Courland Governorate
1795–1918 unit of Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1795–1918 unit of Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.
Courland Governorate,[lower-alpha 1] also known as the Province of Courland or Governorate of Kurland,[1][2] and known from 1795 to 1796 as the Viceroyalty of Courland,[lower-alpha 2] was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) and one of the Baltic governorates of the Russian Empire. Its area roughly corresponded to Kurzeme, Zemgale and Sēlija of modern-day Latvia.
Courland Governorate | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governorate of the Russian Empire | |||||||||
1795–1918 | |||||||||
Location in the Russian Empire The Governorate in 1821 (Russian/German) | |||||||||
Capital | Mitau | ||||||||
Population | |||||||||
• 1897 | 674,034 | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• Partition of Poland | 28 March 1795 | ||||||||
1918 | |||||||||
• Treaty of Brest-Litovsk | 1918 | ||||||||
Subdivisions or uyezds of Courland Governorate | |||||||||
Political subdivisions | 9 | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Today part of | Latvia Lithuania |
The governorate was created in 1795 out of the territory of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, which was incorporated into the Russian Empire as the Viceroyalty of Courland with its capital at Mitau (now Jelgava) following the third partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
In 1915, during the World War I Courland was occupied by the German Empire. With the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on 3 March 1918, Bolshevik Russia accepted the loss of the Courland Governorate. After an attempt to reestablish the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia as a client state of the German Empire, Courland was united with Vidzeme and Latgale to form the Republic of Latvia on 18 November 1918.
The governorate was bounded in the north by the Baltic Sea, the Gulf of Riga and the Governorate of Livonia; west by the Baltic Sea; south by the Vilna Governorate and Prussia and east by the Vitebsk Governorate and Minsk Governorate. The population in 1846 was estimated at 553,300.[1]
It was situated between 55°41' and 57°451⁄2' N. Of its total border of 1,260 versts (1,344 km), the sea border is 320 versts (341 km). The border with Prussia is only 6 versts (6.4 km) long and lacks natural boundaries.
The surface area of the province is 26,112 square versts (29,716 km2).
After the annexation to the Russian Empire, the Kurzeme Governorate united the lands of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia and the Piltene district, both of which retained their previous administrative divisions.
After the administrative reform of 1819, the area of Pilten was incorporated into the territory of the province as the district of Windau (Hauptmannschaft Windau) and the district of Hasenpoth (Hauptmannschaft Hasenpoth). After the reform of 1819, the castle lord of Kandava moved to Talsi. The area of Palanga up to the Prussian border was also added to the Kurzeme province from the Vilna Governorate. The province was divided into ten districts, or Hauptmannschaft, whose administrative authorities were located in the towns of the same name, with the exception of Talsi and Ilūkste, which had only the rights of towns. Each district had its own court with a local police force. Until 1864, every two districts were merged into Oberhauptmannschaft, which contained the Oberhauptmann and the Evangelical Lutheran Church dean's districts under the authority of the Oberhofgericht (Court of the Governor's Court).
The counties of the governorate were:
County | Administrative center
or / and the most populated city |
Population | Arms of County Town | Area | Population (1897 census)[3] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name in German | Name in Russian | 1897 | ||||
Bauske | Баускій | Bauske (Bausk) |
6.544 | 2,097.4 km2 (809.8 sq mi) | 50,547 | |
Windau | Виндавскій | Windau (Vindau) |
7.127 | 3,136.4 km2 (1,211.0 sq mi) | 48,275 | |
Hasenpoth | Газенпотскій | Harsenpoth (Gazenpot) |
3.340 | 2,506 km2 (968 sq mi) | 53,209 | |
Goldingen | Гольдингенскій | Goldingen | 9.720 | 3,276.4 km2 (1,265.0 sq mi) | 66,335 | |
Grobin | Гробинскій | Grobin | 1.490 | 4,685.4 km2 (1,809.0 sq mi) | 110,878 | |
Liepāja (Libava) | 64.489 | |||||
Illukst | Иллукстскій | Illukst | 3.652 | 2,249.7 km2 (868.6 sq mi) | 66,461 | |
Doblen | Митавскій (Добленскій) | Mitau (Mitava) |
35.131 | 2,847.2 km2 (1,099.3 sq mi) | 101,310 | |
Talsen | Тальсенскій | Talsen | 4.200 | 3,151.1 km2 (1,216.6 sq mi) | 61,148 | |
Tukkum | Туккумскій | Tukkum | 7.555 | 2,262.6 km2 (873.6 sq mi) | 51,076 | |
Friedrichstadt | Фридрихштадтскій | Friedrichstadt (Fridrikhshtadt) |
5.175 | 3,504.2 km2 (1,353.0 sq mi) | 64,795 | |
Jēkabspils (Jakobstadt) | 5.829 |
The highest court is the Courts of Kurland (Kurländisches Oberhofgericht), the courts of appeal are the Higher Hauptmanns Courts (Oberhauptmannsgericht), The courts of first instance are the Hauptmannsgericht, the county courts (kreisgericht) for the peasantry, and the lowest level of the court system for the peasantry are the parish courts (Gemeindegericht).[4]
The province of Courland was governed by a governor appointed by the emperor. The representative body of local government was the Landtag (Kurländischer Landtag), which consisted of parish commissioners (Kirchspielsbevollmächtigter, Konvokant) elected by the parishes (Landtagskirchspiel, Parochie) by parish assemblies (Kirchspielsversammlung), In the parish meetings (Kirchspielsversammlung) all large landowners of the parish could participate, the executive body - a noble committee headed by a land commissioner (Landesbevollmächtige) was elected to conduct its sessions.
The residence of the governors was in Jelgava Castle, where the governorate's administrative offices were also located. During the existence of the Baltic Governorate (1801-1876, 1906–1909), the governors of Kurzeme were subordinate to the governor-general of the Baltic Provinces (German: Generalgouverneur der Ostseeprovinzen)., who resided in the Riga Castle.[5]
Until Russification, almost all governors of Courland were German-Baltic noblemen. Until then, the language of administration in the highest authorities and courts of the province was German, but in the parish courts, according to the Courland peasant laws, the records were also kept in Latvian.[6]
In the 19th century the province was predominantly agrarian. In 1817, serfdom was abolished in the province and peasants were granted personal freedom, but all land remained the property of landlords. In 1863 the peasants received the right to buy land as personal property, and a class of land owning peasants began to form. The land owning peasants, along with the German landlords, were the main suppliers of commercial agricultural products. The main crops grown in the province were rye, wheat, barley, peas, oats, and potatoes. Horticulture and gardening are well developed.
Industry of the province is mostly manufacturing. In 1912 there were about 200 factories and plants (mills, vodka mills, sawmills, tanneries, brick mills, flax-spinning factories, etc.) and about 500 cottage industries.
Railway construction was developing on the territory of the province. The Riga - Mitava railroad was built in 1867 and in 1871-76 a section of the Libava - Romena railroad. All in all the length of the railway lines in the province was over 560 versts.
Education in the province was better than the Russian average. In the 1910s there were 8 secondary schools (over 3 thousand students), 13 special secondary schools (over 460 students), 790 lower secondary schools (36.9 thousand students) in the province. In the province in 1913 there were 33 hospitals with 1,300 beds.[7]
Language | Number | percentage (%) | males | females |
---|---|---|---|---|
Latvian | 507 511 | 75.29 | 240 672 | 266 839 |
German | 51 017 | 7.56 | 23 372 | 27 645 |
Yiddish | 37 689 | 5.59 | 18 137 | 19 552 |
Great Russian (Russian) | 25 630 | 3.8 | 16 319 | 9 311 |
Polish | 19 688 | 2.92 | 9 985 | 9 703 |
Lithuanian | 16 531 | 2.45 | 8 833 | 7 698 |
White Russian (Belarusian) | 12 283 | 1.82 | 6 356 | 5 927 |
Romani | 1 202 | 0.17 | 581 | 621 |
Persons that didn't name their native language | 5 | >0.01 | 4 | 1 |
Other[9] | 2 478 | 0.36 | 1 993 | 485 |
Total | 674 034 | 100 | 326 252 | 347 782 |