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St. Petersburg (Russia, not Florida) John Andrade

John Andrade. W Europe- very accessible to water Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc. Allowed for aquatic trade Trade by water =

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Page 1: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

St. Petersburg (Russia, not Florida)

John Andrade

Page 2: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

W Europe- very accessible to water Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North

Sea, etc. Allowed for aquatic trade Trade by water = more contact +

cultural diffusion w/ outside world

East vs. West- Land vs. Water

Page 3: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

E Europe- virtually landlocked Only large bodies of water were Baltic +

Black Seas, which weren’t available to every country

Main form of trade was by land Land trade = more difficult less contact

with outside world ISOLATION

East vs. West- cont’d

Page 4: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

Because of different levels of contact w/ outside world, two very distinct cultures emerged

Culturally separated by the Elbe-Trieste Line ◦ Imaginary line east of Italy

W Europe- much more modern society◦ Mercantilist economy◦ Strong CENTRALIZED government◦ Beginnings of democracy starting to come up

Cultural Differences

Page 5: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

E Europe- more “behind”◦ Still in feudalistic stage◦ Local lords had power as opposed to national

monarch lack of centralization◦ Leaders envied Western rulers w/ absolute power

(e.g. Louis XIV)

Cultural Differences, cont’d

Page 6: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

Hemmed into Europe◦ Swedes controlled Baltic, Ottomans controlled

Black Sea no access to water besides rivers whatsoever

◦ Kept Russians from developing a strong economy like that of Western nations

Had a tsar, but lacked the power of a Western monarch

Where Does Russia Come In?

Page 7: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

Reigned 1682-1725 Had to deal w/ boyars and streltsy vying for

power◦ Boyars- old nobility◦ Streltsy- palace guards

1697- visited W Europe to see how those nations worked so well

Came back determined to make Russia a greater, modern power

Peter the Great

Page 8: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

1 May 1703, during Great Northern War, Peter’s forces captured Swedish fortress on the Neva River

27 May 1703- lower downstream, made Peter and Paul Fortress = first building of new city

Built by serfs + Swedish prisoners of war◦ Many people died building city nicknamed “The

City of Bones” Became the capital of Russia 1712

The Founding of St. Petersburg

Page 9: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

Peter wanted Russia to become more modernized

Founded city in the west, near the Baltic Sea to be closer to Europe

City meant to be a “window on Europe”◦ Shed light on and bring Western ideas to Russia

St. Petersburg, throughout time = WESTERNIZATION

This goal in mind until Russian Revolution in 1917

Purpose of the City?

Page 10: John Andrade.  W Europe- very accessible to water  Ports on Atlantic, Mediterranean, North Sea, etc.  Allowed for aquatic trade  Trade by water =

1. Kagan, Donald, Steven E. Ozment, and Frank M. Turner. The Western Heritage: since 1300. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007. 438-46. Print.

2. "History of St. Petersburg, Russia: Peter the Great (short Biography)." St. Petersburg at Your Fingertips: City Guide and Travel Information Service. Web. 07 Nov. 2010. <http://www.cityvision2000.com/history/peterthe.htm>.

Works Cited