"To Remake the World Anew…" - Dostoevsky and the Petrashevsky Circle Case

Territory. Peter and Paul Fortress, 14, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197198

Dostoevsky was delivered to the Peter and Paul Fortress on the night of April 23 to 24, 1849, from the Third Department of His Imperial Majesty’s Own Chancellery on the Fontanka Embankment (modern No. 15), accompanied by a gendarme lieutenant. In “individual” carriages under the guard of gendarme officers, with intervals of 10–15 minutes, thirteen of the “main culprits” were sent to the fortress.

Fyodor Dostoevsky was delivered to the Peter and Paul Fortress on the night of April 23 to 24, 1849, from the Third Section of His Imperial Majesty’s Own Chancellery on the Fontanka Embankment (now No. 15), accompanied by a gendarme lieutenant. In “individual” carriages under the guard of gendarme officers, thirteen of the “main culprits” were sent to the fortress at intervals of 10–15 minutes.


The first to be arrested, at 10:15 p.m., was Petrashevsky (in the photograph). Dostoevsky was arrested at 11:25 p.m. Thus, Dostoevsky arrived at the fortress well past midnight. There he was confined in cell No. 9 of the secret house of the Alekseevsky ravelin (now demolished; house No. 14 stands in its place, https://reveal.world/story/petropavlovskaya-krepost-glavnaya-tajnaya-tyur-ma-imperii).

His neighbors were: in cell No. 8 — Filippov, and in cell No. 10 — Balasoglo. In July 1849, when some of those arrested in the Petrashevsky case were released, including Beletsky, who was held in cell No. 7 and freed on July 10, Dostoevsky was transferred to his cell.

The public reading of a forbidden letter from Vissarion Belinsky to Nikolai Gogol proved fatal for him. During a search of Dostoevsky’s residence, other banned literature was also found. Six months later, the author of the novel Poor Folk would be sentenced to “death by firing squad.”

Dostoevsky’s close association with the Petrashevsky circle—a secret organization named after its founder, titular counselor Mikhail Petrashevsky—led to major troubles in his life. Gathering together, they held so-called “Fridays”: confidential meetings where they discussed topics too bold for Nicholas I’s Russia, from freedom of the press to the emancipation of the serfs. The movement’s leader promoted the principles of utopian socialism, but the political views of his followers varied widely. Therefore, the Petrashevsky group split into small, autonomously functioning circles based on interests. Dostoevsky aligned himself with the main radicals. In their presence, he read the ill-fated letter from Belinsky several times, which was considered a grave crime in the empire at the time. “Once a week, Petrashevsky held meetings where not always the same people attended. It was an interesting kaleidoscope of diverse opinions on current events, government orders, and the latest literary works across various fields of knowledge; city news was brought in, and everything was discussed loudly without any restraint,” wrote Petrashevsky member Dmitry Akhsharumov in his memoirs.

The police managed to infiltrate the organization with their agent. Through him, the content of the conversations reached the authorities. Meanwhile, Dostoevsky himself, according to another circle member, poet Apollon Maykov, considered Petrashevsky “a fool, an actor, and a chatterbox who would get nowhere,” urging people to turn to Nikolai Speshnev, who called himself a “communist,” and Pavel Filippov. The Petrashevsky members were hunted by gendarmes from the Third Section. In a relatively short time, about forty people were arrested. They were young officers, officials, writers, clerks, landowners, and students aged from 19 to 39. Dostoevsky was no longer an inexperienced youth; he joined the Petrashevsky circle consciously. He was approaching his 28th year. Besides his debut novel, which was followed by a 15-year gap before the next, he had written several novellas and stories.

Dostoevsky was closely watched: on March 1, a police agent reported that “Petrashevsky visited the writer.” The following month, the writer himself read Belinsky’s letter and shortly afterward was present when Lieutenant Petrashevsky Nikolai Grigoriev read the agitational “Soldier’s Truth,” which called for the overthrow of the tsar. On April 22, the Third Section authorized Dostoevsky’s arrest. “By highest order, I instruct your excellency to arrest tomorrow at four o’clock past midnight the retired engineer-lieutenant and writer Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, living at the corner of Malaya Morskaya and Voznesensky Prospect, in the Shil house, on the third floor, in Bremer’s apartment; to seal all his papers and books and deliver them together with Dostoevsky to the Third Section of His Imperial Majesty’s Own Chancellery. In this case, you must strictly ensure that nothing is concealed from Dostoevsky’s papers,” stated the secret message from the chief of gendarmes, General-Adjutant Alexei Orlov. If Dostoevsky denied owning certain papers and books during the search, the Third Section officers had clear instructions not to believe him. Around four in the morning, Dostoevsky returned home. He was given time to fall asleep, and at five they raided and arrested him—the gendarmes thought a sleepy, caught-off-guard person would be easier to “break.”

“On the twenty-second, or rather the twenty-third of April 1849, I returned home around four o’clock from Grigoriev, went to bed, and immediately fell asleep,” recalled the main character of the “special operation.” “No more than an hour later, half-asleep, I noticed some suspicious and unusual people entering my room. A saber clanged, accidentally hitting something. What a strange noise? I opened my eyes with effort and heard a soft, pleasant voice: ‘Get up!’ I looked and saw a quartermaster or private bailiff with handsome sideburns. But he was not the one speaking; it was a gentleman dressed in blue with lieutenant colonel epaulettes.

‘What happened?’ I asked, sitting up in bed.

‘By order...’

I looked: indeed, ‘by order.’ A soldier stood in the doorway, also in blue. It was his saber that clanged...

‘Ah, so that’s what it is!’ I thought. ‘Allow me...’ I began.

‘Nothing, nothing! Get dressed. We will wait,’ added the lieutenant colonel in an even more pleasant voice.”

Then the gendarmes “demanded all the books and began rummaging.” According to Dostoevsky, they found little.

“The papers and letters were neatly tied with a string,” the writer continued. “The bailiff showed much foresight; he looked into the stove and rummaged through my chibouk in the old ashes. At his invitation, a gendarme non-commissioned officer stood on a chair and climbed onto the stove but slipped from the cornice and loudly fell onto the chair, then with the chair onto the floor. Then the insightful gentlemen were convinced that there was nothing on the stove.

On the table lay an old, bent five-altyn coin. The bailiff examined it carefully and finally nodded to the lieutenant colonel.

‘Is it not counterfeit?’ I asked.

‘Hmm... This, however, must be examined...’ muttered the bailiff, and ended up adding it to the case.”

We left. The frightened landlady and her man Ivan, though very frightened, looked with some dull solemnity, appropriate to the event but not festive, accompanied us. A carriage stood at the gate; the soldier, I, the bailiff, and the lieutenant colonel got in. We headed to the Fontanka, to the Chain Bridge near the Summer Garden...”

At the same time, his brother Andrey was arrested at another address.

This was a mistake: the gendarmes’ real target was another Dostoevsky, Mikhail.

At the Third Section headquarters in the former mansion of Count Viktor Kochubey, Fyodor Dostoevsky and other detainees were interrogated throughout the day. At 11 p.m., they were taken to the Peter and Paul Fortress. Here is how Dostoevsky’s close friend and professional colleague Alexander Milyukov recalled the day of Dostoevsky’s arrest, as told to him by the writer’s elder brother Mikhail.

“On April 23, 1849, returning home from a lecture, I found Mikhail Dostoevsky, who had long been waiting for me,” Milyukov noted. “At first glance, I noticed he was very worried.

‘What’s wrong with you?’ I asked.

‘Don’t you know?’ he said.

‘What is it?’

‘Brother Fyodor has been arrested.’

‘What are you saying! When?’

‘Last night... there was a search... he was taken away... the apartment is sealed...’

‘And the others?’

‘Petrashevsky, Speshnev were taken... who else—I don’t know, if not today, then tomorrow they’ll take me too.’”

Milyukov and Mikhail Dostoevsky went to the addresses of their friends: many had disappeared, and their apartments were sealed.

“Besides rumors circulating in the city, which portrayed the Petrashevsky case with the usual additions typical in such cases, we only learned that about thirty people were arrested, all initially brought to the Third Section, then transferred to the Peter and Paul Fortress and held in solitary confinement cells,” Milyukov recounted.

“The Petrashevsky circle had long been under surveillance, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs had introduced a young man to their evenings, who pretended to sympathize with the ideas of liberal youth, regularly attended meetings, incited others to radical talks, then recorded everything said at the evenings and passed it on to the authorities. Mikhail Dostoevsky told me that he had long found him suspicious.” On May 6, the investigative commission would ask Dostoevsky the following questions: what was Petrashevsky’s character as a person in general and as a “political person” in particular; what happened at Petrashevsky’s evenings; was there any secret purpose in Petrashevsky’s society. The writer would spend eight months in confinement, after which the court sentence would be announced and the execution of the Petrashevsky members staged with the breaking of swords over their heads, symbolizing civil death. The news of clemency and replacement of the shooting with eight years of penal servitude would arrive at the last moment—because of this, Lieutenant Grigoriev, who read the “Soldier’s Truth,” would lose his mind forever. Dostoevsky would get off relatively lightly: by order of Nicholas I, his sentence would be halved. After serving as a private by imperial command, following the emperor’s death, the writer would return to St. Petersburg, where he would live and create under the secret surveillance of the police.

The writer was held in the St. Petersburg Fortress for exactly eight months—from April 24 to December 24, 1849. The date of Dostoevsky’s transfer from the fortress to Siberia is documented by the order to the fortress commandant, General-Adjutant I.A. Nabokov, No. 523 dated December 24, 1849: “...the criminals Durov, Dostoevsky, and Yastrzhembsky, held in the Alekseevsky ravelin and scheduled for dispatch this evening to Tobolsk in chains, are to be handed over to Lieutenant Prokofiev of the courier corps assigned for escort and removed from the list of those arrested in the ravelin,” as well as by Nabokov’s report No. 522 of the same date confirming the execution of this order. In a letter to his brother Mikhail dated January 30 – February 22, 1854, from Omsk, Dostoevsky recalled the departure from the Peter and Paul Fortress: “Exactly at 12 o’clock, that is, exactly at Christmas, I put on shackles for the first time. Then we were placed in open sleighs, each separately with a gendarme, and on four sleighs, with the courier in front, we set off from Petersburg.” Milyukov, who came with Mikhail Dostoevsky that day to the Peter and Paul Fortress to say goodbye (in the commandant’s house) to the writer leaving on the stagecoach, corrects this testimony. Warned by the adjutant Maidel that the prisoners would be sent on the stagecoach shortly after the meeting (“in an hour or even earlier”), they waited for the prisoners’ departure at the gates of the Peter and Paul Fortress. “The fortress clock struck nine,” Milyukov writes, differing in the time from Dostoevsky’s letter to his brother, “when two coachman’s sleighs drove out, each with a prisoner and a gendarme.

‘Farewell!’ we shouted.

‘Goodbye! Goodbye!’ they replied.”

Dostoevsky writes: “exactly at 12 o’clock” (that is, at midnight), Milyukov recalls: “the chimes struck nine.” The account of the events by an outside observer—Milyukov—seems more trustworthy. The writer, it seems, tries in his later epistolary testimony to sacralize the fateful, turning point moment of his biography: his penal, suffering path begins “exactly at Christmas.”

He would return to Petersburg only at the end of December 1859—exactly ten years later.


Sources:

https://www.gazeta.ru/science/2019/04/23_a_12316363.shtml

https://histrf.ru/read/articles/kak-dostoievskii-nie-ubil-tsaria-k-167-lietiiu-ariesta-pietrashievtsiev

https://worknet-info.ru/read-blog/1786_petrashevcy-kratko-i-ponyatno-samoe-glavnoe.html

http://family-history.ru/material/biography/mesto/dostoyevsky/

Boris Nikolaevich Tikhomirov: ADDRESSES OF DOSTOEVSKY IN ST. PETERSBURG: CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF SOURCES AND EXPERTISE OF LOCAL HISTORY PUBLICATIONS

 

 

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More stories from St. Petersburg of Fyodor Dostoevsky

Studies at the Main Engineering School (Mikhailovsky Castle)

Fontanka River Embankment, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191187

Dostoevsky moves into the Engineering (formerly Mikhailovsky) Castle, where the Main Engineering School is located. Dostoevsky's company officer, A. I. Savelyev, later recalled that "His favorite place to work was the embrasure of the window in the corner bedroom of the company, overlooking the Fontanka."

The first address of Dostoevsky in St. Petersburg

Moskovsky Ave., 22, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013

The first address of Dostoevsky in St. Petersburg was Bolshoy Tsarskoselsky Prospect, the house of Collegiate Councillor Fyodor Dmitrievich Serapin, No. 7. The modern address is Moskovsky Prospect, No. 22. The house has been preserved (built in the 1820s). In a draft petition addressed to the monarch, M.A. Dostoevsky, who brought his elder sons Mikhail and Fyodor to St. Petersburg to enroll in the Main Engineering School, indicated his "temporary residence near Obukhov Bridge in the hotel at No. (text unfinished)." The researcher of Dostoevsky's work, Fedorov, suggested that the hotel where the Dostoevskys "could have stayed 'near Obukhov Bridge'" was the "stagecoach hotel in the 'huge' Serapin house, where 'order and cleanliness, arrangement and affordability (as the newspaper 'Northern Bee' wrote) are worthy of attention'."

Preparation for Admission to the Main Engineering School

Ligovsky Ave., 65, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191040

Having placed his sons for exam preparation at the Main Engineering School in Captain Kostomarov’s boarding house, Mikhail Andreyevich Dostoevsky left back for Moscow on May 26 or 27. The historical address of the boarding house: Ligovsky Canal Embankment, house of the 3rd guild merchant Nikita Ivanovich Reshetnikov, No. 66. Captain Kostomarov’s boarding house. Modern address: Ligovsky Prospect, No. 65. The house has not been preserved (the current building was constructed in 1912–1913). The address is recorded in a memorial note by A.G. Dostoevskaya, made by her in the Notebook of 1876–1884: “Dostoevsky studied under Coronad Filippovich Kostomarov, on Ligovsky Canal, Reshetnikov’s house.”

Karavannaya Street, merchant Setkov's house, corner of Italian Street, No. 15

Karavannaya St., 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

From August 18, 1841, Dostoevsky began studying in the lower officer class. Having gained the opportunity to live outside the Engineering School, Fyodor Mikhailovich immediately moved to Karavannaya Street to the house of merchant Setkov, at the corner of Italian Street, No. 15 (Modern address: Karavannaya St., No. 16/14). There, "shutting himself in his study, he devoted himself to literary pursuits."

My address: at the Vladimir Church in the Pryanishnikov house, in Grafsky Lane

Grafsky Lane, 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002

In the second half of 1842, Dostoevsky continued his studies in the higher officer class. From December 10 to 21, he successfully passed the semi-annual exams in jurisprudence, fortification, construction art, mineralogy, chemistry, theoretical mechanics, applied mechanics, and the law of God. On January 2, 1843, a drawing review was held at the school. Dostoevsky’s letters from early 1843 reveal a continuing shortage of money. However, Alexander Rizenkampf noted an improvement in the writer’s financial situation in his memoirs: “In the spring of 1843, Fyodor Mikhailovich’s health began to improve. Apparently, his financial means also improved.”

At the Vladimir Church, on the corner of Grebetskaya Street and Kuznechny Lane, the house of merchant Kuchin, at No. 9

Kuznechny Lane, 5/2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002

The address is indicated in Dostoevsky's letter to his brother Mikhail dated February 1, 1846: "...near the Vladimir Church, at the corner of Grebetskaya Street and Kuznechny Lane, the house of merchant Kuchin, at No. 9." The specific historical address and the name of the homeowner are restored according to Tsyolov's 1849 "Atlas of the Thirteen Parts of St. Petersburg."

A brief stop at Rubinstein

Rubinstein St, 32, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002

It is difficult to say what guided the writer when he moved for a month before leaving for Reval from the house on Kuznechny to the house in Troitsky Lane. But the documents (including the police registration from May 13) indisputably show that, having settled in the Pavlovs' house no earlier than the very last days of April, the writer lived there for less than a month.

At the Kazan Cathedral, on the corner of Bolshaya Meshchanskaya and Sobornaya Square, in the Kochendorf house, No. 25

Kazan Street, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Prokharchin is terribly disfigured in a well-known place. These gentlemen of the well-known place have even forbidden the word "official." All living things have disappeared. Only the skeleton of what I read to you remains. I withdraw from my story.

On Vasilievsky, Beketov Association

Bolshoy Prospekt Vasilievsky Island, 4a, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

He reports on his friendship with the Beketov brothers: “These are capable, intelligent people, with an excellent heart, nobility, and character. They cured me with their company.” Dostoevsky works “day and night” on *Netochka Nezvanova*, which he “promised to present to Kraevsky” by January 5; in the evenings, “for entertainment,” he goes “to the Italian opera in the gallery,” and “around the post” (which began on February 3) he starts occasionally attending Petrashevsky’s Friday gatherings and using the books from his library.

Participation in the Petrashevsky Circle, health problems, arrest

6 Voznesensky Ave, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

This instruction is borrowed from the "List of persons who attended the meetings of the Petrashevsky Circle on Fridays since March 11 of this year, 1849," compiled by the Third Department, where about Dostoevsky it is noted: "Residence: 1st Admiralty part, 2nd quarter, at the corner of Malaya Morskaya and Voznesensky Prospect, in the Shil house, on the 3rd floor, in Bremer's apartment." It was repeated in the secret order of the Third Department to Major Chudinov of the gendarme division regarding the arrest of the writer.

Bolshaya Podyacheskaya Street, No. 7

Bolshaya Podyacheskaya St., 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

In relation to the police registration as a "residence permit," the mentioned "housewarming" can be understood precisely as the relocation of the brothers to a new address — to Protopopov's house on Bolshaya Podyacheskaya.

The Fateful Café in the History of Pushkin, Dostoevsky, and Tchaikovsky

Nevsky Ave., 18, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky loved to spend time here, and it was here that a fateful meeting in his life took place — a meeting with Mikhail Vasilyevich Butashevich-Petrashevsky. This happened in April-May 1846.

The Civil Execution of the Petrashevsky Circle Members

Pushkinskaya, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191180

The Petrashevsky Circle was a group of young people who gathered in the 1840s around the official and writer Petrashevsky: utopian socialists and democrats striving to reorganize autocratic and serf-owning Russia. They aspired in words but practically accomplished almost nothing. They met on Fridays at Petrashevsky’s place or at someone else’s among the circle members, most often at the poets Pleshcheev’s or Durov’s, discussing pressing issues, reading poetry, and showing interest in theater and music. They didn’t even create a secret society. They didn’t have time. But almost a quarter of a century later, after the uprising on Senate Square, Nicholas I still feared the free-thinking youth. For their conversations, for their dreams of a bright future for their people, for reading the “forbidden” works of their idol Belinsky, 23 dreamers — each just over 20 years old — were arrested on denunciation and went through almost the same fate as the Decembrists.

Narva Section of the 1st Quarter, for the 3rd Company of the Izmailovsky Regiment, house No. 5,

3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 8b, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005

After the death of Emperor Nicholas I, the writer, like other members of the Petrashevsky Circle, was pardoned by Alexander II. In 1859, Dostoevsky was granted permission to live in Tver, and later in St. Petersburg. At the end of December 1859, Dostoevsky returned to St. Petersburg with his wife and adopted son Pavel, but the unofficial surveillance of the writer did not cease until July 9, 1875.

Malaya Meshchanskaya Street, corner of the Catherine Canal, the house of the general's daughter Anastasia Alekseevna Astafyeva

litera A, Kaznacheyskaya St., 4/16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

Since January 1861, *Vremya* became one of the major Petersburg magazines and soon began to compete with the most popular periodicals: in just its first year, *Vremya* matched the number of subscribers of *Otechestvennye Zapiski* and *Russkoye Slovo* (about 4,000 subscribers) and took third place behind the two absolute leaders — N.A. Nekrasov’s *Sovremennik* (7,000 subscribers) and M.N. Katkov’s *Russky Vestnik* (5,700 subscribers).

On Malaya Podyacheskaya, wife's illness

Malaya Podyacheskaya St., 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

The address is indicated in Gaevsky's letter to Dostoevsky dated August 1, 1864: "In Malaya Podyacheskaya, in the house of Thomas," the modern address being Malaya Podyacheskaya Street, No. 2/96; the house has been preserved. In a draft letter to Rodevich, Dostoevsky refers to the apartment in this house as "my apartment." From July 1863, when Dostoevsky was absent from Petersburg, traveling across Europe, the writer's stepson Pavel Isaev lived at this address—initially together with the tutor Rodevich, and later alone—while the writer was in Moscow with his dying wife Maria Dmitrievna.

Alonkin's House, Meeting with Anna Snitkina

Stolyarny Lane, 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

Anna Snitkina, the future wife of Dostoevsky, participated as a stenographer-transcriber in the preparation for the publication of the novel *The Gambler*. Dostoevsky had never before dictated his works and had always written them himself. This method of working was unfamiliar to him, but on the advice of his friend Milyukov, he was forced to resort to this new way of writing in order to finish the novel on time and fulfill contractual obligations to the publisher Stellovsky. The work of the stenographer exceeded all his expectations. On February 15, 1867, Anna Grigoryevna became the writer’s wife, and two months later the Dostoevskys left for abroad, where they stayed for more than four years (until July 1871). To help her husband pay off debts and avoid the seizure of property, as well as to raise enough money for the trip abroad, Anna Grigoryevna pawned all her dowry, which they were never able to redeem afterward.

27 Voznesensky, marriage to Anna Snikina

27 Voznesensky Ave., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

At the address Voznesensky Prospect, in the house of the wife of retired Lieutenant Colonel Karl Fedorovich Shirmer, 27, apt. 25, the Dostoevskys settled after the reconstruction of 1860. Dostoevsky lived here for a very short time — from January 21 to April 14, 1867 — but this address is very significant in his life. The apartment was rented in January 1867 in connection with the upcoming wedding of the writer and Anna Grigoryevna Snitkina, which took place on February 15, 1867, at the Trinity Izmailovsky Cathedral. The "newlyweds" came here right after the wedding and spent their "honeymoon" here.

Hotel on Bolshaya Konyushennaya, imminent childbirth

Bolshaya Konyushennaya St., 27, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

In her memoirs, Dostoevskaya wrote that upon returning to St. Petersburg from abroad in 1871, they "stayed at a hotel on Bolshaya Konyushennaya Street, but lived there only two days, July 8 and 9. This was most likely the furnished rooms known as the 'Volkovsky Rooms,' modern address: Bolshaya Konyushennaya 23; the building has not survived, and a modern DLT building, constructed in 1912–1913, now stands on this site. Staying there was inconvenient due to the impending addition to the family, and also beyond their means."

Furnished rooms at 3 Yekateringofsky Prospect, apartment 7

3 Rimsky-Korsakov Avenue, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

The Dostoevskys stayed in these furnished rooms temporarily due to a lack of funds. Living for a long time "in furnished rooms was unthinkable: besides all sorts of inconveniences, the close proximity of small children, with their crying and wailing, disturbed the husband both in sleeping and working."

At Serpukhovskaya

Serpukhovskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013

This address of Dostoevsky is not widely known, but it was here in May 1872 that he posed for the artist Perov for the famous portrait, which was exhibited the same year at the Academy of Arts during the II Itinerant Exhibition.

Izmailovsky Regiment, second company, house No. 14

3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005

The description of this apartment is found with Anna Dostoevskaya: “Our apartment was located on the second floor of a mansion, deep in the courtyard. It consisted of five rooms, small but conveniently arranged, and a living room with three windows. Fyodor Mikhailovich’s study was of medium size and situated away from the children’s rooms, so that the children’s noise and running about could not disturb Fyodor Mikhailovich during his work.”

Ligovka — Gusev Lane, house No. 8

per. Ulyany Gromovoy, 8, apt. 36, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036

In the writer’s wife’s apartment, members of the initiative group for publishing the first posthumous Complete Works of the writer gathered. And one of them, the philosopher and literary critic Strakhov, who was writing a biographical essay on Dostoevsky for the first volume, mentioned in passing that in the 1870s he “lived on Ligovka, No. 27, in the house of Slivchansky,” adding in parentheses: “(the very volume in which this edition of his works is being made).”

Under arrest at the guardhouse at Sadovaya Street, No. 37

Sadovaya St., 37A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

Dostoevsky spent two days under arrest in the guardhouse at 37 Sadovaya Street, from March 21 to 23, 1874, according to the sentence of the Petersburg District Court dated June 11, 1873, for violating the censorship statute as the editor of the weekly magazine *Grazhdanin* (*The Citizen*). The execution of the sentence was postponed thanks to the assistance of the prosecutor of the Petersburg District Court, A.F. Koni.

The last address of Dostoevsky, at the corner of Yamskaya and Kuznechny Lane

Dostoevsky St., 2/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002

Historical address: Kuznechny Lane, corner of Yamskaya Street, house of the widow of a 2nd guild merchant, Prussian subject Rosalia-Anna Gustavovna Klinkoström, No. 5/2. Modern address: Kuznechny Lane, corner of Dostoevsky Street, No. 5/2. The house has been preserved (built in the first half of the 1840s, rebuilt in 1882, partially restored in 1968–1970).

Raskolnikov's House - Crime and Punishment

Grazhdanskaya St., 19/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

It is commonly believed that "Raskolnikov's house" is house No. 5, the corner building at the intersection of Srednyaya Meshchanskaya and Stolyarny Lane. Today, this is 19/5 Grazhdanskaya Street (the corner of Grazhdanskaya St. and Przhevalsky St.). In the mid-19th century, this house belonged to one of the heirs of the carriage master Joachim and was five stories tall (now, after major renovations, it is four stories). From the archway, you need to turn immediately to the right; at the corner, there is a door to the staircase described in the novel.

The Old Pawnbroker’s House – Crime and Punishment

Griboedov Canal Embankment, 104d, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

The old pawnbroker’s house is located on the embankment of the Griboedov Canal. The character killed by Rodion Raskolnikov in Dostoevsky’s novel *Crime and Punishment*, Alyona Ivanovna, who was engaged in usury, lived there. The address of the old pawnbroker has been the subject of many years of searches and discussions among researchers of the novel’s topography. Since the 1920s up to the present, various versions of the house’s location have been proposed, with most researchers considering the residential building facing three streets, located at the address: 104 Griboedov Canal Embankment, to be the one that most closely corresponds to the description in the novel.

The grave of Dostoevsky

Tikhvin Cemetery, Alexander Nevsky Square, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191167

And to this day, in the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, at the Tikhvin Cemetery, in the so-called Necropolis of the Masters of Art, lies the grave of Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky—the final resting place of the greatest writer in this world. The writer’s widow, Anna Grigoryevna, recalled that the Alexander Nevsky Lavra offered any place in its cemeteries for his burial. A representative of the Lavra said that the monastic community “requests to accept the place free of charge and will consider it an honor if the remains of the writer Dostoevsky, who zealously stood for the Orthodox faith, rest within the walls of the Lavra.” A place was found near the graves of Karamzin and Zhukovsky; two years later, a monument was erected based on a design by architect Vasilyev and sculptor Laveretsky (workshop of Andrey Barinov).

The House of Parfen Rogozhkin

Gorokhovaya St., 41, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

One of the most important centers of artistic topography in the novel *The Idiot* is Parfyon Rogozhin's house. In this house, which Hippolyte compared to a cemetery, Rogozhin's elderly mother blesses the prince, after which he exchanges a pectoral cross with Parfyon—they become blood brothers. It is here that Myshkin's prophecy comes true: Rogozhin will stab Nastasya Filippovna, and both heroes will weep, embracing, by her body. So where is this gloomy three-story old house? The location of the house on Gorokhovaya Street, "not far from Sadovaya," despite what seems to be a clear authorial indication, raises many questions among local historians, according to Boris Tikhomirov, director of the Dostoevsky Museum and the leading expert on his work.

Grand Hotel Europe, Saint Petersburg (Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky)

Mikhailovskaya St., 1/7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky was a frequent guest of the hotel. In the archives, a quote from Fyodor Mikhailovich regarding the unprecedented scale of the hotel's construction has been preserved: "... this is the architecture of a modern, huge hotel – this is already businesslike, Americanism, hundreds of rooms, a huge industrial enterprise."