Regions of Latvia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Historical regions of Latvia, together with Latvian cultural groups.
Historical regions of Latvia, together with Latvian cultural groups.

Latvia is divided into several historical and cultural regions.

The Latvian constitution used to recognize four distinct regions:

A fifth region is Sēlija (Selonia, Augšzeme), often considered a part of Semigallia. Selonia comprises the eastern part of the 1939 province of Semigallia, roughly corresponding to parts Aizkraukle, Daugavpils and Jēkabpils counties south of Daugava river. Traditional Selonia also includes a portion of north east Lithuania. Named after the Selonians.

In some cases, Kurzeme and Zemgale are combined into one region. This reflects the political division of Latvia between 1629 and 1917, when Kurzeme and Zemgale were together, first as the Duchy of Courland, then as the Courland Governorate in the Russian Empire while Vidzeme and Latgale were politically separate, both from Courland and one from another. From this perspective, there are three regions: Kurzeme (including Zemgale and Sēlija), Vidzeme and Latgale. This division of Latvia into three regions is no longer commonly used but it can be seen in the Coat of Arms of Latvia and the Monument of Freedom in Rīga both of which contain three stars: for Kurzeme, Vidzeme and Latgale, which were united into Latvia in 1918.