• 1601 • 21 May –
Swedish warships entered the Daugava River near Riga. • 31 May – Swedish warships left Riga and returned to Sweden. • June – Swedish warships blockaded the port of Riga, landing troops who burned the Riga suburbs. • 9 June – Swedish ships arrived at Riga again, but soon returned. • 5 July – Swedish warships arrived in the Daugava again and began military operations against Riga, but unsuccessfully. • 19 August – Duke Charles with the Swedish army reached Riga. Military clashes took place at the ramparts of Riga, Riga was shelled, but the Swedes were unable to capture Riga. However, the Riga suburbs were burned and the orchards were cut down. • 18 September – After unsuccessful Swedish battles with the Poles in Livonia, Charles abandoned the siege of Riga, and the Swedish ships finally left Riga. • 20 September – The 14,000-man army of the Polish King
Sigismund III Vasa crossed the Daugava River and went to the aid of Riga. • 1604 • 30 April – The Riga Town Council and Commune agreement was concluded. • 11 August –
Charles IX of Sweden with his fleet arrived in the port of Riga to capture 13 Dutch ships. The Dutch had already left Riga. 3,500 troops disembarked from the Swedish ships and, under the command of
Count Mansfeld, approached Riga. The residents of Riga shot the envoys sent to Riga at the Sand Gates. The Swedes began to devastate the Riga suburbs (4 windmills, St. Gertrude's Church and the barn of St. George's Hospital were destroyed). • 13 September – Charles IX of Sweden arrived at Riga again with a large army and besieged Riga. • 23 September – A repeated invitation to surrender was sent to Riga. • 27 September – The siege of Riga was lifted. • The leader of the Swedish army, Count Mansfeld, devastated the Riga suburbs, as a result of which the building of St. Gertrude's Church was also burned down. • Swedish warships blockaded Riga once more. • The Riga Town Council, fearing for the city's safety, built a new cannon and bell foundry outside the city walls on Kalēju Street 9/11. • A stone
epitaph of the Small Guild was installed in Riga Cathedral. • 1605 • 3 June – The Riga Town Council issued professional regulations (Schragen) to the Latvian cart drivers of Riga. • 11 August – The 4,000-man Swedish army besieged the
Daugavgrīva fortress. • The epitaph of Theodorus Rigeman was installed in Riga Cathedral. • 1608 • 5 August – The Swedes captured Daugavgrīva and established a sconce at the site of the present-day fortress. • The Lutheran pastor Herman Samson began working as the inspector of Riga city schools. • 1609 – With the Polish-Lithuanian army capturing Daugavgrīva, the siege of Riga was broken., the first book printer of Riga, and engraved by
Heinrich Thum • 1611 October 11 – A strong storm raged in Riga, as a result of which trees were uprooted, and great damage was done to buildings. • 1615 – The Latvian Shoemakers' Guild was established in Riga. • 1617–1620 – The first water supply system was installed in Riga. • 1617 – The Swedes, led by King
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, managed to capture the Daugavgrīva fortress. • 1621 • 21 May – Residents of Riga observed an
annular solar eclipse, which was interpreted as a
bad omen. • 4 April – Devastating Daugava floods struck Riga. • August – The Swedish army began an attack on Riga. • 1 August – A strong thunderstorm with rain raged in the vicinity of Riga. • Swedish forces with 160 ships entered the mouth of the Daugava River and landed in the
Mīlgrāvis area. The residents of Riga burned the newly built suburbs. • 12 August – The Swedes called on Riga to surrender, but the residents of Riga rejected the proposal. The first Swedish attacks were repelled. • 27 August – The Swedes completely blocked the Daugava River, and traffic with Riga was completely cut off. The blockade of Riga began. • 1 September – Almost all city churches were damaged in the shelling. Underground warfare began at the walls of Riga. The Swedes began to dig underground mine galleries under the fortifications. • 16 September – The city of Riga surrendered to the Swedish army, and Riga taken by forces of Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. • During the siege of Riga, under the leadership of the Swedish Colonel
Samuel Cockburn (Cobron), the construction of
Kobronschanz began at the former confluence of the Mārupīte River and the Daugava River. Earth fortifications were created at this location. • 1622 October 4 – Johann Ulrich was elected mayor of Riga. • 1626 • 30 May – A strong storm raged in Riga. • The outer fortification belt of the city of Riga with 11 small sconces and palisades was created. • 1628 – Georg von Schwengel, a fortification officer of the Swedish army, produced the first map of the Riga surroundings. • 1629 August 14 – Lightning struck Riga Cathedral, also damaging the organ. • 1631 • The Riga Council issued an order that, like all other copies of books printed in Riga, printed speeches of the Dome School teachers and dissertations of the students should also be handed over to the city library. • The
minting of Riga
thalers was stopped in Riga. • Nikolai Barneke became the mayor of Riga. • A gymnasium was established at the Riga Dome School. • 1632 • The Riga post office started operating in Riga. • A meeting took place in Riga where Jacob Becker proposed publishing a newspaper for Riga with a circulation of 500 copies. The newspaper could be printed by G. Schröder, and Becker himself would supply the paper from his paper mill near Tartu. G. Schröder, J. Becker, the Riga Council syndic, and the "printing masters" appointed by the council participated in the meeting. Unfortunately, this proposal did not receive support, and Becker realized his idea in Königsberg. • 1633 – The Latvian Tailors' Guild was established in Riga. • 1634 • The first manufactory, Rutger Nidehof's sawmill, started operating in Riga. • A church was built and the
Katlakalns pastorate was founded in the territory of the Riga patrimonial district between Bieķensala and Akmeņsala. The first pastor of Katlakalns was Mag. Peter Bauer. • 1638 –
Church of Jesus consecrated. • 1640 – Fortification works were carried out in Riga, financed by the
Swedish government, but the construction was supervised by
Erik Dahlbergh (later Governor-General of Riga). • 1642 • A
house of correction was built in Riga. • A new wing was added to the Daugava side of Riga Castle, which has survived to this day. • To free up territory for the expansion of
Kobronschanz, the Red Guard Tower, built in the 15th century in Pārdaugava, was demolished. • 1645 – The residence of the Governor of Vidzeme was moved from Tartu to Riga. • 1646 • Extensive repairs began at Riga Castle, as a result of which an oriel was built on the corner of the front castle. • A house was built on Mazā Pils Street, the facade of which was made in the Dutch
Mannerist style. It is now known as one of the "
Three Brothers" houses. • 1649 • April – The stream of the Daugava River washed away the Katlakalns mill, as well as many surrounding peasant houses. • 1 April • During the Daugava flood, Riga was flooded, and all buildings on the islands perished. • The Daugava water broke through the Inča dam (now
Latgale neighborhood) in two places, flooding the entire suburb in Pārdaugava, while all the buildings were washed away on the islands. • A residential building with a corner turret – an oriel, richly decorated with early Baroque style reliefs, was built in the northwest corner of Riga Castle. The author of the reliefs is the sculptor Daniel Ankerman. • 1650 •
Powder Tower rebuilt. • A canal was dug in front of the Riga city fortification wall, which still exists today. • 1652 • 26 November – The Riga Town Council issued an order to satisfy the request of the printer Gerhard Schröder and allocate him one bay in the crossing of the Riga Cathedral free of charge for the storage of materials and books. • According to the Riga police regulations, "Latvian" trades (guilds) were admitted to the Small Guild. • 1654–1667 – Riga was threatened by the
Second Northern War. • 1656 • 22 August–5 October – Riga was
besieged by the army of the Tsardom of Russia, by Russian forces of
Alexis Mikhailovich. • 12 September – Reinforcements of 1400 soldiers were delivered to the Riga garrison under the command of Swedish General Douglas and Field Marshal Königsmarck. This forced the Russian Tsar to consider ending the siege. • 12 October – The Riga garrison, led by Jakob De la Gardie, launched a successful attack against the Russian troops. • 16 October – The Riga garrison attacked the retreating Russian army again but suffered a defeat. This made De la Gardie abandon further pursuit of the Russians. • Due to Russian bombardment, the building of Riga Gymnasium was destroyed. • The Russians also captured the
Kobronschanz battery on the left bank of the Daugava River. The main attacks on the fortress took place in three locations – at Riga Castle, at the Bath Bastion, and at the Marstall Gate, where the defenders’ artillery inflicted heavy losses on the attackers. Tsar
Alexei Mikhailovich, who led the siege, ordered
trenches to be dug closer to the city, and 18 cannon batteries were gradually moved closer to the fortifications. Although the Russians managed to capture two earthworks and positioned cannons on Cube Hill (now the Esplanade Square), Riga’s fortress remained unconquered, and the Russian army was forced to retreat from Riga. • According to contemporary reports, the Russian army lost 8000 men at Riga, and an additional 6000 were killed by peasants armed with
muskets and
scythes further away from the city. • The statutes of the Small Guild were confirmed in Riga. • Repeated bans on luxury clothing were issued in Riga. This shows that even during the relatively
puritanical Swedish rule, it was impossible to suppress the Riga citizens' inclination to dress richly and splendidly. • 1663 – The first
centralised water supply system is opened in Riga. • 1665 – The Latvian Brotherhood of Blacksmiths was established in Riga. • 1666 March 11 – The tower of St Peter's Church, more than 130 metres high, collapsed in a lightning storm. • 1675 – The Charles Lyceum was founded in Riga, where Latvian children were also educated. • 1680: • The Latvian Brotherhood of Carpenters was founded in Riga. • The newspaper "Rigische Novellen" began to be published regularly in Riga. • 1684-1688: Reitern House was built at 2/4 Marstaļu Street. • 1691: The 7th oldest pharmacy in Riga, the ''Lion's Pharmacy'', was founded. • 1695: The Swedish royal surveyor J. A. Ullrich produced road maps of Riga and the Tartu County, one of the first in Europe. • 1696:
Dannenstern House was built at 21 Marstaļu Street. • 1698 –
Swedish Gate constructed. ==18th century==