Riga Governorate (Latvian: Rīgas guberņa, Russian: Рижская губерния, romanizedRizhskaya guberniya) was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) and one of the Baltic governorates of the Russian Empire, which existed from 1713 to 1783. The Province of Riga was formed to replace the Eastern Provinces of the Kingdom of Sweden in 1713. After the conquest of the regions of Ingermanland, Livonia and Estonia by Sweden in the Great Northern War in 1710. In 1713, the Provinces of Riga and Tallinn were separated into separate administrative units, and in 1713–1714, the organization and management of the Province of Riga were also defined.[1]

Riga Governorate
Рижская губерния
Governorate of the Russian Empire
1713–1783
CapitalRiga
History 
• Established
17 July 1713
• Disestablished
3 July 1783
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Swedish Livonia
Riga Viceroyalty
Map showing the Reval Governate, Riga Governate and Province of St Petersburg in 1720-1727

History

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On July 2, 1731, with the approval of Empress Anna I and the ukase of the Governing Senate, the island of Osel (modern Saaremaa) received the status of a special region. Saaremaa remained a region of special status until the ukase of the Russian Empress Catherine II, which on February 21, 1765 liquidated Saaremaa as an independent province.[2]

The Provinces of Riga and Tallinn were merged under the leadership of Governor General George Browne in 1775. The All-Russian Provincial Act of 1775 was extended to the Baltic provinces and on July 3, 1783, the Riga Governorate ceased to exist, handing over much of its affairs to the Riga Viceroyalty.[3]

Administrative division

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In 1721 the Province of Riga was divided into 2 provinces:

In 1726 the Smolensk Governorate was transformed into an independent governorate. As a result, the Province of Riga was redistributed into 5 Provinces:

  • Riga province
  • Windau province
  • Dorpat province
  • Pernov province
  • Ezel Province

At the end of the eighteenth century. the province consisted of 9 counties:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ėnt︠s︡iklopedii︠a︡ Riga. P. Jērāns, G. Asaris (Izd. 1 ed.). Riga: Glav. red. ėnt︠s︡iklopediĭ. 1989. ISBN 5-89960-002-0. OCLC 22208908.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ Magazin (1773). Magazin für die neue Historie und Geographie, angelegt von A.F. Büsching (in German).
  3. ^ Ėnt︠s︡iklopedii︠a︡ Riga. P. Jērāns, G. Asaris (Izd. 1 ed.). Riga: Glav. red. ėnt︠s︡iklopediĭ. 1989. ISBN 5-89960-002-0. OCLC 22208908.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)