Krāslava
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. Krāslava (Template:ErrorTemplate:Category handler; Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx) is a town and the administrative centre of Krāslava Municipality. The town lies on the Daugava, upstream and to the east of the city of Daugavpils. Most of the town is situated on the right coast of the Daugava. As defined by Latvian law, Krāslava belongs partially to the Latgale region (on the right side of the Daugava) and partially to the Selonia region (on the left side of the Daugava).[1][2]
History
- Krāslava was an important hillfort on the waterway from the Varangians to the Byzantine Empire since early Middle Ages, part of the orthodox Principality of Jersika in the 13th century.
- In 1558 was mentioned for the first time in written sources of Livonian Order as Kreslau (in German).
- In 1676 the church was built by Jesuit Order and Krāslava became the most northern located center of the Jesuit movement on the border with the areas dominated by Protestant and Orthodox churches.
- In 1729 Count Jan Ludwik Plater bought Krāslava. For nearly two centuries the Plater family determined Kraslava economical and cultural life.
- Craftmen from Poland and Germany in co-operation with local people organized the production of carpets, velvet, silk and cotton material, weapons, jewellery and other goods. The goods were in demand at the four Kraslava fairs and also exported to Courland, Poland and Germany.
- Between 1757 and 1842 Krāslava was home for a Roman Catholic seminary, one of the first educational institutions in Latgale region.
Prominent residents
- writer Kazimierz Bujnicki
- Sculptor Naoum Aronson (1872-1943)
- Signatorie to the Act of Independence of Lithuania Donatas Malinauskas
- Philosopher Nikolai Lossky
- Writer and philosopher Konstantin Raudive
- Monsignor Konstantin Budkevich – Roman Catholic priest executed in the Lubyanka Prison on Easter Sunday 1923.
- athlete Ineta Radēviča
- athlete Valentīna Gotovska
- Basketball player Jānis Timma
- Opera Singer and Professor Katrina Krumpane
- Siarhiej Sacharaŭ (1880-1954), Belarusian folklorist, ethnographer, pedagogue.
- Mocieĺ Blinčykaŭ (1896-1935), leader of the revolutionary movement in Western Belarus.
Gallery
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Panorama of Krāslava in 1875-1876
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Krāslava Town Hall in 1875-1876
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Brivibas Street in Krāslava, 1898
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Krāslava Market Square in 1918
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Krāslava Catholic Church
See also
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Transportation
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Krāslava is home to a station on the Latvian Railways.
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References
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External links
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