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Mežaparks Lutheran Church

Churches in RigaEuropean church stubsLatvian building and structure stubs
Rīga, Mežaparka luterāņu baznīca 2002 11 03
Rīga, Mežaparka luterāņu baznīca 2002 11 03

Mežaparks Lutheran Church (Latvian: Mežaparka Evaņģēliski luteriskā baznīca) is a Lutheran church in Riga, the capital of Latvia. It is a parish church of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia. The church is situated at the address 28 Ezermalas Street. Worship is offered in both Latvian and Russian languages.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mežaparks Lutheran Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mežaparks Lutheran Church
Roberta Feldmaņa iela, Riga Mežaparks

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 57.0024 ° E 24.1732 °
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Roberta Feldmaņa iela 7
LV-1014 Riga, Mežaparks
Vidzeme, Latvia
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Rīga, Mežaparka luterāņu baznīca 2002 11 03
Rīga, Mežaparka luterāņu baznīca 2002 11 03
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Forest Cemetery, Riga
Forest Cemetery, Riga

Forest Cemetery (Latvian: Rīgas Meža kapi) is an 85 hectares (210 acres) large cemetery in the northwestern part of Riga, the capital of Latvia, between the neighbourhoods of Mežaparks and Čiekurkalns. Formally, the cemetery is divided between 1st Forest Cemetery, with entrance from Aizsaules Street, and 2nd Forest Cemetery, with entrance from Gaujas Street. In 1904, German Lutheran congregations in Riga inquired the Riga City Council for allotment of land for a cemetery in the Mežaparks neighbourhood. It was planned to become a new large cemetery after the Great Cemetery, that was established 1773 in Riga and had exhausted its potential. The prominent Baltic-German landscape architect Georg Kuphaldt was author of the original construction project presented 1908, which should have appeared as a park with a central via funeralis, with many small and lateral paths along the graves with low fences and small monuments. The Forest Cemetery was established 29 July 1910 following a decision made by the 3rd Imperial Duma, and it was inaugurated 19 June 1913.All burial ceremonies were conducted in a building erected 1913 after blueprints by the Baltic-German architect Wilhelm Neumann.During World War I, when the front closed in on Riga in 1916, the Forest Cemetery was receiving many fallen Latvian Riflemen. After a lengthy debate with local congregations, the Imperial Duma sanctioned the construction of a military cemetery, on land transferred from the Forest Cemetery, a cemetery that later was named Brothers' Cemetery.The Forest Cemetery has many sculptural memorials and tombstones created by notable sculptors. Many notable Latvian politicians, military, and public figures are buried at the Forest Cemetery.