When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rumbula massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumbula_massacre

    The Nazis wanted to eliminate the Latvian Jews in Riga to make room for Jews from Germany and Austria to be deported to the Riga ghetto. [25] Similarly motivated mass murders of eastern Jews confined to ghettos were carried out at Kovno on October 28, 1941 (10,000 dead), and at Minsk, where 13,000 were shot on November 7 and an additional 7,000 ...

  3. Vidzeme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vidzeme

    The capital of Latvia, Riga, is situated in the southwestern part of the region. Literally meaning "the Middle Land", it is situated in north-central Latvia north of the Daugava River . Sometimes in German , it was also known as Livland , the German form from Latin Livonia , though it comprises only a small part of Medieval Livonia and about ...

  4. Riga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riga

    Riga, with its central geographic position and concentration of population, has always been the infrastructural hub of Latvia. Several national roads begin in Riga, and European route E22 crosses Riga from the east and west, while the Via Baltica crosses Riga from the south and north. As a city situated by a river, Riga also has several bridges.

  5. Free City of Riga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_City_of_Riga

    Free City of Riga (German: Freie Stadt Riga, Latvian: Rīgas brīvpilsēta) is a city-state, which existed in modern times, one of the German state formations that arose in the medieval Baltic during the crisis of the Livonian Confederation at the end of the 16th century. The main governing body of the city during these years was the Riga City ...

  6. History of Riga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Riga

    After more than 700 years of German, Swedish and Russian rule, Latvia, with Riga as its capital city, declared its independence on 18 November 1918. During the Latvian War of Independence , the city was contested by the Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic established by the Red Army , Freikorps battalions composed of Baltic Germans and ...

  7. Burning of the Riga synagogues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning_of_the_Riga_synagogues

    The burning of the Riga synagogues occurred in 1941, during the first days of the Nazi German occupation of the city of Riga, the capital and largest city in the country of Latvia. Many Jews confined in the synagogues died in the fires. Many other anti-Semitic measures were launched at the same time, ultimately followed by the murder of the ...

  8. Riga Ghetto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riga_Ghetto

    Riga Ghetto was a small area in Maskavas Forštate, a neighbourhood of Riga, Latvia, where Nazis forced Jews from Latvia, and later from the German "Reich" (Germany, Austria, Bohemia, and Moravia), to live during World War II. On October 25, 1941, the Nazis evicted the ghetto's non-Jewish inhabitants and relocated all Jews from Riga and its ...

  9. Portal:Latvia/Content - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Latvia/Content

    The Ridzene was originally known as the Riga River, at one point forming a natural harbor called the Riga Lake, neither of which exist today. Riga was dominated first by Germans, later by Sweden and then by Russian Empire until Latvia, with Riga as its capital city, thus declared its independence on 18 November 1918.