Peter and Paul Fortress
The fortress on the Hare Island near the right (northern) bank of the Neva was founded on May 16 (27), 1703,
according to the joint plan of Peter I and Joseph Lambert de Guerin. From August 1703 to 1728, the work in the
fortress was directed by the architect D. Trezzini. The fortress is the historical core of St. Petersburg. Now
the
fortress is part of the Museum of the History of St. Petersburg.
During the Northern War with Sweden, by
1703
Russia
conquered the lands in the Neva delta. To protect them from the attack of the Swedes, it was necessary to build
a
fortification here. The former fortress of Nyenskans (at the confluence of the Okhta with the Neva) was
considered
insufficiently suitable for the protection of the Neva.
The site for the future fortress on May 8 or 9, 1703
was
chosen by Peter I, Alexander Danilovich Menshikov and the French engineer-general Joseph Gaspard Lambert de
Guerin.
Their choice fell on the Hare Island.
The fortress was founded on May 16 (27), 1703 according to the joint
plan
of
Peter I and Joseph Lambert de Guerin: 6 bastions, connected by curtains, 2 ravelins, a crownwork. With the fire
of
its guns, the fortress was supposed to block the fairways of the two largest branches of the river delta: the
Neva
and Bolshaya Nevka. From August 1703 to 1728, the work in the fortress was directed by the architect D.
Trezzini.
The history of St. Petersburg begins with the history of the creation of the Peter and Paul Fortress.
Initially,
an
earthen fortress was built (all fortifications were wood-earthen). Its reconstruction in stone began at the end
of
May 1706. Six bastions were built of stone and brick, interconnected by straight walls - curtains. The height of
the
bastions and curtains is from 9 to 12 meters, the width is from 16 to 20 meters. Rebuilding in stone continued
in
the 1730s-1740s and 1780s.
In 1703, Zayachiy Island was connected to the Petrograd side by the Ioannovsky
Bridge,
the first bridge in St. Petersburg. In the spring of 1707, on the northern shore of the strait separating
Zayachiy
Island from the City Island, the construction of an additional earthen fortification - a kronverk began, and in
the
30-40s of the 18th century - the construction of new structures - Ioannovsky and Alexeevsky ravelins, which
served
to cover the entrances to the fortress.
The Peter and Paul Fortress did not take part in hostilities, and in
the
19th century it was used as a prison (mainly for political prisoners). In 1914-1917 the fortress was called
Petrograd. In the days of the October Revolution (1917) the garrison of the fortress went over to the side of
the
Bolsheviks. In Soviet times, the fortress became a branch of the Museum of the History of Leningrad. Now the
fortress is part of the Museum of the History of St. Petersburg. From the Naryshkin Bastion of the Peter and
Paul
Fortress, a signal cannon is fired daily at 12:00