Statue of Stefan Batory
The Polish King gave Daugavpils city rights in 1582. The monument was unveiled on June 28, 2018 by the Polish (Andrzej Duda) and Latvian (Raimonds Vējonis) presidents. The project by Romuald Gibowski shows the image of the King from a historical coin and around it a clock face with historical names of the city along with the dates of their introduction. Inside the dial-mechanism, there is also an annotation about the date of granting city rights in Latvian and Polish. The facility is located on the square between the roundabout at the intersection of Cietokšņa iela and Daugavas iela (close to the Fortress) and the mouth of the Šunica River into the Daugava River.
Plaque commemorating Leon Broel-Plater
Leon Broel-Plater was a young Polish nobleman born in 1836. In 1863 he joined the January Uprising. During the uprising, he was captured and shot in the Daugavpils Fortress after a court trial. To this day, it is not known where his body lies. However, a memorial plaque commemorating the heroic nobleman remained. It is located on the premises of the Fortress, near the Mark Rothko Art Center. Similar plaques dedicated to Leon Broel-Plater are also in the Catholic cemetery in Daugavpils and close to the former Plater's palace in Kraslava.
Cross on Słobódka
In January 1920 took place the Battle of Daugavpils. The joined forces of the Polish and Latvian armies defeated the Soviet army. Polish soldiers who died in that battle were buried in the military cementery in Daugavpils's Słobódka. After World War II, the local communists decided to liquidate the cemetery and desolate the remains of the heroes of the battle using them to build one of the nearby roads, while creating a garbage dump on this site. Fortunately, in 1992, thanks to the efforts of local Poles, a high, concrete cross and plaques with the names of the fallen were unveiled, and the surrounding area was cleared. The cross is now a memorial of those events, a meeting place for Poles on the occasion of various celebrations, and one of the most important determinants of the Polish identity of this city.
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Polish places in Daugavpils. Part 1. here