Latvia
Full Name | 42 Republic of Latvia | |
Alliance | Neutral or Non-Belligerent | |
Entry into WW2 | 16 Jun 1940 | |
Population in 1939 | 1,995,000 | |
Military Deaths in WW2 | 100,000 | |
Civilian Deaths in WW2 | 300,000 | |
- Civ Deaths from Holocaust | 66,000 |
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
ww2dbaseOn 18 Nov 1918, the People's Council of Latvia declared independence from Russia as Russia was engaged in a civil war. On 22 Sep 1921, Latvia was admitted into the League of Nations. On 5 Feb 1932, Latvia and the Soviet Union, which had supported Latvian independence during the Russian Civil War, signed a non-aggression treaty. Karlis Ulmanis, who had played a leadership role since the new nation's beginnings, staged a bloodless coup d'état on 15 May 1934 and established a nationalist dictatorship that would last into the start of the European War. On 1 Sep 1939, the day the European War began, Latvia announced that it would remain neutral in the conflict, but Germany and the Soviet Union had their own designs for Latvia's fate. On 5 Oct 1939, Latvia was forced to enter into a pact with the Soviet Union. In the spring of 1940, the Soviets attempted to rally a general strike which they had hoped would provide them an excuse to overthrow the Latvian government, but such a coup would not materialize. In Jun 1940, with the Soviet fleet blockading Latvian ports, Latvia was simply threatened with force, which it had no choice but to accept. A rigged election shortly after spelled the final end of independent Latvia. Prior to the country's fall, however, the Latvian government had granted emergency powers to Latvian diplomat Alfreds Bilmanis in the United States on 17 May 1940. Fellow Baltic States Lithuania and Estonia were threatened and taken at around the same time.
ww2dbaseThe Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic was established on 21 Jul 1940 with Augusts Kirhensteins at its helm, and all three Baltic States were annexed into the Soviet Union in the following month. Most western nations deemed the Soviet annexation illegal; Sumner Welles, the US Undersecretary of State, for example, publicly condemned the "devious process" by which "the political independence and territorial integrity of the three small Baltic republics were to be deliberately annihilated by one of their more powerful neighbors." The few months after the occupation of Latvia would be remembered as the Year of Horror (Baigais Gads), with the Soviets deporting somewhere between 20,000 and 30,000 and executing about 1,000. Among those deported were most members of the Latvian government, thus depriving the local population the leadership necessary to organize resistance.
ww2dbaseIn 1941, Germany and the Soviet Union, once allies, entered into war as Germany launched Operation Barbarossa. German troops entered the capital of Riga on 1 Jul 1941. The Germans were initially welcomed by the Latvian people, but they would soon find that the Germans were as brutal as the Soviets. News quickly spread of German massacres of Latvian Jews at Grobina, Durbe, Priekule, Asite, and Jelgava. While the mass execution on the beaches of Skede just north of Liepaja (during which about 700 Jews were executed in the span of about one week) would later become the symbol of the Holocaust in Latvia, the atrocities at Daugavpils which took place around the same time was larger in scale, seeing the deaths of more than a thousand Latvian Jews. About 7,000 civilians were forcibly deported from the Latgale suburbs of Riga, and a Jewish ghetto was set up in that area to house 23,000 Latvian Jews and 6,000 Jews from other European nations; the Daugavpils ghetto in southeastern Latvia held about 15,000 Jews. Between 1941 and 1944, Latvia was a province within the German Reichskommissariat Ostland territory. During this period, Latvia suffered 80,000 to 100,000 civilian deaths, about 66,000 of which were Jews.
ww2dbaseSoviet forces returned to Riga in 1944, and the mass deportations soon began again, whose chief goal was to ensure Soviet control of the Latvian population. By the end of 1945, about 120,000 Latvians were deported to labor camps; many of these "traitors of the people" would not survive to return.
ww2dbaseWith the German siege on Leningrad in northern Russia broken, Soviet troops in the region went on the offensive, reoccupying most of Latvia by the end of 1944 save an area in the Courland (Kurzeme) region of the country, where the surviving German troops there would fight until the very last day of the war.
ww2dbaseHaving been occupied by two neighboring powers during this period, both sides of the conflict saw Latvians in their ranks, roughly 200,000 in all, both volunteers and conscripts. Large numbers of Latvians also took up arms and joined nationalist groups that opposed both the German and Soviet occupiers. After the return the Soviets in 1944, thousands of fighters disappeared into the woods to continued the fight. Soviet forces would not be able to destroy the last group of resistance fighters until 1957, at a cost of 1,562 Soviet personnel killed and 560 wounded.
ww2dbaseLatvia would finally regain independence after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.
ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia
Last Major Update: Jul 2013
Events Taken Place in Latvia | ||
Annexation of the Baltic States | 15 Jun 1940 - 9 Aug 1940 | |
Operation Barbarossa | 22 Jun 1941 - 30 Sep 1941 | |
Discovery of Concentration Camps and the Holocaust | 24 Jul 1944 - 29 Apr 1945 |
Photographs
Latvia in World War II Interactive Map
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Visitor Submitted Comments
30 Mar 2017 02:31:57 AM
You could ask here. If he is alive they will give your details to him - https://www.arhivi.gov.lv/content.aspx?id=609&mainId=135&mainId=135
question:
I would like to find their relatives (father, brother, etc); his birth / marriage / death time; educational institution where he studied / finished; jobs; participation in public organizations; other information (a specific).
answer:
You must provide the following information about yourself:
name and surname;
Document certifying relationship to the person;
actual address, telephone number, email address or other means of communication through which you can communicate with.
As well, you should provide as exact initial details of the relatives:
name (if the name changed, when and in what previous name);
Date and place of birth;
the last known living and / or working place;
details of his parents, spouses descendants or other relatives;
another you have any information that can help find the documents for the relatives.
18 May 2017 07:14:43 AM
i don't get it.
13 Jul 2019 06:14:37 PM
I'm trying to help an elderly Latvian neighbor learn the fate of her Father, a Latvian Soldier "rounded-up" by the Soviets in Riga 1940-1941, and either in mass grave or deported to Siberia or Camp. She was born 1937, then during conflict was sent to America with a group of children, leaving form Germany I believe, abt 1949-1950.
Father: Alberts Alfreds Smits born 15 Sep 1907 Riga, Latvia (930s-1940s , Latvian Army)
Spouse: Elisabeth Antonina Hedwig Von Stromberg 03 Dec 1910 Rava, Poland (Married Nov 1935, Riga) Possibly her Mother died 1950 and is buried in Wilhemshaven, Ger, but no confirmation.
8 Mar 2022 05:53:20 AM
What were the effects on Latvia after the war
8 Nov 2022 10:08:03 AM
Feel the need to comment something for timeline
29 May 2023 05:04:33 AM
My father, Arvids Auzins, brother, a resistance fighter against the Russians, who was dying of injuries sustained from the excrement Russian invaders, advised the four of us to get out in 1944, and after a long journey we finally arrived in Australia sailing from Naples in Sept. 1949 on board Dundalk Bay.
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.
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Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, 16 Mar 1945
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9 Jan 2016 04:48:44 PM
I am looking into the condition my farther and his brother Augusts went through. I am told he also had a brother John and sister Anna still in Latvia...can you help me in my desperate search for my father's struggle! He was a physician in Riga...