Eivere
Village in Estonia
Village in Järva County, Estonia
58°57′N 25°33′E / 58.950°N 25.550°E / 58.950; 25.550Eivere is a village in Paide municipality, Järva County in northern-central Estonia.[1] Prior to the 2017 administrative reform of local governments, it was located in Paide Parish.
Linguist Elmar Muuk (1901–1941) was born in Eivere.
Eivere manor
Eivere estate (German: Eyefer) was first mentioned in 1552. The current manor house was built around 1912 in an eclectic style, mixing neo-Gothic and Art Nouveau elements.[2][3]
References
- ^ Classification of Estonian administrative units and settlements 2014[dead link] (retrieved 28 July 2021)
- ^ Sakk, Ivar (2004). Estonian Manors - A Travelogue. Tallinn: Sakk & Sakk OÜ. p. 102. ISBN 9949-10-117-4.
- ^ Hein, Ants (2009). Eesti Mõisad - Herrenhäuser in Estland - Estonian Manor Houses. Tallinn: Tänapäev. p. 77. ISBN 978-9985-62-765-5.
External links
- Eivere manor at Estonian Manors Portal
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Settlements in Paide (urban municipality)
- Paide
- Allikjärve
- Anna
- Eivere
- Esna
- Kaaruka
- Kihme
- Kirila
- Kirisaare
- Kodasema
- Koordi
- Korba
- Kriilevälja
- Mäeküla
- Mäo
- Mündi
- Mustla
- Mustla-Nõmme
- Nurme
- Nurmsi
- Oeti
- Ojaküla
- Otiku
- Pikaküla
- Prääma
- Puiatu
- Purdi
- Sargvere
- Seinapalu
- Sillaotsa
- Sõmeru
- Suurpalu
- Tarbja
- Tännapere
- Valasti
- Valgma
- Vedruka
- Veskiaru
- Viisu
- Viraksaare
- Võõbu
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