The beginning, course and end of the battles of Cēsis

Attēls ņemts no 1926. gadā publicētās grāmatas "Ziemeļlatvijas un Cēsu kauju piemiņai, 1919-1926". Kartes autors ir Voldemārs Ozols. Grāmata publiski pieejama LNB interneta krātuvē https://ej.uz/ddzx

The victory in the battles of Cēsis was destined to become a turning point in the struggle of Latvians and Estonians for the independence of their country. This victory crossed the line between Andriev Niedra's government and German General Riediger von der Goltz's plans to conquer the Baltics. Instead, the Provisional Government of Kārlis Ulmanis resumed its activities in Liepāja.

 

Events in Latvia before the battles of Cēsis

After more than four years of World War II fighting and the Bolshevik coup in Russia, on November 18, 918, a week after the conclusion of the World War I ceasefire, the state of Latvia was proclaimed in Riga. Kārlis Ulmanis became the head of the Provisional Government. The territory of Latvia was devastated, out of 2.5 million inhabitants, about one million were refugees in Russia.

Latvia and part of Estonia were occupied by the Germans, but on the eastern border stood Bolshevik troops, which, after the annulment of the Brest Peace Treaty of November 13, 1918, attacked with the aim of conquering the former tsarist Russian outlying provinces of Latvia and Estonia. On December 17, the Bolsheviks entered Valka and proclaimed the Soviet Republic of Latvia, another group of troops went to Riga via Daugavpils. German troops did not show serious resistance to the Bolsheviks.

To save the situation, on 7 December the Interim Government signed an agreement with the German government to set up a joint force to fight the Bolsheviks. The agreement provided for the creation of 18 Latvian jewelry, 3 Latvian batteries, 7 German jewelry and 2 batteries, with a total of 6,000 soldiers and 870 horses. The Germans only partially complied with the agreement, mainly by forming their own units, but without providing Latvians with weapons. Meanwhile, the communist troops occupied Latgale and Vidzeme in less than a month and approached Riga.

The representative of the German government A. Vinnigs, contrary to his earlier promises and the will of the allies to delay the occupation of the city, announced that the German troops would not defend Riga. On January 4, 1919, the Bolsheviks entered Riga. Two Latvian companies, led by Lieutenant Colonel Oskars Kalpaks, retreated in the direction of Kurzeme. The caretaker government moved to Liepaja. At the end of January, Bolshevik troops were stopped at Venta, about 100 km east of Liepaja. On February 1, 1919, German General Riediger von der Goltz arrived in Liepaja from Germany. He was entrusted with the command of the Landeswehr (consisting of the Baltic German bodyguards and the iron division formed of German volunteers) and the Latvian Separate Battalion in the fight against the Bolsheviks.

Thanks to the efforts of the Provisional Government, the Separate Battalion eventually became a brigade. The offensive against the Bolsheviks, which began on March 3, 1919, improved the situation on the front, and the communist-led troops gradually had to retreat towards Riga.

In Estonia, the situation was much better: the casualties in World War II were much lower, the influence of communist ideas and Finland's support after the initial failures led to a counterattack and in January 1919 to clear its territory of the Red Army.

Estonian troops had the opportunity to participate in the liberation of Northern Latvia from the Bolsheviks. On February 18, 1919, an agreement was concluded between the Government of Estonia and the Provisional Government of Latvia, which gave Captain Jorģis Zemitāns, the Military Authorizing Officer of the Provisional Government, and Markus Gailītis, an engineer for civil affairs, the opportunity to organize Latvian troops in Estonia. The 1st Latvian Valmiera and 2nd Cēsis Infantry Regiments were formed in Tartu (now Tartu). This laid the foundations for the Northern Latvian Brigade, which was operationally subordinated to the Commander of the Estonian Army's 2nd Division.

On April 16, at a time when the first success in the fight against the Bolsheviks was felt, the Germans made a coup in Liepaja, overthrowing the legitimate Provisional Government, which had to seek refuge on the steamer "Saratov". The Germans managed to form a puppet government led by the pastor and writer Andriev Niedra.

On May 22, 1919, German units liberated Riga from the Bolsheviks. A day later, a brigade of Colonel Jānis Balozs arrived in the city, which stopped the massacres of civilians by the Germans.

Pēteris Stučka's Bolshevik government and troops fled to Latgale, because in May the combined Estonian-Latvian forces had liberated the northern Latvian border from the Bolsheviks and, starting from Ainaži, Rūjiena, Valka and Alūksne, moved to Valais via Valmiera. On June 1 and 2, the Cēsis Infantry Regiment, led by Commander Krišjānis Berkis, arrived in Cēsis. It seemed that the Northern Latvian brigade, the Estonians, the Landesweig, and the Jānis Balozis Southern Brigade had one goal - to continue the fight with the Bolsheviks and to expel them from Latvia. However, instead of moving from Riga to the East and persecuting the Bolsheviks, the Landeswehr and the German Iron Division turned north - towards the combined Estonian-Latvian forces in Vidzeme.


Battle of Cesis

German General Riediger, Count von der Goltz, planned not only to abolish the independent states of Latvia and Estonia, but to go to Petrograd to restore the Russian monarchy and later revenge the Entente countries for the defeat of Germany in World War I.

The German forces did not go in the direction of Rēzekne-Daugavpils, but on June 2 entered Ieriķi station (12 km from Cēsis) and demanded a free road to Cēsis. The brigade of Northern Latvia, in contact with the Commander-in-Chief of the Estonian Army Johan Laidoner, refused to allow the Germans into Cēsis. On June 3, two Landeswehr squadrons entered Cēsis. Thanks to the actions of the Chief of Staff of the Northern Latvia Brigade Voldemārs Ozols, the Germans were besieged and left Cēsis without fighting on June 5. Between Cēsis and Ieriķi, the Germans attacked an Estonian armored train. The battles of Cēsis began, which can be divided into two stages.

On June 6, at 3:00 a.m., Landeswehr launched a rapid attack backed by strong artillery. The 7 km plateau front had to be defended by three less trained ornaments of the 2nd Cēsis Infantry Regiment and three ornaments formed during the last two days, one of which was a school ornament - boys aged 16-18, supported by two Estonian armed trains. After 10 hours of fighting, the Latvian troops could not withstand the triple German superiority and retreated to the right bank of the Rauna River, leaving Cēsis. On June 8, the Estonian sections (Regiments 6 and 9) launched a counterattack, which failed. The attack on Rauna Bridge launched by the Landesver on June 9 was also unsuccessful. On June 10, a mission of Anglo-American allies intervened in the conflict between the two sides. The battle was suspended for 10 days. The second stage of the battle of Cēsis began with the ultimatum of Landesver Commander Major A. Fletcher to the Commander-in-Chief of the Estonian Army J. Laidoner - to withdraw Estonian troops to the ethnographic borders of Latvia. The Estonian Command did not respond to this ultimatum, as, according to the Allies, the Landesvere's representatives were scheduled to attend the talks in Valka on 20 June.

The battles began on the right bank of the Gauja at noon on June 19, when near Vidriži the front parts of the Iron Division collided with the scouts of the 9th Estonian Regiment. On June 20, at 6.30 pm, the commander of the Estonian Division III, Ernest Peders, ordered the start of hostilities against the Landeswehr.

However, on the night of June 20-21, the division headquarters received a report that German main forces had launched an attack on the left bank of the Gauja, from Cēsis to Jaunrauna and Veselava, and desperate fighting was taking place at Rauna Bridge, Lode Station and Liepa Manor.

On the morning of June 21, Landeswehr managed to break the front between the 2nd Cēsis Regiment and the 3rd Estonian Regiment. In the vicinity of Jaunrauna, the left wing of the 2nd Cēsis Regiment had to retreat. The course of the battle was significantly changed by the Kuperjanov partisan battalion commanded by Captain Unta. Landing from the train, it switched to the counterattack from Lode station in the direction of Liepa manor.

J. Kuprejanov's battalion, based on the batteries of an armored train and Latvian cannons, fought the Germans all day and in the evening occupied Liepa manor. Despite this Estonian guerrilla struggle, the Landeswehr managed to bring in enough troops to break (about 6 km), which was divided into three parts. One, in the direction of Jaunrauna, went to Lode station, where he collided with the aforementioned J. Kuperjanov battalion. The second part went further to Skangaļi manor, but German scouts even to Mūrmuiža (10 km from Valmiera); thus endangering the movement of armored trains from Valka to Cēsis. The third part, bypassing the right wing of the 3rd Estonian Regiment, went in the direction of Rauna. The Estonians stopped this German group in the Rauna highlands.

A dramatic situation developed in the area of Skangaļi manor, where there were a lot of Landesvere forces. The situation was saved by an echelon with fighters of Kalev Battalion and 1st Regiment II Battalion, who arrived on June 22 at 3.00 am. 3 km north of Lode station, the soldiers disembarked and, armored train no. Based on 2 landings, went in the direction of Skangaļi manor. At 6.30, these forces broke into the manor, but after a short time, the Landeswehr seized Skangaļi manor. German losses - 60 dead. The number of fallen, injured, and injured people in Kalevė was 62. Landeswere began to retreat in the direction of Cēsis. A few kilometers away, at the Start, the Germans lost another 31 dead. The rest of the Estonian-Latvian part also engaged in active hostilities. The guerrillas of the J. Kuperjanov Battalion continued their attacks in the direction of Jaunrauna, cutting off the retreat of 3,000 Germans from Skangaļi. It ended on a decisive day in the historic battle. The enemy was defeated in the center.

In the late evening of June 22, N. Riekk, the Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Estonia, issued a directive:

"We must not allow the enemy to organize and regroup after the blow of two days of fighting. The defeat of the enemy must be continued and occupied by Cesis. ”

Thus, June 23 was marked by the attack of the Estonian-Latvian joint forces on both banks of the Gauja.

At 7.30 Cēsis was captured, at 8.00 the 6th Estonian Regiment on the right bank of the Gauja also attacked. In the evening of the same day, the enemy was shot down 50 km from Cesis to Inčukalns. On June 26, German forces were also expelled from these positions to the outskirts of Riga. On July 3, under pressure from the Allies, a ceasefire was signed in Strazdumuiža, which saved the Germans from complete disaster and gave them the opportunity to start fighting the new Latvian state under the Avalov-Bermont flag again in October. Today we can say with confidence that in the battles of Cēsis, Latvians fought for the independence of Estonia and Estonians for Latvia.


The role of the countries that won the First World War - the USA, England, France in the creation of the free states of Latvia and Estonia

The right of self-determination declared by the Allies was intended to destroy the adversaries - the German, Austro-Hungarian, Turkish empires, and to create difficulties in the German-occupied territory of Eastern Europe, but it was not intended to crush themselves and the Russian Empire. There was no unity among the Allies - England, France and the United States - regarding the status of Latvia and Estonia. Only for a short time, until December 31, 1918, the British supported the independence of Russia's border lands.

It was in the interests of the Americans and the French to rebuild the Russian Empire in order to preserve their deposited capital. As a result of Allied pressure, the British government decided to end active support for the Provisional Governments of Russia's border states, using them only in anti-Soviet and anti-German combinations. We can justify this with the decision of the Entente of 26 May 1919 on the recognition of the autonomy of the Baltic nations within the Russian Empire.

Only when the Germans in Latvia became unmanageable to the Allies (on May 23 and 24 in Liepaja the Germans arrested Entente officers and instructors), after the discussions in Liepaja on June 5-7, the Allies decided to use the Latvian-Estonian national armed forces to restrain the Germans. This was also necessary because the German attack on the combined forces had stopped the persecution of the Bolsheviks, and it was not in the interest of the Entente. On June 22, the German National Council decided to sign a peace treaty with the Entente. Thus, the Estonians and Latvians, fighting for their own interests, had done a valuable service to the Entente, preventing the German attempt to take over absolute power in the Baltics. It was not until June 25 that the Entente's top leadership decided that the Germans should no longer be supported. On June 28, the Germans signed the humiliating Treaty of Versailles.


Latvia 1919 - different governments during the War of Independence

The government of the Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic, led by Pēteris Stučka and supported by the Red Army, was located in the territory of Latvia. The goal of P. Stučka's government is to liberate the territory of the newly founded state and strengthen the Soviet power here.

The Provincial Government of Andrieva Niedra, based on the German Landeswere and the Iron Division, was located in Kurzeme. The aim of this government was to expel the Bolsheviks from Latvia, to conquer as much territory as possible and to retain German power in the Baltics.

The third - the Provisional Government of Latvia led by Kārlis Ulmanis - had found refuge on the steamer "Saratov" on April 16 after a coup organized by the Germans. The Southern Latvian Brigade in Kurzeme, commanded by Jānis Balozs, and the Northern Latvian Brigade in the northern part of Latvia, commanded by Colonel Jorģis Zemitāns, remained loyal to the government of K. Ulmanis. Politically, both brigades were loyal to the Provisional Government of Latvia, but militarily, the Southern Latvian Brigade was subordinate to General von der Golz, who also commanded Landeswehr and the Iron Division, while the Northern Latvian Brigade was subordinate to the Commander-in-Chief of the Estonian Army, General Johan Laidoner.

 
Wrote down this story: Tālis Pumpuriņš, Cēsu Vēstures un mākslas muzejs
Used sources and references:

Tālis Pumpuriņš, Cēsis History and Art Museum
Historical materials of Edgar Anderson

 
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Related objects

Victory monument in Cēsis

The Victory Monument to Latvians and Estonians killed in the Battles of Cēsis is located in the city of Cēsis, on Vienības Square. In honour of the participants of the 1919 Battles of Cēsis, on 22 June 1924, the first stone was laid for the Victory Monument as sketched by architect Pauls Kundziņš, using funds donated by the people. During the Soviet occupation regime, on the night of 25 March 1951, the monument was blown up and taken down completely. A monument to Lenin, created by sculptor Kārlis Jansons, stood on the former Victory (Unity) Square from 1959 to 1990. In 1997, Māris Niklass, chairperson of the Cēsis District Council, managed to involve Estonian state institutions in the restoration of the monument. The material needed for the construction of the monument, Saaremaa dolomite, was received from Estonia as a gift. On 22 June 1998, during the celebrations of the 79th anniversary of the Battles of Cēsis, the first stone of the monument to be restored was laid on Vienības Square. A ceremony to unveil the restored Victory Monument took place in Cēsis on 15 November 1998 (author: architect Imants Timermanis). Information about the Victory Monument is available in the ‘Cēsis and the Latvian War of Independence’ exhibit of the Cēsis History and Art Museum, in the New Castle.

Monument commemorating the Cēsis battles

The monument to the Estonian and Latvian soldiers who died in the Battles of Cēsis is located in Priekuļi municipality, Liepā, about 1 kilometre south of the Lode Railway Station, on the side of Rūpnīcas street. The first stone of the monument was laid on 22 September 1929, and the monument was unveiled on 11 August 1935. Based on a sketch by Sculptor Augusts Julla who lived in Jullas, Liepa parish, and made of limestone from the village of Allaži, the monument is a high-relief depiction of a peasant soldier leaning on a plough with one hand and a raised sword in the other. The death mask of the sculptor’s father Jānis Julla was used to create the face of the sculpture. According to Aivars Vilnis, a researcher of the history of Liepa parish, a bird’s eye view of the monument reveals that the base of and the path and stairs leading to the monument form the shape of an arrow facing Liepa Manor (Lindenhoff) in the direction of German positions during the Battles of Cēsis. There is doubt, of course, as to whether this was truly the author’s intention at the time; however, it certainly enriches our interpretation of the monument today. Next to the monument are the only natural sandstone arches in Latvia known as ‘Lielā Ellīte’ (‘Liepas Ellīte’ or the Devil’s Kiln).

Cēsis history and art museum in the New Castle of Cēsis

The Cēsis History and Art Museum is located in the very centre of the Old Town of Cēsis, in the New Castle. The museum holds a permanent exhibit of history and interiors named ‘Cēsis, a Symbol of Latvian History’, with two thematic sections: the exhibit ‘Red-White-Red Flag in the History of Cēsis and Latvia’ explains the history of the Latvian national flag from the 13th to 20th centuries, the approved national symbol, the flags of Latvian rifle battalions and the traditions of using national colours during the Latvian War of Independence. The exhibit ‘Cēsis and the Latvian War of Independence’ focuses on the founding of the Cēsis Company in December 1918, the joint battle efforts of Estonians and Latvians in the 1919 Battles of Cēsis, the time when, during the Bermondt Affair, Cēsis served as the temporary capital of Latvia for a short time, as well as the history of the Cēsis Victory Monument. In an escape room named ‘Legends of the Battles of Cēsis’, the participants have one hour to find their way out by solving puzzles, making connections and finding hidden objects. The Cēsis Company, one of the first units of the Latvian Armed Forces, was established on 8 December 1918 in Cēsis Castle by Senior Lieutenant Artūrs Jansons. The museum’s exhibit features a memorial plaque dedicated to the Cēsis Company, unveiled on 8 December 1933 at the Cēsis New Castle, which, at the time, served as the headquarters of the 8th Daugavpils Infantry Regiment and the garrison officers’ club.

Monument for students of the Cēsis Regiment

The monument to the soldiers of the Cēsis Regiment Students’ Company who died in the Battles of Cēsis is located in the city of Cēsis, near the intersection of Palasta and Bērzaines streets. The construction of the monument was proposed by the Soldiers’ Association of the Cēsis Regiment Students’ Company. The monument was unveiled on 26 May 1938. The monument is based on the idea sketched by artist Jānis Rozenbergs, a former soldier of the company. Placed on a metre-high limestone pedestal, the 1.8-metre copper sculpture of a soldier dressed in a school student’s uniform was created by sculptor Rūdolfs Āboltiņš and coppersmith Jānis Zibens. An owl, a symbol of wisdom and knowledge, lies at the soldier’s feet, squatting on and protecting the books of a student who went to war. The sculpture was demolished during the Soviet re-occupation in 1952. A monument named the Komsomol Flag Bearer by sculptor Kārlis Jansons was erected near its former location in 1957. Placed near its historic site, the restored monument was unveiled on 11 November 1992. At the same time, in 1992, a monument to the Komsomol, which had been erected by the occupation regime, was taken down.

Monument to the students' ornaments at the battlefield

On the side of the Cēsis-Āraiši highway, near the former Livu parish.

A monument dedicated to the ornament of volunteers of the Cēsis Regiment, who took part in the battles of Cēsis in 1919, can be seen.
The monument was unveiled on May 29, 1930 near the former Livu parish.
The project of the monument was developed by the former volunteer of the school ornament K.Dzirkalis, the installation works were performed by A.Sproģis firm in Cēsis.
Bronze details according to the author's drawing were created by M.Pluka, they were cast at V.Minūta's factory in Riga. After World War II, the monument was destroyed.
Restored on June 6, 1989, the authors of the restored monument are sculptors A. Jansons and M. Balttiņa, architect I. Timermanis.
Later, the bronze sword and plate were removed for safety reasons and replaced with wooden parts.

Memorial stone in the battles of Cēsis near the fallen Latvian and Estonian soldiers

Located in Priekuli Parish, on the side of the Cēsis-Valmiera highway near the bridge over Rauna.

A memorial stone with a granite memorial to the soldiers killed in the battles of Cēsis, made by stonemason Voldemārs Koltovs, can be seen.
Discovered in 2004, when the 85th anniversary of the Battle of Cēsis was celebrated.
A memorial stone to 110 Estonian and 44 Latvian soldiers killed in battles on the banks of the Rauna and Gauja banks.
The 6th Regiment of the 3rd Estonian Division (Commander K.Tallo), the 3rd Regiment (Commander J. Krūss) and the 2nd Cēsis Regiment of the Northern Latvia Brigade (Commander K.Berķis) fought heroically in the battles near Rauna and Gauja.

The first monument to the Battle of Cēsis and the fallen Estonian soldiers

Located next to the Veselava cemetery chapel.

The first monument to the Battle of Cēsis and the fallen Estonian soldiers was unveiled on August 5, 1923.
The first President of the Republic of Latvia Jānis Čakste and the Estonian Ambassador to Latvia Jūlijs Saljema took part in its opening.

16 Estonian soldiers were buried in the cemetery, who fell in June 1919 in the battles of Cēsis with the Baltic Landesver and the Iron Division. Four of them were later reburied in their homeland. The monument was built on donations collected by locals. It was made by craftsman Dāvis Gruzde according to the design of Kārlis Bierņš, the owner of Ķikuri houses.

Monument to the fallen soldiers of the Cēsis Regiment

Located in Jaunrauna cemetery in Priekuli parish.

A monument to six soldiers of the 2nd (5th) Cēsis Infantry Regiment who fell in the Battle of Cēsis near Jaunrauna Manor on June 21 and 22, 1919, five of whom were buried in Jaunrauna Cemetery, but the sixth was transferred to the family cemetery.
On August 24, 1924, a monument made of local granite was unveiled at the O. Zeviško (formerly R. Teica) quarry in Riga. The monument is designed as an oak trunk, the branches of which have been cut, but the roots are still reaching the ground. The bluntly trunked trunk is crowned by a granite cross, imitating planted oak twigs.

Cesis Brothers Cemetery

Located in Cēsis Lejas Cemetery, Lenču Street 15, Cēsis.

One of the most important memorial sites of the First World War and the War of Independence in Cēsis is the Brothers' Cemetery in the Lower Cemetery.
The cemetery is the monument of the Brethren's Cemetery, built in 1927 by the artist and thinker of Cēsis Augustus Julla (1872-1958), dedicated to the soldiers buried in the Brothers' Cemetery from 1915 to 1920.

About 200 soldiers are buried in the Brothers Cemetery of Cēsis Lower Cemetery. Among them, an unknown number of Latvian riflemen and Russian soldiers killed in the First World War, as well as soldiers of German (10), Polish and other nationalities. During the Latvian Liberation War, 22 fallen soldiers of the 5th (2nd) Cēsis Infantry Regiment, as well as 11 freedom fighters who fell in other Latvian army units, were buried in these cemeteries. 2 Estonians, 15 victims of Bolsheviks and also Latvian Red Riflemen are buried in the Brothers' Cemetery.

Monument for students of the Viljandi Regiment

The monument to the soldiers of the Viljandi Students’ Company who fell near Stalbe is located by the intersection of the Riga-Limbaži road, after making a turn onto the Stalbe-Stūrīši road, which leads to the Pārgauja Municipal Council (to the right). Latvian and Estonian inscriptions on the granite memorial read: ‘On 19-21 June 1919, during the Battles of Stalbe, the 6th Regiment Viljandi Students’ Company repelled the attack of the Germans’. The monument was unveiled on 19 June 2009. Based on the idea conceived by Mareks Niklass, the monument was created by stonemason Voldemārs Koltovs. The 6th Estonian Regiment fought the Baltic Landeswehr and the Iron Division during the Battles of Cēsis near Stalbe. The Germans tried to break the front line in the area of the Stalbe Manor but were forced to retreat after two days of failed attempts. Every year, Lāčplēsis Day celebrations in Stalbe begin with a torchlight procession to the monument devoted to the soldiers of the Viljandi Students’ Company.

Monument in memory of the fallen soldiers of the Latvian Liberation War

The monument is located next to Limbaži Sv. St. John's Lutheran Church, Lībiešu Street 2. There is a memorial to the fallen soldiers of Limbaži and the surrounding area and to Lieutenant General Vilis Gelbe (1890-1919), who fell in the battle against the Germans on June 19, 1919 in Vidriži.
The monument of Lieutenant General Viļis Gelbe can be seen in the Limbaži cemetery in Jūras Street.

Monument to the sea lieutenant, L.k.o.k. Vilis Gelb (1890-1919)

Located in Limbažu Jūras iela cemetery, Jūras iela 56, Limbaži

The monument opened on September 10, 1922 by the then President of Latvia Jānis Čakste, on which the dedication of the poet Viļas Plūdonis to Vilis Gelb is read:

"Compatriots who pass by me, light up in the love of the fatherland,
for the beloved fatherland, I pledge my life."

Vilis Gelbe (1890-1919) was born in Kurzeme, Zemīte parish, but he is also closely related to the Limbaži side, because at the beginning of the Latvian War of Independence, he returned to Latvia from St. Petersburg and joined the North Latvian Brigade.

In May 1919, V. Gelbi commanded Limbaži, he became the military commandant of the area and was able to inspire local men and also very young guys to join the army.

V. Gelbe's activity at that time in Limbaži and its surroundings was very important, his duties included not only maintaining order in the city and its surroundings, but also mobilization, providing food for soldiers and horses, and solving many other issues that cannot be included in orders and instructions. The Commandant's team organized by him acted as a coordinated mechanism to provide the North Latvian Brigade with the most effective assistance possible. The commander's team went to the aid of the regular army in special cases, and he set an example for the new soldiers. V. Gelbe was the first Latvian army officer who proposed to award his subordinates with the III class of the Order of Imanta. There was no order yet. Imanta's name appeared in the open only on March 20, 1920, when the minister of defense, Karls Ullman, was presented with an outline of the establishment of the military order. However, the name of Lāčplėš was chosen for the order.

Vilis Gelbe died during the battles of Cēsis - on June 19, 1919, during a reconnaissance. Later, Gelb was awarded the Láčplēš War Order, however, historians believe that his contribution has not been properly appreciated until now. This is mainly explained by Gelbe's membership in the Northern Latvian Brigade.

The so-called Southern Latvian brigade, which was initially commanded by Oskars Kaplak, later Jānis Balož, competed with the Northern Latvian brigade, which was commanded by Jorģs Zemitāns.

In Vidriži, a memorial sign at the place where LKOK Vilis Gelbe and two soldiers of his team fell

In Vidriži, at the turn to Lēdurga, during the Freedom Struggle on June 19, 1919, Marine First Lieutenant Vilis Gelbe and two soldiers fell in battle.

Vilis Gelbe is buried in the Limbaži cemetery. Vilis Gelbe was awarded the III class of the Lāčplēš War Order (No. 895) for his heroic deed at Vidrižu manor.

Currently, three commemorative crosses installed in 1989 can be seen at the battle site.

On June 22, 1934, a bronze commemorative plaque made by the artist Stefan Berc was unveiled near the maple growing in the manor park. Already at the beginning of the communist occupation, in the fall of 1940, the memorial plaque disappeared. The maple to which it was nailed also died. At the beginning of the Revival, on June 19, 1989, on the 70th anniversary of the death of Gelbe and two soldiers of his team - corporal Krustiņš and soldier Krūza - at the crossroads where a memorial plaque used to be, on the initiative of the Environmental Protection Club and Latvian People's Front branches of Limbažu county, installed three wooden crosses made in folk style by Jānis Eglīš. By the decision of the executive committee of Limbažu district in April 1991, this memorial place was included in the list of historical monuments of local significance.

Memorial at Skangaļi Manor

The memorial to the victory of the combined Latvian and Estonian troops in the battle for the Skangaļi Manor is located about 20 kilometres from Cēsis. Devoted to the participants of the Battles of Cēsis and the fighters of the Estonian Kalevlaste Maleva Battalion, the memorial stone was unveiled on 22 June 2019. The victory of the combined Latvian and Estonian troops in the battle for the Skangaļi Manor, which took place here, was a turning point in the Battles of Cēsis, as a result of which the troops of Niedra’s government initiated a general retreat. The government of Andrievs Niedra was a provisional pro-German government of Latvia, which existed from 10 May to 26 June 1919. The attack on the Landeswehr unit began in the early morning of 22 June 1919 when the 3rd Kalev company used an armoured train to break into the Skangaļi Manor where they seized 2 cannons, however, the enemy still went on a counterattack. The troops repeated the attack slightly later, in the middle of the day, and the Landeswehr unit was forced out of the Skangaļi Manor following fierce close combat. The trophies from the battle include machine guns, large quantities of ammunition and other combat equipment. Two hours later, the Estonians captured an important road junction at the Starti pub. 58 Kalev soldiers were injured or lost their lives in the battle to capture the Skangaļi Manor. Estonia provided significant support in establishing the memorial site.

Rest area “Forest battles”

Named Forest Battles, the rest area is situated in the main location of the Battles of Cēsis near the Amata bridge. Visitors can listen to stories about the Battles of Cēsis and can take part in various activities, including hikes and trips around the most important venues of the Battles of Cēsis, and team battles. At the end, the visitors can enjoy an invigorating wartime soup. The railway bridge over Amata played a very important role throughout the War of Independence, as the first clashes of the Estonian Army with the Landeswehr took place here. On 5 June 1919, the first battle of the Estonian Army’s armoured trains with the Baltic Landeswehr units took place by the railway bridge over Amata. The Landeswehr, knowing that an armoured train was approaching, planted mines on the railway bridge and secured positions at the homestead Amatas on the riverbank in preparation for a possible battle. The bridge over Amata marked the border between Estonian forces and the Germans. On the night of 23 June 1919, during the Battles of Cēsis, the Landeswehr left Cēsis and retreated to the Amata river line. When retreating, the Germans burned down the Cēsis Latvian Society House and blew up the bridge over Amata.

The railway bridge over the river Rauna

The railway bridge over the River Rauna is located near the P20 highway, in Priekuļi parish. It can be viewed from the right side of the Cēsis-Valmiera highway. The railway bridge is not intended for pedestrians and is watched over by security guards. Built in 1889, the masonry bridge on the Riga-Valka railway line is the highest railway structure of its kind in the Baltics. It is 24 metres high and 78.9 metres long. Trains, especially heavy freight trains, must maintain a speed of 80 km/h. Higher speeds are not allowed on the bridge. However, at lower speeds, the train is unable to deal with the slight incline on both sides of the bridge and may start to slide backwards. In June 1919, during the Estonian and Latvian Wars of Independence, reinforcements to the Estonian Army, which also included the Northern Latvian Brigade, were sent by rail across the bridge from Valka, which was at the back of the front. When the 2nd Cēsis Infantry Regiment was forced to retreat from Cēsis, its units strengthened their positions on the banks of the River Rauna. The railway bridge became part of the fortification and ensured the movement of Estonian armoured trains during the battles. During World War II, on 4 July 1941, the bridge was blown up by the fleeing Red Army when the Soviet occupation of Latvia was replaced by the German occupation. German Army sappers restored the bridge within a week. After World War II, during the Soviet occupation, the bridge over Rauna was of military strategic importance and was heavily guarded.

Railway bridge over Amata

Located in Drabešu parish, Cēsis region, near the recreation place "Meža kaujas".

There is a railway bridge over Amata.

The railway bridge over Amata played a very important role throughout the War of Independence, because on June 5, 1919, the first battle of the Estonian army's armed trains with the Baltic Landesver units took place here. Landeswehr, knowing that an armed train was approaching, nominated a railway bridge and took a position at the Amatas home on the river bank, ready for possible warfare. The bridge over Amata was the border between Estonian forces and the Germans.
Historical evidence of the events at the Amata Bridge has not been preserved. As Latvians did not take part in these events, there are no narratives of their memories, there are memories from Estonian soldiers and other sources. It can be said that this was an Estonian-American joint battle against the Landeswehr, because there was an American officer on the Estonian armored train, who later fought in World War II as well. In general, many future World War II officers and commanders took part in the battles of Cēsis, especially on the German side.

The Estonian armed train arrived in Cēsis on June 2, 1919, a day later went to Ieriķi, where talks took place with the landlord, which was unsuccessful, and on June 5, when the armed train approached the Amata bridge again, a collision with the Germans began. A day later, the armed train also took part in the battles near Cēsis, where it helped the soldiers of the Pupils' Company who were threatened with siege. Although the Germans tried to dismantle the rails to cut off the train's retreat, it managed to retreat across the Rauna bridge.

On the night of June 23, 1919, during the battles of Cēsis, the landesver left Cēsis and retreated to the Amata river line. When they retreated, the Germans burned down the house of the Cēsis Latvian Society and blew up a bridge over Amata.

Monument to the liberators of Northern Latvia

Located in the center of Placa by the Inčukalns - Valka highway (A3). Next to the bus stop and Straupe People's House.

The monument made by Teodors Zaļkalns to the liberators of Northern Latvia in 1919 at the Battle of Cēsis can be seen.

There are two limestone supports on the three-step base, on which the limestone block rests. In front of it, the lower part depicts a horse harnessed to a plow and a plow holding reins in his right hand and a sword in his left. A text engraved on the back of the monument, closed by lines by the poet Eduards Virza:

FOR THE RELEASES OF NORTHERN LATVIA

WHILE THE CEREALS ARE SEED IN THESE FIELDS
YOU WILL BE GLORIFIED AND HONORED

The monument was unveiled on November 8, 1931. President Alberts Kviesis took part in the opening.

Monument to the Unknown Faller in the War of Independence

Located in Drabešu parish, 74 km of Vidzeme highway (about a kilometer behind Ieriķi), driving from Riga, on the right side of the road opposite Birzīši house.

A monument to a Latvian soldier who fell in June 1919 can be seen, which was found in this place after the retreat of the Landesweer, who was defeated in the battles of Cēsis.
On May 6, 1934, a monument was unveiled on the grave of an unknown soldier, made in the local limestone by the forest ranger of the Drabešu forestry of the Cēsis Superintendent, the guard of the 10th Cēsis Guard Regiment and Alfreds Kaņeps, the owner of the Ieriķi mill. At the same time, he dedicated the self-made monument to his older brother Mārtiņš Kaņeps, who disappeared without a trace during the First World War, while serving in Latvian rifle formations.

It was overthrown several times during the communist occupation, but disappeared completely in 1984. At the beginning of the Awakening, in the summer of 1988, the burial site was marked with a temporary memorial.
The restored monument, the carving of which was undertaken by the sculptor Maija Baltiņa, who did it together with her husband's sculptor Andrejs Jansons, was unveiled on November 11, 1988.

The new monument, which became the first newly built and erected memorial to the War of Liberation during the Awakening, is made of granite, unlike the original, and is two meters high together with the base.

Monument in memory of the soldiers killed in the War of Independence

Located in Raiskuma Cemetery near the chapel.

The monument to the soldiers killed in the battles of Cēsis was unveiled on September 7, 1930. The monument was made in the local red-gray granite by Cēsis stonemason A. Sproģis. In 2001 the monument was restored.

At the commemoration of the 93rd anniversary of the Battle of Cēsis, Lieutenant-Colonel Ēvalds Krieviņš, who was retired in the Freedom Fights, revealed to the audience that not only the fate of Vidzeme, but also Latvia and partly Europe was decided in Raiskums parish near Auciemmuiža in 1919.
"Here the Estonian regiment heroically wounded the Iron Division and struck the first plane during the War of Independence," says Ēvalds Krieviņš.

Memorial to Estonian soldiers killed in the Latvian War of Independence

Located on the bank of the river Salaca, near the cemetery, Upes Street 3a.

The cemetery was consecrated for the first time in June 1927. In the spring of 1936, at the suggestion of the local guard organization, a cemetery hill was created, where two unknown Estonian soldiers were reburied. The cemetery was consecrated on August 16, 1936. During both the German and Soviet occupation, the cemetery stood abandoned, surrounded by linden trees.

The Estonian Ministry of Defense, in co-operation with the Latvian Ministry of Defense and the Brothers' Cemetery Committee, accepted the Latvian side's proposal to concentrate all individual burials of fallen Estonian soldiers in Mazsalaca, where an ensemble of 2 Estonian soldiers had already been formed after the Freedom Fights.

On June 18, 2013, the monument to the Brothers' Cemetery of Estonian soldiers killed in the Latvian War of Liberation was unveiled on this cemetery hill. The monument was made of Saaremaa dolomite by the Estonian company Dolokivi OÜ after SIA Arhitektu birojs Vecumnieks & Bērziņi. The Minister of Defense of Estonia Urmas Reinsalu and the Minister of Defense of Latvia Artis Pabriks participated in the opening.
On November 11, 2015, 10 new reburials of unknown soldiers who died in the War of Independence were consecrated.

A monument to the memory of the members of the Drustu parish who fell in the First World War and in the battles for the Liberation of Latvia

It is located near the Drustu Lutheran Church.

The monument was opened on June 19, 1932.

On June 14, 1931, the foundation stone of the monument was laid, on which the text "Hundreds of years will come and go, heroes will sacrifice themselves for fatherhood". A galvanized tin capsule with a memorial letter signed by the then Chief of Army Staff General Aleksanders Kalējs, parents of the fallen soldiers and other honored guests of the ceremony is embedded under it.

During the communist occupation, the text under the tab was cemented, but the bronze tab was hidden by the parishioners. When the Revival began, local activists of the Latvian People's Front cleaned the inscription and placed the preserved tab in its place.

41 members of the Drustu congregation who died in the First World War and the Latvian War of Independence have been identified.

Placed in the niches of the church wall are commemorative plaques for the victims of the communist terror - with 58 names of Drustenians and Gatartians carved into oak - the names of people whose graves are unknown.

Lielstraupe Castle

The Lielstraupe Castle is located in the centre of the town of Straupe. The castle is open to visitors and offers a journey through the centuries along with an orienteering exercise in the labyrinths of the castle. During the Battles of Cēsis, the Lielstraupe Castle housed the command post of Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist’s Battle Group of the Iron Division (German: Eiserne Division). During the battles, the castle was visited by Major Josef Bischoff, Captain Heinz Guderian and others. The castle was used for the coordination of an attack in the direction of Stalbe on 21-22 June. The Iron Division was a military force of German mercenaries during the Latvian War of Independence, which was formed from soldiers of the 8th Army of the demobilised German Empire and volunteer mercenaries. It was the best-known part of the German Free Corps and among the best trained and most combat-ready military forces in the Baltics in 1919. During the Soviet period, from 1949 to 1959, the administration of the Lielstraupe Machine-tractor Station operated out of Manor Castle. During this time, the castle was also equipped with training rooms and dormitories for tractor drivers, while the former stable of the manor housed workshops. From 1963 to 2018, the castle was managed by medical institutions, and it was said of the Straupe Narcological Hospital in Latvia that it ‘even treats the walls’.

Monument to the first fallen soldier of the Schoolmen's Company, Edgars Krieviņas

Located in the Central Cemetery of Valmiera, near the chapel (Miera Street 1/3, Valmiera)

A soldier of the 8th (Skolnieki) company of the Cēsi regiment, LKOK Edgars Krieviņš (1899-1919), died on June 7 from injuries sustained in the battles of Cēsi on June 6, 1919, when he covered the retreat of the rest of the units when the Landsweer attacked.

Memorial sign at the founding site of the Cēsis Regiment School Company

Located at Leona Paegles Street 1, next to the red brick facade.

The author of the memorial is the artist Solveiga Vasiljeva, and the idea is based on a flower bud motif. According to the artist, it symbolizes the newly formed personalities - students who have to make an important, responsible and harsh decision in their still short life.
In the form of a memorial, the outer petals of the flower bud are made of geometric, sharp corners, in contrast to the gentle, rounded inside of the bud. The height of the memorial is up to 1.5 m. The memorial was unveiled on May 26, 2011 in Valmiera, the place where the orchestra of the Cēsis Regiment was formed in 1919.

The contours of Latvia are made of artificial cobblestones, on which a plate with the flag and text of the Cēsis Regiment Students' Association is placed:

"At this place on May 26, 1919
Cēsis Regiment Student Company was founded "