The Journey

Seven Chapters

From the founding of Riga in 1201 to the eve of the Great War

Timeline of Riga

713 years from founding to the First World War

1201

Bishop Albert founds Riga

1202

Livonian Brothers of the Sword established

1282

Riga joins the Hanseatic League

1330

Riga Castle built by the Livonian Order

1513

Riga Breviary — earliest known Riga-printed book

Ch. 1
1521

Reformation reaches Riga

Ch. 1
1558

Ivan the Terrible invades — Livonian Wars begin

Ch. 2
1562

Dissolution of the Livonian Order

Ch. 2
1581

Riga falls to Poland-Lithuania

Ch. 2
1621

Gustav II Adolf conquers Riga for Sweden

Ch. 3
1632

Riga becomes the largest city in the Swedish Empire

Ch. 3
1695

Great Famine strikes the Baltic

Ch. 3
1710

Russian siege — plague kills 2/3 of population

Ch. 4
1721

Treaty of Nystad — Baltic ceded to Russia

Ch. 4
1795

Third Partition of Poland — all Latvia under Russia

Ch. 5
1812

Riga suburbs burned to halt Napoleon

Ch. 5
1817

Serfdom abolished in Courland

Ch. 5
1857

Medieval city walls demolished — Riga expands

Ch. 5
1873

First Latvian Song Festival

Ch. 6
1881

Population reaches 170,000

Ch. 6
1897

Latvians rise to 45% of 282,000 population

Ch. 6
1901

Art Nouveau building boom begins

Ch. 6
1905

Revolution — Latvian national movement strengthens

Ch. 7
1913

Population nearly 600,000 — peak of Imperial Riga

Ch. 7
1914

World War I begins — end of an era

Ch. 7
01

The Age of Parchment

c. 1500–1560Late Livonian Confederation

1513 Riga Breviary — earliest known Riga-printed book1521 Reformation reaches Riga

Riga as a powerful Hanseatic trading city under Catholic Church dominance. The Reformation arrives in 1521, sweeping Protestant doctrines through the city. Medieval Latin manuscripts, the earliest known Riga-printed book (1513 Breviary), and Hanseatic trade documents tell the story of a city on the cusp of transformation.

Historical Highlights

  • Riga as a major Hanseatic League trading port
  • Catholic Church dominance and the Bishop’s seat
  • Unique ‘Riga Law’ — a variant of Germanic town law
  • Reformation arrives in 1521
  • The 1513 Riga Breviary — earliest known Riga-printed book

Featured Documents

  • Latin manuscript ‘Liber Primus’ — medieval blackletter
  • Polish royal privilege ‘Commune incliti Poloniae Regni privilegium’
  • Medieval woodcut of saints (S. Florianus, S. Stanislaus)
  • Hanseatic guild records and trade contracts
  • City charters and privileges in Gothic script

Estimated pages: 20–30

02

The Fall of Livonia

1558–1621Livonian War / Polish-Lithuanian Rule

1558 Ivan the Terrible invades — Livonian Wars begin1562 Dissolution of the Livonian Order1581 Riga falls to Poland-Lithuania

Ivan the Terrible invades in 1558, igniting decades of war. The Livonian Order dissolves, Riga falls to Poland-Lithuania, and the city becomes a contested prize between Russia, Poland, and Sweden.

Historical Highlights

  • 1558: Ivan the Terrible invades
  • 1562: Dissolution of the Livonian Order
  • 1581: Riga falls to Poland-Lithuania
  • Religious conflicts in the Reformation aftermath
  • 1600–1621: Polish-Swedish War for Livonia

Featured Documents

  • Hennenberger 1595 geographic masterwork
  • Jan Hus chronicle page
  • War chronicles and battle accounts
  • Maps of Livonia during the wars
  • City defense plans and fortification drawings

Estimated pages: 30–40

03

The Swedish Crown

1621–1710Swedish Livonia

1621 Gustav II Adolf conquers Riga for Sweden1632 Riga becomes the largest city in the Swedish Empire1695 Great Famine strikes the Baltic

Gustav II Adolf conquers Riga in 1621, making it the largest city in the entire Swedish Empire — larger than Stockholm itself. Livonia supplies a third of Sweden’s war costs. A golden era of Baltic German culture.

Historical Highlights

  • Riga becomes the largest city in the Swedish Empire
  • Livonia supplies 1/3 of Sweden’s war costs
  • Golden era of Baltic German culture
  • First schools, literacy programs, Bible translations
  • Great Famine of 1695–1697

Featured Documents

  • Panoramic naval battle engraving
  • Architectural engraving of triumphal arch
  • Swedish royal decrees
  • City panoramic engravings
  • Maps of Swedish Livonia

Estimated pages: 40–50

04

Peter’s City

1710–1795Russian Empire — Early Period

1710 Russian siege — plague kills 2/3 of population1721 Treaty of Nystad — Baltic ceded to Russia

The devastating Russian siege of 1709–1710 and a catastrophic plague kill two-thirds of Riga’s population. Tsar Peter the Great claims the city. The Treaty of Nystad formally cedes the Baltic provinces to Russia.

Historical Highlights

  • 1709–1710: Russian siege and plague
  • Peter the Great takes Riga
  • 1721: Treaty of Nystad
  • Baltic German nobility retains privileges
  • City rebuilt after devastation

Featured Documents

  • Peter the Great’s decrees
  • Plague records and death registers
  • Treaty of Nystad documents
  • City reconstruction plans
  • German-language administrative records

Estimated pages: 30–40

05

The Industrial Titan

1795–1860Russian Empire — Growth Period

1795 Third Partition of Poland — all Latvia under Russia1812 Riga suburbs burned to halt Napoleon1817 Serfdom abolished in Courland1857 Medieval city walls demolished — Riga expands

All of Latvia falls under Russian rule. Napoleon’s army approaches in 1812, and Riga’s suburbs are burned as a desperate defense. Serfdom is abolished, railways arrive, and Riga transforms into a major industrial seaport.

Historical Highlights

  • 1795: All of Latvia under Russia
  • 1812: Suburbs burned against Napoleon
  • Serfdom abolished in the Baltic provinces
  • Railway arrives
  • First Latvian-language newspapers

Featured Documents

  • Napoleonic-era military maps
  • Emancipation decrees
  • Early industrial records
  • Railway construction documents
  • First Latvian-language publications

Estimated pages: 30–40

06

The Latvian Awakening

1860–1905National Romantic Period

1873 First Latvian Song Festival1881 Population reaches 170,0001897 Latvians rise to 45% of 282,000 population1901 Art Nouveau building boom begins

Riga’s population explodes from 77,000 to 282,000 in four decades. Latvians rise to the city’s largest ethnic group. The first Latvian Song Festival in 1873 and the Art Nouveau building boom define a city in cultural renaissance.

Historical Highlights

  • Population boom: 77,000 to 282,000
  • Latvians rise to 45% of population
  • Third-largest industrial city in Russia
  • First Latvian Song Festival (1873)
  • Art Nouveau / Jugendstil architecture boom

Featured Documents

  • Rigasche Zeitung front pages
  • Song Festival programs and posters
  • Jugendstil architectural drawings
  • Census records
  • Revolutionary leaflets (1905)

Estimated pages: 40–50

07

The Eve of War

1905–1914Late Russian Empire / Pre-WWI

1905 Revolution — Latvian national movement strengthens1913 Population nearly 600,000 — peak of Imperial Riga1914 World War I begins — end of an era

Imperial Riga reaches its zenith with nearly 600,000 inhabitants. Hundreds of Art Nouveau buildings rise. Latvian, German, Russian, and Jewish communities create a rich multicultural tapestry. Then, in 1914, the Great War begins.

Historical Highlights

  • Population nearly 600,000
  • Hundreds of Art Nouveau buildings
  • Major industrial hub
  • Rich multicultural city
  • 1914: WWI begins — end of an era

Featured Documents

  • Pre-war city photographs
  • Industrial catalogs
  • Theater and concert programs
  • City directories
  • Military mobilization orders (1914)

Estimated pages: 30–40