The Best Diplomat of Peter the Great

Bolshaya Morskaya St., 20, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

For where do I need you! The career of Petr Pavlovich Shafirov seems utterly incredible. A baptized Jew finds his way to the court of Peter I, becomes a diplomat, heads the postal service, mining and metallurgy, oversees foreign trade, saves the tsar and tsarina from Turkish captivity, becomes one of the richest and most powerful people in the empire, and then, one fine day, loses everything.

The career of Pyotr Pavlovich Shafirov seems utterly incredible. A baptized Jew finds his way to the court of Peter I, becomes a diplomat, heads the postal service, mining and metallurgy, oversees foreign trade, saves the tsar and tsarina from Turkish captivity, becomes one of the richest and most powerful men in the empire, and then one fine day loses everything. However, in reality, Shafirov’s entire life was governed by unwritten laws that shaped the fate of any Russian official both before and after Peter the Great.

First, his completely non-aristocratic origin. Pyotr Shafirov’s father, the baptized Jew Pavel Shafirov, was a literate man who knew several languages, which probably helped him get a job in the household of Boyar Bogdan Khitrov. It was there in 1669 that his son Pyotr was born, destined for a great future. After Boyar Khitrov’s death, Pavel Shafirov became a translator in the Ambassadorial Office and sent his son to work in the shop of a relative — the merchant Yevreinov. But soon the son also ended up in the Ambassadorial Office. According to legend — quite by accident — the young tsar Peter was walking around Moscow and wandered into the shop where Pyotr Shafirov worked. Talking with the young clerk, the sovereign learned that he spoke German, Polish, and French. After this meeting, Peter I supposedly ordered Shafirov to appear, "for you are needed by me," and assigned him to service. This story is not supported by documents or contemporary testimonies, so most likely his entry into the Ambassadorial Office was due to Shafirov senior. It was also not surprising that the baptized Shafirov later got a chance to make a career. After all, his father had secured nobility for himself, and the younger Shafirov confidently called himself the son of a nobleman.

Shafirov found himself in the right nomenklatura clan, which was on the rise. In 1697, "the sergeant of the Preobrazhensky Regiment Pyotr Mikhailov" traveled to Europe with the ambassadors of the Russian state. The Great Embassy included the young translator Shafirov. Foreigners’ testimonies have been preserved stating that he was already close to the tsar at that time: "Peter is surrounded by very common people; among them is a baptized Jew and a shipwright, who eat at the same table with him." However, Shafirov was not a close friend of Peter like Lefort and Menshikov and never became one. Shafirov’s patron was the plenipotentiary ambassador, governor of Siberia Fyodor Golovin, who was responsible for hiring foreign specialists to work in Russia and also handled procurement of everything necessary for building the fleet. By the nature of his work, Golovin communicated a lot with foreigners, so he simply needed a translator. Golovin appreciated Shafirov’s abilities and helped him climb the career ladder in the following years. Thus, when in 1699 Golovin entered negotiations with Denmark and Poland, trying to persuade these powers to form an alliance against Sweden, Shafirov was part of the Russian delegation. Probably Golovin was very pleased with his protégé’s success because in 1701 Shafirov was entrusted to conduct negotiations with Poland independently. The young diplomat was successful, and in 1703 Golovin appointed him his secretary for the Ambassadorial Office, effectively the head of this institution. Golovin was in favor with the tsar at that time and could afford to promote his people to the top, which happened with Shafirov. Two years earlier, Shafirov had headed the postal department, also not without Golovin’s patronage.

At first glance, it may seem strange and surprising that an ordinary translator suddenly became a diplomat, then the chief postmaster of the country, and soon after — the head of the Ambassadorial Office. Later, Golovin helped Shafirov make the next career leap. The tsar’s decree stated: "The great sovereign ordered: the Vilna and Arkhangelsk posts, which were managed by stolnik Matvey Vinius, shall now be managed by the state Ambassadorial Office translator Pyotr Shafirov, and Matvey shall no longer manage these posts." Austrian diplomat Otto Pleier reported to his emperor: "Chancellor Vinius... was pardoned and not hanged, but was whipped and sentenced to pay 7,000 rubles. Here it is customary that first a person is allowed to accumulate a lot, and then some accusation is brought against him — and under torture all the accumulated is taken away."

Peter I did whatever came to his mind with the country. Any whim of his was fulfilled, whether shaving beards or building a capital on a swamp. Peter surrounded himself with officials chosen on the principle of personal loyalty. The closest circle included people the sovereign had known since childhood — Menshikov, the former tutor of the tsar Nikita Zotov, who headed Peter’s personal chancellery, and some others. A bit further out were those whom the sovereign met during his turbulent youth, and Shafirov was one of them. It is well known that in Russia, the greatest success is achieved by officials who even in small things imitate their superiors, adopting their interests and habits. Shafirov, like Peter I, was a hot-tempered, cruel, and intolerant man. Once, for example, he quarreled with his superior — Chancellor Golovkin, after which, venting his anger, he mercilessly beat his subordinate — the secretary of the ambassadorial college Ivan Gubin. Moreover, like Peter I, he drank a lot and often got drunk. It is known that Peter I liked to ply foreign ambassadors with drinks, and Shafirov, imitating his sovereign, widely used alcohol for diplomatic purposes.

In 1708, Peter I granted him three hundred peasant households, with the tsar’s charter stating "that he is rewarded in this way for his faithful and diligent services to the Sovereign; especially during His Majesty’s stay in foreign lands; also for his constant presence in military campaigns from the very beginning of the Swedish war, as well as for his tireless labors and advice in the State Ambassadorial secret affairs." In 1709, after the Battle of Poltava, when generals and officials present at "this glorious victory" were showered with favors and awards, his merits were once again duly recognized. Peter I appointed Shafirov vice-chancellor, or deputy chancellor as it was then called, and even bestowed upon him the title of baron, which, however, Shafirov had secured for himself with the help of his subordinates. The Russian ambassador in Vienna, Baron Urbich, begged the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph I to make Shafirov a baron. He agreed, and Urbich was able to please his superior with the good news.

In 1711, Peter I suffered a crushing defeat by the combined army of Turks and Crimean Tatars. The Russian army was surrounded and pressed against the Prut River, with the sovereign himself and his future wife Catherine trapped. Shafirov also found himself surrounded and was sent to the vizier Baltadji Mehmed Pasha to conduct negotiations. The Russians’ situation was desperate, so the terms on which Peter I was preparing to conclude peace were truly harsh for Russia. Shafirov had the authority to hand over Azov and all previously seized lands to the Turks, and to return all territories taken over many years of the Northern War, except for the lands around Saint Petersburg, for which Pskov was to be offered instead. Additionally, Russia was ready to agree that the king of Poland would be the Swedish protégé Stanisław Leszczyński. Such terms would mean Russia’s defeat not only in the Turkish war but also in the Northern War, yet there were fears that the Turks would not agree to them, so 150,000 rubles were allocated to bribe the vizier, as well as money to bribe other commanders and officials of the enemy army. After distributing bribes, Shafirov managed to negotiate significantly milder peace terms, under which Russia lost Azov but retained everything it had won from the Swedes. There was, however, one more condition: Shafirov himself and the son of Russian Field Marshal Sheremetev became amanats, i.e., hostages whose lives guaranteed Russia’s fulfillment of the treaty.

Shafirov and Major General Mikhail Sheremetev went to Istanbul, and despite his hostage status, Shafirov received ambassadorial powers. The diplomat’s main task was to prevent the Russo-Turkish war from resuming, since the lenient terms of the treaty signed by Mehmed Pasha caused great displeasure to the sultan, and the vizier himself paid for the bribe received from Shafirov with his head. As Field Marshal Sheremetev wrote, "the former vizier who made the treaty was disgracefully dismissed. A chain was put around his neck, and he was led barefoot and on foot through the streets of Istanbul by a mounted Turk, and then strangled." Shafirov’s main diplomatic opponent was Karl XII himself, who after fleeing from Poltava lived in Constantinople. The Swedish king, as well as Crimean Khan Devlet Giray II, pushed Turkey toward war. At the same time, the ambassadors of England and Holland tried to prevent this, as they did not want a Swedish victory, which was supported by their hostile France. But Shafirov’s main diplomatic weapon remained money. For example, 120,000 reichsthalers were spent to bribe the Crimean khan. Shafirov handed out bribes left and right and even managed to bribe the sultan’s mother, who thereafter became a convinced supporter of Russo-Turkish friendship.

In letters to St. Petersburg, Shafirov repeatedly described his misadventures. To Count Sheremetev he wrote:

"The sultan put us in prison in November, where we still remain with your son Mikhail Borisovich, living in great need, having light only from above through the bars, and enduring great hardship from the crampedness and stench. If the war continues, then in this our miserable captivity we will be forced to die."

And yet Shafirov’s mission was successful. In 1714, a final peace treaty was concluded, which practically did not differ from the one signed on the banks of the Prut, and the plenipotentiary hostages were able to return to Russia. Mikhail Sheremetev never made it home, dying in Kiev, while Shafirov was received with great honor. The sovereign showered his diplomat with favors, and soon Vice-Chancellor Shafirov became one of the most influential officials of the empire.

Despite the awards received upon his return, Shafirov desperately stole. And there was nothing surprising about this — in the tsar’s circle, everyone stole without exception. Moreover, he understood nothing about mining, commerce, or postal transport, although he headed the Berg College, Commerce College, and postal department. But this was also unsurprising, since none of the "nestlings of Peter’s nest" understood what they managed. Prussian diplomat Johann Fokkerodt recalled:

"The senators had neither the ability nor the activity required by such extensive administration, and most of them were utterly selfish people from whom you could buy anything for money, no matter how harmful it was to the public good. Moreover, Peter I’s favorites took many things right before the Senate’s eyes."

Nothing could be done about this, since Peter I could not afford to distance himself from his thieving childhood friends, youth companions, and other drinking buddies, as without them he would lose his support.

Shafirov himself poorly understood postal affairs, but his subordinates knew their service excellently and therefore stole with particular success. Shafirov protected such employees, taking his cut from their affairs. The Prussian king personally complained to Peter I about postal swindlers.

In other fields besides diplomacy, Shafirov acted roughly the same way. The Ural affairs, handled by the Berg College, were practically handed over to the merchant dynasty of the Demidovs, with whom Shafirov had mutually beneficial relations.

Shafirov’s fall was as inevitable as his rise. He began to overreach and quickly made powerful enemies. His biggest mistake was quarreling with the all-powerful Menshikov. The Hanoverian ambassador in St. Petersburg, Christian Weber, later recalled:

"Upon returning from Turkey, Baron Shafirov was received with great honor at court. His happiness aroused new hatred among his numerous envious rivals, especially Prince Menshikov. I remember once, while they were on a ship, they had a big argument, and Shafirov told Menshikov that if his inherent envy turned into a fever, all persons close to the Sovereign would die from it, and that he, sparing not even his benefactors, resembled worms gnawing trees, which they feed on and live by. Moreover, he reproached him that Prince Menshikov in many battles watched from afar through a spyglass, like Neptune from the Thracian mountains at the battle of Troy with the Greeks, or like Xerxes, who was at the Battle of Salamis at such a distance that he could not be hit by an arrow. This quarrel later caused Baron Shafirov’s downfall."

In the struggle with Menshikov, Shafirov made another major mistake — he quarreled with the Ober-Procurator, and quarreling with the prosecution in Russia is dangerous. Shafirov reported to the sovereign that Menshikov had encroached on lands around the town of Pochep. This town was gifted to Menshikov after the Poltava victory, but the prince began to annex neighboring plots, and Cossacks who opposed this were imprisoned. Menshikov lost the seized lands, and Colonel Bogdan Skornyakov-Pisarev, who helped him with the surveying, was put on trial. The trouble was that the convicted colonel had a brother — Ober-Procurator of the Senate Grigory Skornyakov-Pisarev. As a result, Shafirov did not destroy Menshikov but made a new powerful enemy for himself.

Soon constant clashes and even drunken fights began between Shafirov and Skornyakov-Pisarev. A war of kompromat erupted between the two officials, and Shafirov’s position was unenviable since his only possible ally — Peter I — was then at the Caspian Sea fighting Persia. Skornyakov-Pisarev easily proved that Shafirov helped his brother Mikhail embezzle state funds and reminded senators of the vice-chancellor’s Jewish origin: "Mikhail Shafirov is not a foreigner but of Jewish nature, a boyar’s serf, nicknamed Shayushka, son, and his father Shayushkin was a schoolboy’s shafor in Orsha, whose relative is still in Orsha, the Jew Zelman..." The vice-chancellor, in turn, claimed that the Ober-Procurator’s father "had no peasants, plowed himself, and taught him from youth, which is evidenced by his and his current rude behavior," and that the Skornyakov-Pisarevs descended from skinners and clerks. However, there was no evidence for this.

Soon Skornyakov-Pisarev uncovered Shafirov’s postal frauds and appointed an investigation in the Senate. A commission was formed that confirmed all the accusations against Shafirov. As a result, in 1723 Shafirov was sentenced to death and deprived of all ranks and property. At the last moment, the execution was replaced by exile to Siberia, but he was exiled only to Novgorod.

After Peter I’s death, Empress Catherine I called Shafirov back to St. Petersburg and even returned his confiscated property. The Hanoverian ambassador in St. Petersburg, Christian Weber, later recalled:

"The Empress summoned Baron Shafirov and expressed very gracious words, asking him to attribute the misfortune he suffered to his enemies, not to the late Emperor, who even before his death always thought well of him, opposed his exile to Siberia, and even intended to restore his former favor." Catherine I ordered Shafirov’s confiscated sword to be returned. Since the very sword could not be found, the empress gave the former vice-chancellor the sword of Peter the Great himself.

Apparently, Catherine retained gratitude to the man who saved her from Turkish captivity. Shafirov’s miraculous return was as inevitable as his entire life path, since in Russia with the change of supreme ruler yesterday’s disgraced become favorites and vice versa. He could no longer rise above president of the Commerce College, but unlike Menshikov, he ended his days in 1739 with honor and wealth. Perhaps the greatest miracle in Shafirov’s extraordinary biography was that he was returned what had been taken from him.

In St. Petersburg, Pyotr Pavlovich Shafirov was the first owner of the plot at house No. 20 on Bolshaya Morskaya Street. His first Petersburg house stood on Berezovy (Petersburg) Island next to Peter I’s little house. Shafirov received the plot in the Morskaya Sloboda in the early 1720s.

Sources:

Kirill Novikov, The Jew of Peter the Great

https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shafirov,_Pyotr_Pavlovich

http://deduhova.ru/statesman/pyotr-pavlovich-shafirov/

Follow us on social media

More stories from Petersburg: Stories, Legends, and Myths

The History of the Name of Vasilievsky Island

Unnamed Road, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199178

Vasilyev Island had three names at once — Russian, Finno-Ugric, and Swedish. The Russian name remained the same: Vasilyev Island (in the Swedish cadastre book — Wassilie Ostroff); the Finnish name Hirvisaari — Moose Island (in the Swedish cadastre book — Hirfwisari); the Swedish name Dammarholm, meaning Pond Island, because fish traps were located there.

The Tear of Socialism. The House of Forgotten Writers

Rubinstein St., 7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191025

A symbol of an era that never happened and a new way of life that even those who promoted it did not want to live in. A house of joy that became the tear of its time.

The Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood — Legends and Myths

Griboedov Canal Embankment, 2B, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood — an Orthodox church, whose full name is the Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ, is located in the historic center of Saint Petersburg, on the embankment of the Griboedov Canal. It is a memorial to Tsar-Martyr Alexander II, who died at this site at the hands of terrorists.

Legends of the Mikhailovsky Castle

Sadovaya St., 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

There is no place in Saint Petersburg more mysterious and mystical than the Mikhailovsky Castle. Everything is unusual—the very appearance of the fortress-like building, the color of its facade, and, of course, the tragic history of its owner, the Russian Emperor Paul I, who shared the fate of his father Peter III, dying as a result of a palace coup in his bedroom within the walls of his castle.

The House of the Queen of Spades

Malaya Morskaya St., 10-4, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

In every corner stood porcelain shepherdesses, a dining clock made by the renowned Leroy, little boxes, tape measures, fans, and various ladies' toys invented at the end of the past century along with the Montgolfier balloon and Mesmer's magnetism. Hermann went behind the screens. Behind them stood a small iron bed; to the right was a door leading to the study; to the left, another — to the corridor. Hermann opened it and saw a narrow, winding staircase that led to the room of the poor ward... A. Pushkin. The Queen of Spades

Legends and Monuments of Malaya Sadovaya

Malaya Sadovaya St., 8, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

Formerly Shuvalovsky, then Novy Lane, later Ekaterininskaya Street. On a very short stretch (less than two hundred meters), this is one of the shortest streets in the city, its length is only 179 meters, yet it holds so many stories, interesting sculptures, and monuments that it would be enough for an avenue.

Chizhik Pyzhik

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

The smallest monument in Petersburg

Singer House or House of Books

Nevsky Ave., 28, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Not only today's entrepreneurs strive to immortalize their ambitions in the height of their office buildings. And the passions regarding the appearance and height regulations were intense.

Mysterious Obelisk near Kazan Cathedral

Kazan Square, 2, Saint Petersburg, 191186

How the Budget Financing Problems of the Early 19th Century Influenced the Development of Alternative History.

Lions from the Bronze Horseman

Admiralteysky Ave, 12, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

Where above the elevated porch, With a raised paw, as if alive, Stand two guardian lions,

Secrets of the Alexander Column

Palace Square, 6, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The Alexander Column, which stands in the middle of Palace Square, was erected to commemorate the victory over the French in 1812.

Russian Tristan and Isolde – punishment for the "vile abomination"

Nevsky Ave., 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The story began on a May day in 1851, when a carriage pulled up to the "English Shop." Lavinia, who had flown out of the store, disappeared into it, and the horses galloped at full speed along Nevsky.

A Jew of Peter the Great or the First Bathhouse Scandal of Russia

Nevsky Ave., 39A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

The first "bathhouse scandal" in Russian history occurred in 1727, and its protagonist was Anton Devier, the General Police Master of Saint Petersburg, the first and highest-ranking official in law enforcement. The fact that he was also Jewish makes the situation even more intriguing.

Anichkov Palace is the oldest surviving building on Nevsky Prospect.

Nevsky Ave., 39, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

The name of the palace and the nearby bridge comes from the **Anichkov Palace** and the **Anichkov Bridge** in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Both are named after Mikhail Anichkov, an engineer who supervised the construction of the first wooden bridge at this location in the early 18th century. The palace later took its name from the bridge and the area.

Burned alive

Nevsky Ave., 15, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

About the Famous Case of Voznitsyn and Leibov in the 18th Century

The Empress's Doctor, the First Russian Jewish Academician

Dvortsovaya Square, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

About paired Russian banyas, since they contribute to the strengthening, preservation, and restoration of health

Samoyed King

Dvortsovaya Embankment, 2E, Saint Petersburg, Leningrad Region, Russia, 191186

He helped Peter I shave the beards of the boyars, became a king, and was exiled.

Half-lions-half-dogs-half-frogs — on Petrovskaya Embankment

Petrovskaya Embankment, 6, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197046

Lions Shi-Zi – granite mythological lions brought from China, they decorate the ceremonial descent to the Neva opposite Peter the Great's cabin.

Cathedral Mosque

Kronverksky Ave, 7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197046

Already in the early years of the existence of Saint Petersburg, a Tatar settlement appeared near the Peter and Paul Fortress. In 1798, more than five hundred Muslim servicemen submitted a petition requesting the granting of a prayer house and the allocation of land for a cemetery.

Where and how was Barmaley born?

Barmaleeva St., 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197136

We will take Barmaley with us, We will carry him off to distant Leningrad! Korney Chukovsky. Barmaley

Sea prison or where they trapped in a bottle

Admiralteysky Canal Embankment, 2t, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190121

The building of the maritime prison was called "the bottle," and according to one version, the colloquial expression "Don't get into the bottle" originated from this.

Doctor Pel's Pharmacy

7th Line V.O., 16-18, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

Doctor Pel's Pharmacy is located in the historic center of Vasilievsky Island. The pharmacy building is over 300 years old. Since 1710, it has housed an operating pharmacy to this day. Not only in this building but throughout the island, there was a pharmacist quarter where, at one time, anyone interested engaged in alchemy. Originally, the building housed a pharmacy shop that frequently changed owners until it came into Pel's possession.

Moisey Nappelbaum – artist or photographer?

Nevsky Ave., 72, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191025

Nappelbaum considered Rembrandt his spiritual inspiration, who, according to him, more than any other artist, brilliantly worked with light and shadow. “Our life is continuously enriched, renewed, and moves forward. And photographic art must develop, spiritually mature, otherwise it will wither, take on a frozen form, and lose everything that was so arduously gained. To prevent this from happening, it is necessary to learn not only the technique of photography, the laws of visual art, composition, and lighting – one must study life, people, human faces, characters in their movement. It is necessary to learn to creatively comprehend the subject.” M. S. Nappelbaum from the book *From Craft to Art*.

The Death of the Poet – Yesenin

Malaya Morskaya St., 24, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

On December 28, 1925, at 10:30 AM in room number five of the "International" hotel (formerly "Angleterre," now the hotel has returned to its historical name), a man was found hanging from a central heating pipe. According to the presented documents, the man who hanged himself was Sergey Alexandrovich Yesenin, a writer... (from the "Incident Scene Inspection Report"). This is how the 30-year-old Russian poet ended his life.

Karl Skavronsky - servant, accidental Russian, and relative of the imperial family

Millionnaya St., 7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The origin of Catherine I is unclear. Her relatives are named Skovorotsky in some documents, Skovorodsky in others, Skovoronsky, and even Ikavronsky. According to Relbig, the surname "Skavronsky" was adopted at the suggestion of Count Peter Sapieha.

Amazing Architect Rossi Street

2 Zodchego Rossi Street, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

Its uniqueness lies in the fact that the development is carried out in exact accordance with ancient canons — the height of the buildings equals the width of the street and is 22 meters, while its length is exactly ten times greater — 220 meters.

Willem Mons: How Peter I Executed His Wife’s Lover

X83G+65 Petrogradsky District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Despite the fact that Peter I changed many historically established traditions in Russia, in some circumstances he displayed seemingly senseless cruelty, more characteristic of medieval monarchs than an enlightened emperor. In particular, this refers to the execution of William Mons.

The Ghost of the Academy of Arts

Universitetskaya Embankment, 17, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

The circumstances of the death of the first director and architect of the building of the Imperial Academy of Arts gave rise to one of the many Petersburg legends, known as the "Ghost of the Academy of Arts." It is said that the soul of the suicide, having found no rest in the Higher World, is doomed to wander forever within the walls he once created.

Were the lands of Petersburg "desolate and empty"?

WCV4+84 Krasnogvardeysky District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

The very foundation of Petersburg is surrounded by mysticism and legends. The most important one, perhaps, tells that the land on which the future capital of the Russian Empire arose was, to use biblical language, "formless and empty." But this is not true.

Kunstkamera - History and Legends

Universitetskaya Embankment, 3, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

When Peter I set out on the Great Embassy to establish military-political and cultural-economic relations, he visited private collections and museums that were completely absent in Russia at that time. During his travels, he purchased entire collections and individual items: books, instruments, tools, weapons, natural rarities. When Peter I returned to Russia, he began to arrange his own "cabinet of curiosities" and the first museum in Russia – the Kunstkamera.

Aircraft carrier on the Neva

Angliyskaya Embankment, 76, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

Few people know that in October 1955, the British aircraft carrier HMS Triumph arrived in Leningrad on a friendly visit. Many Leningrad residents gladly came to the Lieutenant Schmidt Embankment, where it was moored, and took photographs of it.

Russian Bastille - the legendary "Crosses". History, secrets, and legends

Arsenalnaya Embankment, 7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 195009

The legendary Petersburg "Kresty" were built at the end of the 19th century. This is a cross-shaped prison, and many had to endure it — former and future ministers, marshals, writers, scientists, bandits. The history of the country was shaped by the fates of the "residents" of this place. Now the old "Kresty" stand empty, but the stories remain.

Yelagin Palace

1st Elagin Bridge, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197183

What brush, what chisel, Will depict the Yelagin Palace… Attributed to A.S. Pushkin

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.

Osinovetsky Redoubt, Osinovaya Roshcha Fortress

Golitsynskaya St., 1x, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 194362

Osinovetsky Redoubt, Osinovaya Roshcha Fortress, 18th century — an earthen fortress (sternschanze — a fortification in the shape of a pentagonal star), a characteristic example of late 18th-century earthworks, built on the southern side of the fork in the roads to Yukki and Kexholm (Priozersk). It is located in the historic Osinovaya Roshcha district in the north of Saint Petersburg. It had stone entrance gates and ranger barracks.

The Summer Garden Grille is one of the wonders of the world.

1 Summer Garden St., Saint Petersburg, Leningrad Region, Russia, 191186

The poet K. N. Batyushkov wrote: "Look at the fence of the Summer Garden, which is reflected by the greenery of tall lindens, elms, and oaks! What lightness and what elegance in its design. In 1824, the scholar D. I. Sokolov noted that 'the embankments of Petersburg and the fence of the Summer Garden can be counted among the wonders of the world!'"

Church of the Holy Trinity (Trinity Church)

108 Lenin Ave, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198320

The Church of the Holy Trinity (Trinity Church) is an Orthodox church in Krasnoye Selo, a monument of "Anna Baroque" architecture. It was the main church of the summer military capital of the Russian Empire. Here prayed the reigning members of the House of Romanov: from Empress Catherine I to Emperor Nicholas II.

The Courtyard of Spirits on Vasilievsky Island

4th Line V.O., 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

A tiny courtyard-well on Vasilievsky Island can help fulfill the most cherished wishes, but it opens only to the chosen ones. To get into the miniature courtyard, which resembles the shape of a well, you need to visit Vasilievsky Island. It is worth noting: this place is not ordinary. It is shrouded in so many myths that some tourists are even afraid to look inside.

The House of the Emir of Bukhara

Kamennoostrovsky Ave., 44B, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197101

A revenue house in Saint Petersburg, built in 1913–1914 by order of the Emir of Bukhara, Said Abdulahad Khan, for his son Said Alim Khan. The emir invited architect Stepan Krichinsky to design it, who had previously participated in the construction of the Cathedral Mosque. For the house project, the emir awarded the architect the Order of Noble Bukhara.

Hotel "Angleterre" (from the French Angleterre – England)

Malaya Morskaya St., 24, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

The history of the "Angleterre" spans more than a century and a half. Located in the very heart of Saint Petersburg, the hotel has been and remains a witness and participant in the historical events not only of the city but also of the country.

An Unusual Lantern Museum in Saint Petersburg

Odessa St., 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191124

There is a very small museum that tells about an important historical event in the Northern capital — the transition of street lighting from oil lamps to electric lamps. This museum is located on the short Odesskaya Street (not far from Smolny) and consists of only seven exhibits.

The market at Udelnaya is the most famous flea market in Russia.

Fermskoye Highway, Building 41, Block 8, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197341

The Udelny Market (or simply "Udelka") is one of the unique spots in St. Petersburg. It is simultaneously a second-hand store, a flea market, and a bazaar where, like in Greece, you can find everything or almost everything.

Prostitution in Russia: "On the sending of guilty women and girls, who will not be subject to the death penalty, to the spinning workshop"

Fontanka River Embankment, 166, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190020

KALINKINSKAYA HOSPITAL IN SAINT PETERSBURG: Where the Black River and the Fontanka entwined And at the mouth flowed into the mouth of the Neva River, At the mouths of these rivers, in that very place, Where the Kalinov forest once grew, stood a huge house; It was named after that forest and called a house, And specifically, this house was called Kalinkin; Into it were sent all the dissolute wives For their lustfulness...

"Drezdensha" or the First Brothel

Krasnogradsky Lane, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

Decree of Elizabeth Petrovna: "Since, according to the investigations and testimonies of the caught pimps and prostitutes, some of the immoral women they reveal are hiding, and, as is known, around St. Petersburg on various islands and places, and some have retreated to Kronstadt, therefore Her Imperial Majesty has decreed: those hiding immoral women and girls, both foreigners and Russians, are to be searched for, caught, and brought to the main police station, and from there sent with a note to the Kalinin House."

“Chubarov Case”: The Loudest Criminal Trial in the History of Leningrad

San-Galli Garden, Ligovsky Ave., 64, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191040

The indictment in the "Chubarov Lane case" presents the following picture of the crime. At 3:40 AM, Lyubov B. came to the police station and reported that around 11 PM, she was raped by about 30 hooligans in the San-Gali garden. B. was walking to visit her acquaintances in the evening. Near Chubarov Lane, she was grabbed by the arms by three unknown men and taken into the garden, where they began to rape her. Throughout the time, new groups kept coming into the garden and continued to rape her. The investigation revealed that the initiators of the crime were Kochergin P., Mikhailov P., and Osipov M. A total of 21 people are accused.

All gopniks are originally from Saint Petersburg.

Ligovsky Ave., 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036

The slang word "gopnik" does not originate from the gangster-filled 90s, as one might be tempted to assume. In Dahl's dictionary, for example, the word "gop" means a jump or a strike; in Ozhegov's dictionary, there is an example with the phrase "gop-company"; and in the large explanatory dictionary of the Russian language, "gopnik" is simply a person from the lower social strata or just a bum. So what does the word "gopnik" really mean, and where did it come from?

Elephants in Petersburg or How Indian Elephants Improved Russian Roads

Ligovsky Ave., 10/118, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036

For centuries, elephants remained a living embodiment of power and strength, which is why many rulers wanted to possess these visible symbols of might. Russian autocrats were no exception, having learned from personal experience that owning an elephant is not only very troublesome but sometimes quite profitable. For example, for the improvement of domestic transportation routes.

Pavilion with restrooms in Alexandrovsky Park

Gorkovskaya, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197101

At the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries, on Kronverksky Prospekt, near the Nikolaevsky Bridge (as the Lieutenant Schmidt Bridge was called until 1918) and the Tuchkov Bridges, three identical toilets were built by order of the wealthy merchant Alexandrov, who owned the market on Kronverkskaya Street. They were designed by architect A. I. Zazersky and resembled small mansions with towers, spires, and patterned brickwork—like miniature fairy-tale castles.

Smolny Cathedral (Resurrection Cathedral of All Educational Institutions, Smolny Cathedral, Cathedral of the Resurrection of the Word of All Educational Institutions, Resurrection of Christ Smolny Cathedral)

4 Kvarengi Lane, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191060

Smolny Cathedral (Resurrection Cathedral of All Educational Institutions of Smolny, Cathedral of the Resurrection of the Word of All Educational Institutions, Resurrection of Christ Smolny Cathedral) is an Orthodox church in the Central District of Saint Petersburg. It is part of the architectural ensemble of the Smolny Monastery. Historically, the Resurrection Smolny Cathedral has been the church of educational institutions of Saint Petersburg, a church for students; therefore, the main focus of the clergy and laity of the church is the spiritual and moral education of youth. From 1990 to 2015, it served as a concert venue for classical music.

Stories of Sennaya Square – a place with a tragic and criminal past

Spasskaya, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Sennaya Square is a square in the center of Saint Petersburg, located at the intersection of Moskovsky Prospekt and Sadovaya Street. Since August 20, 1739, it was called Bolshaya Square. In the 18th century, the extensive territory of the square (stretching to the Fontanka River) was divided into separate sections, named after the goods sold there: Konnaya Square — near Grivtsov Lane; Sennaya Square — near Obukhovsky Bridge; Sennaya and Drovyanaya Square. Starting from 1764, the name Sennaya Square spread to the entire square. On December 15, 1952, the square was renamed Peace Square, and on July 1, 1992, its former name was restored.

Stories of Sennaya Square - Vyazemskaya Lavra

W8F9+X7 Admiralteysky District, Saint Petersburg, Russia

"Vyazemskaya Lavra" or "the belly of Petersburg" — a slum quarter near Sennaya Square, existing from the late 18th century until the 1920s. The very name Vyazemskaya Lavra is a sarcastic toponym, since "lavra" means a male monastery of the highest rank, while in Vyazemskaya Lavra completely unmonastic rules prevailed. It was named Vyazemskaya after the Vyazemsky family, on whose land the lavra arose. It gained a notorious reputation as a refuge for robbers and inhabitants of the social bottom and lasted until the 1920s. As of 2023, the territory of the former lavra is partially occupied by the shopping center "Sennoy Market."

Stories of Sennaya Square – "Malinnik in Petersburg," or where the criminal slang word "malina" originated.

Sennaya Square, 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

Malinnik was a building that existed in the 19th and early 20th centuries in Saint Petersburg, housing a tavern and brothels. It was located at building No. 5 (modern address; the postal address in the 19th century was Sennaya Square, building No. 3). City authorities made several attempts to close the establishment, but after mass raids, the venues in the building would reopen and continue operating. The brothels were eliminated after the October Revolution. The building survived during the Soviet era and was later significantly rebuilt and extended by two floors, becoming part of a residential complex in the Stalinist neoclassical style.

Stories of Sennaya Square: The Cholera Riot in Petersburg

Brinko Lane, 4, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068

Unrest among townspeople during the cholera epidemic of 1830–1831. Causes — dissatisfaction with the government-imposed travel bans (quarantines and armed cordons) and rumors that doctors and officials were deliberately poisoning the common people, that the police were burying people alive. Succumbing to panic, "agitated crowds smashed police stations and state hospitals, killed officials, officers, and noble landlords."

The story of how trams used to pass through the house

Ligovsky Ave., 50, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036

A well-known building through which a tram used to pass. If you didn't know, you would never guess.

KV-85 - the last tank of this series

pr. Stachek, 108A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 198207

On a granite pedestal stands a KV-85 tank, produced by the Chelyabinsk Kirov Plant during the Great Patriotic War. Behind it is a preserved pillbox with the inscription 1941–1945. This is one of two known surviving examples of this model. Another tank, representing a KV-1s with an 85mm gun in a standard turret, is located in Kubinka.

The Morozov Treasure in the Leningrad Gostiny Dvor

Nevsky Ave., 35, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

On October 26, 1965, an amazing event took place in Leningrad... On that day, in room No. 87 at the corner of Sadovaya and Lomonosovskaya lines of the Gostiny Dvor, builders from the 33rd Directorate of the Repair Trust of Glavleningradstroy were working: Nadezhda Biryukova and Sofya Komova. They dismantled a transverse wall that separated two rooms and began leveling the floor, preparing it for concrete pouring. Near a tiled stove, they discovered 8 non-standard, unusually heavy bricks. One of the workers had the idea to clean the heavy brick from dirt, and it turned out that under the bricks were hidden 8 gold bars, each weighing 16 kg. The total weight amounted to 128 kg. The workers received the due material reward from the state.

The house where the history of the Romanov dynasty ended

12 Millionnaya St., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

The apartment in house No. 12 on Millionnaya Street belonged to Prince Pavel Pavlovich Putyatin. On March 3, 1917, a meeting took place there that influenced the fate of the monarchy in Russia. Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich and a delegation of politicians, including Milyukov, Guchkov, Nabokov (father of the writer V. V. Nabokov), Rodzyanko (chairman of the State Duma), Kerensky, Shulgin, Prince Lvov (the first head of the Provisional Government), and others, held negotiations here. The reason for this meeting was Nicholas II's abdication of the throne in favor of his brother Mikhail.

The Legend of the Bobrinsky Family Treasure or the Treasures of Catherine II

Galernaya St., 60, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

1930. The OGPU receives a strange letter from abroad. Someone named Bobrinsky offers to provide the Soviet government with information about the location of a family treasure. In exchange, he wants to receive half of its value! The tempting letter is immediately put under investigation, especially since it concerns the descendants of Alexei Bobrinsky – the illegitimate son of Catherine II and Grigory Orlov. Surely, caring for the future of her child, the crowned mother provided him with a rich dowry. But where? In the Bobrinsky palace in St. Petersburg, gifted to the founder of the family in 1797? Or in the Bogoroditsk estate near Tula, built specifically for Alexei Bobrinsky? Or maybe, by the time the letter was received, there were no treasures of the empress left at all? After all, unlike his descendants, Alexei Bobrinsky himself was known as a reckless bon vivant and spendthrift.