Subate

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Subate
 
The Old Jewish Cemetery in Subate
City rights 1917
Location of Subate within Latvia
Location 56°01′N, 25°54′E
Other names German: Subbath
District Daugavpils District
Population 1,222
Postal code LV-5471
Calling code +371 54
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)


Subate (pronunciation ), population 964, is a city in Latvia near the border with Lithuania. Subate is located in Selonia, the eastern part of the Zemgale region, 40 km west of Daugavpils.

In 1570 Gotthard Kettler, the first Duke of Courland and Semigallia, granted the Baltic German Plater family, the dominant nobles throughout southeastern Latvia, an estate at the lake of Subate, and Alt-Subbath (Old Subbath) was established. After the Counter-Reformation, the Plater-Sybergs (Polish: Plater-Zyberk) converted to Catholicism, founding a mission with the intention of converting their serfs, and the Lutherans moved across the lake in protest, creating Neu-Subbath (New Subbath); the two towns were joined in 1894. By the late 19th century Jews composed about half of the population, and in 1914 there were ca. 2300 inhabitants. The town traded primarily in Lithuanian flax, but this trade languished after World War I. Almost all of Subate's Jews were brutally murdered in the Stahlecker phase of the Holocaust in 1941.

[edit] References

  • Arveds Švābe, ed.: Latvju enciklopēdija. Stockholm: Trīs Zvaigznes, 1952-1953.
  • Shtetl Focus: Subate. Retrieved 25. II. 2006.