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He Built it on a Swamp
Alexandr of Novgorod defeated the Swedes near the
mouth of the Neva in 1240 - earning the title Nevsky
(of the Neva). Sweden took control of the region in
the 17th century and it was Peter the Great's desire
to crush this rival and make Russia a European power
that led to the founding of the city. At the start of
the Great Northern War (1700-21) he captured the
Swedish outposts on the Neva, and in 1703 he founded
the Peter & Paul Fortress on the Neva a few
kilometers in from the sea. After Peter trounced the
Swedes at Poltava in 1709, the city he named, in
Dutch style, Sankt Pieter Burkh, really began to
grow.
On May 16, 1703, Peter laid the first stone of the
fortress he named St. Petersburg in honor of St.
Peter, guardian of the gates of Heaven. Across the
river from the fortress Peter built a shipyard (the
Admiralty). Peter then figured why not build a city
around his little fortress and shipyard, providing
Russia with a trading port and a "window onto Europe"
through which Russia could hopefully catch Poland in
her underwear.
Geological conditions presented Peter with a
formidable challenge. In many areas the ground was so
soft that huge wooden planks had to be laid as
foundations to prevent buildings from sinking. During
the initial phases of construction thousands of
peasants and workers died of malaria or scurvy and
many were picked off by marauding wolves, earning
Petersburg the epithet "the city laid on bones." In
1712 Peter decided to make St. Petersburg Russia's
capital and required the aristocracy to move here and
build lavish homes for themselves (at their own
expense), as well as chip in to help build government
buildings.
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