Gulbene

Gulbene (pronunciation ; German: Schwanenburg) is a town in northeastern Latvia. It is an administrative center of Gulbene Municipality.

Gulbene
Town
Flag
Coat of arms
Gulbene
Location in Latvia
Coordinates: 57°10′N 26°45′E
Country Latvia
DistrictGulbene Municipality
Town rights1928
Government
  Chairman of the Municipality CouncilNormunds Audzišs
Area
  Total11.898 km2 (4.594 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)
  Total7,199
  Density610/km2 (1,600/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
LV-4401
Calling code+371 644
Number of city council members11
Websitewww.gulbene.lv

The area of this region is 11.898 km2 (4.594 sq mi), with a population of 29,797 inhabitants (69,369 sealen, 10,015 urban, 19,782 rural population).

History

Historical documents first mention the 1224 land division act between the Order of the Sword Brothers and the Archbishop of Riga. In the 14th century the Archbishop built a stone castle around which a populated place was formed.

The Evangelical Lutheran church (Brivības iela 13) was built on the ancient Latgalian castle mound in place of the later Middle Age brick castle from 1838–1843. The church is built in the classical style.

Vecgulbene (Old Gulbene) estate complex was built in the middle and second half of the 19th century not far off the church. The most significant buildings are the White Palace (Brivības iela 12), the Red Palace (Parka iela 1) and the magazine granary (Brivības iela 9). Both palaces have been destroyed and rebuilt several times. Since 1924 the elementary school of the city occupies the Red Palace.

After the construction of the Stukmani to Valka narrow-gauge railway in 1903 and subsequent broad-gauge line construction during World War I, Vecgulbene was established as an important railway junction, and in 1920 it was given the rights of a small village. During the first period of Latvian independence, besides those employed by the railways, small business, trades and crafts were the most important economic activities in the town. Gulbene was heavily damaged during the last years of World War II. After the war, during the Soviet occupation, Gulbene initially became a district, and later, in 1950, a regional centre. In the 1960s and 1970s branches of several major industrial companies were established in the city. Local enterprise was mainly involved with wood processing.

The most architecturally significant building in the area is the passenger building at Gulbene railway station, built in 1926 by the well-known professor of architecture Peteris Feders (1868 – 1936). It is one of the largest and most magnificent railway station buildings in Latvia.

Geography

There is one major town in the Gulbene municipality, and the region is separated into 13 smaller rural parishes. Gulbene is being developed as an environmentally-friendly territory.

Tourism

Sports

The Gulbene municipality's biggest rivers (Gauja, Tirza and Pededze) are currently popular locations for nature tourism and water-sports, but once these were famous places for harvesting river-pearls. Cycling is enjoyed on local country paths.

Gulbene has a basketball team, Gulbenes Buki, playing in the higher division of the Latvian basketball league.

Media

The Gulbene region is served by a newspaper, Dzirkstele.

Twin towns

Notable people

  • Aiva Viksna, chairperson of the association LIDERE.
  • Valdis Zilveris, composer.
  • Inguna Sudraba, Latvia's Auditor General.
  • Uldis Anze, actor.
  • Jevgenijs Augustinovics, conductor, choirmaster.
  • Oto Bertins, painter, black-and-white artist.
  • Imants Cepitis, conductor, choirmaster.
  • Aija Dzerve, actress.
  • Leonids Grabovskis, actor.
  • Gido Kokars, conductor, choirmaster.
  • Imants Kokars, conductor, choirmaster.
  • Augusts Malvess, architect.
  • Ingus Petersons, operatic singer.
  • Ralfs Rubenis, musician and composer.
  • Dzintra Zilde, circus artist.
  • Nauris Indzeris, operatic singer.
  • Grigorijs "Greg" Gorodko, rock artist.
gollark: It is not a "more equal say", it is directly giving more power to rural people.
gollark: I don't care about this particular instance. You said "This is why I think rural should have a more equal say because rural is most of the state, not just the cities.".
gollark: As I said, I disagree with arbitrarily giving one group more power like that.
gollark: Sure, why not, those are nice numbers.
gollark: I do understand that it weights rural votes more highly. This is what I am complaining about.

See also

List of cities in Latvia

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