Tallinn - Gothic houses - Ancient and medieval architecture (2024)

History

Tallinn, or former Reval, was the second largest city of medieval Livonia, the northernmost member of the German Hanseatic League, and the seat of a bishopric. Originally, it was the capital of the Danish part of Livonia, and after subordinating to the Teutonic Order, it was the furthest Teutonic commandry. It first appeared in records in 1219, in the chronicle of Henry of Latvia, describing the landing of the Danish king Valdemar II’s crusaders in the province of Reval (“ad Revelensem provinciam”), an area that was probably still sparsely populated at that time. After Valdemar’s departure, Toompea Hill became the administrative center of the Danes, and over the next dozen or so years, a settlement and then a town developed at its feet. It was first called “civitas” in a document from 1238.
In 1248, Eric IV granted the townspeople of Reval privileges modeled on the charter of Lübeck, which, together with the growing role of maritime trade, resulted in the city’s rapid development. Even the Aesti uprising on SaintGeorge Eve did not stop this trend, as a result of which Denmark decided to sell northern Estonia together with Reval to the Teutonic Order in 1346. Wanting to avoid conflicts with the wealthy townspeople, Teutonic Knights confirmed all city privileges and additionally released the townspeople from the obligation to participate in military expeditions to Ruthenia and Lithuania. The wealth of the city was reflected in the number of merchants and craftsmen’s guilds established in Reval. Next to the oldest guild of St. Olaf and St. Canute from 1363, there was the so-called a Great Merchant Guild, and from 1399 the Brotherhood of the Blackheads operated. An even clearer indicator of the prosperity of the townspeople was the improvement of their housing conditions, visible not only in the expanding area of the city, but also in the quality of buildings.
The population growth in Reval was very rapid, it was estimated that about 5,000 people in the 14th-century town, and about 6,600 in the 16th century. As the number of inhabitants increased, the process of building density in Reval progressed and the original wooden and half-timbered residential structures were transformed into stone ones. The first stone houses in the city were probably built around the mid-13th century, and it certainly existed in the fourth quarter of the 13th century. Stone buildings began to appear in Reval on a larger scale in the 14th century, when the layout of the Hanseatic city was finally consolidated, created primarily due to the culture typical of the merchant towns of northern Germany, but also craft centers from southern Scandinavia and north-western Russia, as well as native Baltic elements.
At the end of the 16th century, after the end of the Livonian War, Tallinn together with the northern part of today’s Estonia passed to Sweden, under whose rule it remained for a hundred years. This was the period in which the gradual replacement of medieval urban buildings with early modern ones began, first in the Renaissance, then in the Baroque style. This process had to accelerate especially after natural disasters, such as the fire of 1684. During the Great Northern War, in 1710, Tsar Peter I captured Estonia, but Reval was surrendered without fighting, which spared the city from destruction. It remained in Russian hands until 1918, when, after the declaration of independence of the Republic of Estonia, the capital was officially named Tallinn. During World War II, the city fortunately avoided serious destruction, thanks to which many of the medieval monuments have survived.

Architecture

The basic layout of the medieval city was shaped under the rule of the Danish kings. Reval was then divided into the so-called the Upper Town with the cathedral and castle and the merchant and crafts Lower Town with the main square. As Reval was not located on a river, it did not have the long quay and streets perpendicular to it, typical of Hanseatic cities. Streets were arranged irregularly, and the market square with the most important buildings was located some distance from the port. The roads were covered with pieces of flat limestone and erratic stones, and less often with wood. More systematic paving of the streets probably began in the last quarter of the 13th century.
The earliest houses in Revel were wooden, with log and in-between-pillars construction technique, as well as half-timbered ones, which allowed for the building of taller houses in the tight space of the city, limited by fortifications. With the increase in wealth, the older wooden buildings were removed from a significant part of the city, often down to the level of the natural ground. Then the properties were covered with a layer of clay or sand to insulate and stabilize the ground, and only then did the construction of stone houses begin. Only in areas that were more stable in terms of geology and water, the oldest stone buildings were built directly on natural ground. There, in accordance with the construction tradition of that time, the digging was limited to a foundation up to 0.5 meters deep.
The stone buildings from the 14th century in Reval were mostly typical Gothic tenement houses of the northern Hanseatic region, which combined the functions of a residential house and a granary. These were gable-type buildings, with ridges arranged perpendicular to the streets and with triangular gables facing squares and roads. In front of the house facades there were often cellar necks and lintels, i.e. ground-level terraces preceding the entrances to the building. The facades of Gothic tenement houses were richly decorated with moulded niches, friezes, cornices and blendes, filled with ornaments in typically Gothic motifs of pointed arches, trefoils or bladders. The openings on the ground floor had pointed arches, and in the late Gothic period were four-sided with stone crosses dividing them into smaller lights. On the upper floors, the windows were smaller, and the only openings there were often hatches for loading goods inside the granaries.
The main element of the interiors of Gothic tenement houses in Reval was a large hall, located at the front of the ground floor and often reaching two floors high. As the largest room in the entire building, it had a fireplace where meals were prepared, it also served as a place of trade and a craft workshop. The next room was on the ground floor in the rear part. It had representative functions and was heated by a hypocaustum furnace located in the basem*nt. The rooms on the first floor in the rear part had a similar function. Storage rooms were located on the upper floors, from where goods could be brought in and unloaded using cranes mounted on the building facades. The lowest places were basem*nts, often inhabited in the Middle Ages, but serving mainly as cool warehouses or beer cellars.

Current state

In Tallinn, many medieval, Gothic buildings have been preserved. Among them one can mention a group of three Gothic buildings from the 14th century, currently serving as a hotel at Pikk 71 street, the so-called Three Sisters (Kolm Ode), and another complex of three medieval tenements called Three Brothers (Kolm Venda) at Lai 38 street. Also at number Lai 23 there is a fully preserved Gothic house. Another medieval tenement, unfortunately with a partly rebuilt façade, is located at Suur Karja 1, and next to it you can see the magnificent Gothic granary Olde Hansa, today serving as a restaurant and the Gothic HopnerHouse opposite and the building now called Peppersack at Vana Turg 6 street. At the end you can not fail to mention the house of the Great Guild (Suurgild) from 1407-1410, at Pikk 17 street. Currently, it houses the Estonian Historical Museum. Worth seeing is also a small street at the southern wall of the town hall with two historic buildings.

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bibliography:
Borowski T., Miasta, zamki i klasztory. Inflanty, Warszawa 2010.
Russow E., Tallinna lätted, “Tuna”, 2/2019.

Tallinn - Gothic houses - Ancient and medieval architecture (2024)

FAQs

What type of architecture is in Tallinn? ›

The Old Town of Tallinn is listed as a UNESCO heritage site both for its Hanseatic architecture and the network of streets and plots that has remained intact to a large extent.

What is the oldest house in Tallinn? ›

Peter the Great's house is the oldest museum in Tallinn. It exhibits a unique collection of genuine objects that surrounded Peter I and Catherine I of Russia during their day-to-day life in Estonia. The couple had stayed in this house several times since 1714.

When was Old Tallinn built? ›

The origins of Tallinn date back to the 13th century, when a castle was built there by the crusading knights of the Teutonic Order.

Is Tallinn a medieval town? ›

Visitors from all over the world drop around to admire the beauty of Tallinn, the best preserved medieval city in Northern Europe boasting Gothic spires, winding cobblestone streets and enchanting architecture.

What is Tallinn well known for? ›

Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Tallinn has many faces: the impossibly photogenic Old Town; a thriving tech and food culture; and the brutalist-style architecture that's a legacy of the Soviet years. You could spend days unpeeling the layers of history.

What is the history of the Estonian house? ›

Sydney. The Estonian society “Eesti Kodu” [Estonian Home] was established on 17 April 1925, at the instigation of Mr Jakob Lukats. Two years later, some members of “Eesti Kodu”, wanting greater emphasis on cultural activities, decided to form a parallel society, “Linda”, which was established on 19 June 1927.

Where is the oldest house on earth? ›

Around 3500 BC – Knap of Howar, UK

Located in Scotland, the Knap of Howar is thought to have been built in 3500 BC. Considered to be one of the oldest houses in the world, Knap of Howar is a stone house located on the remote island of Papa Westray.

What is the oldest ancient house? ›

The oldest archaeological evidence of house construction comes from the famous Oldupai Gorge (also called Olduvai Gorge) site in Tanzania, and the structure is around 1.8 million years old. Nobody knows exactly which proto-human species is responsible for the tools (and houses) found at Oldupai.

What was ancient Estonia called? ›

Early Middle Ages. The name of Estonia occurs first in a form of Aestii in the 1st century AD by Tacitus. However, at this stage it probably indicated Baltic tribes living in the area of Western Lithuania and the present-day Kaliningrad.

How many people lived in medieval Tallinn? ›

Reval was arguably the most significant medieval port in the Gulf of Finland. Reval enjoyed a strategic position at the crossroads of trade between the rest of western Europe and Novgorod and Muscovy in the east. The city, with a population of about 8,000, was very well fortified with city walls and 66 defence towers.

What was Tallinn called before? ›

The Old Town's medieval buildings and network of streets date mostly from the 13th-16th centuries when Tallinn (then known as Reval) was a quickly developing part of the Hanseatic League.

What is Estonian architecture like? ›

The form of a traditional 19th century farmhouse is a long chimney-less building with low walls of horizontal logs and a high straw thatched roof. The log walls are one third and the roof two thirds of the total building height.

What are Estonian houses made of? ›

Estonia has a long tradition of producing houses from local pine or spruce. You can still find log homes that are over 300 years old.

Is Tallinn a flat city? ›

Tallinn is also flat, but people sometimes speak about 'the hills of Tallinn'.

What is the style of architecture in Vilnius? ›

The current city centre is embellished by structures that have Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque and Neoclassical traits. Vilnius deserves the title of the capital of Eastern European Baroque more than any other city.

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