For lesser known works by Latvian sculptor Kārlis Zāle in the old cemeteries of Dīvals and Trikāta

Avots: Gita Memmēna, Vidzemes tūrisma asociācija

One of the little-known works of the sculptor Kārlis Zāle (1888-1942) is a sculpture made of limestone "Roses Roses", which was created between 1939 and 1940 and is related to the creation of the Brothers' Cemetery Ensemble.

During the establishment of the Brothers' Cemetery Ensemble, a proposal to create a pool in the central part of the cemetery was discussed. The sculptor prepared for such a solution and cut out these two similar sculptures, intending to place them at the entrance to the pool. However, the idea of creating a pool was rejected and a lawn was installed in its place. Thus, the “Rose Rose” Brothers Cemetery did not find its place and was installed separately, near the cemeteries of private cemeteries: one in the 1st Forest Cemetery in Riga, the other in the Dīvāli Cemetery in Valmiera. Both sculptures depict a woman kneeling and grieving for the departed. Broken roses and an overturned water tank tell of a broken life. The sculptures are made in limestone and installed on a low base.
The sculpture has been located in the Diva cemetery in Valmiera since 1950.

The second lesser-known work of Kārlis Zāle is a monument to the folk teacher Jēkabs Mūrnieks (1865-1926). Located in the old cemetery of Trikāta. "Noble work leads to eternity" - this is the teacher's motto on the back of the monument.

The relatively complex architectural composition includes a large sub-basin, which apparently depicts a teacher with an open book sitting under the school limes in accordance with the wishes of the customers, and a boy cuddling him. This tab is almost the only work by Kārlis Zāle that has an illustrativism. Unusually, his handwriting has image detail.

Jēkabs Mūrnieks worked continuously at the Trikāta parish school for 42 years and during his time the parish school has educated many well-known Latvian state, army, public and various professions - Minister of War, General Jānis Balodi, Generals Kārlis Gopper and Roberts Dambītis, Colonels Pēteris Silenieks, Mārti Kamols, Jēkabs Gustavs and many others.
In 1928, grateful students erected a monument to Jēkabs Mūrnieks in the Trikāta cemetery, created by the sculptor Kārlis Zāle.

Used sources and references:

http://trikatasvesture.beverina.lv/index.php/pieminekli
https://www.vestnesis.lv/ta/id/59018
http://trikatasvesture.beverina.lv/index.php/sakums/arhivs-2020

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Related objects

Memorial places for generals and knights of the Lāčplēsis War Order in Trikāta Parish

The memorial stele is located next to the Trikāta cemetery chapel.

Trikāta Cemetery preserves the memory of three outstanding Latvian generals - Roberts Dambītis, Kārlis Goppers and Jānis Balodis. Jēkabs Mūrnieks, a teacher of all these generals, is also buried in Trikāta cemetery.

The generals and the knights of the Lāčplēsis Military Order are commemorated every year with torchlight processions to the Trikāta cemetery, where there are two memorial statues, in which the names of 17 knights of the Lāčplēsis Military Order associated with Trikāta parish are engraved.
Stela was opened on November 11, 2018.

Video story about the Lāčplēsis War Order and the set of orders that belonged to General Jānis Balodis.

Military heritage monuments in Dīvaliņš cemetery in Valmiera

Located in Valmiera Dīvala (Jāņa) cemetery in Valmiera.

A monument made in the Allaži limestone by sculptor Marta Lange was unveiled on September 26, 1937.

The pillared monument is closed by an inclined altar, on which there is an oak wreath and a helmet made of limestone.

Approximately 80 soldiers who died in the Latvian War of Independence, as well as those who died from injuries and illnesses, are buried.

Nearby is one of the lesser-known works of Kārlis Zāle - a monument “Broken Roses”, which is connected with the establishment of the Brothers' Cemetery Ensemble.

There is also a memorial to the victims of communist terror - a stone with the inscription: "The assassins of the 1941 communist regime" and white crosses.

Brothers' Cemetery in Riga

Riga Brothers’ Cemetery is located in the northern district of Riga. The cemetery extends over an area of 9 ha and is the most outstanding and significant memorial ensemble in Latvia dedicated to the fallen Latvian soldiers. About 3,000 soldiers are buried here. The Brothers’ Cemetery was created during World War I after the first three Latvian Riflemen, who fell in Tīreļpurvs in the battle against the German Army, were buried here. Later Latvian soldiers who had died in other battles and wars would also be buried in the Brothers’ Cemetery. The memorial is based on the design of the sculptor Kārlis Zāle, and is the first memorial ensemble in Europe with such landscape, architecture and sculptural value. It uses elements typical to the Latvian landscape, traditional farmsteads, Latvian folklore and history that praise the characteristics of soldiers and tell the story of the way of the soldier. The memorial was unveiled in 1936 and it has three parts: ‘The Road of Though’ which is a 250 m long alley, ‘Terrace of Heroes’ with the Altar of the Sacred Flame and ensemble the Sacred Oak Grove, and the burial ground with the Latvian wall and a memorial of a mother with her fallen sons.