Extensive Definition
Tartu (historical names: lang-de Dorpat, from
original name Tarbatu, ) is the second largest city of Estonia. In
contrast to Estonia's political and financial capital Tallinn, Tartu is
often considered the intellectual and cultural hub, especially
since it is home to Estonia's oldest and most renowned university.
Situated 186 km southeast of Tallinn, the city is the centre of
southern Estonia. The Emajõgi River,
which connects the two largest lakes of Estonia, crosses Tartu. The
city is served by Tartu
Airport.
Historical names
As Tartu has been under the control of various
rulers throughout its history, there are various names for the city
in different languages. Most of them derive from the earliest
attested form, the Estonian "Tarbatu". In German,
Swedish
and Polish
the town is known as Dorpat, a variant of "Tarbatu". In Russian,
the city has been known as Юрьев (Yuryev) after Yaroslav
I the Wise and as Дерпт (Derpt), a variant of Dorpat (however,
since 1917 the Estonian name Tartu is used). Similarly, the city
has been known as Tērbata in Latvian,
again a variant of "Tarbatu".
History
Beginnings
Archaeological evidence of the first permanent
settlement on the site of modern Tartu dates to as early as the
5th
century AD. By the 7th century,
local inhabitants had built a wooden fortification on the east side
of Toome Hill (Toomemägi). The first documented record of the place
was made in 1030 by chroniclers of
Kievan
Rus. Yaroslav I the Wise, Prince of Kiev, raided Tartu
that year, built his own fort there, and named it Yuryev (literally
"Yury's" - Yury being Yaroslav's Christian name). Kievan rulers
then collected tribute from the surrounding ancient Estonian county
of Ugaunia,
possibly until 1061, when, according
to chronicles, Yuryev was burned down by another tribe of Chudes (Sosols).
Germans in Dorpat (Tartu)
During the period of Northern crusades in the beginning of the 13th century the fort of Tarbatu (or Tharbata, Tartu) was captured by the crusading Livonian Knights and recaptured by Estonians on several occasions until, in 1224, it was besieged and conquered from troops of the East Slavic prince Vyachko for one last time by the German crusaders. Subsequently known as Dorpat (Tarbatum), Tartu became a commercial centre of considerable importance during the later Middle Ages and the capital of the semi-independent Bishopric of Dorpat.In 1262 the army of Prince Dmitri
of Pereslavl, son of Alexander
Nevsky launched an assault on Dorpat, capturing and destroying
the town. His troops did not manage to capture the bishop’s
fortress on Toome Hill. The event was recorded both in German and
Old
East Slavic chronicles, which also provided the first record of
a settlement of German merchants and artisans which had arisen
alongside the bishop’s fortress.
In the 1280s Dorpat joined the Hanseatic
League. In medieval times Tartu was an important trading city.
As in all of Estonia and Latvia, the largely German-speaking
nobility, but in Tartu/Dorpat (as in Tallinn) even more so, the
Baltic German bourgeoisie, the literati, dominated culture,
religion, architecture, education, and politics until the late
19th
century. For example, the town hall of Dorpat was designed by
an architect from Mecklenburg,
from the city of Rostock, while the
university buildings were designed by another German. Many, if not
most, of the students, and more than 90% of the faculty members
were of German heritage, and numerous statues of notable scientists
with German names can still be found in the city today. Most
Germans had to leave during the first half of the 20th
century.
Polish and Swedish rule
In the 16th
century, Livonia and Tartu
both came under Polish rule, and a
Jesuit
grammar school was established in the city in 1583. In addition, a
translators' seminary was organized in Tartu and the city received
its red and white flag from the Polish king
Stephen Bathory.
The activities of both the grammar school and the
seminary were stopped by the Polish-Swedish
War (1601). Tartu then
became Swedish
in 1629, which
led to the foundation of the university in 1632 by King
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden.
Tartu in Imperial Russia
With the Treaty of
Nystad in 1721, the city became
part of the Russian
Empire and was known as Derpt. Due to fires in the 18th century
which destroyed much of the medieval architecture, the city was
rebuilt along Late
Baroque and Neoclassical
lines. During the second half of the 19th
century, Tartu was the cultural center for Estonians in the era
of Romantic
nationalism. The city hosted Estonia's first song festival in
1869, as well
as the Vanemuine, the first national theatre, in 1870. It was also the
setting for the foundation of the Society of Estonian Writers in
1872.
In 1893, the city was
officially retitled to the ancient Russian name Yuryev. The
university was subsequently russified
from 1895 on
with the introduction of compulsory Russian
in teaching. The Russian imperial university was relocated to
Voronezh
in 1918, but
the Estonian University
of Tartu opened in 1919.
With Estonian independence after World War
I, the city officially became known by the Estonian
name Tartu.
Soviet influence
At the end of
Estonian War of Independence following World War I, a peace
treaty between the Bolsheviks and
Estonia was signed on 2 February
1920 in Tartu.
The treaty meant that Bolshevist
Russia renounced territorial claims to Estonia "for all time."
However, as a result of the Nazi-Soviet
Pact of 1939, the Soviet Union
occupied Estonia and Tartu in 1940.
During World War
II, a large part of the city as well as the historical Kivisild
(Stone Bridge) (built by Catherine
II of Russia in 1776-1778) over the Emajõgi
were destroyed by the fighting Red Army, partly in 1941 and almost
totally in 1944.
After the war, Tartu was declared a "closed town"
to foreigners, as an air base for bombers was constructed on
Raadi
Airfield, in the northeast outskirts of the city. The asphalt
runway there now houses a large used cars market, and is sometimes
used for automotive racing.
During Soviet times the population of Tartu
almost doubled from 57,000 to 100,000.
Independence
Since Estonia regained its independence in 1991, the old town centre is being renovated.Climate
Government
There are 49 members on the town council, elected
by residents every four years using a proportional system of
representation. http://www.tartu.ee/?lang_id=1&menu_id=2&page_id=97
The executive branch of the town government
consists of a mayor and
five deputy mayors. http://www.tartu.ee/?lang_id=1&menu_id=2&page_id=164
The current mayor is Urmas
Kruuse. Andrus
Ansip, the current
Prime Minister of Estonia, was mayor for many years. Both Ansip
and Kruuse are members of the Estonian
Reform Party, which has dominated in Tartu in recent
years.
Population
According to the European Statistical Office, Tartu's population comprised the following self-reported ethnic groups as of 2006:Tartu's historic population is presented in the
following table, based on data from official censuses since 1881
and Estonian Statistical Office:
Education and culture
The city is best known for being the home to the
University
of Tartu, founded by King
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in 1632. Mainly for this
reason, Tartu is also - tongue-in-cheek - known as "Athens of the
Emajõgi" or as "Heidelberg
of the North".
Tartu is also the seat of the
Estonian University of Life Sciences, the Baltic
Defence College, Tartu
Aviation College, and the Estonian Ministry of Education and
Research. The Estonian
Supreme Court, which was re-established in Tartu in the autumn
of 1993, is
likewise in the city, as well as the Estonian Historical Archives
and Estonian national theatre Vanemuine
Main sights
The architecture and city planning of historical Tartu mainly go back to the pre-independence period, with Germans forming the upper and middle classes of society, and therefore contributing many architects, professors, local politicians, etc.Most notable are the old Lutheran St.
John's Church (Estonian:Jaani
Kirik, German:
Johanneskirche), the 18th-century town hall, the university
building, the remainders of the 13th-century cathedral, the
botanical gardens, the main shopping street, and many buildings
around the town hall square.
The historical slum area called Supilinn is
located on the bank of river Emajõgi, near the town centre and is
regarded as one of the few surviving poor neighbourhoods in Europe
from the 19th century. At the moment Supilinn is rapidly being
renovated.
In the suburbs, classic Soviet neighbourhoods -
blocks of high-rise flats - were built during the period between
the Second World War and restoration of Estonian independence in
1991.
Presently, Tartu is also known for several
modern, rather sterile-looking buildings of the "steel, concrete
and glass" type, but has managed to retain a mix of old buildings
and new buildings in the historical centre of town.
Being the intellectual and cultural centre of
Estonia, the Estonian Prime Minister often takes state guests to
Tartu. Famous guests have included Charles,
Prince of Wales, the presidents of Finland, Latvia, Hungary, the
Republic
of Ireland, and Lithuania, as
well as religious leaders like the
Dalai Lama and the head of the
Orthodox Church of Constantinople, Patriarch
Bartholomew I.
Tartu's large student population means that it
has a comparatively thriving nightlife, with some bars,
restaurants, and nightclubs. Some of the more popular destinations
for tourists include the Wilde Irish
Pub, the Gunpowder Cellar,
Club Tallinn and the café
Maailm.
Annually, in the summer, Tartu hosts the Hansa
Days Festival (Estonian: Hansapäevad) under the motto "History
lives" when the old town is bustling with activty from handicraft
markets and historic workshops to a jousting tournament.
Twin towns
- flagicon NOR Bærum, Norway
- flagicon NED Deventer, the Netherlands
- flagicon ITA Ferrara, Italy
- flagicon DEN Frederiksberg, Denmark
- flagicon ISL Hafnarfjörður, Iceland
- flagicon FIN Hämeenlinna, Finland
- flagicon Lithuania Kaunas, Lithuania
- flagicon GER Lüneburg, Germany
- flagicon Russia Pskov, Russia
- flagicon Latvia Riga, Latvia
- flagicon USA Salisbury, United States
- flagicon FIN Tampere, Finland
- flagicon FIN Turku, Finland
- flagicon SWE Uppsala, Sweden
- flagicon HUN Veszprem, Hungary
- flagicon NED Zutphen, the Netherlands
Gallery
See also
References
External links
dorpat in Breton: Tartu
dorpat in Bulgarian: Тарту
dorpat in Catalan: Tartu
dorpat in Chuvash: Тарту
dorpat in Czech: Tartu
dorpat in Danish: Tartu
dorpat in German: Tartu
dorpat in Estonian: Tartu
dorpat in Spanish: Tartu
dorpat in Esperanto: Tartu
dorpat in French: Tartu
dorpat in Galician: Tartu
dorpat in Korean: 타르투
dorpat in Indonesian: Tartu
dorpat in Italian: Tartu
dorpat in Hebrew: טרטו
dorpat in Georgian: ტარტუ
dorpat in Latin: Tarbatum
dorpat in Latvian: Tartu
dorpat in Lithuanian: Tartu
dorpat in Hungarian: Tartu
dorpat in Dutch: Tartu
dorpat in Japanese: タルトゥ
dorpat in Norwegian: Tartu
dorpat in Norwegian Nynorsk: Tartu
dorpat in Low German: Tartu
dorpat in Polish: Tartu
dorpat in Portuguese: Tartu
dorpat in Romanian: Tartu
dorpat in Quechua: Tartu
dorpat in Russian: Тарту
dorpat in Simple English: Tartu
dorpat in Slovenian: Tartu
dorpat in Serbian: Тарту
dorpat in Finnish: Tartto
dorpat in Swedish: Tartu
dorpat in Turkish: Tartu
dorpat in Volapük: Tartu
dorpat in Võro: Tarto
dorpat in Chinese: 塔尔图