'Latgale' or 'Latgalia' (,
Latgale dialect: ''Latgola'') is one of the four cultural
regions of
Latvia recognised in the
Constitution of the Latvian Republic. It is the easternmost region north of the
Daugava river. While most of Latvia is historically
Lutheran, Latgale is historically predominantly
Roman Catholic.
The region has a large population of
ethnic Russians, especially in
Daugavpils, the largest city in the region. Many of the Russians who lived in Latgale before the Soviet occupation are
Old Believers.
Rēzekne, often called the heart of Latgola,
KrÄslava, and
Ludza are other large towns in the region, which also has a
Belarusian minority. There is still a significant Polish minority (Daugavpils has almost as many Poles as Latvians). As part of the
Polotsk and
Vitebsk guberniyas, the region was part of the
Pale of Settlement and had a very large Jewish population -- but most of the Jews perished in the
Holocaust and much of the remainder has emigrated.
The region is one of the poorest in the
European Union, and unlike in the rest of Latvia a majority of voters was opposed to EU membership in the referendum on accession.
Due to its history several different names are historically used for Latgale.
★ Other names for the region include Lettigallia, Latgallia, and Latgola.
★ The people are called ''latgalieÅ¡i'' in Latvian (as distinct from ''latgaļi'', which refers to the ancient tribe, though some modern Latgalians [especially
separatists] prefer ''latgaļi'') — ''latgalīši'' in Latgalian, sometimes ''latgali'' — Latgalians, Latgallians, or Lettigalls in English, and are sometimes referred to as ''Äangaļi'' (sometimes derogatory — the reference is to a novel, and Latgalians often call other Latvians "Äiuļi"). The term ''latgalieÅ¡i'' dates only to the early
20th century, and before that Latgalians were long refrred to as Vitebsk Latvians or Inflantians (Latgalian: ''vitebskīši'', ''inflantīši'').
★ The language or dialect is called
Latgalian.
History
Originally territory of nowadays Latgale was populated by the
Eastern Balts. They spoke some unknown East Baltic language, which became a basis for the
Latgalian dialect of
Latvian language. The dialect is still spoken by many
Latgalians and has a standardized written form, for which reason some consider it to be a separate language. During the
10th–
12th centuries two principalities — of
Jersika and
Atzele existed on the territory of nowadays Latgale; in addition, the land of the so-called
Eastern Latgalians included parts of what is today
Vidzeme and
Russia. In the second decade of
13th century principality of Jersika became a part of
Lithuania, but in
1270s it was conquered by the
German crusaders of the
Livonian Order and incorporated into
Livonia.
In
1559–
62, the territory of nowadays Latgale was annexed by
Lithuania, and in
1569 it was reorganized into
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In
1620s most of Livonia was ceded to
Sweden, but a part of Livonia including Latgale remained under Lithuanian–Polish control; this land became known as
Inflantia. Creation of Polish Inflanty is the birth of the region we know today by the name Latgale. During this period the Latgalian dialect of the
Latvian language developed separately from the Latvian spoken in other parts of what is now Latvia and was influenced by Polish.
In
1772, Latgale was annexed by the
Russian Empire, and in
1865 a period of
Russification, as part of Russia's anti-Polish policies, was begun, during which the Latgalian language (written in Latin script) was forbidden. This ban was lifted in
1904, and a period of Latgalian reawakening began. Many Latgalian public figures sought a reunification with the rest of Latvia in
1917 at the
Congress of Rezekne, while some preferred autonomy (Kemps) or incorporation in Russia (bureaucracy). Decisions of the 1917 Congresses and declaration of independence on
18 November 1918 with Latgale as part of Latvian state moved both Latvian armed forces as well as local partisan movement to struggle for liberation of Latgale. Tough enough task, taking into account territorial interests of both
Bolshevik Russia and Poland. In
1920 as a result of nation-building irredentist war Latgale was incorporated into Latvia. By the peace treaty of
1920 with
Soviet Russia, the territories of Pskov guberniya were incorporated into Latvia to please its economic interests. United with other "original" Latvian territories, as claimed by the declaration of independence (ethnographic borders as national borders), they formed district of Jaunlatgale, later
Abrene district.
In
1944, at the beginning of the second
occupation of Latvia by the USSR, the eastern civil parishes of the
Abrene district were incorporated into the
Russian Federation. Now they are ''de facto'' a part of
Russia.
See also
★
Latgallians
★
Latgalian language
Latgale in foreign languages
★
★
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External links
★
[1] overview in Lithuanian
★
Latgale / Latgola overview in Latvian, English, and Russian
★
Latgale research center
★
[2] a Latgalian site with an online Latgalian–Latvian dictionary.
★
News from Latgale