The driving force behind agrarian reform was more political than economic. As a result of agrarian reform the country's main natural treasures - land and forests changed it owners. The inherited feudal power over the state's main economic sectors was broken with elimination of feudal
manor system, which connected inherited
mansions (
Rittergut) with land around it. The previous landowners affected by the reforms, mostly ethnic
Baltic Germans, did not receive any compensation, however they were left with a small fraction of their former lands. In 1924 the Baltic Germans demanded a payment of 1,200 million
gold francs for expropriated land properties through a group of six their representatives in Latvia's parliament. However just before the crucial vote on 30 April 1924, the Baltic German faction abandoned the hearing room, which led to the dismissal of the claim by a small majority. Later, the German-speaking parliamentary faction appealed against the State of Latvia in the
League of Nations, requesting compensation for seized land, but that claim was also rejected. In 1929 Latvia signed an agreement with Poland, which resolved the controversial issues that were mostly related to the Latgale region. The Latvian government paid 5 million lats for estates that were expropriated from
Polish noblemen in course of agrarian reform. == See also ==