PETROKREPOST

pyĕˌtrəkryĕˈpəstyə, formerly Schlüsselburgshlüˈsəlboorkh, town and fortress, NW European Russia, E of St. Petersburg. The town, the terminus of a railroad and of the lateral canals on Lake Ladoga, has shipbuilding and repair yards. Opposite the town, on an island in Lake Ladoga, stands the fortress, which dominates the lake's access from the Neva River. Built in 1323 by the republic of Novgorod and at first called Oreshek, the fortress fell to Sweden in 1611 and was renamed Noteborg. Peter I captured it from the Swedes in 1702, during the Northern War, and named it Schlüsselburg [Ger.,=key fortress], envisioning it as the major link in Russia's line of defense to the Baltic Sea. The following year he founded St. Petersburg on the Baltic. The fortress soon lost its military significance and was used until the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution as a prison for high-ranking persons (including several members of the imperial family) and for political prisoners. In 1928 it was converted into a museum. Schlüsselburg fell (1941) to the Germans during World War II; its recapture (1943) by Russian forces opened the land route to besieged Leningrad (St. Petersburg). The name Petrokrepost [Rus.,=Peter's fortress] was adopted in 1944.

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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: Petrokrepost
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books on: Petrokrepost  - 11 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-11 >>  
 
...Petrodvorets , Moscow, 1956. Petrograd , see LENINGRAD. Petrokrepost until 1611 Oreshek, then Noteborg, 1702-1944 Shlissel...February 1917 as a prison for important political offenders. Petrokrepost was founded by Novgorodians in 1323, and was Swedish, 1611...
...had modeled Rudin on Bakunin, not the firebrand who at the writing of the novel was languishing in the Schlusselburg now Petrokrepost Fortress prison, but the impetuous friend of his youth who swore volubly by Hegels dialectics. Herzen observed that Turgenev...
...defended the origin of the Neva River at Lake Ladoga. 8 Peter renamed the town Shlisselburg Schlusselburg, "key city"; now Petrokrepost to emphasize its importance for Russias clear control of Lake Ladoga and the headwaters of the Neva. The conquered fortress...
...Gulf of Finland. Frozen from October to April. Has about 500 islands. Abundance of fish. Chief towns on its shores are Petrokrepost f. Shliisselburg , Novaya Ladoga, Sortavala, Priozersk Keksgolm . Played important role in Russian history, being on...
...recovered, having been unjustly in enemy hands for ninety-two years." P B, II, 110 , 423 . Schlusselburg is now known as Petrokrepost. 4 P B, II, No. 462. 5 Ibid., No. 459. 6 Ibid., Nos. 460-61, 463-65. 7 Pleyer, the Imperial resident in...
More book Results: 1-10 11-11 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Petrokrepost  - 4 results

 
 
PETROKREPOST pye tr krye p sty , formerly Schlusselburg shlu s lboorkh, town and...the land route to besieged Leningrad (St. Petersburg). The name Petrokrepost Rus.,=Peters fortress was adopted in 1944...
...from Lake Ilmen. The main outlet is the Neva, which flows W into the Gulf of Finland at St. Petersburg. The fortress at Petrokrepost commands the Nevas exit from the lake. Among the many islands in the northern part of the lake is Valaam (Finnish Valama...
SCHLUSSELBURG see Petrokrepost , Russia. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Leningrad in 1924. During World War II, the city was cut off from the rest of the USSR by the fall of Schlusselburg (now Petrokrepost ) to the Germans (Aug., 1941). It was besieged for over two years, during which many hundreds of thousands died of...


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