Bolshoy Prospekt Vasilievsky Island, 4a, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034
The address is indicated in Dostoevsky's letters to his brother Mikhail dated November 26 and December 17, 1846: “...On Vasilievsky Island, 1st Line near Bolshoy Prospect, in Soloshich’s house, No. 26, opposite the Lutheran Church,” “...On Vasilievsky Island, 1st Line along Bolshoy Prospect, in Soloshich’s house, No. 26, in Beketov’s apartment.” The police registration for Dostoevsky’s “residence permit” was made at the same address. The modern address is Vasilievsky Island, Bolshoy Prospect, No. 4, corner of Repin Street, No. 19; the house has been preserved.
The presented evidence requires detailed commentary. In some, including quite authoritative publications, following the writer’s epistolary testimony, it is stated: “Dostoevsky moves to an apartment at the address: Vasilievsky Island, First Line, house 26…” And again: “Dostoevsky lives at the corner of 1st Line and Bolshoy Prospect, in house No. 26.”
However, in the 1840s, only odd numbers existed on the 1st Line of Vasilievsky Island. Therefore, such an address did not exist. But on Bolshoy Prospect, Soloshich’s house, which had the number 3 in the 1840s, was indeed numbered 26 in the old numbering system. This is the address reflected in the police registration and also named by Dostoevsky himself in his letters.
How then to explain the twice-repeated inaccuracy in the address designation (“on the 1st Line”) found in Dostoevsky’s letters to his brother? Possibly, the writer named the 1st Line as it was better known and easier to find compared to the extremely narrow Pesochny Lane. Or perhaps there was a through passage via the courtyards of Golubin’s house from the 1st Line to Soloshich’s house, and the members of the “association,” using this shortcut, were accustomed to listing themselves as being on the 1st Line. But the preserved house at the corner of Bolshoy Prospect and Repin Street confirms the above findings. As for the “Lutheran Church” mentioned by Dostoevsky, opposite which Soloshich’s house was located, this is the Church of St. Catherine, which has survived to this day and is situated between the 1st Line and Repin Street, on the opposite side of Bolshoy Prospect, at No. 197.
About the “association” of the Beketov brothers, Dostoevsky wrote to his brother Mikhail: “Finally, I proposed living together. A large apartment was found, and all expenses, for all parts of the household, do not exceed 1200 rubles in assignations per person per year. Such are the great benefits of the association! I have my own room, and I work all day long.” The participants of the association were: Dostoevsky’s fellow student from the Engineering School Alexey Beketov; Nikolay Beketov — a university student, future outstanding physicist and chemist, academician; Andrey Beketov — at that time a student of the university’s Oriental department, later a famous botanist, grandfather of Blok; Oriental studies students Pleshcheev, who almost daily attended the circle meetings, and Khanykov, as well as Grigorovich, Maykov, and some others, totaling fifteen people. Formally, one of the Beketov brothers was apparently the tenant, and Dostoevsky rented a room from him “from the residents.” The “association” lasted a short time. It dissolved due to the Beketov brothers’ departure to Kazan in February 1847.
In his letters to his brother Mikhail, Dostoevsky reports his intention to prepare the publication of his works for the “coming autumn”; about the planned illustrations for “The Double” and “Poor Folk”; about a quarrel with “Sovremennik.” He writes: “Now they say that I am infected with vanity, have dreamed of myself, and I am passed on to Kraevsky because Maykov praises me. Nekrasov is going to scold me. As for Belinsky, he is such a weak person that even in literary opinions he has five Fridays a week. Only with him have I maintained the old good relations. He is a noble man.” He reports friendship with the Beketov brothers: “These are capable, intelligent people, with an excellent heart, with nobility, with character. They cured me with their company.” Dostoevsky works “day and night” on “Netochka Nezvanova,” which he “promised to deliver to Kraevsky” by January 5; in the evenings “for entertainment” he goes “to the Italian opera in the gallery,” “around the post” (which began on February 3) he occasionally attends Petrashevsky’s Fridays, using the books from his library.
On February 24, Dostoevsky’s “residence permit” registration appears at a different address.
Sources:
M. Basina: “The Life of Dostoevsky. Through the Twilight of White Nights”
Boris Nikolaevich Tikhomirov: DOSTOEVSKY’S ADDRESSES IN PETERSBURG: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF SOURCES AND EXPERTISE OF LOCAL HISTORY PUBLICATIONS
http://family-history.ru/material/biography/mesto/dostoyevsky
https://www.citywalls.ru/house106.html
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