Elva | |||
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— Town and municipality — | |||
Elva town hall | |||
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Coordinates: 58°13′28″N 26°25′16″E / 58.22444°N 26.42111°ECoordinates: 58°13′28″N 26°25′16″E / 58.22444°N 26.42111°E | |||
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Town rights | 1 May 1938 | ||
Area | |||
• Total | 9.92 km2 (3.83 sq mi) | ||
Population (01.01.2010[1]) | |||
• Total | 5,762 | ||
• Density | 580/km2 (1,500/sq mi) | ||
Website | www.elva.ee |
Elva is a town and a municipality in Tartu County, Estonia. It has a population of 5,762 (as of 1 January 2010) and an area of 9.92k m².[1]
Elva has two larger lakes. Lake Verevi has a sandy and well-developed beach area that is very popular in the summer and is host to many outdoor events. Lake Arbi has wet reed grown shores. Elva's largest employer (and in all of southern Estonia) is Enics Eesti AS, subsidiary of Enics Group, providing electronics manufacturing services in industrial electronics. Elva has one school, Elva Gümnaasium, offering education from 1st grade to high school graduation.
The dominant element in Elva is the train station which today is the visitors information center and which used to be an important trade route in the past centuries.
Detailed information on hikes on foot or by bicycle can be obtained from visitors information center. Canooer’s favorite is the river of Elva with old water mill sites and rapid banks. In winter skiing fans can participate in the Tartu Cross-Country Marathon, belonging to the Worldloppet series. Its 60 km track from Otepää to Elva can be cycled through on mountain bikes in summer.
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Elva was founded soon after the completion of Tartu-Valga train route that was built from 1886 to 1889. Elva was first mentioned in an Estonian newspaper in 1889.
Elva is named after the Elva river that has been mentioned in books already in the 17th century.
In 1913 a two grade school was opened.
On 1 May 1938 Elva became a town.
The town center was heavily damaged in the Second World War. In July 1941 Elva was liberated by the Forest Brothers. In August 1944 surroundings of Elva became a bloody battlefield between Hyazinth von Strachwitz's panzer brigade and the Red Army.
From 1950 to 1962 Elva was District Central of Elva district. Elva's town rights were restored in 1965.
The beach of Lake Verevi in Elva.
Elva song festival ground, Lake Arbi in the background.
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This Tartu County location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
Estonia (i/ɛˈstoʊniə/;Estonian: Eesti [ˈeːsti]), officially the Republic of Estonia (Estonian: Eesti Vabariik), is a country in the Baltic region of Northern Europe. It is bordered to the north by the Gulf of Finland, to the west by the Baltic Sea, to the south by Latvia (343 km), and to the east by Lake Peipus and Russia (338.6 km). Across the Baltic Sea lies Sweden in the west and Finland in the north. The territory of Estonia consists of a mainland and 2,222 islands and islets in the Baltic Sea, covering 45,339 km2 (17,505 sq mi) of land, and is influenced by a humid continental climate.
Estonia is a democratic parliamentary republic divided into fifteen counties, with its capital and largest city being Tallinn. With a population of 1.3 million, it is one of the least-populous member states of the European Union, Eurozone, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, the OECD and the Schengen Area. Ethnic Estonians are Finnic people, and the official language, Estonian, is a Finno-Ugric language closely related to Finnish and the Sami languages, and distantly to Hungarian.
MS Estonia, previously Viking Sally (1980–1990), Silja Star (−1991), and Wasa King (−1993), was a cruise ferry built in 1979/80 at the German shipyard Meyer Werft in Papenburg. The ship sank in 1994 in the Baltic Sea in one of the worst maritime disasters of the 20th century. It is the deadliest European shipwreck disaster to have occurred in peacetime, costing 852 lives.
Coordinates: 59°23′0″N 21°40′0″E / 59.38333°N 21.66667°E
The ship was originally ordered from Meyer Werft by a Norwegian shipping company led by Parley Augustsen with intended traffic between Norway and Germany. At the last moment, the company withdrew their order and the contract went to Rederi Ab Sally, one of the partners in the Viking Line consortium (SF Line, another partner in Viking Line, had also been interested in the ship).
Originally the ship was conceived as a sister ship to Diana II, built in 1979 by the same shipyard for Rederi AB Slite, the third partner in Viking Line. However, when Sally took over the construction contract, the ship was lengthened from the original length of approximately 137 metres (449 ft) to approximately 155 metres (509 ft) and the superstructure of the ship was largely redesigned.
This Strange Engine is the ninth studio album by British rock band Marillion, released in 1997.
It is the first of three albums in three consecutive years that Marillion released on a contract with Castle Communications, after being dropped by EMI Records following the relative lack of commercial success of Afraid of Sunlight in 1995; peaking at No. 16, Afraid of Sunlight had been the band's first studio album not to reach the top ten of the UK Albums Chart. Without the promotional efforts of a major label, This Strange Engine continued Marillion's decline in mainstream success; it reached No. 27 on the UK Albums Chart and stayed there for two weeks. The album sold significantly better in the Netherlands, home of one of the band's most loyal audiences, reaching #10.
Most of the tracks are soft rock styled but relatively lengthy compositions.
The first single released from the album was "Man of a Thousand Faces". A music video was also released of this track. The second single from the album was "Eighty Days". Neither single received any mainstream radio airplay. For the first time, no singles from a Marillion album entered the UK Singles Chart.
(Ivan Drever)
There's not really a story to this one, however, if you like it, it's for you!
I'll walk this way until I sleep
I'll ride this road until I die
I'd take you with me if you'd come
It's keeping me alive
I'd talk to those who'd put me down
I'd listen without prejudice
The only thing I ever owned
Was living deep inside
Chorus:
I'll ride this horse into the wind
I'll take you with me when I go
My song is precious can't you see
I'll sing it till I sleep
I'll fly with wings that soar above
The land that lies beneath me
The only thing I've ever owned
Was living deep inside
I'd walk through hills and glens for those
Who mean the world to me and I
Would rather see you stay than go
But now we must decide
I'll ride the surf on board this ship
That takes me o'er the foaming sea
Unites me with my family
And those that I'd caress
Chorus
So till I sleep, I'll carry on
So till I die, I'll run along
These lines I drew myself have gone
You know it's only right
And when my senses have all gone
And when myself I am alone
I'll count my blessings one by one
And then I'll say good night