KRONSHTADT

krənshtätˈ, city, NW European Russia, on the small island of Kotlin in the Gulf of Finland, c.15 mi (20 km) from Saint Petersburg. It is one of the chief naval bases for the Russian Baltic fleet. The harbor is icebound for several months each year. It was founded (1703) by Peter I as a port and a fortress to protect the site of St. Petersburg, and it was the commercial harbor of St. Petersburg until the 1880s. The port lost its commercial value after the development of St. Petersburg. The visit (1891) of a French naval squadron to Kronshtadt was followed by a Franco-Russian military agreement heralding the formation of the Triple Entente of France, England, and Russia. Mutinies of the naval garrison took place in 1825 and 1882 and played a part in the revolutions of 1905 and 1917 (see Russian Revolution). A revolt of the sailors in Mar., 1921, was instrumental in establishing Lenin's New Economic Policy. The general unrest among peasants and workers touched off this mutiny of the naval garrison that had been loyal to the Bolsheviks during the revolution. This was the climax of the anti-Bolshevik unrest in the country. In World War II, Kronshtadt played a major role in the defense of St. Petersburg (then Leningrad) against the Germans. It is also spelled Cronstadt.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Kronshtadt
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books on: Kronshtadt  - 48 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-48 >>  
 
...gun -the 381 of a ship anchored off Kronshtadt. It is a tremendous voice, a prolonged...like a rainbow into the sky between Kronshtadt and Terijoki. The 381 shell bursts...something unusual has been happening on Kronshtadt. The heavy German batteries installed...
...and Denikin, dispatched emissaries to Kronshtadt to win over the rebels. The Bolsheviks...slogan "Soviets without Communists," Kronshtadt might soon become a starting point for...departed by hundreds to fight on the Kronshtadt front. One whole class of our college...
...what might be called a "nuclear Kronshtadt" in which the extension of the rationalization...Kronshtadt has come to be a metaphor for a loss of revolutionary faith. In Kronshtadt, in 1921, a small naval garrison...
...adversarys fleet bobbing on anchors in front of Kronshtadt. Now Kronshtadt was not as much a fortress as a naval base. Ships...though its streets boiled with life. In summer, Kronshtadt was a pleasant place to be. But Rozhestvenskys...
...Kamchatka to Nagasaki directly, but from Kronshtadt, the headquarters of the Baltic fleet...establish regular communications between Kronshtadt and Alaska via Canton and, if possible...and anchors would be transported from Kronshtadt around the globe. The embassy left...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-48 >>

 

journal articles on: Kronshtadt  - 5 results

 
 
...with the outer end of the Finnish gulf and the harbors of Kronshtadt and Vyborg. On the other hand, it relies on the Kaliningrad...security interest along the whole coastline, stretching from Kronshtadt to Baltijsk. This claim could be countered, however, by...
...nobility, received a military education as well as an additional year of study in the humanities at the Naval Cadet School in Kronshtadt, Russia, graduating in 1792. In addition to serving from 1801 to 1805 as a volunteer in the British Navy, he took part...
...understand Russian Orthodoxy without knowing such saints as St. Sergius of Radonezh, St. Seraphim of Sarov, St. John of Kronshtadt, etc. Similarly, to understand Roman Catholicism one must be familiar with St. Francis of Assisi, St. Teresa of Avila...
...built two GcmgMf-class dreadnoughts and two of the Borodino class. In 1939 the keel was laid down here for the first of the Kronshtadt-dass battle cruisers (never finished) of Stalins big-fleet program. Next in size was the Baltic (Baltiiskii) shipyard...
...months of the Civil War had witnessed sporadic peasant disturbances throughout the Russian territory, culminating in the Kronshtadt Rebellion of new naval recruits fresh from the villages on March 1, 1921. 19 A general peasant uprising, the bete noire...


 

magazine articles on: Kronshtadt  - 1 result

 
 
...underwater mine using an electrical circuit. In 1854, during the unsuccessful attempt of the Anglo-French fleet to seize Kronshtadt fortress, British steamships HMS Merlin, HMS Vulture and HMS Fireufly were damaged by underwater explosions of Russian Naval...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Kronshtadt  - 4 results

 
 
KRONSHTADT kr nshtat , city, NW European Russia...1891) of a French naval squadron to Kronshtadt was followed by a Franco-Russian military...unrest in the country. In World War II, Kronshtadt played a major role in the defense of...
CRONSTADT see Kronshtadt , Russia. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...at Cattaro (now Kotor). A mutiny may be the signal for a revolution, as were the Russian mutinies in 1905 and 1917 at Kronshtadt . See C. Gill, The Naval Mutinies of 1797 (1913); G. E. Manwaring and B. Dobree, The Floating Republic (1938, repr...
...islands of its delta. St. Petersburgs port is linked by deepwater canal with Kotlin Island, where the outer port and the Kronshtadt naval base are located. Russias second largest city and its former capital, St. Petersburg is a major seaport, rail junction...


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