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Cesis House

Faber House

Time · 1839.-1944. g. Audio · audio story
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Interesting facts

Although the house at 40 Rīgas Street is called “Faber's House”, the real property of the painter Karlis Fabers was located at the corner of Liela Livu and Maza Katrinas Streets, as evidenced by entries in the Cesis City Magistrate's Land and Inheritance Book.

Johann Köhler, the son of poor Estonian peasants, studied with Faber for seven years and later became the first academically educated Estonian painter and Russian court artist.

Facts

1839-1846: Johans Köhler studies in Cesis with the painter Kārlis Fābers

1925: Latvian writer Melānija Vanaga, who lived at 40 Rīgas Street, graduates from Cēsis Secondary School

1927-1934: V. Alekseevs grocery and bakery shop, M. Radzins electrical and radio shop

1928-1929: A. Teikmanis shoe workshop at 40 Rīgas Street

1930: Kristine Mazite's tearoom closes; M. Radziņa moves her shop to 4 Rīgas Street

1931-1935: Knitting shop in the building

1932-1933: A. Eglitis's tailor's workshop at 40 Rīgas Street

1941: R. Zaķis works as a photographer in apartment No. 2 at 40 Riga Street, having been allowed by the Soviet authorities to take and produce photographs for passports

1944: the real Faber House on the corner of Lielā Līvu and Mazā Katrīnas Streets is destroyed during the Second World War

After 1945: the Soviet authorities establish the Cēsis Consumers' Association \"Spectorgu\" at 40 Rīgas Street

Today: the building is practically in ruins

The story

The house at 40 Rīgas Street, known in history as Faber's House, occupies an important place in the history of Cesis, but with an interesting twist - it turns out that the building, long known as Faber's House, was not actually the real house of Kārlis Faber! Although tourist guides list it as the place where Johann Köhler, later known as the founder of Estonian national painting, lived and worked from 1839 to 1846, archival documents reveal that the real house of his master, Karl Faber, was located on the corner of Lielā Līvu and Mazā Katrīna Streets. Unfortunately, this building was destroyed during the Second World War in September 1944. It is possible that only Faber's workshop was located at 40 Rīgas Street.

40 Rīgas iela has a rich commercial history. 20. In the 1920s and 1930s, it was a bustling commercial centre, with shoe workshops, knitting mills, a tailor and other businesses. 1930. In 1927, Kristīne Mazīte's tearoom was closed, and one of the longest tenants was V. Aleksejevs with his grocery shop and bakery, which operated from 1927 to 1934. His advertisements in “Cesis Newspaper” were as vivid as his business: “Not empty advertising - but a fact. Why do I sell so cheap? It's simple: I buy my goods in bulk direct from the source”, or the bold statement “the crisis is over”, because in his shop rye bread cost only 6 cents a pound.

No less important was M. Radziņš's electrical and radio shop, which operated in this building from 1927 to 1930. The entrepreneur boasted that his shop was "the only one in Cesis" where radio receivers and loudspeakers were made. His technical talent was also recognised: one of the devices he designed won first prize in a competition organised by Philips. 1930. In 2007, Radziņš moved to a more prestigious location - 4 Rīgas Street.

During the Second World War and in the post-war years, the building's function changed. 1941. In the spring of 2009, the photographer R. Zaķis, one of the few who were allowed by the Soviet authorities to take passport photographs, worked here. After the war, the building was used as a special shop for the Cēsis Consumers' Association "Spectorgs", where employees could buy detergents, state vodka and papiros.

The building was also home to the prominent Latvian writer and journalist Melanija Vanaga (1905-1997), who lived with the owner Mrs Rišová during her school years, before graduating from Cēsis Secondary School (then M. Neija Gymnasium for Women) in 1925.

The materials used for the description are:

Dace Cepurīte, Mg. hist., Research “Cēsnieks un jeho nams”

Collections of the Cesis Castle Museum.

Timeline of events

1839
1846.gads: Johans Kēlers mācās Cēsīs pie daiļkrāsotāja Kārļa Fābera
1925
Latviešu rakstniece Melānija Vanaga, kas dzīvoja Rīgas ielā 40, pabeidz Cēsu vidusskolu
1927
1934.gads: Ēkā darbojas V. Aleksejeva pārtikas veikals un maizes ceptuve, kā arī M. Radziņa elektrotehniskais un radio veikals
1928
1929.gads: Rīgas ielā 40 darbojas A. Teikmaņa apavu darbnīca
1930
Tiek slēgta Kristīnes Mazītes tējnīca; M. Radziņa pārceļ savu veikalu uz Rīgas ielu 4
1931
1935.gads: Ēkā darbojas adītava
1932
1933.gads: Rīgas ielā 40 darbojas A. Eglīša drēbnieka darbnīca
1941
R. Zaķis Rīgas ielā 40 dzīvoklī nr. 2 darbojas kā fotogrāfs, kam padomju vara atļāvusi fotografēt un izgatavot fotogrāfijas pasēm
1944
Otrā pasaules kara laikā tiek sagrauts īstais Fābera nams Lielās Līvu un Mazās Katrīnas ielu stūrī
Pēc 1945.gada: Padomju varas iestādes Rīgas ielā 40 ierīko Cēsu Patērētāju biedrības \"Spectorgu\"
Mūsdienās: Ēka praktiski ir sagruvusi
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Cēsis
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