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				 Russian Historical Sites Palace Square
  Designed 
				as the successor to Moscow's great imperial squares, this vast 
				formal court is best known as the focal point of the great 
				political struggles that transformed Russia during the first 
				decades of the twentieth century. The first of these events was 
				"Bloody Sunday," the catastrophe that initiated the Revolution 
				of 1905. On the morning of Sunday, January 9, 1905, thousands of 
				striking workers, including their wives and children, marched 
				into the square to present a petition for relief to Nicholas II. 
				They were met by soldiers, who began firing on the crowd almost 
				immediately, killing hundreds (according to some accounts 
				thousands) of the demonstrators. The causes of the massacre are 
				disputed, particularly in light of the complicated political 
				tensions in the government at the time. Some historians, for 
				example, argue that both the demonstration and the military 
				reaction were planned by the conservative secret police, who 
				were alarmed by signs that the Tsar had decided upon reform. 
				Whatever its cause, the effect of Bloody Sunday was 
				clear--popular opposition to the Tsar was galvanized, and 
				conservative reactionaries gained strength in the government. In the wake of Bloody Sunday the 
				country's politics became increasingly divisive, and genuine 
				compromise and reform unlikely. Civil unrest broke out all over 
				the country, and, with the disaster of the Russo-Japanese War, 
				the government was forced to accede to popular demands for 
				reform. It soon became clear, however, that Nicholas and his 
				government had no intention of making good on this agreement. 
				Popular discontent and radical political movements were harshly 
				repressed. While these policies were successful for a time, the 
				government's inept conduct during the First World War created an 
				enormous surge of dissent. The critical turning point came in 
				February of 1917, when the underfed, poorly led, and 
				discontented army refused to act to put down strikes in Moscow 
				and St. Petersburg and called for an end to the war. By March, 
				Nicholas had no choice but to abdicate. A provisional government assumed 
				control under the leadership of the moderates, first Prince 
				Lvov, then (in July) Aleksandr Kerensky. From its seat in the 
				Winter Palace, the Kerensky government tried and failed to gain 
				popular support and restore civil order. Among the socialist 
				anti-government parties, the radical Bolshevik wing gradually 
				gained strength among the increasingly impatient army and 
				workers. Within a few months the Bolsheviks decided to assume 
				power. On the night of October 26 they staged an armed coup 
				d'etat, storming across the Palace Square and seizing the 
				Provisional Government as it met within the Winter Palace. 
				Although the storming of the Winter Palace was by no means the 
				massive popular uprising that it was to become in the Bolshevik 
				commemorations and in Sergei Eisenstein's film October, it was 
				certainly the moment of symbolic birth of the Soviet state. 
 The Alexander ColumnThis towering triumphal column was 
				erected in 1833 as a somewhat belated monument to the defeat of 
				Napoleon in 1812. Designed by Auguste de Montferrand, who also 
				designed St. Isaac's Cathedral, the Alexander Column was hewn 
				from the rock face of a cliff in Karelia over a period of two 
				years, requiring the labors of thousands of workers. It was then 
				carefully transported to St. Petersburg, taking an entire year 
				for to complete the transit. On arrival, the monolith was 
				erected by two thousand veterans of the war. It is surmounted by 
				an angel of peace, the visage of which bears considerable 
				similarity to Alexander himself. In keeping with the geometric 
				formality of the Imperial structures of the city, the Alexander 
				column is positioned so as to align perfectly with the entrance 
				to the Winter Palace and the triumphal arch that serves as the 
				entry to the General Staff building opposite.
 
				 The 
				General Staff Building Commissioned by Alexander I 
				in 1819, the neoclassical General Staff building was situated so 
				as to formally balance the facing Winter Palace. Its grand 
				triumphal arch was the first Russian monument to the war against 
				Napoleon. Atop the arch stands a bronze sculpture of Victory in 
				her six-horsed chariot--in a nicely lifelike touch, two Roman 
				soldiers restrain the outermost horses, as if to prevent the 
				team from leaping out onto the square. Although the General 
				Staff Building is not open to the public, it is in any case of 
				primary interest for its sweeping, graceful facade.
 The AdmiraltyThe Admiralty building was 
				constructed in 1823 as the administrative headquarters of the 
				Russian Navy. Designed by Andreyan Zakharov, it is best known 
				for its impressive central tower and crowning gilt spire. Rising 
				to a height of over seventy meters, the spire is surmounted by a 
				brilliant windvane in the form of a frigate, which has become 
				the ubiquitous symbol of the city. The Admiralty's ornate facade 
				is laden with appropriately nautical sculptures and reliefs, and 
				looks out over the trees and statues of the pleasant Admiralty 
				Garden.
 Decembrists SquareThe second of St. Petersburg's great 
				squares is named for the ill-fated Decembrists' revolt. On 
				December 14, 1825, a small group of reformist officers entered 
				the square at the head of their troops in order to prevent the 
				Senate from ratifying the accession of Nicholas I. Unbeknownst 
				to the officers, the Senators had anticipated such an action and 
				had already taken their oath to the Tsar in secret. Although the 
				reformers thus found no Senators in the adjacent Senate 
				building, they did run into several thousand loyalist troops who 
				had been called into action by the Tsar. The rebels were 
				attacked, captured, and soon afterward executed or exiled.
 Peter the Great Statue (The Bronze Horseman) Commissioned by Catherine the Great 
				and sculpted by the Frenchman Etienne Falconet, this striking, 
				dynamic statue has long been one of the most symbolic monuments 
				in St. Petersburg. Catherine intended it to glorify the 
				philosophy of enlightened absolutism that she shared with her 
				predecessor, and for good and bad Falconnet seems to have 
				succeeded. From different angles the rearing equestrian statue 
				seems by turns to be benevolent and malevolent, inspiring and 
				terrifying. In 1833 Pushkin immortalized it in his masterful 
				poem The Bronze Horseman, in which the statue comes to life to 
				pursue the poor clerk Yevgeny through the flooded streets of the 
				city. For most of its history, the Bronze Horseman has been 
				regarded as a symbol of tyranny and destruction. However, as 
				Russia's Tsarist past has become more distant and somewhat less 
				politically charged, the statue has come to be appreciated as 
				much for its dramatic beauty as for its imperial associations. Peter the Great's CottageThis shockingly modest wooden 
				cottage was Peter's first residence during his supervision of 
				the construction of St. Petersburg. Built by army carpenters in 
				a mere three days in the summer of 1703, it contrasts ironically 
				with the grand imperial city planned by its resident. Although 
				the cottage has been sealed off in a protective brick enclosure, 
				it still provides both a sense of the city's earliest days and 
				an oddly intimate glimpse of Peter's character. Unlike many of 
				his predecessors and his successors, Peter the Great spent a 
				considerable amount of time trying to act not like a Tsar. At 
				the age of fifteen he embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe, during 
				which time he studied a number of crafts and worked in a Dutch 
				shipyard. Even after his return, he frequently worked incognito 
				among the laborers on his own projects, and it is likely that he 
				literally lent a hand to the creation of his new capital.
 The Peter & Paul FortressPeter's first concern in the 
				creation of St. Petersburg was with the defense of the 
				approaches of the Neva river delta, and the Peter and Paul 
				Fortress was the first major building project undertaken. In 
				fact, it is entirely possible that the idea of building a new 
				capital city on the site occurred to the young Tsar while he was 
				living in his cottage and supervising the fortress's 
				construction.
 The primary attraction within the 
				fortress is the Peter and Paul Cathedral, begun by Peter as soon 
				as the fortress had been constructed, though not completed until 
				1733. In keeping with Peter's Eurocentric bias, its design 
				follows the pattern of Dutch ecclesiatical architecture rather 
				than Russian. The most noticeable characteristic of this is the 
				cathedral's tall thin spire, which was designed specifically so 
				as to best Moscow's Ivan the Gret Belltower as the tallest 
				structure in Russia. The cathedral is the resting place of most 
				of the Romanov monarchs (excepting Peter II, Ivan VI, and 
				Nicholas II), and their sarcophagi can be viewed inside. Engineer's CastleWhen Catherine the Great died late 
				in 1796 she was succeeded by her son Paul, who had been 
				estranged from her for years. Paul detested his mother, felt 
				uncomfortable ruling in the shadow of her memory, and may have 
				been more than a little psychologically unsound. Within a very 
				short while he had alienated his nobility and advisors by both 
				his erratic, capricious behavior and, more importantly, his 
				attempts to lessen the power of both the nobility and the 
				military. Having noticed that he was not exactly revered, Paul 
				became convinced that he was a target for assassination.
 His solution was the Engineer's 
				Castle, a fully-loaded fortress residence, including a broad 
				defensive moat and even a secret escape passageway from the 
				hallway outside of his bedroom. The castle was not without some 
				endearing personal touches, however. As a gesture of defiance at 
				the restrained classical tastes of his deceased mother, Paul had 
				the castle constructed in a kind of postmodern medley of 
				different architectural styles. As a gesture of respect to his 
				own taste, he had his monogram inscribed in the castle thousands 
				of times over. Having rushed the project along, Paul moved in 
				immediately upon its completion in 1801. Whether he believed 
				Engineer's Castle to be impregnable or because he trusted almost 
				no-one, the isolated Tsar brought with him a personal guard of 
				only two Cossacks. Of course, reality quickly lived up to its 
				reputation for irony--Paul was murdered in his bedroom only 
				three days later, having never even reached the hallway. |