Cēsis Castle Manor

The estates of Cēsis Castle Manor never formed a single contiguous territory but were scattered throughout the Cēsis area.

Count Karl Gustav von Sievers established various rest areas, hills, and viewpoints in the romantic castle park, naming them after his family members—Charlotte’s Island, Alexander’s Hill, Minadora’s Hill, and Emanuel’s Hill with a terrace.
In the 1840s, the water from the hydropathic clinic established on the grounds of Cēsis Castle Manor was considered superior to the famous Gräfenberg water in Bavaria.

Facts

  • 1627: King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden grants Cēsis Castle and the town to Count Axel Oxenstierna
  • 1649: Count Erik Oxenstierna orders the construction of the missing manor buildings in Cēsis
  • 1653: E. Oxenstierna’s regulations provide for the establishment of a sheep farm in Cēsis with a flock of 100 head
  • Late 17th century: Cēsis Castle functions solely as a manor
  • 1721: After Vidzeme is annexed by Russia, Cēsis Castle Manor becomes a public or state-owned manor
  • 1730: Empress Anna Ioannovna of Russia presents Cēsis Castle and the manor to Duke Ernst Johann von Biron
  • 1744: The castle and manor are confiscated from Biron and gifted to Chancellor Alexey Bestuzhev-Ryumin
  • 1755: Bestuzhev-Ryumin sells the castle and town to Johann Gottlieb I von Wolff
  • 1777: Karl Eberhard von Sievers purchases the castle manor
  • 1781: The stable-coach house is built (as indicated by the date on the weather vane)
  • 1821: Karl Gustav von Sievers inherits the castle manor
  • 1825: Work begins on the romantic park of Cēsis Castle
  • 1832–1833: A park (now May Park) is established opposite the castle tavern
  • 1841: With the Count’s support, Dr. G. Meyer opens a hydropathic clinic
  • 1846: A treatise on the hydropathic clinic is published—the first Cēsis tourist guide
  • 1856: Count Emanuel von Sievers the Elder inherits the castle manor
  • 1878: The brewery building is constructed
  • 1909: Emanuel von Sievers the Younger inherits the castle manor
  • 1914: The Riga Society of History and Antiquity Researchers completes the preservation of the R tower
  • 1920: The castle is nationalized during the Latvian agrarian reform
  • 1922: The Count’s heirs sell the manor properties
  • 1935: The city board begins landscaping the park
  • 1949: The Cēsis Museum is established in the New Castle building
Adrese

9 Pils Square

Cēsis Castle Manor is one of the most romantic sites in Cēsis, where the silhouette of the historic New Castle gradually emerges from the ruins of the ancient Livonian Order castle. Although the history of Cēsis Castle, the estates owned by its masters, and the buildings of Cēsis Castle Manor form an inseparable whole, in the “Cēsis Stories” project, we consider the mid-17th century as the beginning of the Castle Manor, when Cēsis Castle began to function solely as a manor.

After Vidzeme came under Swedish rule in 1621, King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden granted Cēsis Castle and the town with all its appurtenances to the Swedish Chancellor, Count Axel Oxenstierna, in 1627. Initially, the Oxenstiernas took care of the castle’s maintenance—in 1629, a significant amount of iron was purchased for the Cēsis fortifications, and in 1637, the stoves and windows were repaired.In 1649, Axel’s son, Count Erik Oxenstierna, turned his attention to modernizing the manor’s economy, ordering the construction of the missing manor buildings in Cēsis at the lowest possible cost. 1653. In [Year], the regulations he issued provided for the establishment of a sheep farm in Cēsis with a flock of 100 head, importing sheep from Prussia. That same year, he commissioned the rampart master Sigvardo to create a plan of Cēsis Castle and the town, indicating further intentions for the castle’s use. However, these plans were not realized, and since the 1690s, Cēsis Castle has functioned solely as a manor.

After Vidzeme was annexed by Russia in 1721, Cēsis Castle Manor became a public or state-owned manor. 1724. In [Year], the manor’s manager Georg Christoph von Grabaus wrote to the governor that, despite efforts to repair the manor buildings, they were not yet fully in order due to a lack of timber and workers. The letter mentions that a cattle shed was built last autumn, but a new threshing barn and granary were still needed. At this time, the manor buildings were made of wood, while the castle was abandoned.In 1730, Empress Anna Ioannovna of Russia presented Cēsis Castle and the manor to her favorite, the Duke of Courland and Semigallia, Ernst Johann von Biron. Since Biron owned other, more valuable properties and primarily resided in Courland or Russia, he likely did not manage the manor himself but leased it out. 1744. In [Year], Empress Elizabeth I confiscated the castle and manor from Biron and gifted them to the Russian Chancellor Alexey Bestuzhev-Ryumin as a hereditary property.
In 1731, the Chancellor sold the castle and town to Johann Gottlieb I von Wolff, whose family was active and energetic. The von Wolffs sought to organize the lands and buildings around the castle, develop livestock farming, and built the Cēsis Castle Manor house, or New Castle, using the ancient outer bailey buildings and the walls of the Lademacher Tower.

However, the von Wolffs also acted cruelly—they evicted 9 peasants from their homes to establish 2 new livestock manors, and the peasants’ corvée labor obligations increased rapidly. 1771. In [Year], the peasants of Cēsis Castle Manor complained to the Governor-General of Vidzeme, and in 1776, their complaint was also submitted to the Russian heir to the throne, Paul I, when he stopped in Stalbe to change horses. These complaints were ultimately rejected, and the author of the complaint, Žagaru Krišus, was severely punished.In 1777, the von Wolffs sold the castle manor to Karl Eberhard von Sievers, beginning the von Sievers family’s 143-year reign over five generations. 1821. In [Year], the manor was inherited by Karl Gustav von Sievers, who around 1825 began creating the Cēsis Castle romantic landscape park, initially only for his family, but later opening it to the residents of Cēsis with special permits.In the 1840s, a well-known hydropathic clinic was established in Cēsis. 1841. In [Year], Dr. Georg Heinrich Meyer, with the support of Count K.G. von Sievers, began treatments using the water found in Cēsis, with excellent results. 1843.-1845. In [Year], this healing water became known in St. Petersburg and Moscow, and many Russian nobles traveled to Cēsis for treatment. Meyer’s 1846 treatise on the hydropathic clinic became the first Cēsis tourist guide.

After the death of K.G. von Sievers, the castle manor was inherited by his son, Emanuel von Sievers the Elder. During his time, around 1854, a small observation tower was built on the R tower of the castle ruins, and by 1857, it was already being used by the “Livonia” corporation for its commercia.In 1909, Emanuel von Sievers the Younger inherited Cēsis Castle Manor; he left for Russia in December 1915 and never returned to Cēsis. He died on December 7, 1919, in the city of Yessentuki, Russia.

After the 1920 agrarian reform, the New Castle was nationalized, and in 1922, the Count’s heirs sold the remaining real estate on the Cēsis Castle Manor territory for 45,000 gold lats.

Today, the Cēsis Castle Manor complex features the New Castle (now the Cēsis Castle Museum), one of the few 18th-century manor houses in Latvia built into a medieval castle fortification system. The castle complex also includes other historic buildings—the stable-coach house (now the Exhibition Hall), the manor granary, the former brewery and tavern, as well as the romantic park with its pond and monuments.

The materials used for the description are:
Ilma Zālīte, MA in History and the Cēsis Rotary Club project “Tour of Cēsis Manors”Collections of the Cēsis Castle Museum and Cēsis Central LibraryAgris Dzenis, MA in History, study “History of Cēsis Castle”

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