 75 7 77 4 78 9 78 5 80 5 82 9 87 4 86 9 81 7Average dew point C F 2 28 3 27 2 28 2 36 6 43 10 50 14 57 13 55 10 50 6 43 2 36 1 30 5 40 Mean monthly sunshine hours 34 64 130 187 273 295 279 248 173 103 43 28 1 857Source 1 NOAA sun 1961 1990 35 Source 2 Weatherbase humidity 36 Source 3 Meteo Climat 37 Source 4 Time and Date dewpoints 1985 2015 38 Districts Edit Vecliepaja Ezerkrasts Dienvidrietumu rajons Ziemelu priekspilseta Jaunliepaja Velnciems Karosta Tosmare Zala birze Jauna pasaule Suburbs Edit Aucugals Grinvalti Perkone Cimdenieki Kapsede Skede Closest cities Edit The closest city to Liepaja is Grobina located about 10 kilometres 6 2 mi away towards Riga Other main cities in the region are Klaipeda approx 110 km 68 mi to the south Ventspils approx 115 km 71 mi to the north and Saldus approx 100 km 62 mi to the east The distance to Riga the capital of Latvia is about 200 km 124 mi to the east The nearest point to Liepaja across the Baltic sea is the Swedish island of Gotland approximately 160 km 99 mi to the north west The distance to Stockholm is 216 nautical miles The closest major airports to Liepaja are Palanga International Airport 60 km 37 mi and Riga International Airport 210 km 130 mi Architecture EditLiepaja s architecture features buildings from different centuries classical wooden buildings from the 17th century highly regarded brick architecture Eclecticism and Art Nouveau buildings at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries as well as some buildings of the interwar period Soviet era functionalism and contemporary architecture Many buildings were destroyed during World War II which resulted in the destruction of almost the entire city built up area between the Trade Canal and the Rose Square more than 100 buildings The development of Liepaja was entirely determined by economic conditions initially the establishment of the port and later from the late 19th century the expansion of industry 39 Early architecture Edit Building on 26 Kungu Street Liepaja reached its first period of construction and architectural prosperity in the 17th and 18th centuries The development of the architecture and artistic styles of the buildings was reflected in the houses of the wealthier inhabitants where Mannerism Baroque Classicism and other styles can be found The common people built their homes using traditional building methods typical of the countryside 40 The oldest type of building in Liepaja is a wooden log house on a low stone plinth with a steep tiled roof This type of building can be found on Kungu Street which was the main street of the town in the 17th century 41 The building on 24 Kungu Street is notable for the visit of Tsar Peter I of Russia in 1697 while the neighbouring building on 26 Kungu Street was visited by King Charles XII of Sweden in 1700 42 Other notable buildings are those at 6 Liela Street 3 Kungu Street 13 Stendera Street and the warehouses at 1 and 2 Jana Street and 4 6 and 10 12 Zivju Street 39 After several unsuccessful attempts to build a harbour during the previous century the Trade Canal was dug in 1703 which contributed to the growth of the city At this time the port warehouses were built out of wood characterised by a high plinth created as a semi basement Most of the older warehouses were concentrated in Juras Street one of which was moved to the Open Air Museum in the 1930s while the others have not survived Residential buildings in the harbour area were very small and densely distributed 42 In 1848 there were 664 buildings in the town of which only 46 were stone built Although wooden buildings were constructed the most luxurious were built with roof extensions and ornate doors panelling and beautifully painted pot stoves The most ornate building in 18th century Liepaja was the Holy Trinity Cathedral 39 Building on 12 Kurmaja Prospect Architect Paul Max Bertchy Bertchy Edit With the construction of the Grobina highway in 1841 and the Liepaja Romny railway in the 1870s the city took on a different character This was further marked by the appointment of Paul Max Bertchy as the city s first architect in 1871 The houses built by Bertchy form the most notable part of Liepaja s historic buildings The wide range of Bertchy s diverse works includes the oil extraction plant and linoleum factory mansions at 14 and 16 Krisjana Valdemara Street 15 Peldu Street tenement houses on 44 Peldu Street the Peldu Institution bath house in Jurmala Park the hospital complex on Dartas Street the gymnasium building at 4 Krisjana Valdemara Street the cafe at 2 Krisjana Valdemara Street the St Anne s Church the Rome Hotel and others His red brick buildings are also well known The architecture of this period uses high quality woodwork such as doors The painted staircases are remarkable not only in the luxurious houses but also in the workers tenements on 6 Palmu Street 9 Avotu Street 28 Republikas Street and 21 Kursu Street 39 Art Nouveau Edit Building on 5 Liela Street Architect Ludwig Melville Liepaja is home to examples of the Art Nouveau style of architecture on a European scale There are dozens of Art Nouveau buildings in the city which in absolute numbers is more than in other European cities Graudu Street is almost entirely defined by Art Nouveau along its entire length 43 Most of the buildings are built in the restrained and laconic style of Northern National Romanticism 44 Paul Max Bertchy designed several Art Nouveau buildings but also significant are those by Theodor Max Bertchy Bertchy junior Ludwig Melville Charles Carr Lars Sonke Pauls Kampe Adolf Kucner Gustav Janicek William Losow Max Kuhn Alexander Zehrensen and Vasily Kosyakov The Art Nouveau in Liepaja reflects mostly Latvian German and partly also Russian as well as other interchanges 45 The most outstanding examples of Art Nouveau are the buildings on 2 6 Kurmajas Prospect 9 Ausekla Street 28 34 36 38 44 46 27 29 and 45 Graudu Street 3 9 16 and 23 Dzintaru Street 8 Krisjana Barona Street 23 Liepu Street 33 35 Peldu Street 1 and 11 Pasta Street 4 and 5 Liela Street 2 Teatra Street 18 Baznicas Street 21A Barinu Street 22 Tirgonu Street 1 5 17 and 21 Kursu Street 8 10 and 16 Rozu Street 6 Alejas Street yard 43 Toma Street 11 Dika Street 4 and 11 Avotu Street 19 and 28 Republikas Street 5 13 15 17 19 25 and 66 Uliha Street 1 Raina Street 10 12 Kronu Street etc 43 View in Karosta Karosta Edit In the northern part of the city under the guidance of the best Russian military architects and engineers the Karosta complex was built which was and is completely different from the rest of the city both in function and in the character and traditions of its buildings The Karosta is still an outstanding example of a militarised complex in Latvian architectural history The district was built for the Russian army and is dominated by the Orthodox cathedral in the centre The most important objects of the Karosta are the officers meeting house and the residential complex as well as the unique fortification system that encircled the entire city and connected the different parts of the city with underground passages During World War I the fortifications were partially blown up 39 Interwar period Edit During the interwar period architect Janis Blaus designed the project for the Latvian Society House in Liepaja The building was erected in 1934 on the Rose Square The Army Economic Store building was built in 1934 1935 according to the design of architect Aleksandrs Racenis but was destroyed during the Second World War The pawnshop and savings bank building at 3 Teatra Street was built in 1936 1937 40 During this period the Friendly Vocation Primary School now the 5th Secondary School K Bikse and the Jaunliepaja Lutheran Church K E Strandmann were also built 39 Soviet era Edit Great Amber Concert Hall in Liepaja Architect Volker GienckeLiepaja s city centre was devastated by the Second World War and new development master plans were needed The architecture and urban planning of Latvia which was part of the USSR was regulated by the uniform urban planning and building regulations of the Soviet Union New centres for cities destroyed during the war were planned according to standardised formal principles International Modernism where streets had to be wide and squares regular symmetrical with a Lenin monument in the centre Public buildings were designed to be representative in line with Soviet architectural principles large spacious imposing In 1957 the building that now houses the University of Liepaja was built in a heavy eclectic style designed by the architect Andrejs Aivars An almost identical building is located in Daugavpils The Kurzeme department store was built with large windows on the exterior walls and shop windows on the ground floor During the Soviet period the historical buildings of Liepaja s Old Town were eliminated over a wide area by the construction of a tram line from Kurzeme to Peldu Street Changes also affected Liela Street 40 Due to the military port Liepaja was a closed city and thus construction in the city was rather slow until the 1970s when the construction of new factories Lauma agricultural machinery factory Hidrolats and residential areas were built the most important of which is the Ezerkrasts district 39 Contemporary architecture EditAfter the restoration of independence an artificial ice rink architect U Pilens a Catholic monastery A Kokins in Jaunliepaja the Maja shop reconstruction A Padelis Lins new market pavilions in the city centre U Pilens were built The most remarkable building of the 21st century is the Great Amber Concert Hall New age construction is characterised by the use of new materials and technologies as well as rationalism and functionalism 39 Monuments and memorials Edit Monument to the sailors and fishermen lost at sea 1977 Monument to the Defenders of Liepaja in 1941 1960 Monument to 1919 Freedom Fighters Monument to Mirdza kempe 1989 Monument to Evalds Rimbenieks lv 2008 Memorial wall in Zala birze Nikolay Dedaev Monument Statue of Hermes Liela iela 10 1 Rock Cafe Guitar The Amber clockFormer monuments Edit Monument to Imants Sudmalis 1978 partially dismantled and relocated Monument to Lenin 1970 dismantled Monument to Nelson Stepanyan relocated to Kaliningrad Monument to the 11 sailors of Soviet submarine L 3 relocated to Moscow Monument to the submariners of the Baltic Sea partially dismantled Museums Edit The Liepaja Museum 46 Department of Liepaja Museum Liepaja during the occupational regimes Museum History of Liepaja Community of Jews Museum Liepajas Metalurgs founded in 2007 Museum Karosta Prison 47 Churches Edit St Paul s Baptist Church 1895 St Anna s Lutheran Church 1587 Liepaja Holy Trinity Lutheran Cathedral 1758 St Joseph s Catholic Cathedral 1762 Holy Trinity Orthodox Church 1867 St Nicholas Naval Cathedral Karosta 1901 1903 Notable buildings Edit Rose square Latvian Rozu laukums Swan Pond remnant of river Liva Hotel Libava Peter The Great house the oldest house in Liepaja Graudu 45 Graudu nams Jugendstil Graudu 42 former Bonic Cafe Great Amber Concert Hall Latvian Koncertzale Lielais dzintars Petertirgus Central market Liepajas teatris City council building former District court Restaurant Vecais Kapteins University of Liepaja building 1st Latvian Rock CafeAdministration Edit Current mayor Gunars Ansins and former mayor Uldis SesksFourteen deputies and a mayor make up the Liepaja City Council City s voters select a new government every four years in June The Council selects from its members the Chairman of City Council also called City Mayor the two Vice chairmen Deputy Mayors which are full time positions City Council also appoints the members of four standing committees which prepare issues to be discussed in the Council meetings Finance Committee City Economy and Development Committee Social Affairs Health Care Education and Public Order Committee Culture and Sports Committee The City of Liepaja had an operating budget of 104 million euros in 2022 48 Traditionally political leanings in Liepaja have been right wing In recent years the Liepaja Party has dominated the polls Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 16381 000 18004 500 350 0 184011 000 144 4 188129 600 169 1 189764 500 117 9 1907 49 81 000 25 6 191494 000 16 0 192151 600 45 1 194052 900 2 5 195064 200 21 4 1959 11 71 000 10 6 197092 900 30 8 1975 50 100 000 7 6 1989114 500 14 5 1995100 300 12 4 200089 100 11 2 200785 300 4 3 2011 51 83 400 2 2 2019 52 68 945 17 3 Liepaja s population structure has been multicultural and this impacted city s social life economy and administration Liepaja s population structure started to change after the abolition of serfdom in 1817 The number of inhabitants in 1800 is 4500 but in 1840 there already were 11 000 citizens The number of city inhabitants has doubled in 40 years It continued to grow and in 1881 Liepaja already had 29 600 inhabitants 53 Liepaja s population grew fastest before World War I almost tenfold in 50 years It doubled during the 50 years of Soviet occupation when population growth was hampered by the existence of the closed military port Until World War I there was a high proportion of Baltic Germans until World War II there was a high proportion of Jews and during the Soviet occupation the number of Russians increased The proportion of Latvians increased from 16 in 1863 to 85 in 1943 until World War II but decreased again after the war 39 With 68 945 inhabitants in 2019 Liepaja is the third largest city in Latvia Its population has declined since the withdrawal of Soviet military forces the last of which left in 1994 In addition many ethnic Russians emigrated to Russia in 1991 2000 More recent causes include economic migration to Western European countries after Latvia joined the EU in 2004 and lower birth rates The demographic situation in Liepaja is unfavourable as the natural population growth is negative 39 However the trend of people leaving Liepaja is gradually decreasing and in 2018 a positive migration balance was achieved for the first time in many years Favourable migration trends are more and more significantly compensating for the negative natural increase so the overall population decline trend has been significantly reversed in 2017 and 2018 The dependency load is 690 children adolescents and pensioners per 1000 inhabitants which is the highest value among the major cities 54 The population decreased by an average of 750 inhabitants per year between 2012 and 2018 55 Religion Edit St Anne s ChurchSee also Roman Catholic Diocese of Liepaja Liepaja has a number of churches As elsewhere in central and western Latvia Protestant churches mostly Lutheran are predominant Holy Trinity Cathedral houses the seat of the Lutheran Bishop of Liepaja Other Lutheran congregations are St Anne Church of the Cross and Church of Luther There are four Baptist congregations in the city among them are St Paul church and Church of Zion Owing to the regional importance of Liepaja during the last decades of the Russian Empire a number of Russian Orthodox churches were established in the city early in the twentieth century Their congregations are chiefly drawn from the Russian speaking population The Catholic faith is represented in Liepaja by a St Joseph Cathedral the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Liepaja Catholic primary school and the Catholic centre The structure of the Catholic centre was used to represent the Vatican in Expo 2000 in Hanover and was transferred to Liepaja after the event Other Christian sects include Old Ritualists Adventist Pentecostal Latter day Saints and Jehovah s Witnesses who have single congregations and churches Economy Edit Dry docks of the Liepaja Northern Shipyard established in 1900 56 After the collapse of USSR s centrally planned economy Liepaja had to deal with issues of rundown infrastructure To provide business incubation and development for the city Liepaja Special Economic Zone Liepaja SEZ was established According to the law Liepaja SEZ was established on March 1 1997 and it will exist until December 31 2035 The purpose of the Liepaja SEZ is to develop a business environment manufacturing shipping and air traffic as well as international trade through Latvia The aim of the Liepaja SEZ is to attract investment for expanding of manufacturing and infrastructure and to create new work places and to ensure the development of the region In the beginning investment growth remained slow due to a shortage of a skilled labour force but the scheme proved to be successful as positive tendencies can be seen with formation of new businesses 53 After joining the European Union in 2004 many companies were faced with strict European rules and tense competition In 2007 Liepajas cukurfabrika and Liepajas serkocini closed down Livu alus Liepajas maiznieks and Lauma have been sold to European investors in 2013 the steel production company Liepajas Metalurgs went bankrupt which was one of the largest economic disasters in modern Latvian history costing the state around 230 million LVL 327 million EUR 57 58 Today the City s economic development is mainly driven by Liepaja Special Economic Zone Trade Port and the companies placed there In 2021 the companies in Liepaja with the largest turnover are TOLMETS AE Partner and Jensen Metal 59 Transport Edit Public transport in Liepaja Liepaja s transport system consists of 31 bus lines 5 of which are connected to Grobina as well as one Liepaja tram line which is 7 kilometres long The tram line was founded after the opening of the first Liepaja power plant in 1899 which makes it the oldest electric tram line in the Baltic states 60 it is now operated by the municipal company Liepajas tramvajs In 2013 the tram line was extended by 1 7 km from the Dienvidrietumu residential area Klaipeda Street to the Ezerkrasts residential area with a turnaround at the end of Mirdzas kempes Street Liepaja has direct bus connections to Riga Riga International Airport Ventspils Jelgava Klaipeda and other destinations Liepaja has a railway connection to Jelgava and Riga and through them to the rest of Latvia s railway network There is just one passenger station in the New Town but the railway extends further and links to the port There is also a northward railway track leading to Ventspils but in recent decades it has fallen into disuse for economic reasons The railway provides the main means of delivering cargo to the port Two main highways the A9 and A11 connect the city and its port to the rest of the country The A9 leads north west towards Riga and central Latvia and the A11 leads south to the border with Lithuania and its only port Klaipeda and to Palanga International Airport 61 The city also hosts Liepaja International Airport one of three international airports in Latvia it is located outside the city limits north of the Lake of Liepaja near Cimdenieki The airport is serviced by charter flights and an Air Baltic connection to Riga International Airport Liepaja airport serviced 6 043 commercial scheduled and non scheduled passengers in 2017 62 The Port of Liepaja has a wide water area and consists of three main parts The Winter harbour is located in the Trade channel and serves small local fishing vessels as well as medium cargo ships Immediately north of the Trade channel is the main area of the port separated from the open sea by a line of breakwaters This part of the port can accommodate large ships and ferries Further north is Karosta harbour also called Karosta channel which was formerly a military harbour but is now used for ship repairs and other commercial purposes Liepaja also welcomes yachts and other leisure vessels which can enter the Trade channel and moor almost in the center of the city Education Edit University of Liepaja History Edit The idea to open a school was born in 1560 during a church survey and schools existed in Liepaja before 1625 However it was the granting of city rights that encouraged the further development of schools as the maintenance of schools was considered one of the city s responsibilities Both German and Curonian children were encouraged to attend the newly founded school It was announced to the non Germans that those children who were sent to the school would be freed from all servitude and even freed from serfdom they would also be given help for further education At the beginning the school was a one class school the second class was opened in 1638 from 1650 the school had 3 classes and in 1750 the 4th class was opened In 1788 a new school building was built and in 1806 the town school was transformed into the county s highest school after 250 years of existence This county school was attended by Krisjanis Valdemars and Kronvaldu Atis In 1866 the county school was converted into the Nikolai Gymnasium In 1861 a maritime class was opened at the county school which was added to the Liepaja Maritime School in 1876 The first girls high school was opened in 1871 and by 1874 there were already 2 girls high schools one of which was turned into a gymnasium in 1886 In the following years the Russification of schools which started with the law of 1889 turned all schools into Russian schools however there were schools attended by Latvian children in their majority where Latvian was taught as a subject and religious studies were taught in Latvian Schools with Latvian as the only language only appeared after Latvia gained independence 63 Liepaja State Gymnasium No 1 During the First Free State there were three secondary schools 25 primary schools two technical schools a trade school a secondary school of applied arts a trade institute a technical evening craft school a Jewish craft school a fishing and fish farming school There was also a folk conservatory and various evening courses In December 1919 a separate children s section was opened in the library the first in Latvia After World War II Liepaja was home to the Liepaja Pedagogical Institute founded in 1954 in 1945 as the Pedagogical School in 1950 as the Liepaja Teachers Institute the General Technical Faculty of the Riga Polytechnic Institute a maritime school a medical school a polytechnic the Liepaja Applied Arts High School founded in 1926 a music school ten comprehensive schools two vocational technical high schools and two technical schools 39 Today Edit Liepaja Maritime CollegeLiepaja has wide educational resources In March 2019 the Liepaja City Council decided to merge Secondary School No 2 with Secondary School No 12 to form a new secondary school taking full advantage of the modernised learning environment of Secondary School No 2 64 In 2022 the city has 21 kindergartens twelve general education institutions and two private schools 2 music schools and two boarding schools providing education in the city s largest residential districts 65 Interest education for children and youth is available in 8 municipal institutions Children and Youth Centre Youth Centre Centre for Young Technicians Art and Creation Centre Vaduguns Complex Sport School Gymnastics School Tennis Sports School Sports School Daugava football track and field athletics and Basketball Sports School Liepaja Central Library has six branches and audio record library Literature fund consists of about 460 000 copies and online catalogue 66 Average annual number of visitors 25000 Liepaja also has several higher education institutions represented by 67 University of Liepaja Riga Technical University Liepaja branch Riga Stradins University Liepaja branch Baltic International Academy Liepaja branch Turiba University Liepaja branch Riga Technical College Liepaja branch College of Law Liepaja branch Liepaja Maritime College 68 Liepaja Medical College Liepaja Applied Art School Liepaja Carpentry School Liepaja Tourism and Textile Design SchoolCulture Edit Rome Garden Liepaja is known as a city rich in deep cultural and historical traditions and has a very important place in the cultural landscape of Latvia and the region Liepaja is home to both state and municipal institutions as well as the University of Liepaja and privately funded artistic groups and departments The city has a remarkable legacy in terms of its historical cultural environment buildings monuments visual art collections museums and libraries Liepaja has a strong tradition of performing arts and intangible cultural heritage crafts folk art traditional culture in both Latvian and minority groups Cultural tourism and creative industries are developing There is a strong cultural education base in its professional forms Certain sectors are relatively underdeveloped in Liepaja fine arts literature declining cinema etc Liepaja took part in the competition for the European Capital of Culture ECOC status in 2014 but on 15 September 2009 the European Commission jury recommended that Riga be awarded the status 69 Having taken part in the competition for the European Capital of Culture status in 2027 on 10 May 2022 the jury awarded the status to Liepaja 7 Symbols Edit Spoku koks Ghost tree an object dedicated to the Latvian rock group Livi Liepaja has three officially approved symbols a coat of arms a flag and an anthem The coat of arms was adopted in 1625 while the flag was first officially proclaimed in 1938 with the Law on the Flag of the City of Liepaja The anthem The City where the Wind is Born Pilseta kura piedzimst vejs was approved in 1999 and premiered in the first hour of 2000 Imants Kalnins wrote the song In the City where the Wind is Born in 1973 dedicating it to Liepaja and the people of Liepaja with lyrics by Maris Caklais It was first performed by Austra Pumpure and even then the song gained the status of an unofficial anthem of Liepaja residents Liepaja also has its own special dish Liepajas mencini smoked dried cod with potatoes onions and dill in heavy cream fried in a ceramic pot which is based on an ancient recipe from South Courland 70 Dried smoked or lightly dried codfish was used in the diet of the coastal inhabitants of Courland Livonians and Curonians even before the arrival of German settlers in the 13th century The use of Liepaja s symbols is regulated by the Binding Regulations adopted by the City Council on 25 February 1999 Music Edit Interior of the Holy Trinity Cathedral Liepaja is known as the music capital of Latvia 15 The Liepaja Symphony Orchestra the oldest orchestra in the Baltic States performs in Liepaja It remains the only professional orchestra in Latvia outside Riga 71 Liepaja is home to bands such as Livi Credo 2xBBM and Tumsa as well as composers such as Zigmars Liepins Janis Lusens and Uldis Marhilevics Music festivals such as Summer Sound International Star Festival VIA Baltica Festival International Organ Music Festival and others are organised 55 From 1964 to 2006 Liepajas Dzintars the longest running and most tradition rich popular music festival in Latvia was held in the Put vejini concert garden 72 Visual arts Edit Liepaja s art scene has a long and rich tradition The oldest and most outstanding work of art in Liepaja is the altar of St Anne s Church built in 1697 The most significant work of art of the 18th century is the organ of the Holy Trinity Cathedral The interior decoration of the Old Catholic Church is also noteworthy ornamental formations in plaster 1762 and the altar retable a typical late Baroque work paintings of columns walls and ceilings stained glass windows Works of applied art masters are in the Liepaja Museum There are 18th century door sashes from the house at 13 Stendera Street and works by tin foundrymen The most outstanding sculpture of the 19th century is the sculpture by Fabiani for the chapel in the Old Cemetery but the sculpture in the city is mainly memorial works In the Northern Cemetery there is a monument to the memory of the soldiers who died in the Latvian War of Independence there is also a memorial marker to Colonel Oskars Kalpaks at his first burial site and in the Jewish burial section of the Liva Cemetery there is a monument to the memory of the Jewish soldiers who died in the Latvian War of Independence near Liepaja In Jurmala Park there is a monument to the sailors and fishermen perished in the sea and to the 16 January 1905 rally Nearby is a monument to the poet Mirdza kempe Until the restoration of independence the city had several monuments created during the Soviet occupation of which the monument to the 1941 defenders of Liepaja remains in place 39 but it is being dismantled in 2022 73 Since 1996 the town has been decorated with memorial sculptures to the bed of the River Liva created in a plenary workshop led by Girts Burvis The Liepaja anthem In the City where the Wind is Born is reproduced in bronze sculptures along the entire length of Kurmaja Prospect 74 There is a rich tradition of painting 39 Theatre Edit In 1907 the Liepaja Latvian Dramatic Society was founded Together with other societies in March 1907 it established and maintained the Liepaja Latvian Theatre now Liepaja Theatre which is the oldest Latvian professional theatre still in existence In 1918 the theatre moved to its present premises the City Theatre on the then Hagedorna now Teatra Street 75 Sports Edit Liepaja s Olympic CentreIn 1998 the first ice hockey rink built in Latvia during the years of independence was opened in Liepaja which has since hosted regular ice hockey games including two youth World championship games HK Liepajas Metalurgs became the home team of the Olympic Ice Arena The team won eight Latvian championship gold medals and also won the 2002 Eastern European Hockey League tournament Due to problems at the metallurgical company the hockey team ceased operations in the summer of 2013 In 2014 the HK Liepaja was founded and they became champions of the Latvian Hockey Higher League in 2015 16 season In January 2014 the FK Liepajas Metalurgs ceased operations and was replaced by the FK Liepaja who became Latvian champions in 2015 Their home stadium is the Daugava Stadium Liepaja is home to Latvian Basketball League club Betsafe Liepaja On 2 August 2008 a new multipurpose sports arena Liepaja Olympic Centre was officially opened It has been established as one of the most modern multipurpose sports and cultural complexes in Latvia Liepaja regularly hosts various sporting events such as the World and European Basketball Championships and the 2009 Women s European Basketball Championship Subgroup A and B matches were played at the Liepaja Olympic Centre The European Rally Championship stage Rally Liepaja the International Windsurfing Competition and others are also held 76 Media Edit Liepaja has a regional newspaper Kurzemes vards and a regional TV channel TV Kurzeme The city also has several regional Internet portals there is an amateur radio community 77 and a citywide wireless video monitoring system As of 2010 update digital terrestrial television is fully operational mobile television and broadband wireless networks are implemented All four Latvian mobile operators have stable zones of coverage GSM 900 1800 UMTS 2100 CDMA450 and client service centers in Liepaja Representation in other media EditIn 1979 a part of the film Moonzund was filmed in the town Notable people EditWoldemar Kernig 1840 1917 Russian and German neurologist Reuven Dov Dessler 1863 1935 rabbi Mikelis Valters 1874 1968 politician first Latvian Minister of Interior Lina Stern 1878 1968 biochemist Yanka Maur 1883 1971 Belarusian writer Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler 1892 1953 rabbi Augusts Annuss 1893 1984 painter Eduard Tisse 1897 1961 cameraman Leon Josephson 1898 1966 American lawyer and Soviet spy Jacob Klein 1899 1978 Russian American Jewish philosopher Herberts Cukurs 1900 1965 aviator and Nazi collaborator Valdemars Baumanis 1905 1992 basketball coach Balys Dvarionas 1905 1972 Lithuanian composer Stanislaw Jaskiewicz 1907 1980 Polish actor Mirdza kempe 1907 1974 poet Arvids Jansons 1914 1984 conductor father of Mariss Jansons Talivaldis kenins 1919 2008 composer 78 Morris Halle 1923 2018 Latvian American Jewish linguist Zvi Harry Hurwitz 1924 2008 South African journalist Israeli diplomat and adviser to two prime ministers Ernesto Foldats 1925 2003 biologist George D Schwab 1931 American political scientist editor Holocaust survivor and academic Kirovs Lipmans 1940 businessman Teofils Bikis 1950 2000 pianist Zigmars Liepins 1952 composer Janis Vanags 1958 Archbishop of Riga in the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia Laila Pakalnina 1962 film director Igo 1962 singer and composer Martins Freimanis 1977 2011 musician and actor Konstantin Konstantinovs 1978 2018 Latvian Russian powerlifter Maris Verpakovskis 1979 football player Romans Miloslavskis 1983 swimmer and politician Mareks Mejeris born 1991 basketball player for Hapoel Jerusalem of the Israeli Basketball Premier League Anastasija Sevastova 1990 tennis player Kristaps Porzingis 1995 basketball player Rudolfs Balcers 1997 ice hockey playerTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Latvia Liepaja is twinned with 79 Nynashamn Sweden 1990 Elblag Poland 1991 Bellevue United States 1992 Darmstadt Germany 1993 Klaipeda Lithuania 1997 Gdynia Poland 1999 Arstad Bergen Norway 2001 Palanga Lithuania 2001 Helsingborg Sweden 2005 Guldborgsund DenmarkGallery Edit Petertirgus St Nicholas Russian Orthodox Naval Cathedral 1901 1903 architect Vasily Kosyakov Church of St Anna Liepaja railway station The ruins of the northern forts St Joseph church Liepaja border marker See also Edit Liepaja travel guide from Wikivoyage Ports of the Baltic SeaReferences Edit Regionu novadu pilsetu un pagastu kopeja un sauszemes platiba gada sakuma Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia Retrieved 30 December 2022 Iedzivotaju skaits pec tautibas regionos pilsetas novados pagastos apkaimes un blivi apdzivotas teritorijas gada sakuma pec administrativi teritorialas reformas 2021 gada 2021 2022 Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia Retrieved 28 December 2022 ISG020 Population number and its change by statistical region city town 21 development centres and county Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia 1 January 2020 Retrieved 12 February 2021 Murray John Russia Poland and Finland etc Third Revised Edition London 1875 p 85 a b Liepajas vesture liepaja lv in Latvian Retrieved 8 August 2011 a b Mass murder of Jews in Liepaja Yad Vashem channel YouTube a b Liepaja wins the title of European Capital of Culture 2027 10 May 2022 Retrieved 13 May 2021 a b KNAB the Place Names Database of EKI Eki ee Retrieved 20 April 2017 SAURUSAITIS Peter P Thirty days in Lithuania in 1919 Being an account of personal experiences and observations encountered in a trip extending from August 30 1919 to February 16 1920 Project Gutenberg p 9 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Turnbull Stephen Tannenberg 1410 Osprey Publishing Oxford UK 2003 p 82 Certainly Poland amp Lithuania invaded Prussia again in 1422 but no mentions of Libau a b c Liepaya Great Soviet Encyclopedia Moscow Sovetskaya Enciklopediya 1969 1978 Retrieved 8 August 2011 Liepaja Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica com Inc 1997 Masonicum masonicum lv Retrieved 8 August 2011 Zemaitis Augustinas History of Liepaja OnLatvia com Retrieved 18 April 2022 Colomb Philip Howard Memoirs of Admiral the Right Honble Sir Astley Cooper Key ebooksread com Retrieved 5 October 2010 Palmer Alan Northern Shores London 2005 p 215 Liepajas Pastnieks Latvijas Enciklopediska vardnica in Latvian a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Libavo Romenskaya zheleznaya doroga Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in Russian 1907 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Paul Max Bertschy Visit Daugavpils Retrieved 19 July 2020 Gidroaerodrom Great Soviet Encyclopedia in Russian 1969 1978 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Palmer 2005 p 255 Palmer 2005 p 258 Silins Janis 18 April 2019 The republic on the sea The 1919 coup that exiled the Latvian government to a steamboat Public Broadcasting of Latvia Retrieved 21 April 2019 Hiden John and Salmon Patrick The Baltic Nations and Europe Longman Group UK Ltd 1991 p 32 6 Hiden John The Baltic States and Weimar Ostpolitik Cambridge University Press UK 1987 p 101 3 Hiden amp Salmon 1991 p 78 Crimes of Einsatzgruppen in Liepaja 1941 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Site of Liepajas slimnica in Latvian Retrieved 10 August 2011 Liepaja Naval Port Liepaja to host military base with NATO standard docks Lsm lv Retrieved 28 April 2022 Letonika lv Liepaja 2002 a b c d e SIA GRUPA 93 2012 STRATEGISKAIS IETEKMES UZ VIDI NOVERTEJUMS Vides parskats PDF 4 Latvijas klimats un ta mainibas raksturs edu lu lv Retrieved 9 September 2022 Avotniece Zanita Aniskevica Svetlana Malinovskis Edgars 2017 KLIMATA PARMAINU SCENARIJI LATVIJAI Zinojums PDF Liepaja Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 28 November 2013 Weatherbase Historical Weather for Griuzupe Latvia Weatherbase Retrieved 4 February 2013 Liepaja Climate Normals 1981 2010 Meteo Climat Retrieved 11 October 2017 Climate amp Weather Averages in Liepaja Time and Date Retrieved 24 July 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Caune Mara K isis Aleksis 1999 Latvijas pilsetas enciklopedija Preses nams Riga ISBN 9984 00 357 4 OCLC 50383143 a b c dzejaprozamaterialiberniem 13 August 2017 Liepajas arhitektura gadsimtu griezos Mani raksti in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 Koka apbuve Koka apbuve in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 a b Sane Alksne Liga 1991 Celvedis Liepajas arhitektura in Latvian Liepaja Liepajas pilsetas arhitekturas un pilsetbuvniecibas parvalde a b Jugendstils ka Liepajas arhitekturas ista rota building lv in Latvian 29 October 2013 Retrieved 10 September 2022 Jugendstils Jugendstils in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 Janis Krastins Cosmopolitan Atmosphere and Latvian Jugendstil in Liepaja PDF Free Download docplayer net Retrieved 10 September 2022 Site of the Liepaja museum in Latvian Retrieved 10 August 2011 Site of Karosta prison museum karostascietums lv Retrieved 10 August 2011 Budzets 2022 gadam Budzets 2022 gadam in Latvian Retrieved 11 September 2022 Libava Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in Russian St Peterburg Brokgauz Efron 1907 Retrieved 8 August 2011 Gorod rodnoj na semi vetrah in Russian Liesma 1976 p 263 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help PASTAViGO IEDZiVOTAJU NACIONALAIS SASTAVS REGIONOS UN REPUBLIKAS PILSETAS GADA SAKUMA csb gov lv in Latvian Retrieved 10 August 2011 permanent dead link Platiba iedzivotaju blivums un pastavigo iedzivotaju skaits regionos republikas pilsetas un novados gada sakuma Centralas statistikas parvaldes datubazes Retrieved 12 June 2017 a b Eglins Eglitis Atis Lusena Ezera Inese 1 January 2016 From Industrial City to the Creative City Development Policy Challenges and Liepaja Case Procedia Economics and Finance 3rd Global Conference on Business Economics Management and Tourism 39 122 130 doi 10 1016 S2212 5671 16 30256 8 ISSN 2212 5671 ESOSAS SITUACIJAS RAKSTUROJUMS LIEPAJAS PILSETA EKONOMIKA PDF a b ESOSAS SITUACIJAS RAKSTUROJUMS LIEPAJAS PILSETA KULTuRA PDF Liepaja Northern Shipyard Lzk lv Retrieved 28 April 2022 Liepajas metalurgs bankruptcy to cost Latvia around LVL 230 million Baltic News Network News from Latvia Lithuania Estonia 12 November 2013 Archived from the original on 12 November 2013 Retrieved 11 September 2022 kurs The Baltic Course Baltijskij Liepajas metalurgs bankruptcy the greatest economic disaster since Parex collapse The Baltic Course Baltic States news amp analytics Retrieved 11 September 2022 Uznemumi ar lielako apgrozijumu pa gadiem Statistika Latvijas novadu pilsetu griezuma Liepaja Latvijas rajoni un novadi Lursoft statistika Lursoft statistika lursoft lv Retrieved 11 September 2022 catchsmartsolution com CatchSmart Liepajas tramvajs in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 Noteikumi par valsts autocelu un valsts autocelu marsruta ietverto pasvaldibam piederoso autocelu posmu sarakstiem 13 May 2013 Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 10 September 2022 Lagzdina Daiga Kristaps Gatis 2018 Baltics European State Aid Law Quarterly 17 1 119 123 doi 10 21552 estal 2018 1 15 JSTOR 26694216 via JSTOR Liepajas 300 gadu jubilejas pieminai 1625 1925 1925 Lemums pienemts Apvienosanas process ir sacies irliepaja lv in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 Visparizglitojosas skolas Visparizglitojosas skolas in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 Catalog of Liepaja central library liepajasczb lv in Latvian Archived from the original on 24 February 2008 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Augstaka izglitiba Augstaka izglitiba in Latvian Retrieved 10 September 2022 Liepajas Jurniecibas koledza Ljk lv Retrieved 28 April 2022 Press corner European Commission European Commission Retrieved 11 September 2022 catchsmartsolution com CatchSmart Liepajas ipasais ediens ar Kurzemes smeki Liepajas mencini in Latvian Retrieved 14 August 2022 Liepajas simfoniskais orkestris lso lv in Latvian Retrieved 10 August 2011 Liepajas dzintars enciklopedija lv Retrieved 11 September 2022 Liepaja demontes tris padomju okupacijas laika piemineklus liepajniekiem lv in Latvian Retrieved 11 September 2022 catchsmartsolution com CatchSmart Liepajas himnas telu skulpturas in Latvian Retrieved 11 September 2022 Liepajas teatris Teatra iela 4 Vecliepaja Liepaja Kurzemes reg Vietas lv Vietas lv Latvijas celvedis Latvijas karte pilsetas rajoni turisma un citi interesanti objekti pasakumi Retrieved 11 September 2022 Par sporta dzivi Liepaja Par sporta dzivi Liepaja in Latvian Retrieved 11 September 2022 Site of Liepajas radio amatieru grupa lrg lv Retrieved 10 August 2011 Talivaldis kenins Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine Latvijas Muzikas informacijas centrs Sadraudzibas pilsetas liepaja lv in Latvian Liepaja Retrieved 30 August 2019 Cite error A list defined reference named kur23102001 is not used in the content see the help page Cite error A list defined reference named kafija is not used in the content see the help page Cite error A list defined reference named lur2005 is not used in the content see the help page Cite error A list defined reference named teatris is not used in the content see the help page Cite error A list defined reference named bur is not used in the content see the help page Cite error A list defined reference named kur17091999 is not used in the content see the help page Cite error A list defined reference named urbanaudit is not used in the content see the help page Bibliography EditMelkonov Yurij 2005 Pushki Kurlyandskogo Berega Riga LV GVARDS ISBN 9984 19 772 7 Kondratenko R V 1997 Voennyj port Aleksandra III v Liepae Saint Peterburg RU Istoricheskij almanah Citadel 2 5 izd OSTROV a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Vushkan Yanis Vladislavovich 1976 Gorod rodnoj na semi vetrah Riga LV Liesma a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tooms Viljars 2003 2007 Liepajnieku biografiska vardnica Riga LV Tilde Letonika a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sane Alksne Liga 1991 Celvedis Liepajas arhitektura Liepaja LV Liepajas pilsetas TDP IK Arhitekturas un pilsetbuvniecibas parvalde a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jana seta 2003 Liepajas pilsetas plans Riga LV Karsu izdevnieciba Jana seta ISBN 9984 07 330 0 Gintners Janis 2004 Liepajas gadsimti Liepaja LV Liepajas muzejs a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Gintners Janis Ula 2008 Liepaja Latvijas sakotne Liepaja LV Liepajas muzejs ISBN 978 9984 39 723 8 Gintnere Ula 2005 Liepaja laikmetu dzirnavas Liepaja LV Kurzemes Vards ISBN 9984 9190 4 8 Lancmanis Imants 1983 Liepaja no baroka lidz klasicismam Riga LV a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Liepajas 300 gadu jubilejas pieminai 1625 1925 Liepaja LV 1925 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Wegner Alexander 1970 1878 Geschichte der Stadt Libau Libau v Hirschheydt ISBN 3 7777 0870 4 Tire Irina 2007 Liepaja in graphics Latvia Poligrafijas infocentrs ISBN 978 9984 764 92 4 Dorenskis Jaroslavs 2007 Liepajas Metalurgs Anno 1882 Liepaja LV Fotoimidzs 364 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Korklysh S 1966 Liepaya in Russian Riga Liesma a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Evans Nicholas J 2006 The Port Jews of Libau 1880 1914 In David Cesarani Gemma Romain eds Jews and Port Cities 1590 1990 Commerce Community and Cosmopolitanism London UK Vallentine Mitchell amp Co Ltd pp 197 214 ISBN 978 0 85303 681 4 Eberstein Ivan H The Amber Land Libava s Tragic Fate and the Fall of the Russian Empire New York External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Liepaja Wikimedia Commons has media related to Liepaja www liepaja lv Liepaja City Council official website History of Liepaja www liepajniekiem lv Liepaja news in Latvian and Russian in Latvian and Russian www portofliepaja lv Port of Liepaja www orkestris liepaja lv Liepaja Symphony orchestra Kurzemes Vards Liepaja regional newspaper in Latvian Kursas Laiks Liepaja district newspaper in Latvian Rozu laukums Webcam showing Rose square in Liepaja The murder of the Jews of Liepaja during World War II at Yad Vashem website Liepaja Info Mobile Application Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liepaja amp oldid 1132961644, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.