The history of Latvia has been one of centuries of foreign rule.
In the Middle Ages, the area that would become Latvia was populated by four Baltic tribes. These tribes were pagan until the 13th century, one of the last regions in Europe to become Christian. In the 11th century, German missionaries made peaceful attempts to convert the region; but as soon as they left, the new converts jumped into rivers to wash off their baptism.
In the early 13th century, with the support of the Pope, German and Danish invaders launched the Livonian Crusades, to convert the Latvians by force. Bishop Albert of Buxhoevden, with the permission of the Pope, founded the Livonian Brothers of the Sword, which merged with the Teutonic Order in 1237. By this time, they had conquered all of the Latvian tribal confederations and the region was Christianised.
Subsequently, the Germans formed a Livonian Confederation, which ruled the region for more than three centuries. German rule was divided between various factions: the Teutonic Order, the Archbishopric of Riga, and the free city of Riga which, established by the German invaders, became an important trading city and a member of the Hanseatic League. At the same time, indigenous Latvians were marginalised from political and economic power, and generally did not benefit from the increased prosperity brought by Baltic Sea trade. Latvian nobles either became part of the German ruling order or were marginalised, while the peasantry were forced into serfdom.
In 1561, Latvia was partitioned. The south went to Poland-Lithuania, while Sweden took Riga and the north-east. The west of Latvia was a semi-autonomous duchy, ruled by Duke Kettler, who had colonies in Africa.
In 1710, following victory in the Great Northern War, Riga passed from Sweden to Russia. By the end of the 18th century, all of Latvia was part of the Russian Empire.
In the late 19th century, Latvia saw a national revival. Latvian serfs were emancipated early in the century and with the freeing of serfs across the Russian Empire in 1861 free peasants could finally buy the land of their ancestors. Newspapers were printed in Latvian for the first time while Latvians developed an interest in their history, folk traditions, and ethnic culture. In the Russian Revolution of 1905, the idea of a Latvian state was floated – but as the revolution was put down, quickly abandoned.
Following the Russian Revolution of 1917, Latvia declared independence. However, parts of the region were occupied by Germany, and Latvia would become front line in the Russian Civil War between the Bolsheviks and the ‘White’ faction, aided by the Germans. After the war, a Latvian-Soviet peace treaty was signed, and the Soviet Union recognised Latvia’s independence.
It wouldn’t last long. The Nazi-Soviet pact of 1939 gave Latvia to the Soviets, and the country was soon occupied by the Red Army. This was followed by a Nazi occupation in 1941, tragically leading to the death or deportation of over a 100,000 Latvians, most of them Jewish.
When World War Two ended, the Soviets marched back in. Latvia became part of the Soviet Union for the next forty years. The loosening of Soviet rule in the late 1980s saw the emergence of a Latvian independence movement. In 1989, two million Latvians, Lithuanians, and Estonians formed a human chain, 650 kilometres long, that stretched from Vilnius in Lithuania, through Riga, to Tallinn in Estonia.
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Latvia declared its independence.