Walk was the historical German name for the town that is since 1920 divided into Valga in Estonia and Valka in Latvia.[1] After 1419 it was the seat of the Landtag of the Livonian Confederation.[2]
Demographics
editEthnicity | 1897[3] | |
---|---|---|
amount | % | |
Latvians | 4453 | 40.8 |
Estonians | 3594 | 32.9 |
Russians[a] | 1214 | 11.1 |
Germans | 1145 | 10.5 |
Jews | 303 | 2.77 |
Poles | 197 | 1.80 |
other | 16 | 0.15 |
Total | 10922 | 100 |
Religion | 1897[3] | |
---|---|---|
amount | % | |
Protestants[b] | 7862 | 72.0 |
Eastern Orthodox | 2403 | 22.0 |
Orthodox Old Believers | 53 | 0.49 |
Roman Catholic | 222 | 2.03 |
Jewish[c] | 380 | 3.48 |
Muslims | 1 | 0.001 |
Other Christian denominations[d] | 1 | 0.001 |
Other non-Christian denominations | 0 | 0 |
Total | 10922 | 100 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "History". Visit Valga Valka. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- ^ "Valga. Valka" (PDF). visitvalgavalka.com. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
- ^ a b ПЕРВАЯ ВСЕОБЩАЯ ПЕРЕПИСЬ НАСЕЛЕНІЯ. РОССІЙСКОЙ ИМПЕРІИ 1897 г. XXІ. ЛИФЛЯНДСКАЯ ГУБЕРНІЯ [First General Population Census. Russian Empire, year 1897. XXI. Livonian Governorate.] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Interior of the Russian Empire. 1905. pp. 2–3 (28).
57°46′18″N 26°01′11″E / 57.77167°N 26.01972°E