Valga, Estonia

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Valga linn
Flag of Valga
Coat of arms of Valga
Flag Coat of arms
County Valga County
Mayor Margus Lepik
Area 16.54 km²
Population (as of 2004)
 - Density
14,055
849.8/km²
Coordinates 57°47′ N 26°02′ E
Location of Valga
Location of Valga

Valga is a town in southern Estonia and the capital of Valga County. Until their separation in 1920, Valga and the town of Valka in northern Latvia were one town. They are now twin-towns. The area of Valga is 16.5 km² and that of Valka is 14.2 km². Their populations are respectively 15,330 and 7,100.

Contents

[edit] Location

Valga is situated at the junction of roads and railways. The Tallinn-Tartu-Riga railway is connected via Tapa with the Tallinn-Narva-St Petersburg main line. Valga is an international railway junction. Since there is no railway station in Valka, trains coming from Latvia are directed to Lugaži, which is the terminal of the Latvian railway lines. During the Cold War Valga was home to Valga air base.

The distance to Tartu is 89 km, Pärnu 144 km, Tallinn 245 km, Riga 175 km and Pskov 170 km.

[edit] Activity

Since 1944 a local newspaper "Valgamaalane" has been published (3 times a week). Since 2003 there has also been a local newspaper "Walk" (in the Russian language). There also is a local correspondence office of Estonian Television (Eesti Televisioon) and a local radio - "Raadio Ruut".

Valga has concluded several cooperation agreements. The nearest is an agreement (from the year 1995) with the neighbouring town of Valka. There are also cooperation agreements with Oakland, Maryland [1] (USA) and Östhammar Municipality (Sweden). There are long-term friendly relations with Hallsberg Municipality in Sweden and the towns of Lübz in Germany and Tornio in Finland.

Valga is developing quickly. Since 1996 the populace's quality of life has improved due to the renovation of several buildings, including the Central Library, Valga Stadium, the Museum, Valga Hospital, and the Culture and Hobby Centre. Step by step the schools and kindergartens are also being modernized. Since 2003 a new water treatment plant has remarkably improved the quality of water in the town.

In the private sector there have been extensive investments in trade, light industry, and forestry.

Valga Town Hall, built in 1865.
Valga Town Hall, built in 1865.
Valga central library.
Valga central library.
Valga train station, built in 1949.
Valga train station, built in 1949.

[edit] History

  • 1286: Valga (under name Walk) appears for the first time in the credit register of the city of Riga.
  • 1298, 1329, 1345: Valga suffers from looting raids made by Lithuanians who are led by Grand Duke Gediminas and Algirdas on the second and third occasions.
  • 1419 Walk becomes the seat of the Landtag of the Livonian Confederation.
  • 1481: A looting raid by Russians; the settlement burns down for the fourth time.
  • 1500: Valga, a settlement in the heart of Old Livonia that is not fortified, is chosen as the location for town assembly days 36 times up to 1500.
  • 1501: During another raid by Russians the settlement gets burnt down for the fifth time.
  • 1558: During the Livonian War the medieval settlement of Valga is completely destroyed.
  • 1584, 11 June: Valga is granted the same charter and byelaws as Riga by Stefan Batory, the King of Poland.
  • 1590, 17 April: The King of Poland, Sigismund III Vasa, ratifies the charter for the second time. Valga is granted its city arms.
  • 1600: The first town map, showing 42 house properties. The town is 7 km long and between 0.5 and 0.25 km wide.
  • 1626: After the Polish-Swedish War Valga becomes the subject of Sweden. On 6 March, King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden confirms the existing privileges.
  • 1710: As the result of the Great Northern War, Valga is subjected to Russian rule together with the rest of Estonia.
  • 1764, 5 October: Empress Catherine II confirms the town's privileges.
  • 1783: The district of Valga is formed during the Regency of Catherine II.
  • 1780: The first stone buildings are erected: a church, a school and county offices.
  • 1789: Land surveyor O.S. Engell drafts the map of Valga showing 76 plots with houses.
  • 1816: The building of St. John's Church is finished.
  • 1876: Walkscher Anzeiger, the first newspaper in Valga, is issued.
  • 1889: Valga Railway Station is opened. On 22 July the Tartu-Valga railway line is officially opened.
  • 1890, 16 December: The Valga Temperance Society is founded.
  • 1896: The Pärnu-Valga narrow-gauge railway is opened.
  • 1901, 7 December: Together with Latvians, Estonians succeed in winning the elections over Baltic Germans in Valga – the first occasion on Estonian territory. The chemist Johannes Märtson is elected mayor.
  • 1902: In the building of the Temperance Society the social society Säde is founded; Andres Alver, the county medical officer, is elected chairman. The Valga-Marienburg narrow-gauge railway is opened.
  • 1908: The Girls' Progymnasium is changed into the Gymnasium with Marta Pärna as principal.
  • 1909: The construction of the Säde building is begun (architect Georg Hellat).
  • 1917: A German zeppelin flies over the town and drops forty high-explosive bombs without hitting the main target, the railway station.
  • 1918, 11 January: The Council of Delegates of Valga County Workers, Soldiers and Landless Men gains power in the town. On 12 February the German Army occupies Valga.
  • 1919, 11 January: The Valga Estonian Gymnasium is opened at 22 Kesk Street. For the first time in the history of secondary education in Valga the teaching language is Estonian. At the end of January, 107 victims of Bolshevik acts of terror are found in five mass graves around Valga; 67 people are taken away as hostages. On 31 January the battle at Paju takes place and consequently Valga is freed from the Bolsheviks.
  • 1920, 1 July: The British envoy Colonel S. G. Tallents conclusively establishes the border between Estonia and Latvia. Valga proper, as far as Konnaoja and Luke graveyard, remains intact under Estonian rule.
  • 1921, 11 February: The decree of the Estonian government establishes the territory of Valga county. Valga becomes a county centre.
  • 1940, 17 August: The Soviet occupation begins and with it the mass deportations of Estonians and Latvians from Valga/Valka
  • 1941, 9 July: Valga is occupied by German troops.
  • 1944, 19 September: In the course of heavy fighting Valga is liberated from the German occupation of Estonia. It is immediately replaced by the Soviet occupation of Estonia.
  • 1988. The Valga Society for the Protection of Antiquities is founded. On 27 November, on the initiative of the Society, the beginning of the War of Liberation is commemorated at the memorial for those killed in the war.
  • 1989, 24 February: The first Estonian flag of the re-established independence period is hoisted on the flagpole of 12 Aia Street.
  • 1992, 24 May: The Russian army base in Valga is taken over, and later on becomes the border guard's post.
  • 1993, 17 October: The first free elections of the municipal council after the restoration of independence take place.
  • 1994, 31 January: On the 75th anniversary of the battle of Paju a memorial to it is opened. On 21-25 June, worldwide days of Valga county people take place.

[edit] External links


Coat of arms of Valga County Municipalities of Valga County
Urban municipalities: Tõrva | Valga
Rural municipalities: Helme | Hummuli | Karula | Otepää | Palupera | Puka | Põdrala | Sangaste | Taheva | Tõlliste | Õru