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The Rose of Turaida in Sigulda
In the valley of the Gauja River in Latvia—then Livonia—near the imposing Turaida Castle, a simple grave beneath a linden tree marks the resting place of a woman known as the Rose of Turaida.
Her name was Maija. According to legend, she was found as an infant after a 17th-century battle during the Polish–Swedish Wars, discovered in her dead mother’s embrace. She was raised by the secretary of the Castle and grew up, as the story goes, known for her beauty and kindness, thus called the Rose of Turaida.
She fell in love with a gardener from the other side of the river, Viktor Heil, who worked as a gardener at Sigulda Castle. In the evenings, the couple would meet halfway at Gutman’s Cave.
A deserter became obsessed with her. When she refused his advances, he concocted a plan: he tricked Maija into coming to the cave by sending a false message in her lover’s name. Realising she could not escape, she told him the scarf around her neck was enchanted: it could make its wearer invulnerable to any damage, and that he should test it on her. The man did so, killing her instantly. Her choice was to die rather than betray herself and her love.
She was buried in Turaida’s Church cemetery, where Viktor planted a linden tree and, in later retellings, a white rose that turned red from her blood. A cross on her grave was said to bear the words, “Love is stronger than death.”
The story was long treated as folklore until the 19th century, when court documents discovered in Riga confirmed that the murder had in fact taken place. Among the archives was an official act describing the case, revealing details that deepen the tragedy: that evening Viktor found Maija’s body in the cave, he rushed for help, only to be accused, arrested, and put on trial at Turaida Castle, facing execution. However, the course of events changed when a mercenary confessed he was the one who delivered the forged message. The real killer was caught and hanged, and Viktor was acquitted, but he left the country, never to return.
In the early 20th century, the burial site was marked, and couples in love continue to leave flowers for the Rose there. Newlyweds also visit, hoping to partake in a devotion that has lasted for centuries.