Church of Jesus

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The octagonal Lutheran Church of Jesus, designed by architect H. F. Breitkreic and to the rear of the unmissable Latvian Academy of Sciences, was constructed in 1818 (renovated 1939) and, with its 37 metres high two tier tower, it is the largest wooden church in Riga and one of the largest wooden churches in Europe. Given its colour it is hard to tell that this is a wooden building until you are right up beside it. Continue reading “Church of Jesus”

Monument to Zanis Lipke and All the Saviours of Latvian Jews

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Within four months of the Nazis occupying Riga on 1 July 1941, a Jewish ghetto had been set up in the Moscow District of the city. 30,000 Jews where forcibly moved into the ghetto. Within weeks, 24,000 of its occupants were forced marched to Rumbula forest on the outskirts of the city and shot. Thousands more were shot or otherwise eliminated within the city. Throughout Latvia, between 1941 and 1945 70,000 Jews were killed by or under Nazi direction. Continue reading “Monument to Zanis Lipke and All the Saviours of Latvian Jews”

Riga Radio and TV Tower

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The closest I came to the Riga Radio and TV Tower was when I visited the Grebenshchikov Old Believers Church, just across the Daugava River. Even from this distance the tower is a very impressive Soviet built structure. If viewing from the church, do not be tempted to walk down the road depicted in my attached pictures with a view to reaching the tower. The bridge-less (at this point) Daugava River is just behind the building which appears to be, though is not, at the base of the tower in the picture. Continue reading “Riga Radio and TV Tower”

Grebenshchikov Old Believers Church

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The original wooden Old Believers church, established by Aleksandr Grebenšhchikov on this site, was built in 1760. Its replacement, officially the Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos, was built in 1814 and remains home to one of the largest congregations of Old Believers in the world. The stunning tower and gold dome were added in 1906. Continue reading “Grebenshchikov Old Believers Church”