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Saint Petersburg{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="1" align="right" style="margin-left:1em; background:#e3e3e3;" ! Coat of Arms ! Map |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | align="center" | | align="center" | |- ! colspan="2" | Data |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Federal districts of Russia: || Northwestern Federal District |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Subdivisions of Russia: || Federal cities of Russia |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Geographic coordinate system: || |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Area: || 606 Square kilometre |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Population: || 4,661,219 (2002 Census) |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Population density: || 7691 persons/km² |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Altitude: || 3 m |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Postal code: || 190000-199406 |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | Area code: || +7 812 |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | License plate: || 78, 98 |----- bgcolor="#FFFFFF" ! align="center" colspan="2" |[[Image:neva_spit.jpg|thumb|300px|The Neva river has been called the main street of St Petersburg]] |} Saint Petersburg (Russian language: Санкт-Петербу́рг, Transliteration of Russian into English: Sankt-Peterburg), colloquially known as Питер (transliterated "Piter"), formerly known as Leningrad (Ленингра́д, 1924–1991) and Petrograd (Петрогра́д, 1914–1924), is a city located in Northwestern Russia on the delta of the river Neva at the east end of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic Sea. Founded by Tsar Peter I of Russia in 1703 as a "window to Europe", it served thenceforth as the capital of the country during the Russian Empire of its history until 1918. With about 4.7 million inhabitants (2002), it is today Russia's second largest city, Europe's fourth largest city, a major European cultural center and the most important Russian Baltic Sea port. St. Petersburg is the northernmost city in the world with over one million people. The city centre is a World Heritage Site; the city, for over 300 years Russia's political and cultural centre, is impressive even today and to honor it people call it often "the Northern Capital" (северная столица). St. Petersburg is administrative center of the Leningrad Oblast (while being a separate region) and the Northwestern Federal District (Северо-западный федеральный округ). ==Landmarks and tourist attractions== [[image:winter_canal.jpg|thumb|left|St Petersburg is known as the city of 300 bridges.]] The majestic appearance of St. Petersburg is achieved through a variety of architectural details including long, straight boulevards, vast spaces, gardens and parks, decorative wrought-iron fences, monumental and decorative sculptures. The Neva River itself, together with its many canals and their granite embankments and bridges, gives the city a unique and striking ambience. These bodies of water give St. Petersburg the name of "Venice of the North". St. Petersburg's position near the Arctic Circle, on the same latitude as nearby Helsinki, Stockholm and Oslo (60° latitude), causes twilight to last all night in May, June and July. This celebrated phenomenon is known as the "white nights." The white nights are closely linked to another attraction — the nine drawbridges spanning the Neva. Tourists flock to see the bridges drawn and lowered again at night to allow shipping to pass through the city. The historical center of St. Petersburg, sometimes called the outdoor museum of Neoclassicism, was the first Russian patrimony inscribed in the UNESCO list of world heritage sites. === The palaces === St. Petersburg has been known as the city of palaces. One of the earliest of these is the Summer Palace (Russia) a modest house built for Peter I of Russia in the Summer Garden (1710–1714). Much more imposing are the baroque residences of his associates, such as the Kikin Hall and the Menshikov Palace on the Neva Embankment, constructed from designs by Domenico Trezini in 1710–1716. A residence adjacent to the Menshikov palace was redesigned for Peter II of Russia and now houses the state university. Probably the most illustrious of imperial palaces is the baroque Winter Palace (1754–1762), a huge building with dazzlingly luxurious interiors, now housing the Hermitage Museum. The same architect, Bartolomeo Rastrelli, was also responsible for three residences in the vicinity of the Nevsky Prospect: the Stroganov palace (1752–1754, now a wax museum), the Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov palace (1749–1757, now a military school), and the Media:anichkov_palace.jpg (1741–1750, many times rebuilt, now a palace for children). Other baroque palaces include the Sheremetev house on the Fontanka embankment (also called the Fountain House), and the Beloselsky-Belozersky palace (1846–1848) on the Nevsky Prospect, formerly a residence of the Grand Duke Sergey Alexandrovich. [[Image:HermitageAcrossNeva.jpg|center|thumb|650px|The Hermitage Museum complex with the Winter Palace at right]] Of Neoclassical palaces, the foremost is St Michael's (or Engineers') Castle, constructed for Paul I of Russia in 1797–1801 to replace the earlier Summer Palace. The Tauride palace of Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin (1783–1789), situated nearby, used to be a seat of the Duma. Just to the left from the Hermitage buildings is the Marble Palace, commissioned by Count Orlov and built in 1768–1785 from various sorts of marble to a Neoclassical design by Antonio Rinaldi. The Michael Palace (1819–1825), famed for its opulent interiors and named after its first lodger, Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich, now houses the Russian Museum. Also built in the Neoclassical style are the Yusupov palace (the 1790s); the Kirill Razumovsky palace (1762–1766); the Peter Ivanovich Shuvalov palace (1830–1838), where Rasputin was killed; and the Yelagin Palace (1818–1822), a sumptuous summer dacha of the imperial family, situated on the Yelagin Island. The last important residences were built for Nicholas I of Russia's children: the Maria Palace (1839–1844), located just opposite St Isaac's Cathedral and housing a city council, the Nicholas palace (1853–61), and the New Michael Palace (1857-1861). === The churches === The church buildings mostly belong to the Russian government. The largest church in the city is St Isaac's Cathedral (1818–1858), one of the biggest domed buildings in the world, constructed for 40 years under supervision of its architect, Auguste de Montferrand. Another magnificent church in the Empire style is the Kazan Cathedral (1801–1811), situated on the Nevsky prospect and modelled after St. Peter's Basilica. No tourist can miss the Church of the Savior on Blood (1883–1907), a gorgeous monument in the Russian architecture which marks the spot of Alexander II of Russia's assassination. As Peter the Great forbade building onion dome, this church is exceptional in the city with its onion-shaped tower. The Peter and Paul Cathedral (1712–1732), a long-time symbol of the city, contains the sepulchres of Peter the Great and other tsars. Apart from these four principal cathedrals, which operate today primarily as museums, there are numerous other churches. Of baroque structures, the grandest is the white-and-blue Smolny Cathedral (1748–1764), a striking design by Bartolomeo Rastrelli, but never completed. It is followed by the [http://img.photosight.ru/2004/04/22/468550.jpg Naval Cathedral] of St Nicholas (1753–1762), a lofty structure dedicated to the Russian Navy, the outside being covered with plaques to sailors lost at sea. The church of Sts Simeon and Anna (1731–1734), St Sampson Cathedral (1728–1740), St Pantaleon church (1735–1739), and St Andrew Cathedral (1764–1780) are all worth mentioning. [[Image:chesma_church.jpg|thumb|left|The Chesma palace church (1780) is a rare example of the Gothic Revival in Russia.]] The Neoclassical churches are too numerous to count. Many of them are intended to dominate vast squares, like St. Vladimir's Cathedral (1769–1789), not to be confused with the church of Our Lady of Vladimir (1761–1783). The Transfiguration (1827–29) and the Trinity Cathedrals (1828–1835) were both designed by Vasily Stasov. Smaller churches include the Konyushennaya (1816–1823), also by Stasov, the "Easter Cake" church (1785–1787), noted for its droll appearance, St Catherine church on the Vasilievsky Island (1768–1771), and numerous non-Orthodox churches on the Nevsky Prospect. The Alexander Nevsky Monastery, intended to house the relics of St Alexander Nevsky, contains two cathedrals and several smaller churches in various styles. It is also remarkable for the Tikhvin Cemetery, where many notable Russians are buried. The city has two small churches in the early Gothic revival style, those of St John the Baptist (1776–1781) and the Chesmenskaya (1777–1780), both designed by Georg Velten. The late 19th-century and early 20th-century temples are all constructed from Russian Revival or Byzantine architecture designs. Finally, the cathedral mosque (1909–1920), reputedly the largest in Europe, is built after the model of Timurid temples in Samarkand. === Public buildings === The Peter and Paul Fortress, formerly a political prison, occupies a dominant position in the center of the city. A boardwalk was built along a portion of the fortress wall, giving visitors a clear view of the city across the river to the south. On the other bank of the Neva, the spit of the Vasilievsky island is graced by the former Stock exchange building (1805–1810), reminiscent of a classic Greek temple, with two great Rostral Columns, decorated with ships' prows, standing in front of it. Undoubtedly the most famous of St. Petersburg's museums is the Hermitage Museum, one of the world's largest and richest collections of European art history. Its vast holdings were originally exhibited in the Greek Revival building (1838–1852) by Leo von Klenze, now called the New Hermitage. But the first Russian museum was established by Peter the Great in the Kunstkamera, erected in 1718–1734 on the opposite bank of the Neva River and formerly a home to the Russian Academy of Sciences. Other popular tourist destinations include the Museum of Applied Arts (1885–1895), the Ethnography Museum (1900–1911), the Alexander Suvorov Museum of Military History (1901–1904), and the Political History Museum (1904–06). The imperial government institutions were housed in the General Staff building on the Palace Square (1820–1827), with a huge triumphal arch in the centre, the Senate and Synod buildings on the Senate Square (1827–1843), the Imperial Cabinet (1803–1805) on the Nevsky Prospect, the Assignation Bank (1783–1790), the Customs Office (1829–1832), and the splendid Admiralty (1806–1823), one of the city's most conspicuous landmarks. Most of these buildings were designed either by Giacomo Quarenghi, or by Carlo Rossi. The former imperial capital is rich in educational institutions. Saint Petersburg State University occupies several buildings on the Vasilievsky Island, including the spacious baroque edifice of Twelve Collegia (1722–1744). The St.Petersburg Academy of arts (1764–1788), an exceedingly handsome structure, overlooks a quayside adorned with genuine Egyptian griffins and sphinxes. The Smolny Institute (1806–1808), originally the first school for Russian women, was picked up by Lenin as his headquarters during the Russian Revolution of 1917. The Catherine Institute (1804–1807), also designed by Quarenghi, has been affiliated with the Russian National Library. Another Neoclassical building by Quarenghi, a roomy Horse Guards Riding School (1804–1807), was recently designated the Central exhibition. Some of the city shops and storehouses are landmarks in their own right. For example, the monumental New Holland Arch (1779–1787) and adjacent walls of the New Holland isle are occupied by commercial enterprises. The Merchant Court on the Nevsky Prospect (1761–1785), also designed by Jean-Baptiste Vallin de la Mothe, houses a large supermarket, several coffee bars and a Saint Petersburg Metro. Nearby is the Circular Market, erected in 1785–1790. Other department stores, built in the majestic Art Nouveau style, line the Nevsky Prospect and include the Eliseev emporium, the House of Books, and the Passage. St Petersburg is a home to many theatres. The Alexandrine Theatre, built in 1828–1832 by Carlo Rossi, was named after the wife of Nicholas I of Russia. Much more famous outside Russia is the Mariinsky Theatre (formerly known as the Kirov Theatre of Opera and Ballet), which has been styled the capital of the world ballet. The St. Petersburg Conservatory, the first in Russia, was opened in 1862 and bears the name of Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov; its alumni include Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, and Shostakovich. === Public monuments === [[Image:Surikov horseman.jpg|thumb|250px|The ''Bronze Horseman'' turns alive and races the streets of St. Petersburg in more than one work of Russian fiction]] Probably the most familiar symbol of St Petersburg is the equestrian statue of Peter the Great, installed in 1782 on the Senate Square. Considered the greatest masterpiece of the French-born Etienne Maurice Falconet, the statue figures prominently in the Russian literature under the name of the ''Bronze Horseman''. The Palace Square is dominated by the unique Alexander Column (1830–1834), the tallest of its kind in the world and so nicely set that no attachment to the base is needed. A striking monument to Generalissimo Aleksandr Suvorov, represented as a youthful god of war, was erected in 1801 on the Field of Mars (Saint Petersburg), formerly used for military parades and popular festivities. St Isaac's Square is graced by a monument to Nicholas I, which was spared by Bolshevik authorities from destruction as the only equestrian statue in the world with merely two support points (the rear feet of the horse). The public monuments of St Petersburg also include the circular statue of Catherine the Great on the Nevsky Prospect, fine horse statues on the Anichkov bridge, a Rodin-like equestrian statue of Alexander III of Russia, and the Tercentenary monument presented by France in 2003 and installed on the Sennaya Square. Some of the most important events in the city's history are represented by particular monuments. The Napoleon's Invasion of Russia over Napoleon, for example, was commemorated with two triumphal arches, one Narva Triumphal Gate, another at the Moscow gates. Following this tradition, the Piskarevskoye Cemetery was opened in 1960 as a monument to the victims of the Siege of Leningrad. === Suburbs === St Petersburg is surrounded with imperial residences, some of which were inscribed in the World Heritage list together with the city. These include Peterhof, with the Grand Peterhof Palace and glorious fountain cascades; Tsarskoe Selo, with the baroque Catherine Palace and the neoclassical Alexander Palace; and Pavlovsk, which contains a domed palace of Paul I of Russia (1782–1786) and one of the largest English-style parks in Europe. Much of Peterhof and Tsarskoe Selo had to be restored after being dynamited by the retreating Germans in 1944. Other imperial residences have yet to be revived to their former glory. Gatchina, lying 45 km southwest of St Petersburg, retains a royal castle with 600 rooms surrounded by a park. Oranienbaum, Russia, founded by Prince Menshikov, features his spacious baroque residence and the sumptuously decorated Chinese palace. Strelna has a hunting lodge of Peter the Great and the reconstructed [http://www.konstantinpalace.com/ Constantine Palace], used for official summits of the Russian president with foreign leaders. Other notable suburbs are Shlisselburg, with a Oreshek, and Kronstadt, with its 19th-century fortifications and naval monuments. ==History== [[Image:neva_old.jpg|thumb|250px|Inspired by example of Venice and Amsterdam, Peter the Great envisaged boats and coracles as principal means of transport in his city of canals. No permanent bridges across the Neva were allowed until 1850.]] Tsar Peter the Great founded the city on May 27 (May 16, Julian calendar), 1703 after reconquering the Ingrian land from Sweden. He named it after his patron saint, the apostle Saint Peter. The original name of ''Sankt-Pitersburh'' was actually Dutch; Peter had lived and studied in that country for some time. The Swedish fortress of Nyen and later Nöteborg had formerly occupied the site, in the marshlands where the river Neva drains into the Gulf of Finland. Since construction began during a time of war, the new city's first building was a fortification. Known today as the Peter and Paul Fortress, it originally also bore the name of ''Sankti-Pitersburh''. It was laid down on ''Zaichiy'' (Hare) Island, just off the right bank of the Neva, a couple of miles inland from the Gulf. The marshland was drained and the city spread outward from the fortress under the supervision of ethnic Germans engineers Peter invited to Russia. Peter forbade the construction of stone buildings in all of Russia outside of St. Petersburg, so that all stonemasons would come to help build the new city. Serfs provided most of the labor for the project. According to one estimate, 30,000 died. St. Petersburg was founded to become the new capital of Russia. By virtue of its position on an arm of the Baltic Sea, it was called by Pushkin a "window on Western countries". Russia would be a major Great Britain trading partner for years to come. It was also a base for Peter's navy, protected by the island fortress of Kronstadt, Russia, built soon after the city. In the course of the 18th and 19th centuries, Russia's elite built lavishly in the city, leaving many palaces that survive to this day. But the city also suffered from terrible floods, one of which was described by Pushkin in his ''Bronze Horseman''. Anna_of_Russia.">Image:simon-anne.jpg|left|thumb|200px|The small church of Sts Simon and Anne (1734) was dedicated to the patrons saints of Anna of Russia. Alexander II of Russia's emancipation of the serfs (1861) caused the influx of large numbers of poor into the city. Tenements were erected on the outskirts, and nascent industry sprang up. By the end of the century, St Petersburg had grown up into one of the largest industrial hubs in Europe. With the growth of industry, radical movements were also astir. Socialism organizations were responsible for the assassinations of many royal officials, including that of Alexander II of Russia in 1881. The Russian Revolution of 1905 began here and spread rapidly into the provinces. During World War I, the name ''Sankt Peterburg'' was seen to be too German and, on the initiative of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, the city was renamed ''Petrograd'' on August 31 (August 18, Julian calendar), 1914. 1917 saw the beginnings of the Russian Revolution. The first step (the February Revolution) was the removal of the Tsarist government and the introduction of a Russian Provisional Government, 1917 and the Petrograd Soviet. The new government was overthrown in the October Revolution, and the Russian Civil War broke out. The city's proximity to anti-revolutionary armies, and generally unstable political climate, forced Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin to flee to Russia's historic former capital at Moscow on March 5, 1918. The move may have been intended as temporary (it was certainly portrayed as such), but Moscow has remained the capital ever since. On January 24, 1924, three days after Lenin's death, Petrograd was renamed ''Leningrad'' in his honor. The central committee's reason for renaming the city again was that Lenin had led the October revolution. Deeper reasons existed at the level of political symbolism: Saint Petersburg had stood as the head of the Tsarist empire. After Moscow it was the largest city and the change gave great prestige to Lenin. The renaming to Leningrad emphatically symbolised the upheaval that had occurred to the social and political system. The government's removal to Moscow caused a reversal of the mass immigration of the latter 19th century. The benefits of capital status had left the city. Petrograd's population in 1920 was a third of what it had been in 1915 (see table below). During World War II, Leningrad was surrounded and besieged by the German Wehrmacht in the Siege of Leningrad from September 8, 1941, until January 27, 1944, a total of twenty-nine months. A "Road of Life" was established over Lake Ladoga (frozen for a large part of the year), but it was open to airstrikes; only one out of three supply trucks that embarked on the journey reached its destination. Another route, running through the frontline, was opened on January 18, 1943. Some 800,000 of the city's 3,000,000 inhabitants are estimated to have perished. For the heroic tenacity of the city's population, Leningrad became the first Soviet city to be awarded the title Hero City. [[Image:rathause_petersburg.jpg|thumb|The downtown preserves numerous ''profit houses'' built in the Art Nouveau style]] According to some historians, Soviet Union ruler Joseph Stalin delayed the breaking of the siege and stymied the evacuation of the city with the intention of letting its ''intelligentsia'' perish at the hands of the Germans. Many of those Leningraders who were evacuated to distant corners of the Soviet Union never returned to their home city. The war damaged the city and killed off many of those old Petersburgers who had not fled after the revolution and did not perish in the mass purges before the war. Nonetheless, Leningrad and many of its suburbs were rebuilt over the following decades to the old drawings. Though changes in the social fabric were more permanent, the city remained an intellectual and arts centre. After the collapse of the Soviet Union on September 6, 1991, a bare majority (54%) of the population agreed to restore the original name, Saint Petersburg. As well as the city, 39 streets, six bridges, three Saint Petersburg Metro stations and six parks were renamed. Nevertheless, some, especially older people, still use the old names and, for example, use the old addresses on letters. The name releases positive associations particularly in connection with the siege - so that on holidays even authorities call places connected with World War 2 "Hero city Leningrad". Among young people the name ''Leningrad'' seems to be a vague protest against the new society. One of the most successful bands in Russia, a Ska punk band from Saint Petersburg, called themselves ''Leningrad'' (not to be confused with ' ' Leningrad Cowboys'' from Finland). After a popular vote the name of the ''Oblast'' (administrative province) of which the city is the capital remained Leningrad Oblast. ===Population=== According to results of the last census October 9, 2002, St. Petersburg has 4.159.635 inhabitants. That amounts to roughly 3 per cent of the populations of Russia as a whole. The average monthly salary 2003 was 6179 rubles (about 176 euros). Since it was founded, the city has seen strong social contrasts, the situation of many people hardened after the Perestroika. Beggars and old women selling what they brought from the countryside now can be seen frequently. About 15 per cent of the population lives in kommunalkas. People can only move to St. Petersburg if they can show they have a room and a job or if they are married to an inhabitant of St. Petersburg. Probably many people don't have this registration and are living thus on an illegal or semi-legal status (and they are not included in the census). The International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates there are up to 16,000 children living on the street (as of 2000). Officially the city is inhabited to 89.1 per cent by Russians. 2.1 per cent Jews, 1.9 per cent Ukrainians, 1.9 per cent Belorussians follow up, as well as a substantial number of Tartars, Caucasians, Uzbeks, Weps, Finns, and Azerbaijani (with many illegal immigrants). As for religions most are Russian Orthodox, while many others are atheist etc. ==== Population development ==== The following charts show the numbers of inhabitants. Until 1944 they are mostly estimations, from 1959 until 2002 they are census and 2005 is a calculation. {| border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="5" | valign="top" | {| ! style="background:#efefef;" | year ! style="background:#efefef;" | inhabitants |- | 1725 || align="right" | 75,000 |- | 1750 || align="right" | 150,000 |- | 1800 || align="right" | 300,000 |- | 1846 || align="right" | 336,000 |- | 1852 || align="right" | 485,000 |- | 1858 || align="right" | 520,100 |- | 1864 || align="right" | 539,100 |- | 1867 || align="right" | 667,000 |- | 1873 || align="right" | 842,900 |- | 1881 || align="right" | 876,600 |- | 1886 || align="right" | 928,600 |- | 1891 || align="right" | 1,035,400 |- | 1897 || align="right" | 1,264,900 |- | 1901 || align="right" | 1,439,400 |- |} | valign="top" | {| ! style="background:#efefef;" | year ! style="background:#efefef;" | inhabitants |- | 1908 || align="right" | 1,678,000 |- | 1910 || align="right" | 1,962,000 |- | 1915 || align="right" | 2,318,600 |- | 1920 || align="right" | 722,000 |- | 1926 || align="right" | 1,616,100 |- | 1936 || align="right" | 2,739,800 |- | 1939 || align="right" | 3,191,300 |- | 1944 || align="right" | 2,559,000 |- | January 15 1959 || align="right" | 2,888,000 |- | January 15 1970 || align="right" | 3,512,974 |- | January 17 1979 || align="right" | 4,072,528 |- | January 12 1989 || align="right" | 4,460,424 |- | October 9 2002 || align="right" | 4,159,635 |- | January 1 2005 || align="right" | 4,039,751 |} |} ==Economy== The city is a major center of machine building, including power equipment, machinery, shipyards, instrument manufacture, ferrous and nonferrous metallurgy (production of aluminum alloys), chemicals, printing, and one of the major ports of the Baltic Sea. The Saint Petersburg Mint (''Monetny Dvor'') is apart from Goznak in Moscow the only place in Russia that mints Russian coins, medals and badges. Ford Motor Company began producing the Ford Focus automobile here in 2002. ==Transportation== The city is a major transport hub. It is the center of the local road and railway system, and has a seaport (in the Gulf of Finland of Baltic Sea) and river ports (in the delta of Neva). It is the terminus of the Volgo-Baltic waterway which links the Baltic with the Black Sea. Saint Petersburg has regular railway connections to Helsinki, Finland via Vyborg (on the Russian side) and Lappeenranta and Lahti (on the Finnish side). Three beautiful, old-fashioned trains - the ''Sibelius'', the ''Repin'' and the ''Tolstoi'' - operate exclusively on this route. The city is served by Pulkovo Airport, which carries both domestic and international flights. The Saint Petersburg Metro (subway/underground) system began operation in 1955 and now includes four lines. ==Administrative division== :''Main article: Administrative division of Saint Petersburg'' City has numerous islands and many historically important city parts are located on them. Vasilyevsky island is the largest of them and forms the whole Vasileostrovsky Administrative District, Saint Petersburg. Petrogradskaya, Krestovsky island, Yelagin island, and Kamenny islands form Petrogradsky Administrative District, Saint Petersburg. ==Culture== ===St. Petersburg in the movies=== ''(see also Cinema of Russia and Soviet Union)'' The end of the cultural predominance of St. Petersburg (and Moscow being chosen as the new capital) coincided with the dawn of film industry in Russia. Only few films achieved international acclaim and other international productions from Western countries couldn't film there. Lenfilm was the Soviet film studio based in St. Petersburg, however films that became known internationally were often based on famous literary works, such as quite a few ''Anna Karenina'' (a Russian and a France film, each of 1911; the first Western ''Anna Karenina'' has been shot in Petersburg after the end of communism) or several versions of Fyodor Dostoevsky's ''The Idiot (novel)'' (the first one, Russian, in 1910). Several Films deal with the complex history of the city many of which have propaganda purposes. Outstanding is the film ''Noi Vivi'' (Italy, 1942, [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035130/ see noi vivi at imdb]), based on the novel ''We the Living'' by Ayn Rand, a film that comments on History of Italy as a monarchy and in the World Wars by way of showing the October Revolution. ''Grand Duchess Anastasia of Russia'' has been shot several times, famous especially the one from 1956 with Ingrid Bergman and Warner Brothers' musical (USA, 1997). Giuseppe Tornatore plans a film about the Siege of Leningrad in 2005. The Russian Ark, shot in the Winter Palace (now the Russian State Hermitage Museum), let the audience meet various real and fictional personages from 300 years of Russian history, including the present. Der Untergang was also filmed in Petersburg because of similarities of the historical city center and the center of Berlin of 1945. Leningrad also became the scene of Interdevochka (also Интердевочка or Intergirl) by Pyotr Todorovsky in 1989 featuring impressive shots of the city. The cult comedy Irony of Fate (Cyrillic: Ирония судьбы, или С лёгким паром!, English title: Irony of Fate) even if mostly shot at Cheremushi, Moscow) plays in St. Petersburg (showing some very nice pictures of St. Petersburg) and pokes fun at Soviet city planning. Fiction movies are e.g. GoldenEye (1995) or the action movie Midnight in St. Petersburg (UK, 1996). Onegin (1999 featuring Liv Tyler) is based on the Pushkin lyrics and shows many tourist attractions. The International Film Festival in Saint Petersburg is held annually since 1993 during the white nights. ===St. Petersburg in the literature=== [[image:nevsky_znamenka.jpg|right|thumb|250px|The feverish life of St Petersburg's main avenue was described by Gogol in his stories, notably in Nevsky Prospekt (story).]] It was said that St Petersburg was the head of the Russian Empire, whereas Moscow was its heart. "The most purposeful city in the world" (as Dostoyevsky referred to it) frequently appeared to Russian literature as menacing and unhuman mechanism. The grotesque and often nightmarish image of the city is featured in Pushkin's last poems, the Petersburg stories of Gogol, the novels of Dostoyevsky, the verse of Alexander Blok and Osip Mandelshtam, and in the symbolist novel ''Petersburg'' (by Andrey Bely). ===Notable people=== ''main article: List of People in St. Petersburg'' Numerous Russian and international aristocrats, politicians, artists, and scientists were born and/or have lived in Saint Petersburg. These include many of List of Russian rulers#Emperors of Russia, 1721-1917, the novelists Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Vladimir Nabokov, the composers Modest Mussorgsky, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Igor Stravinsky and Dmitry Shostakovich, the painters James McNeill Whistler and Kazimir Malevich, the scientists Leonhard Euler, Mikhail Lomonosov, Heinrich Schliemann and Alfred Nobel, the ballet dancers Vaslav Nijinsky, Anna Pavlova, George Balanchine and Rudolf Nureyev, and the politicians John Quincy Adams, Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, and Vladimir Putin. ==See also== * Catherine the Great * Catherine palace * Peter the Great * Peterhof * Russian Revolution * Siege of Leningrad * Winter Palace * List of places named after Lenin == External links == * [http://www.spb.ru/eng Official web site of St. Petersburg] * * [http://www.alexanderpalace.org/petersburg1900/ St. Petersburg 1900: a photographic travelogue of the capital of Imperialist Russia, by Bob Atchison] * several hundred photo albums by Peter Sobolev * * [http://www.nevsky88.com Saint Petersburg Apartment Rentals and photos around 1900] * * [http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/html_En/ The famous museum, the Hermitage] * * *[http://www.russialink.org.uk/charity/ non-governmental Organizations in St.Petersburg] * http://www.tcaup.umich.edu/stpetersburg/index.html Cities and towns in Russia Coastal cities Federal cities of Russia World Heritage Sites in Russia Saint Petersburg la:Petropolis nds:Sankt Petersborg os:Бетырбух Saint PetersburgFeatured on Template:March 5 selected anniversaries (may be in HTML comment) -------- The recent addition by 62.78.138.226 from May 3, 2003 is the automatically translated text from Russian Wikipedia. Meanwhile I shall not attempt merging it with the original text of the article, only rewrite it in more or less readable English. User:Iorsh 22:08 23 May 2003 (UTC) ---- I think this page should, like Rome, Paris and Athens, be mainly about the Russian city. user:jheijmans I agree - in fact the "link" to the Russian Saint Petersburg doesn't even work ---- :It is not all that obvious that "Saint Petersburg" means the one in Russia to most people. The one in Florida is probably nearly as commonly meant, or even MORE commonly meant. How perfectly ridiculous. I don't think anyone outside the US would so mean unless they had a vacation home in Florida. The one in Russia is a great home of the arts, seat of the Hermitage and longtime capital of Imperial Russia. As well say that the most famous Frankfurt is in Kentucky. (Yes, I know it's spelt differently.) user:Montrealais :Also, the most famous Cairo is in Georgia, and you say it KAY-row. :An aside: I live in Florida, and I've always seen Saint Petersburg, Florida written St. Petersburg, Florida instead. I for one was not particularly aware there ''was'' a S(ain)t Petersburg in Florida. (The only non-Russian one that comes to mind is the one in Missouri, which is Huckleberry Finn.) --User:Brion VIBBER :If you're talking to me, I was being heavily ironic. :-) ::For 70 Years, the Russian city wasn't even called "St. Petersburg." It was "Leningrad"! I just did a Google search on "Saint Petersburg" and of the first 10 hits (thus the most popular ones) 5 referred to the one in Florida and 5 to the one in Russia. We should note that the audience for Wikipedia is English-speakers, and in the English speaking world there are far more Americans and Canadians (yes, a lot of Canadians vacation in Florida) than Europeans. (I'm not sure what "St. Petersburg" unmodified would mean to Australians, the only other major English-speaking group in the world!) To consider St. Petersburg in Russia as THE "St. Petersburg" is about of a piece as considering Boston, England or Memphis, Egypt as THE "Boston" or "Memphis" (How many people even know there ARE such places as Boston in England or Memphis in Egypt? But yes, they were there first!) -- BRG Clearly we need some way to distinguish between: * Leningrad, the St. Petersburg in Russia * Saint Petersburg, Florida * and the fictional place in Hucklebury Finn. The question is: is one of these usages of such primacy that it should get the best spot? Or should Saint Petersburg be a disambiguation page that shows the differences and requires the reader to click again for the one they wanted? --User:Ed Poor :Americans are not the only people in the world, BRG. Saint Petersburg in Russia is simply of greater historical and international significance than St. Petersburg, FL. - user:Montrealais I honestly hope North Americans aren't as ignorant of geography and history as BRG suggests, but if they are, well, shouldn't an encyclopedia attempt to educate them instead of reinforcing their regionalism? I think Saint Petersburg, Russia should get the lead spot, due to both historical and current international significance. User:Wesley :I am an American, and I have absolutely no idea why anyone would want a raw link to Saint Petersburg to go to some town in Florida whose sole claim to fame appears to be a Salvador Dali museum. Russia it is. --User:Brion VIBBER 18:16 Sep 13, 2002 (UTC) == Map and administrative regions == It seems I have got incomplete information about St. Petersburg administrative regions (raions). Many places state that St. Petersburg has 21 administrative regions and those 13 are just the urban ones, for instance here: http://nw.priroda.ru/spb/img/map_big.gif http://www.galenfrysinger.com/saint_petersburg_russia.htm I used tourist maps and tourist guide information and drew a map with administrative districts on it, similar to my Shanghai map. If someone has a definite knowledge about administrative regions in StPb, please let me know. Otherwise I will visit local library this week and complete the maps and fill up the rest of the districts using the information I have available. I apology for the incomplete data, but lets hope I get it corrected very soon. :I will add a new link clarifying (problemizing) the administrative districts in St. Petersburg: http://www.leontief.ru/rnsc/eng/nwregions/nwr4.htm -- this says 21 "raions" (or independent settlements) and 111 administrative municipalities. The administrative system gets complicated. I am going to focus on those 21 "raions", since I have no information source for those 111 municipalities whatsoever. ::Per OKATO, there are 20 administrative districts in the city. I made the corrections to the article. If you need information on lesser municipalities, leave me a note on my User talk:Ezhiki. Or, I can write the Administrative division of Saint Petersburg modeled after similar articles (e.g., Administrative division of Dagestan). Let me know if you need assistance. Thanks.—User:Ezhiki 16:45, Nov 18, 2004 (UTC) :::St. Petersburg district map is now in the Administrative division of Saint Petersburg article. == On Notable/Famous people == The section should be dropped or moved off to a separate page. Pretty much every notable Russian, who lived in 18th and 19th century is related to SPb. SPb was a capital. It's a city now with nearly 5 million people, like a small country. There are way too many notable/famous residents. Such lists can work for small towns but for large cities/capitals they simply pollute the artile with a list nearly the same as the List of Russians. --User:Gene s 06:12, 1 Feb 2005 (UTC) Besides, the Category system can address such lists much cleaner than the "lists". --User:Gene s 06:14, 1 Feb 2005 (UTC) == Wikipedia:Translation_into_English#German-to-English == I've just taken on a request to translate and merge in extra information from the German article into the English Saint Petersburg, and have started the first paragraph where there's nothing to add (I will soon translate and merge in the second paragraph though) except I'm puzzled by the differing population figures. :de:Sankt Petersburg states a population almost 700 thousand lower, while as far as I can make out from Babelising (I can't read Russian) the :ru: article: Population of 4436,7 thousand inhabitants (5003,8 thousand inhabitants, including the populated areas, subordinated to city hall) but no date is given. Other sources give: * http://www.bartleby.com/61/22/S0032200.html Population: 4,328,851. * MSN Encarta has (2001 estimate) 4,627,800. * http://www.travelspb.com/ (2004 assumed) has 4.8 million * ru: states 4436,7 thousand but no date * http://map.rin.ru/cgi-bin/main_e.pl?Region=piter 2000-2004 has 4728 thousand Even the historical population charts in both languages vary for 2002: 4,700,000 versus 4,159,635 in the German article. Could the larger number be including the suburbs? -User:Wikibob | User talk:Wikibob 23:54, 2005 Feb 13 (UTC) :According to 2002 Census, the population of St. Petersburg is 4,661,219. This includes the population of all of the administrative districts under the city jurisdiction. The "suburbs" population (by which, I believe, you mean the population of Leningrad Oblast) is not included. I woul recommend using Census data as they are used across all of the Russian federal subjects to create a basis for proper stats comparison. :If you need detailed stats by administrative districts, let me know.—User:Ezhiki 21:41, Feb 15, 2005 (UTC) Thanks for that, I've used the 2002 census data as you suggest. I've also added some more images, and translated and merged in a couple of paragraphs. A rough summary and details can be seen in User:Wikibob/Saint Petersburg if anyone cares to check and improve. My translating is slow and somewhat weak in places. The German article structure is somewhat different from that of this article, here is an English translation of the German one: {| |- bgcolor="#FFFFC0" | 1 The Name of the City 2 Geography 3 History 3.1 The city in the swamp 3.2 The blooming of the city 3.3 Rebellions, assassination attempts, revolutions 3.4 Leningrad 3.5 After the fall of the Soviet Union 4 Politics 5 Population 5.1 Population growth 6 Culture 6.1 Literature 6.1.1 The "Petersburger Text" 6.2 The Hermitage 6.3 Architecture 6.3.1 Building and monument conservation 6.3.2 Building style 6.3.3 Tour of the city 6.4 Petersburg in Film 7 Education 8 Economy (Industry?) and Transportation 8.1 Economy 8.2 Transportation 9 Twin towns 10 Personages 11 Literature 11.1 English 11.2 Literature by Petersburgers 12 Weblinks|} Contrast this with the English article that starts like a tourist guide and is missing certain sections I would consider important. Before making such a drastic change, what are the views of others? Should we relocate the sections to mirror the German structure, or mirror one of these: London, Berlin, or leave it as it is? -User:Wikibob | User talk:Wikibob 03:33, 2005 Mar 6 (UTC) :Information that's present in the German article and missing from the English article is quite interesting and important. I do not see why anyone would complain if you translate it and add to the English article. I do not believe the article on St. Petersburg is a part of any series with a rigidly defined structure, so no matter in which (more or less logical) order you add sections, it should work fine. I would guess that eventually the articles on all Russian cities, St. Pete included, will conform to a standard template/layout, but currently it is not the case. :This is strictly my personal opinion, of course. If any one has any complaints, I assume they will voice them here.—User:Ezhiki 16:33, Mar 7, 2005 (UTC) == from the section Population == As for religions, 10 per cent of the inhabitants are atheist, Russian Orthodox. This makes no sense. Does it mean 10 are athiest, the rest are russian orthodox, or that the two positions have 10% each? User:Sabine's Sunbird 03:58, 16 Apr 2005 (UTC) :Was religious affiliation even asked in the 2002 census? This paragraph right below the census numbers at least gives the impression, but the first links I found with google make me believe it was not, like ''[http://www.stetson.edu/~psteeves/relnews/0208a.html Russian census will not survey religious affiliation]'' (at the bottom of page), ''"Both the patriarchate and the state committee agree that confessional identification is a private matter of the citizen and the inclusion of such a question in the census would constitute infringement on freedom of conscience."'' :Any numbers from after 1937 I found were vague and coming from religious communities. Considering this, and if I'm not interpreting the assumed percentages completely wrong, would it be safe to say, ''"Although there are no exact numbers from any census since 1937, a majority of inhabitants is believed to be Orthodox Christians, a significant percentage atheist, and (..)"''? --User:Nikai 09:18, 16 Apr 2005 (UTC) Saint PetersburgCities and towns in Russia See other meanings of words starting from letter: SSB | SC | SD | SE | SF | SG | SH | SI | SJ | SK | SL | SM | SN | SO | SP | SR | SS | ST | SU | SW | SX | SY | SZ |Words begining with Saint_Petersburg: Saint-Petersburg Saint-Petersburg_Electrical_Engineering_University Saint_Petersburg Saint_Petersburg Saint_Petersburg Saint_Petersburg,_FL Saint_Petersburg,_Florida Saint_Petersburg,_Florida Saint_Petersburg,_PA Saint_Petersburg,_Pennsylvania Saint_Petersburg,_Russia Saint_Petersburg-Clearwater_International_Airport Saint_Petersburg_(disambiguation) Saint_Petersburg_Conservatoire Saint_Petersburg_Democratic_Club Saint_Petersburg_Metro Saint_Petersburg_Paradox Saint_Petersburg_paradox Saint_Petersburg_State_University Saint_Petersburg_State_University_of_Economics_and_Finance Saint_Petersburg_Times Saint_Petersburg_treaty |
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