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Kronstadt

Kronstadt (Russian: Кроншта́дт, romanizedKronshtadt [krɐnˈʂtat]), also spelled Kronshtadt, Cronstadt or Kronštádt (from German: Krone for "crown" and Stadt for "city") is a Russian port city in Kronshtadtsky District of the federal city of Saint Petersburg, located on Kotlin Island, 30 km (19 mi) west of Saint Petersburg, near the head of the Gulf of Finland. It is linked to the former Russian capital by a combination levee-causeway-seagate, the St Petersburg Dam, part of the city's flood defences, which also acts as road access to Kotlin island from the mainland.

Kronstadt
Кронштадт
Location of Kronstadt
Kronstadt
Location of Kronstadt
Kronstadt
Kronstadt (Saint Petersburg)
Coordinates: 59°59′27″N 29°46′29″E / 59.99083°N 29.77472°E / 59.99083; 29.77472Coordinates: 59°59′27″N 29°46′29″E / 59.99083°N 29.77472°E / 59.99083; 29.77472
CountryRussia
Federal subjectSaint Petersburg
Founded1704
Population
 • Total43,005
 • Estimate 
(2018)[2]
44,401 (+3.2%)
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK [3])
Postal code(s)[4]
197760–197762
Dialing code(s)+7 812
OKTMO ID40360000
Websitewww.gov.spb.ru/gov/admin/terr/reg_kronsht

Founded in the early 18th century by Peter the Great, it became an important international centre of commerce whose trade role was later eclipsed by its strategic significance as the primary maritime defence outpost of the former Russian capital.[5][6] The main base of the Russian Baltic Fleet was located in Kronstadt, guarding the approaches to Saint Petersburg. In March 1921, the island city was the site of the Kronstadt rebellion.

The historic centre of the city and its fortifications are part of the World Heritage Site that is Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments.

Kronstadt has been a place of pilgrimage for Orthodox Christians for many years due to the memory of Saint John of Kronstadt.

History

Foundation

 
Monument to Peter the Great, the city's founder
 
Kotlin island with Kronstadt on Saint Petersburg administrative map
 
The Cathedral of St. Andrew (1817–1932), patron saint of the Russian Navy, destroyed by the Soviet regime in 1932.
 
Map of the harbour and nearby fortifications of Kronstadt, 1724

Kronstadt was founded by Peter the Great, whose Imperial Russian forces took the island of Kotlin from the Swedes during the Great Northern War in 1703. The first fortifications were inaugurated on 18 May [O.S. 7 May] 1704. These fortifications, known as Kronshlot [ru] (Кроншлот), were constructed very quickly. During the winter, the Gulf of Finland freezes over completely. Under the command of Governor-general Alexander Danilovich Menshikov, workers used thousands of frames (caissons) made of logs from evergreen trees filled with stones which were moved by horses across the frozen sea, and placed in cuttings made in the ice. Thus, several new small islands were created, and forts were erected on them, virtually closing access to Saint-Petersburg by sea. Only two narrow navigable channels remained, with forts guarding them.

One of the first governors of Kronstadt was a veteran of the Royal Scots Navy, Admiral Thomas Gordon who was a refugee in Russia from the Scottish union with England and became chief commander of the port of Kronstadt from 1727 to 1741.

Just as Kronstadt became populated and fortified, it attracted merchants from maritime powers most notably, the Dutch, the British and the Germans through the old Hanse connections. The community of British merchants or "factors" came to be known as the English Factory, despite the fact that many of them were Scots. They settled both in Kronstadt and in St Petersburg itself and for a time dominated both inward and outward trade, especially in the reign of Catherine the Great. They became an integral part of British trade and foreign policy through the Board of Trade in London. A number of the British settlers became naturalised Russians.[5] Trading alliances were sharply interrupted by the outbreak of the Crimean War (1854).

Kronstadt was thoroughly refortified in the 19th century. The old three-decker forts, five in number, which formerly constituted the principal defences and had resisted the Anglo-French fleets during the Crimean War, became of secondary importance. From the plans of Eduard Totleben a new fort, Fort Constantine, and four batteries were constructed (1856–1871) to defend the principal approach, and seven batteries to cover the shallower northern channel. All these fortifications were low and thickly armoured earthworks with heavy Krupp guns on their ramparts. The city is surrounded by an enceinte.

In summer 1891, the French fleet was officially received in Kronstadt. It was a first step towards the forthcoming Franco-Russian Alliance.

Russian Civil War

During the Petrograd (now Saint Petersburg) riots of the February revolution, the sailors of Petrograd joined the revolution and executed their officers, thus gaining a reputation as dedicated revolutionaries. During the civil war, the sailors participated on the red side, until 1921, when they rebelled against Bolshevik rule in the Kronstadt rebellion.

Kronstadt with its supporting forts and minefields was key in protecting Petrograd from foreign forces. Despite this, the cruiser Oleg was torpedoed and sunk by a small motor boat after participating in the bombardment of Krasnaya Gorka fort that had revolted against the Bolsheviks.[7] This was followed on August 18, 1919, by a raid of seven Royal Navy Coastal Motor Boats inside the harbour of Kronstadt itself, damaging the Soviet battleships Petropavlovsk and Andrei Pervozvanny, and sinking a submarine supply ship, the Pamiat Azova.

Kronstadt Rebellion

In 1921, a group of naval officers and men, together with soldiers and civilian supporters, rebelled against the Bolshevik government in Soviet Kronstadt. The garrison had previously been a centre of major support for the Bolsheviks, and throughout the Civil War of 1917–1921, the naval forces at Kronstadt had been at the vanguard of the main Bolshevik attacks. Their demands included freedom of speech, the end of deportation to work camps, a change in Soviet war politics, and liberation of the soviets (workers' councils) from "party control".[8] After brief negotiations, Leon Trotsky (then the Minister of War in the Soviet Government, and the leader of the Red Army) responded by sending the army to Kronstadt, along with the Cheka. The uprising was thus suppressed following a massacre.

Interwar and World War II

In the late 1930s, the fortified city became the base of the Soviet Baltic Fleet. During that time it was an important training centre for the Soviet navy. The Kronstadt naval dockyard overhauled and repaired surface ships and submarines for the Baltic Fleet. All forts and batteries of the city were reconstructed.

At 23:37 on June 21, 1941, fleet operational readiness Number 1 was announced by Baltic Fleet Commander Vice Admiral V. Tributs on the order of the People's Commissar of the Navy Admiral N.G. Kuznetsov. Several hours later the first German aircraft began dropping mines into the canal outside Kronstadt. The duty officer, first lieutenant S. Kushnerev, ordered anti-aircraft batteries to open fire on enemy planes. Several aircraft were shot down or damaged. Twenty-seven German planes took part in the first attack, and three were destroyed by the anti-aircraft guns of the 1st Air Defence Regiment of the Baltic Fleet. This regiment was situated in the southern forts.

 
Soviet battleship Marat at the Spithead Fleet Review 1937
 
German aerial reconnaissance shot of Kronstadt, June 1, 1942

During World War II, Kronstadt was subject to several bombing raids by the Luftwaffe. In August 1941 the Luftwaffe began bombing Kronstadt repeatedly. The most notable bombing was Stuka ace Hans-Ulrich Rudel's sinking of the battleship Marat.

To prevent an enemy landing, 13 artillery batteries were established in Kronstadt with nine more batteries outside the city, on the island of Kotlin. The main lookout was located in the Naval Cathedral. Visual range reached 45 km (28 mi). The coastal defence forces of Kronstadt included two infantry regiments.

In late August, the Red Army in the Baltic States was in a critical situation. Tallinn, the main base of the fleet, was in danger and an order to relocate the fleet from Tallinn to Kronstadt was given. By the time the Soviets had decided on a maritime evacuation of Tallinn, over 200 Soviet civilian and military vessels had been assembled in Tallinn harbour.

After the evacuation of Tallinn, a submarine subdivision had been organized in Kronstadt. By the end of 1941, 82 naval operations had taken place. Hitler was enraged, because Soviet submarines frequently disrupted military supplies of strategic materials from Sweden to Germany. The Germans tried to block the exit completely from the Gulf of Finland with anti-submarine nets and mines. Despite these efforts, the Soviet submariners continued to attack German ships. In 1942, 29 German vessels were sunk. Submarines cooperated with reconnaissance aircraft in searching for military targets.

Soviet submarines had broken through the mine barrages in the Gulf of Finland in 1942. To keep the Soviet submarine force away from Baltic shipping stronger efforts were planned. The minefields would be larger and in addition a double submarine net would be laid from Porkkala to Naissaar in Operation Walross. The blockade of the Gulf of Finland turned out to be 100% effective. But in 1944, when Finland signed a peace treaty with the Soviet Union, one of the conditions was that the Soviets could locate one naval base in Finland at Porkkala. Submarine warfare in the Baltic Sea reached its final stage after peace was reached with Finland.

The Baltic Fleet sent more than 125,000 people to serve on shore at the front. Eighty-three thousand people fought directly on the Leningrad Front. For the protection of Leningrad 10 brigades of naval infantry, four regiments, and more than 40 separate battalions and companies were formed in Kronstadt.

The Luftwaffe and German artillery sent thousands of bombs and shells onto the naval dockyard and the Arsenal factory. The German air raids in September 1941, damaged ships of the Baltic Fleet and the infrastructure of the naval dockyard. Several sections of the yard were destroyed, the docks were heavily bombed causing the death of dozens of workers and engineers. Nevertheless, the naval yard continued its work. Despite the siege, the workers persevered with their work, often working 18–20 hours a day.

Thanks to the power of the Kronstadt Fortress the destruction of Leningrad, then the main industrial and cultural centre of the Soviet Union, was successfully prevented. The honorary status of "City of Military Glory" was conferred on it by the President of the Russian Federation Dmitriy Medvedev on April 27, 2009, citing the "courage, endurance and mass heroism, exhibited by defenders of the city in the struggle for the freedom and independence of the Motherland".

Population

With changing historical trends, the population saw peaks and troughs partly determined by the expansion and then decline of the naval base and dockyard.

Year Inhabitants
1854 53,000
1897 59,525
1926 31,197
1939 38,071
1959 40,303
1970 39,477
1979 40,308
1989 45,053
2002 43,385
2010 43,005

Note Census data of 1897 includes military personnel

Recent population data indicate it has stabilised as follows: 43,385 (2002 Census);[9] 43,005 (2010 Census).[1]

Places of interest

 
The Bypass canal
 
The Naval Cathedral in Kronstadt, interior

The city of Kronstadt is built on level ground on the island and is thus exposed to flooding, most notably in 1824. The port is icebound for 140–160 days in the year, from the beginning of December to April. A very large proportion of the inhabitants are sailors. On the south side of the city there are three harbours: the large western or merchant harbour, the western flank of which is formed by a great pier joining the fortifications which traverse the breadth of the island on one side. The middle harbour was used chiefly for fitting out and repairing vessels. The eastern or military harbour was used for docking vessels of the Russian Navy. The Peter and Catherine Canals connected with the merchant and middle harbours across the city. Between them stood the old Italian Palace of Prince Menshikov, whose site was later occupied by a school for pilots. In the second half of the 18th century the building of the former Italian palace was used by various military training institutions. In 1771–1798 the Sea Cadet Corps was housed there before being transferred to St Petersburg. From 1798 to 1872 the Navigation School was situated in the former palace.

 
Warehouse

The Kronstadt tide gauge is situated near the former Italian palace. Sea level observations in Saint Petersburg began already in 1703. On Kotlin Island, the main naval fortress of the Russian Empire began observations in 1707. This monitoring was necessary because the water level of the Finnish Gulf could change considerably in a short time, creating problems for shipping. The annual flood also required close monitoring of the water level. The Kronstadt sea-gauge with the tide gauge pavilion is the zero level of the Baltic system of highs and lows. All depths and altitudes (even the heights of spacecraft) in Russia and some other countries of the former Russian Empire are measured according to the Kronstadt sea-gauge. Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, said in 1967 that it was "the Hub of the Universe".

The modern city's most striking landmark is considered to be the enormous Naval Cathedral, dedicated to St Nicholas and built between 1908 and 1913 in Anchor Square which also contains many military memorials. The cathedral is regarded as the culmination of Russian Neo-Byzantine architecture. The Pyotrovsky Gardens is a park that surrounds the monument to Peter the Great who founded the city. There are a number of historic buildings, such as the Dutch Kitchen and the former Italian Palace, that recall the city's mercantile and military past.

 
Fort Konstantin

Among other public buildings are the Naval Hospital, the British Seamen's Hospital (established in 1867), the Civic Hospital, the Admiralty (founded in 1785), the arsenal, dockyards and foundries, the School of Marine Engineering, and the English Church.

The Kronstadt port was once considered the most fortified port in the world. It still retains some of its old "forts" on small fortified artificial islands. Originally, there were 22 such forts, situated in line with the southern and northern shores of the Gulf of Finland. Some fortifications were located inside the city itself and one was on the western shore of Kronslot Island, on the other side of the main navigational channel.

The construction of the Saint Petersburg Dam led to some of the forts being demolished. The dam, a levee-causeway-Seagate combination also enabled Kronstadt and some of the forts being reached by land. Among the most important surviving forts are:

  • Fort Konstantin, the biggest in the Gulf of Finland
  • Fort Rif on the western shore of the island; and the particularly well-preserved Fort Alexander I, "the Plague Fort"
  • Fort Totleben, named after Eduard Totleben, the largest and the newest of the forts, built at the beginning of the 20th century.
 
Plan of the St Petersburg Dam

There are daily bus and water tours to Kronstadt from Saint Petersburg.[10]

Devotion to St. John of Kronstadt

The now demolished older St Andrew Cathedral (1817), once a prominent Kronstadt landmark, was destroyed on Communist orders in 1932. St John of Kronstadt, one of the most venerated Russian saints, served there as priest from 1855 to 1908.[11]

Saint Petersburg Dam

The controversial dam that took 30 years to build (1980–2011) now links Kotlin island to the mainland from north and south, not only acts as part of the flood defences, but lets through shipping and completes the St Petersburg ring-road system, across the island. It is a feat of marine engineering consisting of a combination of levee-causeway and seagate. Its construction on the shoals of the Gulf of Finland involved the removal of some of the historic fortifications.

Twin towns – sister cities

Kronstadt is twinned with:[12]

Former twin towns

On 1 March 2022, the Polish city of Piła suspended its partnership with Kronsdadt as a reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[13]

Notable people

  • Thomas Gordon (1658 -1741), admiral, Governor and Commander-in-Chief at Kronstadt from 1727 until his death in 1741. His granddaughter Anne Young married a Scot, Lt. Thomas MacKenzie (Foma Kalinovich Mekenzi, Фома Калинович Мекензи, son of Colin). Two years after their marriage in 1738 they had a son also called Thomas, (Foma Fomich Mekenzi (Фома Фомич Мекензи, son of Thomas), a Scottish-Russian rear admiral who founded the city of Sevastopol in the service of the Russian Empire in 1783.
  • Domenico Trezzini (1670–1734), Swiss-Italian architect who worked on first design of Kronstadt
  • William Tooke (1744–1820), chaplain (1772–75) to the English merchant community in Kronstadt, later moved to St. Petersburg
  • Hippolyte de Capellis [fr] (1744–1813), French naval officer, emigrant after the French Revolution, became a Rear admiral of the Imperial Navy and governor of Kronstadt (1799–1801)
  • Agustín de Betancourt (1758–1824), Spanish engineer and town-planner of Kronstadt
  • Thomas Tooke (1774–1858), British economist and statistician, was born in Kronstadt on February 26, 1774
  • Aleksey Greig (1775-1845), Admiral of the Imperial Russian Navy, son of Samuel Greig, a Scottish Admiral in the service of Russia
  • Otto Friedrich Theodor von Möller (1812–1874), painter of German descent
  • Alexei Ivanovich Butakov (1816–1869), Admiral and explorer, brother of Admiral Grigory Butakov
  • Mikhail Britnev (1822–1889), shipbuilder
  • Saint John of Kronstadt (1829–1909), Kronstadt parish priest and revered as a saint after his death
  • Nikolai Kulchitsky (1856–1925), histologist[14]
  • Ivan Yendogurov (1861–1898), painter[15]
  • Mikhail von Schulz (1862–1917), Vice-admiral of the Russian Imperial Navy
  • Eino Rahja (1885–1936), Finnish-Russian Communist revolutionary
  • Nikolay Gumilyov (1886–1921), influential poet and founder of Acmeist poetry, murdered by the Cheka
  • Jukka Rahja (1887–1920), Finnish-Russian Communist revolutionary, born in the city
  • Ivan Yevdokimov (1887–1941), writer
  • Stepan Petrichenko (1892–1947), leader of the Kronstadt Mutiny (1921)
  • Pyotr Sobennikov (1894–1960), Soviet lieutenant general[16]
  • Pyotr Kapitsa (1894–1984), birthplace of co-recipient of the 1978 Nobel Prize in Physics.
  • Cleo Nordi (1898–1983), Russo-Finnish ballerina was born in Kronstadt. She later taught in London
  • Nikolay Dubinin (1907–1998), Geneticist
  • Boris Stark (1909–1996), missionary and priest
  • Alexander Gomelsky (1928–2005), basketball player and coach
  • Sergei Revyakin (born 1995), Russian football goalkeeper

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  2. ^ "26. Численность постоянного населения Российской Федерации по муниципальным образованиям на 1 января 2018 года". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
  3. ^ "Об исчислении времени". Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). June 3, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  4. ^ Почта России. Информационно-вычислительный центр ОАСУ РПО. (Russian Post). Поиск объектов почтовой связи (Postal Objects Search) (in Russian)
  5. ^ a b Kaplan, 1995
  6. ^ Herbert H. Kaplan Russian Overseas Commerce with Great Britain During the Reign of Catherine II. Volume 218 of "American Philosophical Society": Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society, 1995. ISBN 978-087-1692-184
  7. ^ Ingrian nationalists, according to Operation Kronstadt
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on March 15, 2009. Retrieved March 8, 2009.
  9. ^ Russian Federal State Statistics Service (May 21, 2004). Численность населения России, субъектов Российской Федерации в составе федеральных округов, районов, городских поселений, сельских населённых пунктов – районных центров и сельских населённых пунктов с населением 3 тысячи и более человек [Population of Russia, Its Federal Districts, Federal Subjects, Districts, Urban Localities, Rural Localities—Administrative Centers, and Rural Localities with Population of Over 3,000] (XLS). Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года [All-Russia Population Census of 2002] (in Russian).
  10. ^ "Boat tour to Kronstadt". Archived from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2011.
  11. ^ Alla Selawry, Jean de Cronstadt, médiateur entre Dieu et les hommes, Éditions du Cerf, 2001
  12. ^ "Города-партнёры". visitkronshtadt.ru (in Russian). Visit Kronshtadt. from the original on October 1, 2021. Retrieved February 5, 2020.
  13. ^ "Miasto Piła zawiesza współpracę z rosyjskimi miastami partnerskimi. Co na to poseł Marcin Porzucek?" (in Polish). March 2022. from the original on March 5, 2022. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  14. ^ Кульчицкий Николай Константинович May 3, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, hrono.info (in Russian)
  15. ^ Ендогуров Иван Иванович February 11, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, art-catalog.ru (in Russian)
  16. ^ Собенников Петр Петрович March 6, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, encyclopedia.mil.ru (russisch)

External links

  • Kronstadt history November 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • Map of Kronstadt July 5, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  • in Russian
  • Kronstadt Fortress (city fortifications)
  • Kronstadt sea forts: South part and North part

kronstadt, other, uses, disambiguation, russian, Кроншта, дт, romanized, kronshtadt, krɐnˈʂtat, also, spelled, kronshtadt, cronstadt, kronštádt, from, german, krone, crown, stadt, city, russian, port, city, kronshtadtsky, district, federal, city, saint, peters. For other uses see Kronstadt disambiguation Kronstadt Russian Kronshta dt romanized Kronshtadt krɐnˈʂtat also spelled Kronshtadt Cronstadt or Kronstadt from German Krone for crown and Stadt for city is a Russian port city in Kronshtadtsky District of the federal city of Saint Petersburg located on Kotlin Island 30 km 19 mi west of Saint Petersburg near the head of the Gulf of Finland It is linked to the former Russian capital by a combination levee causeway seagate the St Petersburg Dam part of the city s flood defences which also acts as road access to Kotlin island from the mainland Kronstadt KronshtadtMunicipal townFlagCoat of armsLocation of KronstadtKronstadtLocation of KronstadtShow map of RussiaKronstadtKronstadt Saint Petersburg Show map of Saint PetersburgCoordinates 59 59 27 N 29 46 29 E 59 99083 N 29 77472 E 59 99083 29 77472 Coordinates 59 59 27 N 29 46 29 E 59 99083 N 29 77472 E 59 99083 29 77472CountryRussiaFederal subjectSaint PetersburgFounded1704Population 2010 Census 1 Total43 005 Estimate 2018 2 44 401 3 2 Time zoneUTC 3 MSK 3 Postal code s 4 197760 197762Dialing code s 7 812OKTMO ID40360000Websitewww wbr gov wbr spb wbr ru wbr gov wbr admin wbr terr wbr reg wbr kronshtFounded in the early 18th century by Peter the Great it became an important international centre of commerce whose trade role was later eclipsed by its strategic significance as the primary maritime defence outpost of the former Russian capital 5 6 The main base of the Russian Baltic Fleet was located in Kronstadt guarding the approaches to Saint Petersburg In March 1921 the island city was the site of the Kronstadt rebellion The historic centre of the city and its fortifications are part of the World Heritage Site that is Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments Kronstadt has been a place of pilgrimage for Orthodox Christians for many years due to the memory of Saint John of Kronstadt Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Russian Civil War 1 3 Kronstadt Rebellion 1 4 Interwar and World War II 2 Population 3 Places of interest 3 1 Devotion to St John of Kronstadt 3 2 Saint Petersburg Dam 4 Twin towns sister cities 4 1 Former twin towns 5 Notable people 6 Gallery 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditFoundation Edit Monument to Peter the Great the city s founder Kotlin island with Kronstadt on Saint Petersburg administrative map The Cathedral of St Andrew 1817 1932 patron saint of the Russian Navy destroyed by the Soviet regime in 1932 Map of the harbour and nearby fortifications of Kronstadt 1724 Kronstadt was founded by Peter the Great whose Imperial Russian forces took the island of Kotlin from the Swedes during the Great Northern War in 1703 The first fortifications were inaugurated on 18 May O S 7 May 1704 These fortifications known as Kronshlot ru Kronshlot were constructed very quickly During the winter the Gulf of Finland freezes over completely Under the command of Governor general Alexander Danilovich Menshikov workers used thousands of frames caissons made of logs from evergreen trees filled with stones which were moved by horses across the frozen sea and placed in cuttings made in the ice Thus several new small islands were created and forts were erected on them virtually closing access to Saint Petersburg by sea Only two narrow navigable channels remained with forts guarding them One of the first governors of Kronstadt was a veteran of the Royal Scots Navy Admiral Thomas Gordon who was a refugee in Russia from the Scottish union with England and became chief commander of the port of Kronstadt from 1727 to 1741 Just as Kronstadt became populated and fortified it attracted merchants from maritime powers most notably the Dutch the British and the Germans through the old Hanse connections The community of British merchants or factors came to be known as the English Factory despite the fact that many of them were Scots They settled both in Kronstadt and in St Petersburg itself and for a time dominated both inward and outward trade especially in the reign of Catherine the Great They became an integral part of British trade and foreign policy through the Board of Trade in London A number of the British settlers became naturalised Russians 5 Trading alliances were sharply interrupted by the outbreak of the Crimean War 1854 Kronstadt was thoroughly refortified in the 19th century The old three decker forts five in number which formerly constituted the principal defences and had resisted the Anglo French fleets during the Crimean War became of secondary importance From the plans of Eduard Totleben a new fort Fort Constantine and four batteries were constructed 1856 1871 to defend the principal approach and seven batteries to cover the shallower northern channel All these fortifications were low and thickly armoured earthworks with heavy Krupp guns on their ramparts The city is surrounded by an enceinte In summer 1891 the French fleet was officially received in Kronstadt It was a first step towards the forthcoming Franco Russian Alliance Russian Civil War Edit During the Petrograd now Saint Petersburg riots of the February revolution the sailors of Petrograd joined the revolution and executed their officers thus gaining a reputation as dedicated revolutionaries During the civil war the sailors participated on the red side until 1921 when they rebelled against Bolshevik rule in the Kronstadt rebellion Kronstadt with its supporting forts and minefields was key in protecting Petrograd from foreign forces Despite this the cruiser Oleg was torpedoed and sunk by a small motor boat after participating in the bombardment of Krasnaya Gorka fort that had revolted against the Bolsheviks 7 This was followed on August 18 1919 by a raid of seven Royal Navy Coastal Motor Boats inside the harbour of Kronstadt itself damaging the Soviet battleships Petropavlovsk and Andrei Pervozvanny and sinking a submarine supply ship the Pamiat Azova Further information on the 1917 newspaper Trud Zemlia i More Kronstadt Rebellion Edit Main article Kronstadt rebellion In 1921 a group of naval officers and men together with soldiers and civilian supporters rebelled against the Bolshevik government in Soviet Kronstadt The garrison had previously been a centre of major support for the Bolsheviks and throughout the Civil War of 1917 1921 the naval forces at Kronstadt had been at the vanguard of the main Bolshevik attacks Their demands included freedom of speech the end of deportation to work camps a change in Soviet war politics and liberation of the soviets workers councils from party control 8 After brief negotiations Leon Trotsky then the Minister of War in the Soviet Government and the leader of the Red Army responded by sending the army to Kronstadt along with the Cheka The uprising was thus suppressed following a massacre Interwar and World War II Edit In the late 1930s the fortified city became the base of the Soviet Baltic Fleet During that time it was an important training centre for the Soviet navy The Kronstadt naval dockyard overhauled and repaired surface ships and submarines for the Baltic Fleet All forts and batteries of the city were reconstructed At 23 37 on June 21 1941 fleet operational readiness Number 1 was announced by Baltic Fleet Commander Vice Admiral V Tributs on the order of the People s Commissar of the Navy Admiral N G Kuznetsov Several hours later the first German aircraft began dropping mines into the canal outside Kronstadt The duty officer first lieutenant S Kushnerev ordered anti aircraft batteries to open fire on enemy planes Several aircraft were shot down or damaged Twenty seven German planes took part in the first attack and three were destroyed by the anti aircraft guns of the 1st Air Defence Regiment of the Baltic Fleet This regiment was situated in the southern forts Soviet battleship Marat at the Spithead Fleet Review 1937 German aerial reconnaissance shot of Kronstadt June 1 1942 During World War II Kronstadt was subject to several bombing raids by the Luftwaffe In August 1941 the Luftwaffe began bombing Kronstadt repeatedly The most notable bombing was Stuka ace Hans Ulrich Rudel s sinking of the battleship Marat To prevent an enemy landing 13 artillery batteries were established in Kronstadt with nine more batteries outside the city on the island of Kotlin The main lookout was located in the Naval Cathedral Visual range reached 45 km 28 mi The coastal defence forces of Kronstadt included two infantry regiments In late August the Red Army in the Baltic States was in a critical situation Tallinn the main base of the fleet was in danger and an order to relocate the fleet from Tallinn to Kronstadt was given By the time the Soviets had decided on a maritime evacuation of Tallinn over 200 Soviet civilian and military vessels had been assembled in Tallinn harbour After the evacuation of Tallinn a submarine subdivision had been organized in Kronstadt By the end of 1941 82 naval operations had taken place Hitler was enraged because Soviet submarines frequently disrupted military supplies of strategic materials from Sweden to Germany The Germans tried to block the exit completely from the Gulf of Finland with anti submarine nets and mines Despite these efforts the Soviet submariners continued to attack German ships In 1942 29 German vessels were sunk Submarines cooperated with reconnaissance aircraft in searching for military targets Soviet submarines had broken through the mine barrages in the Gulf of Finland in 1942 To keep the Soviet submarine force away from Baltic shipping stronger efforts were planned The minefields would be larger and in addition a double submarine net would be laid from Porkkala to Naissaar in Operation Walross The blockade of the Gulf of Finland turned out to be 100 effective But in 1944 when Finland signed a peace treaty with the Soviet Union one of the conditions was that the Soviets could locate one naval base in Finland at Porkkala Submarine warfare in the Baltic Sea reached its final stage after peace was reached with Finland The Baltic Fleet sent more than 125 000 people to serve on shore at the front Eighty three thousand people fought directly on the Leningrad Front For the protection of Leningrad 10 brigades of naval infantry four regiments and more than 40 separate battalions and companies were formed in Kronstadt The Luftwaffe and German artillery sent thousands of bombs and shells onto the naval dockyard and the Arsenal factory The German air raids in September 1941 damaged ships of the Baltic Fleet and the infrastructure of the naval dockyard Several sections of the yard were destroyed the docks were heavily bombed causing the death of dozens of workers and engineers Nevertheless the naval yard continued its work Despite the siege the workers persevered with their work often working 18 20 hours a day Thanks to the power of the Kronstadt Fortress the destruction of Leningrad then the main industrial and cultural centre of the Soviet Union was successfully prevented The honorary status of City of Military Glory was conferred on it by the President of the Russian Federation Dmitriy Medvedev on April 27 2009 citing the courage endurance and mass heroism exhibited by defenders of the city in the struggle for the freedom and independence of the Motherland Population EditWith changing historical trends the population saw peaks and troughs partly determined by the expansion and then decline of the naval base and dockyard Year Inhabitants1854 53 0001897 59 5251926 31 1971939 38 0711959 40 3031970 39 4771979 40 3081989 45 0532002 43 3852010 43 005Note Census data of 1897 includes military personnelRecent population data indicate it has stabilised as follows 43 385 2002 Census 9 43 005 2010 Census 1 Places of interest Edit The Bypass canal The Naval Cathedral in Kronstadt interior The city of Kronstadt is built on level ground on the island and is thus exposed to flooding most notably in 1824 The port is icebound for 140 160 days in the year from the beginning of December to April A very large proportion of the inhabitants are sailors On the south side of the city there are three harbours the large western or merchant harbour the western flank of which is formed by a great pier joining the fortifications which traverse the breadth of the island on one side The middle harbour was used chiefly for fitting out and repairing vessels The eastern or military harbour was used for docking vessels of the Russian Navy The Peter and Catherine Canals connected with the merchant and middle harbours across the city Between them stood the old Italian Palace of Prince Menshikov whose site was later occupied by a school for pilots In the second half of the 18th century the building of the former Italian palace was used by various military training institutions In 1771 1798 the Sea Cadet Corps was housed there before being transferred to St Petersburg From 1798 to 1872 the Navigation School was situated in the former palace Warehouse The Kronstadt tide gauge is situated near the former Italian palace Sea level observations in Saint Petersburg began already in 1703 On Kotlin Island the main naval fortress of the Russian Empire began observations in 1707 This monitoring was necessary because the water level of the Finnish Gulf could change considerably in a short time creating problems for shipping The annual flood also required close monitoring of the water level The Kronstadt sea gauge with the tide gauge pavilion is the zero level of the Baltic system of highs and lows All depths and altitudes even the heights of spacecraft in Russia and some other countries of the former Russian Empire are measured according to the Kronstadt sea gauge Yuri Gagarin the first man in space said in 1967 that it was the Hub of the Universe The modern city s most striking landmark is considered to be the enormous Naval Cathedral dedicated to St Nicholas and built between 1908 and 1913 in Anchor Square which also contains many military memorials The cathedral is regarded as the culmination of Russian Neo Byzantine architecture The Pyotrovsky Gardens is a park that surrounds the monument to Peter the Great who founded the city There are a number of historic buildings such as the Dutch Kitchen and the former Italian Palace that recall the city s mercantile and military past Fort Konstantin Among other public buildings are the Naval Hospital the British Seamen s Hospital established in 1867 the Civic Hospital the Admiralty founded in 1785 the arsenal dockyards and foundries the School of Marine Engineering and the English Church The Kronstadt port was once considered the most fortified port in the world It still retains some of its old forts on small fortified artificial islands Originally there were 22 such forts situated in line with the southern and northern shores of the Gulf of Finland Some fortifications were located inside the city itself and one was on the western shore of Kronslot Island on the other side of the main navigational channel The construction of the Saint Petersburg Dam led to some of the forts being demolished The dam a levee causeway Seagate combination also enabled Kronstadt and some of the forts being reached by land Among the most important surviving forts are Fort Konstantin the biggest in the Gulf of Finland Fort Rif on the western shore of the island and the particularly well preserved Fort Alexander I the Plague Fort Fort Totleben named after Eduard Totleben the largest and the newest of the forts built at the beginning of the 20th century Plan of the St Petersburg Dam There are daily bus and water tours to Kronstadt from Saint Petersburg 10 Devotion to St John of Kronstadt Edit The now demolished older St Andrew Cathedral 1817 once a prominent Kronstadt landmark was destroyed on Communist orders in 1932 St John of Kronstadt one of the most venerated Russian saints served there as priest from 1855 to 1908 11 Saint Petersburg Dam Edit Main article Saint Petersburg Dam The controversial dam that took 30 years to build 1980 2011 now links Kotlin island to the mainland from north and south not only acts as part of the flood defences but lets through shipping and completes the St Petersburg ring road system across the island It is a feat of marine engineering consisting of a combination of levee causeway and seagate Its construction on the shoals of the Gulf of Finland involved the removal of some of the historic fortifications Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Russia Kronstadt is twinned with 12 Annapolis United States Asipovichy Belarus Changli County China Dax France Demre Turkey Feodosia Crimea Ii Finland Kotka Finland Lushan City China Marostica Italy Messina Italy Muhlhausen Germany Nafplio Greece Narva Joesuu Estonia Nordborg Sonderborg Denmark Oulu Finland Oxelosund Sweden Pinghu China Pohja Tallinn Tallinn Estonia Pudasjarvi Finland Sumoto Japan Toulon France Zhongshan County China Former twin towns Edit Pila PolandOn 1 March 2022 the Polish city of Pila suspended its partnership with Kronsdadt as a reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 13 Notable people EditThomas Gordon 1658 1741 admiral Governor and Commander in Chief at Kronstadt from 1727 until his death in 1741 His granddaughter Anne Young married a Scot Lt Thomas MacKenzie Foma Kalinovich Mekenzi Foma Kalinovich Mekenzi son of Colin Two years after their marriage in 1738 they had a son also called Thomas Foma Fomich Mekenzi Foma Fomich Mekenzi son of Thomas a Scottish Russian rear admiral who founded the city of Sevastopol in the service of the Russian Empire in 1783 Domenico Trezzini 1670 1734 Swiss Italian architect who worked on first design of Kronstadt William Tooke 1744 1820 chaplain 1772 75 to the English merchant community in Kronstadt later moved to St Petersburg Hippolyte de Capellis fr 1744 1813 French naval officer emigrant after the French Revolution became a Rear admiral of the Imperial Navy and governor of Kronstadt 1799 1801 Agustin de Betancourt 1758 1824 Spanish engineer and town planner of Kronstadt Thomas Tooke 1774 1858 British economist and statistician was born in Kronstadt on February 26 1774 Aleksey Greig 1775 1845 Admiral of the Imperial Russian Navy son of Samuel Greig a Scottish Admiral in the service of Russia Otto Friedrich Theodor von Moller 1812 1874 painter of German descent Alexei Ivanovich Butakov 1816 1869 Admiral and explorer brother of Admiral Grigory Butakov Mikhail Britnev 1822 1889 shipbuilder Saint John of Kronstadt 1829 1909 Kronstadt parish priest and revered as a saint after his death Nikolai Kulchitsky 1856 1925 histologist 14 Ivan Yendogurov 1861 1898 painter 15 Mikhail von Schulz 1862 1917 Vice admiral of the Russian Imperial Navy Eino Rahja 1885 1936 Finnish Russian Communist revolutionary Nikolay Gumilyov 1886 1921 influential poet and founder of Acmeist poetry murdered by the Cheka Jukka Rahja 1887 1920 Finnish Russian Communist revolutionary born in the city Ivan Yevdokimov 1887 1941 writer Stepan Petrichenko 1892 1947 leader of the Kronstadt Mutiny 1921 Pyotr Sobennikov 1894 1960 Soviet lieutenant general 16 Pyotr Kapitsa 1894 1984 birthplace of co recipient of the 1978 Nobel Prize in Physics Cleo Nordi 1898 1983 Russo Finnish ballerina was born in Kronstadt She later taught in London Nikolay Dubinin 1907 1998 Geneticist Boris Stark 1909 1996 missionary and priest Alexander Gomelsky 1928 2005 basketball player and coach Sergei Revyakin born 1995 Russian football goalkeeperGallery Edit Fort Alexander viewed from Kronstadt St Nicolas Chapel Fort Rif Italian pond Aerial view of Navigation Pass S 1 of Saint Petersburg Dam Kronstadt the Blue bridge The Dutch Kitchen Kronstadt Kronstadt street art Leningradskaya Street A Kronstadt canalReferences Edit a b Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2011 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda Tom 1 2010 All Russian Population Census vol 1 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda 2010 All Russia Population Census in Russian Federal State Statistics Service 26 Chislennost postoyannogo naseleniya Rossijskoj Federacii po municipalnym obrazovaniyam na 1 yanvarya 2018 goda Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved January 23 2019 Ob ischislenii vremeni Oficialnyj internet portal pravovoj informacii in Russian June 3 2011 Retrieved January 19 2019 Pochta Rossii Informacionno vychislitelnyj centr OASU RPO Russian Post Poisk obektov pochtovoj svyazi Postal Objects Search in Russian a b Kaplan 1995 Herbert H Kaplan Russian Overseas Commerce with Great Britain During the Reign of Catherine II Volume 218 of American Philosophical Society Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society 1995 ISBN 978 087 1692 184 Ingrian nationalists according to Operation Kronstadt The Kronstadt Rebellion Feb 28 Mar 18 1921 Archived from the original on March 15 2009 Retrieved March 8 2009 Russian Federal State Statistics Service May 21 2004 Chislennost naseleniya Rossii subektov Rossijskoj Federacii v sostave federalnyh okrugov rajonov gorodskih poselenij selskih naselyonnyh punktov rajonnyh centrov i selskih naselyonnyh punktov s naseleniem 3 tysyachi i bolee chelovek Population of Russia Its Federal Districts Federal Subjects Districts Urban Localities Rural Localities Administrative Centers and Rural Localities with Population of Over 3 000 XLS Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda All Russia Population Census of 2002 in Russian Boat tour to Kronstadt Archived from the original on January 6 2013 Retrieved August 14 2011 Alla Selawry Jean de Cronstadt mediateur entre Dieu et les hommes Editions du Cerf 2001 Goroda partnyory visitkronshtadt ru in Russian Visit Kronshtadt Archived from the original on October 1 2021 Retrieved February 5 2020 Miasto Pila zawiesza wspolprace z rosyjskimi miastami partnerskimi Co na to posel Marcin Porzucek in Polish March 2022 Archived from the original on March 5 2022 Retrieved March 5 2022 Kulchickij Nikolaj Konstantinovich Archived May 3 2018 at the Wayback Machine hrono info in Russian Endogurov Ivan Ivanovich Archived February 11 2019 at the Wayback Machine art catalog ru in Russian Sobennikov Petr Petrovich Archived March 6 2019 at the Wayback Machine encyclopedia mil ru russisch This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Kropotkin Peter Alexeivitch Bealby John Thomas 1911 Kronstadt In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 927 928 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kronstadt Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kronstadt Kronstadt history Archived November 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kronstadt web site Map of Kronstadt Archived July 5 2007 at the Wayback Machine Kronstadt Virtual Excursion in Russian International Kronstadt Development Fund Kronstadt Fortress city fortifications Kronstadt sea forts South part and North part Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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