Discover the best top things to do in Riga Region, Latvia including Baldone White Castle, Pine trees of Rainis, House of the Black Heads, Riga Town Hall Square, Old City Riga (Vecriga), Jauniela, Salaspils Memorial Ensemble, Bikernieki Memorial, Rumbula Forest Memorial, House of Aspazija.
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5.0 based on 4 reviews
interesting modern sculpture, but you need a little background in Latvian poetry to appreciate the point. next to the beach, and surrounded by a little wall you can sit on and have a snack while contemplating how times change.
4.5 based on 1,780 reviews
Closed for Covid-19 at the moment. On the last Saturday of month - join open FREE guided tour at 13:00 on English! Get the 1h tour with guide for free, pay only the entrance fee! Pre-reservation is necessary on website or by e-mail. It is one of the most beautiful buildings in Riga, with a unique legacy of the Black Heads brotherhood that was established here at the end of the 14th century, along with the existing merchants’ guild. The young and joyful foreign merchants united in the brotherhood organized splendid events, later becoming honorable members of the local community. As time passed the house began to host visits of foreign kings and other noble guests and continues to fulfill this task up to today – concerts, balls, gala dinners and diplomatic receptions are frequently organized here. Now every visitor has the chance to explore the exhibition about the history and economic development of Riga City.
The original building was from the 13-14th Century. It was the home of a guild called the Black Heads, merchants, ship owners and foreigners in Riga. The building sustained damage during WWII and later rebuilt, after the fall of Communism.
4.5 based on 3,030 reviews
Well worth a visit to The House of Blackheads which has an intriguing history going back hundreds of years, plus Workd War2 and the Russian occupation
4.5 based on 7,115 reviews
This charming maze of narrow and crooked cobblestone streets is filled with a mixture of architectural styles including Nordic, Gothic, Renaissance, baroque and Jugendstil, plus such historic sites as the 13th-century Riga Castle, St. Peter's Church, the Swedish Gate and the Freedom Monument.
Visited Riga for a long weekend without any expectations. Now I’m convinced, it’s one of the greatest cities with a great architecture, a great atmosphere and just a great ambiance???????? Discover the different squares with a lot of restaurants and bars with live music. Look at the street artists making art with fire , the opera singer , the street music bands and so on.
4.5 based on 305 reviews
Jauniela is for sure a very lively street with its winding cobblestone street. This are can lead you into other streets. The street is narrow and I must advice to leave the uncomfortable high heels at home. Please wear comfy cushioned shoes for these roads. Jauniela has lots of charm and many people seem to love this street as well. It just has a lot of charm about it.
4.5 based on 148 reviews
This is another awe inspiring place. Once the location of a concentration camp, now an indellible reminder of the suffering experienc ed here and throught much of Europe during WWII. If you are near Riga, this is a must to visit. Make sure you gointo the museum, whcih appears simply as a wall, as you aproach.
4.5 based on 49 reviews
Very moving Holocaust Memorial in outskirts of city in forest area. Very little parking and hard to find following GPS and address, then you see the white arches and realize that you are there. As you walk from the road into a forested area the noise of the city goes away and the forest encloses the area. The rough stone markers are similar to those used at the Treblinka Holocaust Memorial and represent all the places that people were taken from. Might be good to go with others as there were some broken bottles and graffiti present and it is secluded.
4.5 based on 59 reviews
No memorial can do justice to the atrocities committed here or to the victims who were murdered, but as a memorial to remind the living of the worst that humans can do to humans, Rumbula is exceptional. The event itself is inconceivable. Row after row day after day from 30 November - 8 December 1941, in a well planned and executed conveyor belt of slaughter, innocent men, women and children were lined up and murdered coldly and methodically by the Nazis and their collaborators bullet by bullet layer upon layer in the open pits which became mass graves. Over those nine days 25,000 innocents were executed at Rumbula. How is it possible for humans to do this to other humans? Perhaps most haunting of all was climbing the stairs from the train track to the killing ground. My understanding is that the victims were force marched the 10 kilometers from the Riga Ghetto to Rumbula, with a few elderly or infirm trucked in, but these train tracks recalled for me the tracks leading to Auschwitz-Birkenau – built because the murderous methods deployed in the Baltics were not efficient enough. The descriptive information at the site is pretty spare. A couple of tombstone-like plaques at the entrance in Latvian, English, German, and Hebrew provide an overview of the massacre and the creation of the memorial, so reviewing the Wikipedia entry or another source for the horrifying details of this crime is valuable for those who want more. That said, the reverence of the site speaks volumes. The path through the woods to the memorial is both peaceful and foreboding. The memorial structure itself -- the Star of David topped by a menorah – commemorates the dead. The star is formed from stones engraved with the names of the slaughtered and the streets of the Riga Ghetto. The concrete bordered mass graves surrounding the memorial give you a small sense of the slaughter’s scale. We drove there on our way to Liepaja and missed the entrance because we did not know to look for the dark metal ensnaring-vine-like structure reaching out from the entrance to the edge of the highway at the turnoff, but our GPS gave us good directions. You can also get there by bus. The Rumbula Forest Memorial is truly a place for reflection on what we humans can do at our worst and what we must do to prevent such atrocities in the future.
4.5 based on 34 reviews
Easy walk from Dubulti railway station, free entry, beautifully restored, very nice staff. Some translations of Azpazija's work available in several languages. Good touchscreen info in the room behind the reception, too. Park your bicycles in the yard, though, inside the white fence.
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