Ikà ¡Ã·ile (, ; , or ; ; ) is a town in Ogre Municipality, in the Vidzeme region of Latvia. It was the first capital of the Roman Catholic Bishopric of Livonia, known by the German name of ÃÂxküll.
Saint Meinhard was the first bishop of ÃÂxküll. In 1197, Berthold of Hanover, a Cistercian abbot of Loccum, was made the second bishop of ÃÂxküll. Those days the town was the center of the upcoming crusading activities in the Livonian area. Bishop Berthold moved the episcopal see to Riga, before being killed by the Livs in battle.
According to Urmas Sutrop's recent research into the toponym's origin, the name Ikà ¡Ã·ile is from a Livonian term meaning "the ford or islet(s) (i.e. a place on the Daugava River where it was possible to cross the river) belonging to the son of the (local ruler) IkeâÂÂ. (The personal name Ike has the honourable meaning âÂÂage, lifetimeâÂÂ; the Ike family had considerable power in Livonia, as they controlled the military and trade traffic across the Daugava at Ykescola/Ykescole.) The earlier idea that the placename Ikà ¡Ã·ile translates from the Finnic Livonian words ikà ¡-÷ile (ikà ¡ = 'one', ÷ile = village) meaning "one village" or "the (one) village", is treated by Sutrop as a folk etymology.
Ikà ¡Ã·ile is one of the oldest inhabited regions of Latvia. This is evidenced by the mound and an ancient burial ground in the present rural area of Ikà ¡Ã·ile. By the 9th to 12th centuries there was already a Liv village on the Daugava waterway.
Building and employment of castles was an important topic in the first accounts available in the Livonian Chronicle of Henry. Henry of Livonia, an eyewitness to the events, started telling about a canon of the Augustinian monastery of Segeburg in Holstein called Meinhard. Meinhard heard stories of travelers about the great Daugava river, an area of commerce for pagan tribes of Livs and Letts.
Meinhard ventured there to convert people to Christianity. After some conversions, he built a church in the village of Ikà ¡Ã·ile and baptized some Livonians. However, the position of the church was vulnerable to attacks, mainly from Lithuanian pagan inhabitants. After a Lithuanian raiding party attacked in winter, Meinhard and the local people hid in the forests. According to Henry of Livonia's chronicle, Meinhard pointed out that Livonians were foolish for not having fortifications, and promised people to build castles if they converted to Christianity.
In 1185 stonemasons from Gotland built the castle of Ikà ¡Ã·ile with a chapel or church. This is the oldest stone castle in Latvia and it is also the oldest stone building in the Eastern Baltic. In 1186 the upper bishop of Bremen appointed the monk Meinard, of Segeberga monastery, near Lübeck, as the first bishop of Ikà ¡Ã·ile. Under his leadership Ikà ¡Ã·ile became the center from which Catholicism would spread in Latvia. Both Meinhard and the second bishop, Berthold, were buried inside Ikà ¡Ã·ile Church (Bishop Meinhard was later reburied at the Dome Church in Riga). Albert of Buxhovden followed Berthold as bishop of Uexkull. He arrived at his diocese with a sizeable army of Saxon crusaders and supported by the Holy Roman Emperor and the Pope.
Albert realized that the diocese of Uexküll, defended by a castle with the same name, was far away from the Daugava river to be effective in the battle. For that reason, he requests another fortification near the sea, that would be the founding of Riga. In 1201, the third Bishop of Ikà ¡Ã·ile, Albert, moved the Livonian Bishopric Center to Riga. During the Livonian Crusade Ikà ¡Ã·ile Castle was attacked by the Semigallian troops on the left bank of the Daugava several times, and in 1203 and 1206 tried to capture the castle.
In 1638 the municipality of Ikà ¡Ã·ile included eight manors, the richest of which being the Ikà ¡Ã·ile and Tënà «à ¾u manors. By the 19th century there were two manors left in the Ikà ¡Ã·ile municipality, the Ikà ¡Ã·ile and Berkava manors. After the formation of Ogre, which originally belonged to the Ikà ¡Ã·ile municipality, the area of Ikà ¡Ã·ile parish was gradually reduced.
The castle of Ikà ¡Ã·ile was destroyed in the 17th century, and the church (which was rebuilt many times) was destroyed in 1916 by German artillery. In 1933 a new Lutheran church was erected near Ikà ¡Ã·ile, near the station. Due to the construction of the Riga Hydroelectric Power Plant and the reservoir, the ruins of the first stone church were preserved in the 1970s; the island on which they are now located was increased and strengthened. The ruins of Ikà ¡Ã·ile manor, as well as a castle, are below the water of the reservoir.
The head of the city government in Ikà ¡Ã·ile is the mayor. The incumbent mayor Indulis Trapià Âà ¡.
Ikà ¡Ã·iles government is located at Ikà ¡Ã·ile, Peldu street 22.
Ikà ¡Ã·ile Secondary School is a Latvian State School, founded in 1966. It is also a Junior Achievement Latvia School.
The origins of the Ikà ¡Ã·ile School date back to 1864, when the first parish school was established under the leadership of Ikà ¡Ã·ile. The school building is named Zemturi. About a hundred years after the development of Ikà ¡Ã·ile School it was decided to build a new school. The building of the school took place near the center of Ikà ¡Ã·ile, next to the new A6 highway. The Ikà ¡Ã·ile School of the Ogre district was opened in 1966. The development and growth continued, therefore additional schools were built, enabling the establishment of a secondary school. From 1989 to 1990, the school was rebuilt, and in 1990 it was named the Ikà ¡Ã·ile Secondary School.
Ikà ¡Ã·ile District Central Library is a library in Ikà ¡Ã·ile, located on Peldu street 22.
The first library in the vicinity of Ikà ¡Ã·iles was formed and operational by the beginning of the 19th century. The first written information about the library of Ikà ¡Ã·ile region can be found at the beginning of V. Villeruà ¡'s book "GÃÂjums", which states that in 1852 a Reading Association with 35 members was established in the Ikà ¡Ã·ile municipality. The library was restored in 1946, after the Second World War. There have been changes to the library over the years; in 1974, a separate children's library was created.
Source: William Urban, The Teutonic Knights, a Military History, (London 2003) 82,83.