Daugavgrīva Fortress
Latvia · Europe

關於
Daugavgrīva fortress (German: Dünamünder Schanze, Festung Dünamünde; Polish: twierdza Dynemunt; Russian: крепость Дюнамюнде, Усть-Двинск; Swedish: Neumünde) is a fortress built in Swedish Livonia in the 17th century. It is located in Daugavgrīva, Riga near the mouth of Buļļupe river branch in the Daugava.
Daugavgrīva fortress has a significant place in the history of Latvia. Bible translator Johann Ernst Glück was living here in 1680-1683, and during World War I the first unit of Latvian troops was established here — the 1st Daugavgrīva Latvian Riflemen Battalion (1915). During the Latvian War of Independence, in 1919, during the Bermontiade, the fortress was captured by the 9th Rēzekne Infantry Regiment of the Latvian Army.
Today the fort is a monument of national significance. Part of its territory is included in the customs territory of the Republic of Latvia.
內容改寫自 Wikipedia (CC BY-SA)。照片來自 Wikimedia Commons.