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・ Ventsislav Aydarski
・ Ventsislav Bengyuzov
・ Ventsislav Bonev
・ Ventsislav Dimitrov
・ Ventsislav Hristov
・ Ventsislav Ivanov
・ Ventsislav Ivanov (footballer, born 1995)
・ Ventsislav Kerchev
・ Ventsislav Marinov
・ Ventsislav Varbanov
・ Ventsislav Vasilev
・ Ventsislav Velinov
・ Ventsislav Yankov
・ Ventsislav Yordanov
・ Ventsislav Zhelev
Ventspils
・ Ventspils Castle
・ Ventspils Coach Terminal
・ Ventspils District
・ Ventspils Gymnasium No.1
・ Ventspils High Technology Park
・ Ventspils I Station
・ Ventspils II Station
・ Ventspils International Airport
・ Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre
・ Ventspils I–Tukums II Railway
・ Ventspils Lighthouse
・ Ventspils Municipality
・ Ventspils Olimpiskais Stadions
・ Ventspils University College


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Ventspils : ウィキペディア英語版
Ventspils

Ventspils (; (ロシア語:Вентспилс); (ドイツ語:Windau); (ポーランド語:Windawa); ) is a town in northwestern Latvia in the Courland historical region of Latvia, the sixth largest city in the country. At the beginning of the 2012, Ventspils had a population of 41,998. It is situated on the Venta River and the Baltic Sea, and has an ice-free port. The city's name literally means "castle on the Venta", referring to the Livonian Order's castle built alongside the Venta River. Ventspils holds the national record for the highest temperature ever recorded in Latvia with +37.8 °C on 4 August 2014.〔 〕
== History ==
Ventspils developed around the Livonian Order Ventspils Castle, built along the Venta River. It was chartered in 1314 and became an important mercantile city of the Hanseatic League.
As part of the Duchy of Courland, Ventspils blossomed as a shipbuilding centre. 44 warships and 79 trading ships were built in the town, and it was from Ventspils that the Duke's fleet set out to colonize Gambia and Tobago. Metal, amber, and wood-working shops also became important to the city's development.
During the Polish-Swedish War and the Great Northern War, Ventspils was destroyed, and in 1711 a plague wiped out most of the remaining inhabitants. Ventspils fell under the control of Imperial Russia and its re-growth was stalled.
It was not until about 1850 that shipbuilding and trade became important again. The port was modernized in the 1890s and connected to Moscow by rail. It became one of Imperial Russia's most profitable ports, by 1913 turning a yearly profit of 130 million rubles. The population soared as well, growing from 7,000 in 1897, to 29,000 in 1913.
During the German occupation from 1915–1919, the population decreased almost by half, though some returned home during the First Republic of Latvia (1918–1940).
In 1939, the Red Army established a base in Ventspils. Under Soviet rule, an oil pipeline was built to Ventspils, and became the USSR's leading port in crude oil export. Thirty kilometres north of Ventspils is the ex-Soviet radioastronomy installation VIRAC (''Ventspils Starptautiskais Radioastronomijas Centrs'' or ''Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre''). The existence of the ''Centrs'' was unknown to most Latvians until 1994. After independence, the Latvian government began a city-beautification process to make the city more attractive to tourists.
In 2004, Ventspils was a host city for a multi-national (United States, United Kingdom, Poland, Sweden, Russia, Latvia, Denmark, Finland, Norway) naval exercise called Baltic Operations XXXIII (BALTOPS). The force was led by the guided missile cruiser USS ''Anzio and the destroyer . The US vessels were the first American warships to visit the port of Ventspils since Latvian independence was declared.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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