The Saeima traces its origins to the
Sejm of the Kingdom of Poland, which led to the creation of the
Sejm (Seimas) of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and later to the creation of the
Sejm of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
Polish Livonia, a part of the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, was exposed to the Polish mode of administration and introduced to the Sejm-system. The Warsaw Sejm of 1677 settled the case of remaining part of Polish Livonia or
Latgale (), naming it a voivodeship and a duchy, with the right to name three senators: the Bishop, the Voivode and the Castellan of Inflanty (...) Local sejmiks took place at
Daugavpils, while starostas resided at Daugavpils,
Ludza,
Rēzekne and
Viļaka. The voivodeship had six deputies to the Sejm, but only two of them came from Inflanty, the other four were symbolically named by the king, to remember the lost part of Livonia (
Swedish Livonia). However, the rest of Latvia belonged to the
Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, which was governed by the Dukes and the
Landtag of Courland. The word
sejm derives from the verb "sjąć się" meaning "to get together", with similar words in some other Slavic languages, of
proto-Slavic origin *sъjęti < *sъjemti Sejm, then, as a noun meant "a gathering, a meeting, a council." In the 19th century, as the concept of nations began to emerge,
Juris Alunāns, a member of a Latvian nationalist group called the
Young Latvians, claimed ownership to the word "saeims". Despite the similar sound, similar semantic structure and clear historical connotations, he claimed that it was a purely Latvian word that he had invented. As mentioned earlier, the word bears a similar meaning: "a gathering, a meeting, a council". He claimed that the word he constructed stemmed from the archaic
Latvian word
eima instead, meaning "to go" (derived from the
PIE *ei "to go" and also a cognate with the
Ancient Greek eimi,
Gaulish '''', among others). He could not explain, however, how the s- prefix got added to the word, and what sense this addition made within the limits of the Latvian language. Nevertheless, according to Alunāns, the word is purely Latvian and completely independent of the aforementioned historical context. However, the prefix sa- to a verb in modern Latvian language usually stands for a complete action and the word "Saeima" can stand for a meaning "let's gather together completely". In the pre-war Latvia, the Saeima was elected for three-year terms. The
1st Saeima met from 7 November 1922 to 2 November 1925, the
2nd from 3 November 1925 to 5 November 1928, the
3rd from 6 November 1928 to 2 November 1931, and the
4th from 3 November 1931 to 15 May 1934 (date of the
Latvian coup d'état). ==Elections==