July 7, 9
Hello everyone!
Over 50% of Latvia is forest, and contains some beautiful places outside of its lovely capital, Riga. This will show two places I visited: Rundale Palace and Gauja National Park.
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| Peeking out at Turaida Castle from its tower |
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Wild eyes - arguably added by a person who wasn't using theirs - on this animal head. The antlers are real, the head is not. |
One of these is a summer palace in the small village of Rundale. It was purposely built far away from any settlement, not that it needed to be close to anything. It is that grand.
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| They actually had an even bigger residence in a place called Jelgava |
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| The Meeting Room - the Duke would sit at one end |
The palace, a short distance north of the border with Lithuania, belonged to the Duke of Courland, which is a historical Latvian land in the west of the modern-day country.
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| Portraits of key figures connected to the palace |
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| Fascinating chess set in the games room |
Another place that could be used for movie sets is Gauja National Park, an area found about 80 km east of Latvia’s capital. The term ‘national park’ is a bit of a misnomer, there are many villages within the confines of the borders.
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| Pond in Turaida Museum Reserve |
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| Building in Turaida Museum Reserve |
Parts of the park help you peek into Latvia’s medieval past, when it was part of an area called Livonia. This covered much of modern-day Latvia and Estonia. It has existed in many forms and under many names, but seems to have been at its peak in the fourteenth century. Middle Ages, we’d probably say.
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| Old jewellery - there's a tiny knife in each necklace |
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| Different ways of getting around - there is a sledge at the back |
You get a vibe for this in an area called Turaida. Its open air museum contains a blacksmiths, a stable house and a sauna, amongst other buildings that would have been used in the region at that time and a little bit beyond.
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| Pond in Turaida Museum Reserve |
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| Sauna - we are getting closer to Scandinavia... |
Turaida was also home to a castle. Whilst some of it has been left as a ruin, other elements have been reconstructed. One part that didn’t need much mortar or brick was the tower, which stands almost 40 metres high.
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| I was told that 88% of the tower is original, which seems a very specific number |
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| Inside the tower, before you get to the top |
The 360 degree view from the top of the tower is stunning. Swathes of virgin pine forest separated by the meandering Gauja river.
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| First records of a castle being here are from 1214 |
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| Don't lean out too far! |
A more complete castle can be found at Sigulda. Called Sigulda New Castle, it was built in the 1870s, and is actually much more manor house than defensive structure. There is a Russian connection, as Latvia was controlled by the Russian Empire at this time. I was more interested in the black rye bread ice cream that I got. Texture was a bit strange but it tasted surprisingly nice.
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| Rundale Palace |
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| Turaida Castle |
Love you all,
Matt