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· St. Petersburg in dates
1703 - St Petersburg is founded when Peter the Great builds the Peter and Paul Fortress. A year later the Admiralty shipyard is built. Work on Letny Sad (the Summer Gardens) begins. 1710 - Alexander Nevsky Lavra is founded. 1712 - St Petersburg becomes Russia's capital. 1714 - The Kunstkamera, Russia's first museum, is founded and the first stone buildings are built. 1715 - Russia's first Naval Academy is founded. 1718 - Peter the Great executes his son Czarevich Alexei, in the Peter and Paul Fortress, which now becomes a prison for enemies of the government. 1721 - Peace is made with Sweden, ending the long Northern War. Peter takes the title emperor. 1724 - The Academy of Sciences is founded. The remains of St Alexander Nevsky are moved from Vladimir to the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. 1725 - Peter the Great dies, and his second wife, Catherine I, ascends the throne. The population of St Petersburg is about 40,000. 1728 - Peter II, Peter the Great's son, becomes emperor and moves the capital back to Moscow. 1732 - Under Empress Anna, Peter the Great's niece, St Petersburg comes capital again. 1736-37 - Fire destroys downtown St Petersburg. 1741 - Elizabeth Petrovna, Peter the Great's daughter, seizes power after deposing the child emperor, Ivan VI, ruler for less than a year. 1750 - The city population reaches about 100,000. 1754 - Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli begins building the Winter Palace. 1757 - The Academy of Arts is founded. 1761 - Elizabeth dies, Peter III becomes emperor. 1762 - Peter is deposed by his wife, Catherine II (Catherine the Great). 1767 - Catherine begins buying art collections, laying the foundation of the Hermitage museum. 1777 - The city is hit by flooding. 1782 - The Bronze Horseman monument is unveiled. 1785 - The Marble Palace is built by Catherine II for her lover Prince Orlov and she purchases Diderot's library for her collection. 1789 - The Tauride Palace is built by Catherine II for her lover, Prince Potyomkin. 1795 - The Imperial Public Library is founded. 1796-7 - When Catherine dies, her son Pavel begins his short rule. Construction on the Mikhailovsky Castle begins. The Russian-American Company is founded to administer Alaska, a Russian territory. 1799 - Pavel is assassinated in Mikhailovsky Castle, and Alexander I, later known as Alexander the Great, becomes emperor. 1811 - The Kazan Cathedral is completed. 1812 - Napoleon invades Russia. 1816 - Russia's first stock exchange opens on the Spit of Vasilievsky Island. 1823 - The Admiralty building is completed. 1824 - Flooding in the city. 1825 - Alexander I dies, and the Decembrists rise up when Nicholas I ascends the throne. 1826 - Five of the Decembrist leaders are executed at the Arsenal (now the Artillery Museum). 1832 - The Alexander Column is erected. 1834 - The Senate and Synod buildings, designed by Carlo Rossi, are finished. 1837 - Russia's leading poet, Alexander Pushkin, is killed in a duel. The first Russian railroad opens between St Petersburg and Tsarskoe Selo. The Winter Palace burns down, and is rebuilt nearly a year later. 1850 - The Annunciation Bridge, now Lt. Schmidt Bridge, opens as the city's first permanent bridge. 1851 - The Moscow-St Petersburg railroad opens. 1853 - The city's population is over half a million. Nicholas I dies. Alexander II ascends the throne. 1858 - St Isaac's cathedral is finished. 1860 - The Mariinsky Theatre is opened, and the State Bank of Russia is founded. 1861 - Serfdom is abolished. 1863 - A central water supply system is opened. 1869 - Medeleyev, a professor at St Petersburg university, creates the periodic table. 1879 - The first street lights appear. 1880 - Alexander II narrowly escapes a terrorist bomb explosion in the Winter Palace. A year later he is assassinated and later the Church on the Spilled Blood is built on this spot. 1885 - The St Petersburg sea port moves from the Spit of Vasilievsky Island to its current location in the city's southeast. 1890 - Pyotr Tchaikovsky's Sleeping Beauty premieres at the Mariinsky Theatre. The city's population reaches one million. 1894 - Alexander III dies. Nicholas II becomes tsar. 1898 - The Russian Museum opens. 1903 - The Trinity Bridge spans the Neva, spurring a building boom on the Petrograd side. 1905 - Hundreds of peaceful workers and their families are shot by government troops on Bloody Sunday on Palace Square. A general strike begins, leading to a full uprising across the empire. 1906 - As part of the government's concessions, the State Duma, the Russian parliament, convenes for the first time in the Tauride Palace. 1907 - The Church on the Spilled Blood is finished. 1910 - The city's population reaches over 2 million. 1914 - World War I. The city is renamed Petrograd. 1917 - Tsar Nicholas II abdicates in what is called the February Revolution. The Bolsheviks seize power in October. The city's population reaches its peak of 21A million. 1918 - The Bolsheviks forcibly dissolve the democratically elected Constituent Assembly, called just after the Bolshevik seizure of power to choose a new post-tsarist government. The Red Terror begins as anti-communist forces march on Petrograd. The capital is moved back to Moscow. 1919 - Petrograd is under siege by the White Army. The population flees as food supplies are cut off. 1920 - Only 700,000 people remain in the city, which is totally paralysed by the communist terror. 1921 - The sailors of the Kronstadt naval base rise up against the Bolsheviks. All are massacred. 1924 - Lenin dies; the city is renamed Leningrad. The third worst flood in city history strikes. 1929 - Communist authorities begin pulling down churches as part of their anti-religion campaign. 1934 - Sergei Kirov is assassinated in his office in PRECEDING PAGES: Lenin calls for revolution. LEFT: Peter I with his family in 1720. RIGHT: a commander of the Red Army. Smolny, setting off the Great Terror. 1939 - The city population is 3.2 million. 1941 - In June the Nazis invade Russia, and in September the Siege of Leningrad begins. 1944 - The Siege is lifted. The city's population has declined to 500,000. 1948 - The so-called Leningrad Affair begins, leading to the repression of local intellectuals. 1955 - The subway opens. 1964 - The Peterhof Palace opens to the public after restoration of damage caused by the war. 1979 - Construction begins on the flood protection barrier in the Gulf of Finland. 1988 - Fire rips through the library of the Academy of Sciences, destroying thousands of rare books. 1989 - UNESCO makes the city a world heritage site. The population reaches 5 million. 1991 - Anatoly Sobchak becomes the city's first mayor. 1996 - Vladimir Yakovlev becomes city governor. 1998 - The remains of Tsar Nicholas II, his family and servants are interred in the Peter and Paul Cathedral. Financial crisis paralyses Russia. 2000 - Former city deputy governor, Vladimir Putin, becomes Russia's president, and Yakovlev wins re-election as city governor. The city becomes the official capital of the Northwest Federal District. 2003 - The city celebrates its 300th anniversary, marked by infrastructure projects. | |
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