Cultural Heritage Centre "Tīnūži Manor" Museum
The Cultural Heritage Centre ‘Tīnūži Manor’ is located in Ogre municipality, Tīnūži village, 7 km from the cities of Ogre and Ikšķile. The first written evidence about the manor dates back to the 16th century. Until the mid-18th century it was considered an economic production unit with small and insignificant buildings. But over time it grew into a large farm. During World War I, battles between the Russian and German armies took place here, and the Latvian Riflemen were also involved. During the War of Independence Tīnūži manor was used as the headquarters and armoured car park of the 1st Valmiera Infantry Regiment of the Latvian Army. In 1932, the manor was given to the Union of the Latvian War Invalids, which provided accommodation and care for war veterans. During World War II (in 1943) the German Army unit FAT 212 was transferred from Estonia to Tīnūži manor. It was a saboteur unit that prepared soldiers to fight the Red Army. Latvian soldiers were also trained in the arts of intelligence gathering, guerrilla warfare tactics and sabotage. The lord house of Tīnūži manor was destroyed when the Red Army was moving towards Riga. Nowadays it is a place with a beautiful landscape and historical buildings on the banks of the Little Jugla River. Exhibits dedicated to historical events, including the ones concerning the Latvian Riflemen, can be seen at the Cultural Heritage Centre ‘Tīnūži manor’.
Used sources and references:
Turčinskis, Z. Latgalian saboteurs trained at the German Abwehr Group 212 reconnaissance-saboteur school. Journal of the Latvian Institute of History, No. 4, 2004.
Felder, BM The “Wildcat” Company. The SS Hunting Association East and the Preparations of Anti-Soviet Partisans in Latvia (1944–1945). Book: Totalitarian Occupancy Regimes in Latvia 1940–1964. (Articles of the Latvian Historians' Commission, vol. 13). Riga: Latvian History Institute Publishing House, 2004.
Lancmanis, I. Once upon a time on the Linden Hill. Art, No. 5, 2006
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