Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Aizpute county

Aizpute county
County of Latvia
1819–1949
Coat of arms of Aizpute
Coat of arms

Location in the Courland Governorate
CapitalAizpute (Gazenpot)
Area 
• 1897
2,506.58 km2 (967.80 sq mi)
Population 
• 1897
53,209
History 
• Established
1819
• Disestablished
1949
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Duchy of Courland and Semigallia
Liepāja District
Hasenpoth County on the map of Courland Governorate (1820).

Aizpute county (Latvian: Aizputes apriņķis; German: Kreis Hasenpoth, Russian: Газенпотскій уѣздъ, romanizedGazenpotskiy uyezd) was a historic county of the Courland Governorate and of the Republic of Latvia. Its capital was Aizpute (Hasenpoth).

History

Created as the Chief Captaincy of Aizpute (German: Oberhauptmannschaft Hasenpoth) in 1819 was from southwestern parts of the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia and District of Pilten after incorporation into the Russian Empire. In 1864, County of Aizpute (Kreis Hasenpoth) became one of the ten counties of the Courland Governorate.

After establishment of the Republic of Latvia in 1918, the Aizputes apriņķis[1] existed until 1949, when the Council of Ministers of the Latvian SSR split it into the newly created districts (rajons) of Aizpute (dissolved in 1962) and Alsunga (dissolved in 1956).

Demographics

At the time of the Russian Empire Census of 1897, Kreis Hasenpoth had a population of 53,209. Of these, 90.4% spoke Latvian, 5.4% German, 2.5% Yiddish, 1.0% Lithuanian, 0.4% Russian, 0.2% Polish and 0.1% Romani as their native language.[2]

References