Gustavs Tūrs

The Most Reverend
Gustavs Tūrs
Archbishop of Riga
Church Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia
Archdiocese Riga
See Riga
Elected 14 March 1948
In office 1948-1968
Predecessor Teodors Grīnbergs
Successor Jānis Matulis
Orders
Ordination 20 June 1920
Consecration 1948
Personal details
Born (1890-05-24)24 May 1890
Prauliena Parish, Russian Empire
Died March 16, 1973(1973-03-16) (aged 82)
Riga, Latvian SSR
Buried Forest Cemetery, Riga
Nationality Latvian
Parents Gustavs Turss
Anna Tursa
Occupation Archbishop

Gustavs Tūrs (24 May 1890 - 16 March 1973) was a Latvian prelate of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia and Archbishop of Riga from 1948 to 1968.

Biography

Born on May 24 1890 to Gustavs and Anne Tursa in Prauliena Parish "Silnieki". The family had eight children. He studied at the Lazdon Parish School (Gustavs'kola), at the Aleksander Boys' Gymnasium and St. Petersburg Alexei Gymnasium (1907-1910). He studied jurisprudence and later theology from 1910 to 1918 at the University of Tartu. On June 20, 1920 he was ordained to the priesthood in St James' Church in Riga, when it was still a Lutheran church. For a short time he served as a pastor in Latgale in the parishes of Sīķele, Borne,Kalupe, Preiļi and Krāslava. Since 1921 he has served as a teacher in Bauska and as a pastor in the Bauska parish, having been there for 24 years. He also served in areas surrounding Bauska such as Cod, Mezotne and Budberga. During and after World War II he was a pastor of St. John's Church, Riga and of Alūksne, Sātu and Zemītes. On March 14, 1948, he was elected Archbishop of the LELB. In 1959, Leipzig University's Faculty of Theology bestowed him with an honorary doctorate. On March 23, 1968, at the 11th General Synod Tūrs resigned from his post as Archbishop of Riga and Primate of the Church of Latvia. He died on March 16, 1973 in Riga. He was buried on March 24, 1973, in Forest Cemetery, Riga.[1]

References

  1. "Gustavs Tūrs (Turss)", LELB. Retrieved on 22 December 2017.
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