Rakvere is the administrative center, or county seat, of Lääne-Viru County in northern Estonia, about 100 km southeast of Tallinn and 20 km south of the Gulf of Finland and the Baltic Sea. In 2022, Rakvere was one of 10 ACES European Towns of Sport. In 2023, Rakvere achieved Green Destinations' Silver Award after having been selected in 2021 as part of the Top 100 Destination Sustainability Stories.
Rakvere boasts a distinctive architectural feature: the Rakvere door. Reflecting German baroque cabinets of the 17th and 18th centuries and the expressionist style of the 1920s, the wooden Rakvere door has a pointed, raised rectangle in the center. In 2023, there were 15 Rakvere doors on 13 houses.
After the Kingdom of Denmark conquered northern Estonia, it started to erect stone buildings in 1220. The Battle of Wesenberg, with the Danish and
/ref> After the king sold Danish Estonia to the Livonian Order in 1346, a large stone castle was built on top of the stronghold on Vallimägi. The Ordensburg was protected by towers and courtyards.
The building of a Franciscan monastery started on Theatre Hill in 1508. Yet, in 1558, during the first year of the Livonian War, Muscovite troops captured Rakvere, and, in 1574, Swedish Empire heavily damaged the town after the disastrous Siege of Wesenberg. In 1581, Sweden captured Rakvere and passed it to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1602; Polish troops destroyed the castle in 1605. After Rakvere returned to Swedish control that same year, a mansion was built on the ruins of the monastery. In 1703, during the Great Northern War, Rakvere was burned down. With the capitulation of Estonia and Livonia in 1710 and the subsequent Treaty of Nystad in 1721, the town became part of the Russian Empire. It was a part of Russia until 1918 when, following World War I, Estonia became an independent nation.
During the period of independence from 1918 to 1940, Estonia completed its first railway, and Rakvere was at the heart of the crucial Tallinn-Rakvere-Narva-St. Petersburg trade route. Telephone lines had been installed in 1898, and nearly the entire city had electric lights in 1918. Many prominent buildings were built, too, in Rakvere, during this period, including the market building, the old bank building (today, SEB Pank), and Rakvere Secondary School (since 2022, Rakvere Freedom School). Local newspapers emerged, including the county paper Virumaa Teataja in 1925. The idea of a professional theatre in Rakvere started to take shape as well. In 1930, during the administration of Mayor Heinrich Aviksoo, the town stadium opened. Later, Anton Soans developed a new master plan from which emerged a private German-language school and a public Estonian-language high school.
With Estonia in World War II, the Soviet Red Army invaded and occupied the country in June 1940. On 14 June 1941, hundreds of Rakvere's residents were deported to Russia. From 7 August 1941 to 19 September 1944, the town was occupied by Germany. In the autumn of 1941, the Dulag 102 prisoner-of-war camp was relocated from Šiauliai to Rakvere, and was later moved to Volosovo.
On 20 August 1991, Estonia again declared its independence.
On 15 July 2000, a high-end F2/T5 tornado hit Rakvere, killing one person and injuring one other. The tornado damaged 110 homes and destroyed 120 garage buildings. One car was seen airborne.
Today, permanent exhibitions and seasonal programs and activities in the castle explain everyday life in the 16th century. Visitors can dress as medieval knights and walk through the castle's rooms, including a torture chamber, an alchemist's workshop, and a room of historical artifacts. -->
The roots of Rakvere Theatre date back to 1882. Following independence, Estonian Land Reform of 1919 gave Rakvere's originally Swedish manor house (mõis) to the local government. On 4 May 1920, Mayor Jakob Liiv created the Rakvere Community Center Society (Rahvamaja Selts) to manage the formerly private building. Liiv's leadership helped create Rakvere Theatre. Construction of the theatre building - an addition to the manor house turned community center now cultural center (kultuurikeskus) - was completed at the end of the 1930s. Its festive opening was on 24 February 1940. The theatre survived World War II, and it was renovated in 2005. A cinema was built along a wall of the manor's carriage stable in 2016.
Today, Rakvere Theatre presents 10 new productions each season. The theatre has given Estonia many renowned actors, including Volli Käro, Üllar Saaremäe, Indrek Saar, Ülle Lichtfeldt, and Aarne Üksküla. Since 1990, it has organized the biannual event Baltoscandal, which hosts avant-garde plays and groups from all over the world.
In 2009, however, the Rakvere Municipality launched an international architectural competition for designs that would transform Kotli's church into a multifunctional music center and concert hall in honor of Arvo Pärt, who lived in Rakvere with his mother from 1938 until at least 1965. Rakvere selected Estonian architects Kristiina Aasvee, Kristiina Hussar, and Anne Kose, working together as Stuudio KAH OÜ, and their 20-million-euro design for what became known as the Ukuaru Concert Hall (Ukuaru Muusikamaja). On March 27, 2025, 85 years late, a spire was rested atop the northwest tower of Kotli's church. The spire for the east tower followed on April 29. The brass flag on the tower has the year 2025, and the one on the east tower has 1940."Ukuaru muusikamaja sai pärast 85 aastast ootust esimese tornikiivri," Rakvere Sõnumid, Rakvere, Eesti, Aprill 2025.
From 1940 to 1944, the Ministry of Education of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic operated Rakvere I and Rakvere II Secondary Schools in two shifts in the Freedom School building. In 1944, the two schools consolidated under the name Rakvere Secondary School; in 1946, it was the Rakvere Estoinan Secondary School, and, in 1950, Rakvere I Secondary School.
From 1994 to 2022, Freedom School was Rakvere Secondary School ( gümnaasium). In 2022, the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research opened a state, or national, high school () in a new 4,100-square-meter building, and Freedom School became an elementary school.
Harald , an Estonian patriot, was the director of the school during a period of significant growth - from 1936 until he was dismissed and replaced in August 1940. Jänes fled to Sweden to escape persecution by the Soviet Union. Jänes's son established a scholarship fund in 1993 in his father's name. In 1943, Ado Pajo graduated from the school and fought against Soviet forces in Finland as well as Estonia. Pajo returned to the school in 1950 to teach mathematics for more than 30 years. Established in 2006, the Pajo Memorial Medal recognizes the best mathematics student in each year's graduating class. In 1954, composer Arvo Pärt graduated from the school. (Across the street from Freedom School the Municipality of Rakvere is converting St. Paul's Church, also designed by Kotli, into a multipurpose music center in honor of Pärt.) In 1970, entrepreneur graduated from the school. Established in 2004, the Oleg Gross Award recognizes graduates who are active in their communities.
Unveiled on June 15, 2002, on the edge of Vallimägi in celebration of Rakvere's 700th anniversary, Tarvas pays homage to the town's historical name Tarvanpää and symbolizes the town's motto Väge täis (Full of Strength). The individuals and companies who financed the sculpture are engraved into the granite block.
==Gallery==
Transport
Geography
Demographics
+Ethnic composition 1922-2021
! rowspan="2" Ethnicity
! colspan="2" 1922
! colspan="2" 1934
! colspan="2" 1941
! colspan="2" 1959 1970
! colspan="2" 1979
! colspan="2" 1989
! colspan="2" 2000
! colspan="2" 2011
! colspan="2" 2021 Estonians 6885 89.9 9108 90.8 8099 95.7 11168 78.1 13292 74.3 14550 76.5 14902 75.2 14496 84.8 13445 88.1 13386 88.4 Russians 304 3.97 355 3.54 163 1.93 - - 3441 19.2 3326 17.5 3545 17.9 1845 10.8 1371 8.98 1155 7.63 Ukrainians - - 0 0.00 - - - - 410 2.29 355 1.87 507 2.56 218 1.28 150 0.98 193 1.27 Belarusians - - - - - - - - 106 0.59 108 0.57 171 0.86 69 0.40 46 0.30 36 0.24 Finns - - 22 0.22 5 0.06 - - 394 2.20 406 2.14 396 2.00 277 1.62 137 0.90 121 0.80 Jews 101 1.32 100 1.00 0 0.00 - - 44 0.25 24 0.13 23 0.12 11 0.06 5 0.03 0 0.00 Latvians - - 21 0.21 8 0.09 - - 26 0.15 26 0.14 20 0.10 5 0.03 6 0.04 14 0.09 Germans 256 3.34 281 2.80 - - - - - - 60 0.32 88 0.44 9 0.05 9 0.06 8 0.05 Tatars - - 9 0.09 - - - - - - 50 0.26 27 0.14 21 0.12 15 0.10 8 0.05 Polish people - - 13 0.13 17 0.20 - - - - 28 0.15 22 0.11 15 0.09 14 0.09 12 0.08 Lithuanians - - 2 0.02 2 0.02 - - 19 0.11 20 0.11 24 0.12 9 0.05 6 0.04 7 0.05 unknown 0 0.00 42 0.42 5 0.06 0 0.00 0 0.00 0 0.00 0 0.00 50 0.29 5 0.03 81 0.53 other 113 1.48 74 0.74 167 1.97 3128 21.9 159 0.89 58 0.31 97 0.49 72 0.42 55 0.36 119 0.79
Landmarks
Rakvere Castle (Linnus)
Rakvere Trinity Church (Kolmainu Kirik)
Long Street (Pikk Tänav)
Rakvere Theatre and Manor House (Teater ja mõis)
Rakvere Central Square (Keskväljak)
St. Paul's Church (Pauluse Kirik) and Ukuaru Concert Hall (Muusikamaja)
Notable buildings
Rakvere Freedom School (Vabaduse Kool)
Public Sculptures
Aurochs Sculpture (Skulptuur Tarvas)
A Young Man on a Bicycle Listening to Music (Noormees jalgrattal muusikat kuulamas)
Public Parks
Rakvere Oak Grove Preserve ()
Rakvere Manor House Park (Mõisapark)
Freedom War Memorial Park (Vabadussõja mälestussammas)
Sports
Athletic facilities
Sports clubs
Sporting events
Twin Towns / Sister Cities
External links
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