I took the 4 hour bus from Klaipeda to
Riga and arrived on a very gray, stormy day. It didn't last through my four-day stay, however, and for a couple days, there were clear blue skies. In Riga, I found my favorite cathedrals of all the cathedrals in the Baltic capitols: the Dome Cathedral and St. Peter's Cathedral. Each of the gothic-style cathedrals had impressive stained glass windows and the Dome Cathedral had a huge organ inside. I rode an elevator to the top of St. Peter's and battled the wind to take still pictures of the old town from above.
The Dome Cathedral, with a Christmas tree in the square
The stained glass windows inside of the Dome Cathedral
The pulpit inside the Dome Cathedral, which belongs to the Latvian Lutheran Church
The altar
Some of the organ pipes suspended on the rear balcony in the Dome Cathedral
The tonsury in the courtyard of the Dome Cathedral
A pagan sculpture dug up from the courtyard of the Dome Cathedral and covered with coins from visitors
An attempt at taking a still photograph of the Dome Cathedral from the top of St. Peter's Cathedral; the wind was blowing so hard that I could lean into it pretty steeply without falling
The steeple of St. Peter's Cathedral, from the top of which I took the previous picture
The dark interior of St. Peter's Cathedral
The old town of Riga from the top of St. Peter's Cathedral
The "House of the Blackheads" (what a terrible name), where rich, unmarried German merchants used to live (I suppose they were traders within the Hanseatic League, because Riga was a member city of the League and the building was built in the 14th century, during the operation of the League)
Town hall at night
I started to enjoy wandering the streets at night, because everything was so well-lit and colorful in the old town
If I ever return, I hope to stay at this particular hotel
The interior of the Latvian National Museum of Art
A Latvian painting of a swineherd
Also a painting by a Latvian artist
When I was in Riga, I was lucky to see the commemoration of the liberation of Latvia from the Soviet Union on January 20th. Here is the procession. Below is a short paragraph that I took from one of the Latvian Institute's webpage:
"January 20
: Commemoration Day of Defenders of the Barricades in 1991.
Already in autumn 1990, reactionary forces increasingly became established in the government of the Soviet Union. It was in their interests to stop the Baltic peoples' move towards restoring independence, and in January 1991 the leaders of the USSR in Moscow took a decision to restore the old order in the Baltic. Latvians from all over the country rushed to Rīga to build barricades and defend the independent power structures. January 20 marked the culmination of violence by Soviet forces hostile to Latvian independence. Soviet special forces seized the Latvian Ministry of the Interior, a gun-battle ensued and several people were killed."
Laying flowers at the graves at the foot of the Monument of Freedom
The Monument of Freedom
Detail of the statue at the top of the Monument of Freedom
This is the central esplanade in the Riga old town, and seeing as how it was such a pleasant ambiance, I thought that I should videotape it
The Russian Orthodox Cathedral
Inside of the Orthodox Cathedral; just after taking this video, a priest politely asked me to stop taping and I felt really bad about it, but I'm still posting the video, hehe!
Doesn't this look like classic Stalinist architecture? It is the tallest building in the Russian part of Riga, right next to the giant Russian-style outdoor market
This scene made me feel like I was on another planet, with the mood and strange buildings surrounding me. Riga really has the most interesting mixture of architecture of all the Baltic Republics. Sadly, I didn't take any pictures of the
art nouveau district, which is a well-known example of the style.
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