Liiva Cemetery
Liiva Cemetery is located in Tallinn, at 34 Kalmistu Road. The
cemetery was put to service in 1935. The first to be buried at
the Liiva Cemetery in D section on January 28, 1935
with the civil ceremony was Hans Martinson, member of the
Riigikogu who belonged to the Estonian Socialist Labour Party
of that time. The official opening of the cemetery took place
only on September 22, 1935.
In the territory of the cemetery there is a chapel
(architectural monument) built in 1935.aastal and memorial of
the victims of the Red Terror.
Liiva chapel has been designed by architect Herbert Johanson in
1934. It is a functional sacral building made of square stone.
The main entrance of the cemetery, the chapel and the memorial
form the main axis in the territory discussed. This is the
symbol of the Liiva Cemetery, landmark for the visitors of the
cemetery.
With its area of 64 hectares Liiva was the biggest cemetery in
Tallinn till 1978. It is fully functional by its nature and
soil.
Originally, when planning the cemetery, it was meant to hold
the principle of maintaining the virgin forest landscape on
bypaths between the sections of burial places but later on this
idea has been given up as the number of funerals has increased.
Initial bypaths are very wide. Part of the territory of the
cemetery in the east across Valdeku road has remained as a
virgin forest land that has not been organised. After careful
and purposeful organising more natural parts of cemetery could
appear there. Although in developing the Liiva Cemetery natural
principles have not been taken into account so far, they should
be applied more in new sections that will be put to use,
especially in the close neighbourhood of the chapel that has
initially been the forest land. In the sections that are still
in use placement of tumuli in straight lines and burial places
with rigid concrete edges dominate. Liiva Cemetery has wide
sections with line graves (for the purpose of burying the
patients of the homes for the disabled and other deceased who
have no folks) that are first turned into a green area but
later these graves stay abandoned and make the
place look shabby
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