Paide

Town in Estonia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paide is a town in Estonia and the capital of Järva County, one of the 15 counties of Estonia.

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Paide
Paide castle
Paide castle
Paide is located in Estonia
Paide
Paide
Location in Estonia
Coordinates: 58°53′00″N 25°33′26″E
Country Estonia
County Järva County
Municipality Paide
Area
  Total
10.036 km2 (3.875 sq mi)
Population
 (2024)[1]
  Total
8,073
  Rank19th
  Density804.4/km2 (2,083/sq mi)
Ethnicity (2021)
  Estonians92.3%
  Russians3.23%
  other4.47%
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
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Drone video of Paide and its castle

Etymology

Paide's German name Weißenstein (originally Wittenstein or Wittensten in Low German) means 'white stone'. This name was derived from the limestone used for the construction of Paide Castle. A Latin translation, Albus Lapis, has also been used.[2] The Estonian name Paide was first recorded in 1564 as Paida. It is thought to derive from the word paas, pae, meaning 'limestone'.[citation needed]

Sights

Paide Church

Paide Vallitorn

A castle was built in Paide by order of Konrad von Mandern, master of the Livonian Order, sometime in 1265 or 1266. It was from the beginning constructed around the central tower or keep, locally known as Tall Hermann tower or Vallitorn. With its six storeys, the tower has always been the core of the castle complex. The fortress was strengthened during the 14th and 15th centuries, when the surrounding walls were enlarged and towers added. It was also modernised to be able to meet the new threat of firearms. During the 16th century, the castle was again modified through the addition of outer bastions.[3]

During the Livonian War, the castle was repeatedly besieged by Russian troops, and in 1573 it was occupied by troops loyal to Ivan the Terrible. After that, the castle changed hands several times. It was also involved in the fighting during the 1600-1611 Polish-Swedish War, in the so-called Siege of Weissenstein.[3]

In 1895-1897 restoration work was carried out on the central tower and some other parts of the castle. However, in 1941, during World War II, retreating Soviet troops blew up the central tower and it was not repaired until after Estonia regained its independence, in 1990–1993.[3]

Today the restored central tower houses a part of Järva County museum.[3]

Paide Church

Paide Church originally dates from the 16th century; however, it has been very badly damaged in both war and fire on several occasions, and the present-day building dates mainly from a reconstruction which took place in 1909-1910 under the supervision of architect J. C. Mühlhausen.[3]

Demographics

More information Ethnicity, amount ...
Ethnic Composition 1922-2021
Ethnicity 1922[4] 1934[5] 1941[6] 1959[7] 1970[8] 1979[9] 1989[9] 2000[10] 2011[11] 2021[12]
amount % amount % amount % amount % amount % amount % amount % amount % amount % amount %
Estonians 2693 90.5 3070 93.5 2927 98.3 5351 91.7 6774 85.6 8363 86.7 9411 86.7 8683 90.1 7602 92.4 7312 92.3
Russians 61 2.05 38 1.16 14 0.47 - - 560 7.08 806 8.36 926 8.54 512 5.31 359 4.36 256 3.23
Ukrainians - - 0 0.00 - - - - 47 0.59 85 0.88 156 1.44 120 1.24 87 1.06 160 2.02
Belarusians - - - - - - - - 27 0.34 35 0.36 50 0.46 20 0.21 15 0.18 26 0.33
Finns - - 2 0.06 1 0.03 - - 153 1.93 158 1.64 152 1.40 115 1.19 60 0.73 46 0.58
Jews 12 0.40 18 0.55 0 0.00 - - 4 0.05 1 0.01 2 0.02 3 0.03 1 0.01 0 0.00
Latvians - - 7 0.21 3 0.10 - - 9 0.11 20 0.21 8 0.07 3 0.03 2 0.02 9 0.11
Germans 175 5.88 132 4.02 - - - - - - 67 0.69 41 0.38 24 0.25 18 0.22 11 0.14
Tatars - - 0 0.00 - - - - - - 5 0.05 3 0.03 4 0.04 2 0.02 3 0.04
Poles - - 1 0.03 4 0.13 - - - - 25 0.26 15 0.14 20 0.21 16 0.19 9 0.11
Lithuanians - - 1 0.03 0 0.00 - - 8 0.10 9 0.09 9 0.08 7 0.07 5 0.06 4 0.05
unknown 0 0.00 0 0.00 3 0.10 0 0.00 0 0.00 0 0.00 0 0.00 61 0.63 12 0.15 41 0.52
other 35 1.18 16 0.49 26 0.87 486 8.33 329 4.16 67 0.69 76 0.70 70 0.73 49 0.60 50 0.63
Total 2976 100 3285 100 2978 100 5837 100 7911 100 9641 100 10849 100 9642 100 8228 100 7926 100.01
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Sports

Paide is home to Paide linnastaadion, the home ground of Meistriliiga football team Paide Linnameeskond.

Notable residents

See also

References

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