St. Petersburg

Home > Fiction > St. Petersburg > Page 61
St. Petersburg Page 61

by Jonathan Miles


  Matvienko, Valentina, 467–8

  May Day celebrations, 308, 374

  Mayakovsky, Vladimir, 388

  Meader, Vaughn, 444–5

  meal times, 231

  Meck, Baron Vladimir von, 307

  medicine see health and medicine Medvedev, Dmitri, 448, 450, 473

  Melba, Dame Nellie, 291–2

  Mellon, Andrew, 403

  Meltzer, Friedrich, 307

  Menelaws, Adam, 245, 246

  Mengden, Julia, 100

  Mengs, Anton Raphael, 155

  Mensheviks: and 1905 Revolution, 319; origins, 325–6; Lenin collaborates with, 326; Duma delegates arrested, 330; vision for communism, 359; challenge claims of Bolshevik government, 369

  Menshikov, Alexander: background and character, 19, 37; relationship with Peter I, 19, 34; introduces future Catherine I to Peter I, 25; St Petersburg palace, 35–7; knowledge of German, 38; Peter I builds Oranienbaum for, 51; Peter I’s treatment of, 62; furthers own career under Catherine I, 71–2; over-reaches himself, 77

  Menshikov Palace, 35–8, 36, 49, 77, 82, 340

  mental health, 168

  merchant’s yard see gostiny dvor

  Mertens Trade House, 332–3

  Messelier, de le (French diplomat), 107

  Messmacher, Maximilian, 280, 303

  metro system, 481–2

  Meyerhold, Vsevelod, 340, 388

  Mezentsov, General Nikolai, 275

  Michelet, Jules, 253

  Michetti, Niccolò, 33

  Mickiewicz, Adam, 223

  Mikhail, Grand Duke (nineteenth century), 214, 280

  Mikhail, Grand Duke (Nicholas II’s brother), 357

  Mikhailov, Mikhail, 261, 265

  Mikhailov, Timofei, 283

  Mikhailovsky Palace, 188; building of, 187–8; Paul killed at, 189; abandoned by Alexander I, 190; rebuilt, 209, 260; converted into Russian Museum, 291; restoration, 468

  Miladorovich, Count, 215

  Miloslavsky family, 10–12

  Ministry of Finance building, 209

  Ministry of Foreign Affairs building, 209

  Mir Istkusstva (The World of Art; magazine), 301–3

  Mira, Pietro (Pedrillo), 90

  Mirsky, Leon, 275

  Mitchell, Admiral, 21

  Molière, 239

  Molotov, Vyacheslav, 410, 412

  Mons, Anna, 13–14, 24–5

  Mons, William, 67

  Montferrand, Auguste Ricard de, 207, 2–27, 237

  Monument to the Third International, 382, 382

  Morosov, Ivan, 403

  Morosov, Pavlik, 402

  Moscow: in eighteenth century, 60, 77–8; Napoleon’s occupation, 203–5; mid-nineteenth-century thinkers and writers, 248–50; 1862 arson attacks, 264; attacks on Jews, 288; paintings transferred there from Hermitage, 403; post-glasnost flaunting of wealth, 463–4; ‘Chechen’ bombs, 471–2; character and atmosphere, 479; metro system, 481

  Moscow School of Mathematics and Navigation, 24

  Moss, Eric Owen, 474

  Mothe, Jean-Baptiste Vallin de la, 147–8, 157

  Mottley, John, 58, 77

  Mottraye, Aubry de la, 48, 50, 73, 74, 75

  Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 163, 475

  Mravinsky, Yevgeny, 400

  Mukhina, Lena, 414–15, 417, 418, 427

  Münnich, General Burkhard Christoph von, 87–8, 98, 99, 100, 102, 111

  Münzenberg, Willi, 395

  Muradelli, Vano, 438

  Muraviev, Count, 269

  Muravyov, Nikita, 213, 220

  Murmansk, 371, 374

  music: under Anna, 92–4; under Elizabeth, 114–16; under Nicholas 1, 240–4; under Alexander II, 259, 278–80; under Alexander III, 291–8; under Nicholas II, 327–30, 338–40, 343, 347–8, 351; in Soviet era, 378, 389, 393–4, 399–401, 424–6, 438–42; love of Westernstyle music grows, 441–2, 448–9, 453–4, 465, 470; in twenty-first century, 475

  Mussorgsky, Modest, 279, 280, 287, 292, 301, 327–8

  Myshkin, Ippolit, 274

  Nabokov, Vladimir, 308, 318, 331, 383

  Nadir, Shah, 99–100

  Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France, 199, 202, 203–5, 206

  Napoleon III, Emperor of France, 260

  Napoleonic Wars, 202, 203–6

  Narkompros, 372, 388

  Narodnaya Volya (People’s Will), 276–7, 282–6, 290–1

  Nartov, Andrei, 19

  Narva, Battle of (1700), 23

  Narvskaya, 270–1

  Naryshkin, Alexei, 143

  Naryshkin, Natalya, 10–12

  Naryshkin, Sergei, 109, 114, 116

  Naryshkin family, 10–12

  Naryshkina, Maria, 201

  Natalya Alekseevna (Peter I’s sister), 41

  Natalya Petrovna (Peter I’s daughter), 68

  National Congress Palace, 467

  National Public Library (formerly Imperial Russian Public Library), 157, 209, 260, 427

  nationalism, 465

  Nautilius Pompilius, 465

  Nechaev, Sergei, 271–2

  Nekrasov, Nikolai, 229, 253, 265, 266

  Nemtsov, Boris, 472

  neoclassicism, 148–50, 154–6, 206–7, 227, 260, 430–1

  Netherlands see Holland

  Neva River, 78; course, 25; maps, 26; Bell on, 28; crossing, 42; sandbars, 42; sailing on, 87, 178; fishing, 123; in winter, 127, 128, 129, 192, 205, 332, 406; drinking from, 166–7; influence on Stravinsky, 339

  Nevsky Bridge, 255

  Nevsky Pickwickians, 301–4

  Nevsky Prospekt, 96, 123; construction, 96–7; building schemes under Catherine 11, 131, 148, 157; in its heyday, 177, 179, 255; building schemes under Alexander I, 199; a walk along it in mid-nineteenth century, 231–4; Dostoevsky on, 267; in early twentieth century, 305, 308, 332–3, 343; renamed 25th of October Street in Soviet era, 407; hit by German shells in Second World War, 413–14, 423; rebuilding after the war, 431; in Nineties, 1, 2, 3–5; in twenty-first century, 484

  Nevsky Prospekt massacre (1917), 355–6

  Nevzorov, Alexander, 454–5

  New Economic Policy (NEP; 1921), 385, 386

  New Holland Arch, 148

  New Holland Island, 474

  newspapers, 82, 333, 404; see also books and publishing

  Nicholas I, Emperor of Russia, 325; accession, 214; reign, 214–56; and Decembrist uprising, 214–20; establishes Third Section, 220–1; St Petersburg building schemes, 227–8, 236–9, 255; reaction to Winter Palace fire, 236; love of chivalry and dressing-up, 244–5; attitude to women, 245–6; resistance to industrialisation, 246; rioting precipitated by cholera outbreak, 246–7; cracks down on revolutionary thinkers, 250–4; foreign policy, 254; death, 256

  Nicholas II, Emperor of Russia: ballerina mistress, 294; reign, 299–57; character, 299–300, 322; lifestyle, 300–1; domestic and foreign policies, 304–5; 1905 Revolution, 299, 309–23; October Manifesto, 322, 324; reasserts autocratic power, 324; relationship with Rasputin, 336–8; interest in paranormal, 342; celebrates Romanov tricentenary, 345–6; reaction to Rasputin’s death, 354; and 1917 Revolution, 354–5; abdicates and put under guard, 357; moved with family to Tobolsk, 361; death, 375

  Nicholas, Grand Duke, 304

  Nicholas Konstantinovich, Grand Duke, 281

  Nijinsky, Romola, 294

  Nijinsky, Vaslav, 299, 316, 329–30, 339

  Nikitenko, Alexander, 252

  Nikitin, Ivan, 50

  Nikolaev, Leonid, 397

  Niodini (dancer), 115

  NKVD see police

  Nobel, Ludwig, 271

  The Northern Bee (periodical), 252

  Noverre, Jean-Georges, 243

  Novikov, Nikolai, 141

  Novokshchenova, Tatiana, 90

  Nureyev, Rudolf, 440–1

  Nurok, Alfred, 302

  Nuvel, Walter, 302

  Nyenskans, 26, 27

  Obama, Barack, 447

  Obolensky, Prince Yevgeny, 213 obshchina (villag
e communes), 249, 250, 272, 273

  October (film), 5–6, 208, 365, 392

  October Manifesto (1905), 322, 324

  Odessa, 287, 319

  Of Freaks and Men (film), 333–4

  Ogarev, Nicholas, 250

  OGPU see police

  oil, 474

  Okhrana see police Okhta, 473

  Okudzhave, Bulat, 442

  Olga, Grand Duchess, 346

  oligarchs, 464–5

  opera: under Anna, 93–4; under Elizabeth, 115–16; under Catherine II, 163; under Alexander I, 210; under Nicholas I, 240, 241–2; under Alexander II, 259, 279–80; under Alexander III, 291–3, 294; under Nicholas II, 327–8, 347–8; in Soviet era, 389, 393, 399–401, 438; in twenty-first century, 475

  Oranienbaum, 51, 148, 200

  Orléans, Philippe, Duc d’, 292

  Orlov, Alexei, 134

  Orlov, Grigory, 117, 134, 138, 149, 155

  orphanages, 140, 147

  Ostermann, Johann Friedrich, 87–8, 100, 102, III

  Paget, Lady Muriel, 407

  Pahlen, Count Peter von der, 189

  ‘Painting in Great Britain 1700–1960’ (exhibition), 438

  Palace Square: celebrations for royal weddings held in, 116, 137; joust in, 137; workers petition Catherine II in, 173; buildings around, 209, 227; assassination attempt on Alexander II in, 275; 1905 massacre in, 315, 315; and 1917 Revolution, 5–6, 366; hit by German bomb in Second World War, 426; May Day demonstration in, 457; resurfaced, 467; ice palace in, 470

  Paléologue, Maurice, 352

  Palladio, Andrea, 153, 155, 156

  Panin, Nikita (Catherine II’s Foreign Minister), 159

  Panin, Count Nikita (Paul’s assassin), 189

  Paris: Peter I visits, 50; Catherine II buys artworks from, 157–8; Paul buys artworks from, 180–1; Napoleon captures, 205; Alexander I visits, 210–11; flood risks in nineteenth century, 230; 1863 Salon, 260; Commune, 280; assassination attempt on Alexander II in, 281; Diaghilev’s success in, 327–8, 329–30, 338, 359; Nureyev visits, 441

  Parkinson, John, 167

  Parland, Alfred, 289

  Pashkevich, Vasily, 163

  Pasternak, Boris, 404, 437

  Patti, Adelina, 291

  Paul, Emperor of Russia, 185; birth and parentage, 117, 179–80; Peter III wishes to rid self of, 133–4; Catherine II gives palaces to, 149, 153–4; variolated against smallpox, 167; reign, 179–90; relationship with Catherine II, 179, 180, 181, 182, 188; background and character, 180–2, 183; death, 188–90

  Pauzié (court jeweller), 110 Pavlova, Anna, 293, 299, 330

  Pavlovsk Palace, 153–4, 198

  People’s Vengeance, 271

  People’s Will see Narodnaya Volya

  peredvizhniki see Wanderers art movement

  perestroika, 453–7

  Perovskaya, Sofia, 276, 283, 284, 285, 374, 400

  Perrot, Jules, 243, 244

  Perry, John, 19

  Pestel (Decembrist), 220

  Peter I, the Great, Tsar and Emperor of Russia: background and childhood, 10–13, 28; character, 10, 13, 21–2, 34, 63–4; early interest in building, 12; becomes tsar, 13–14; reign, 15–69; first wife and family, 13; tour of Europe, 9–10, 14–22; drinking habits, 16–17, 33, 38, 53, 64, 70; personal meting out of punishments, 22, 58; modernisation policies, 23–4; bigamous marriage, 25; founds and builds St Petersburg, 25–37; bigamous marriage made public, 39; forces people to move to St Petersburg, 39–40, 44; tries to force St Petersburg residents to sail, 42; attempts to regulate food supplies, 48; further European trips, 49–51; as collector, 50; builds palaces around St Petersburg, 51–4; more modernisation policies, 54–5; behaviour at assemblées, 55; involvement in son’s death, 58–60; involvement in St Petersburg’s administrative affairs, 62; proclaimed Emperor, 64–5; decrees Table of Ranks, 65; prepares for Catherine I’s succession, 65–6; relationship with Catherine I, 66; executes Catherine I’s lover, 67; death and funeral, 67–8, 70; achievements in St Petersburg assessed, 68–9; measures against corruption, 71–2; glorified in Peter and Paul Cathedral, 78–9; promotion of cult of Alexander Nevsky, 96–7; Catherine II’s statue to honour, 143–7, 145, 146, 411, 428, 481; Paul’s statue to honour, 188; Hermitage exhibition, 468; opera about, 468; as branding tool, 469

  Peter II, Emperor of Russia, 71–2, 76, 77- 80

  Peter III, Emperor of Russia, 116–17, 124–5, 133–4, 179–80

  Peter Petrovich (Peter I’s son), 43–4

  Peter and Paul Cathedral, 35, 68, 78- 9, 318, 332, 467

  Peter and Paul Fortress: Peter I builds, 28–30; rebuilt in stone, 35; still unfinished, 73, 85; gun salutes from, 193; houses imperial mint, 197; restored for 2003, 467

  Peterhof (Petrodvorets): Peter I builds, 52–4; chapel built, 106; under Alexander I, 200; Nicholas I entertains at, 245; in early twentieth century, 308, 348; renamed Petrodvorets in First World War, 350; in Soviet era, 405, 412; wrecked by Germans in Second World War, 54, 54, 432

  Petersburg Side, 229, 309, 332

  Petipa, Marius, 243–4, 296

  Petrashevsky, Mikhail, 250–2

  Petrograd Free Studios, 372

  Petrov, Colonel Andrei, 114

  Petrov, Vasily, 136

  Petrov-Vodkin, Kuzma, 394

  Philadelphia Museum of Art, 403

  Philharmonic Hall, 426, 439, 461–2, 483

  photomontage, 389, 390

  Picasso, Pablo, 403

  Picq, Charles le, 209, 210

  plague, 168

  plays see theatre

  Plehve, Vyacheslav von, 310, 311

  Plekhanov, Georgy, 274, 275, 276

  Pobedonostsev, Konstantin, 286, 320

  Poincaré, Raymond, 348

  police: secret police under Peter I, 30; Police Chancellery set up, 56, 57; secret police under Anna, 99; under Catherine II, 164; under Alexander 1, 197; Nicholas I establishes Third Section, 220–1; its actions against intellectuals, 251–4; police corruption, 254; rising crime under Nicholas I, 254-5; assassination attempts on heads of Third Section, 275; Third Section replaced by Department of State Police, 278; fail to prevent Alexander II’s assassination, 283; Okhrana’s activities under Alexander III, 290–1; Okhrana’s activities under Nicholas II, 310–13, 318, 322–3, 330, 337; Cheka set up, 371; Cheka activities, 373, 375, 377; Cheka becomes GPU, then OGPU, then NKVD, then KGB, 387; shops exclusive to NKVD, 396; NKVD and Stalinist purges, 397–8, 399, 400; NKVD HQ, 401; NKVD’s lifestyle during siege, 419–20; KGB enforce censorship under Khrushchev, 437; KGB and phone tapping, 446; KGB spy on foreign tourists, 449; fear of KGB decreases, 453; ex-KGB officers given important posts under Sobchak, 462; FSB and ‘Chechen’ bombs, 471–2

  Police Bridge, 197

  Polish Rebellion (1863), 258, 269

  Politkovskaya, Anna, 472

  pollution, 165, 166–7, 332, 341; see also public health and hygiene

  Poltava, Battle of (1709), 33–4

  Pompeii, 148

  Poniatowski, Count Stanislas, 117,

  Pope-Hennessy, Una Birch, Dame, 407

  Popkov, Peter, 433

  Popova, Lyubov, 390

  porcelain, 123, 136, 152–3, 206, 237, 244–5

  Porter, Robert Ker, 190, 192–3, 194, 200

  Pososhkov, Ivan, 57

  Potempkin, Prince Grigory: coaches, 133; Catherine II presents with Cameo Service, 136; relationship with Catherine II, 138–9; Catherine II gives palace to, 155; and Mozart, 163; and the ‘Potempkin villages’, 173

  Potempkin incident (1905), 319

  Praskovia Saltykova (Ivan V’s wife), 83

  Pravda (newspaper), 404

  Preobrajenskaya, Olga, 316

  Preobrazhenskoe, 12, 22

  Primorsky Prospekt, 343

  Princip, Gavrilo, 349

  Printz (Prussian ambassador), 13

  Private Opera Company, 292 Progulka (film), 465–6

  Prokopovich, Feofan, Archbishop of Novgorod, 66–7, 68, 70, 76

  Prokovi
ev, Sergei, 186, 204, 328–9, 389, 424–5

  Proletkult, 372, 381, 388

  Proletkult Arena Theatre, 381

  prostitution: under Peter I, 56; under Anna and Elizabeth, 122; under Catherine II, 169; under Paul, 184; under Alexander 1, 197; regulation begins under Nicholas I, 254–5; continues under Alexander II, 268; in late nineteenth century, 288; in early twentieth century, 335–6; in Soviet era, 395; in Nineties, 459–60; in twenty-first century, 470

  Protopopov (Minister of the Interior), 356

  Prussia, III

  Przhetslavsky, O, A., 207

  public health and hygiene: under Peter I, 57–8; under Anna, 101; City Council’s responsibilities, 130; under Catherine II, 165, 166–7; drinking water, 166–7; under Alexander II, 270; in early twentieth century, 334–5; in 1920s, 380; during siege, 417

  Pudovkin, Vsevolod, 349–50, 367

  Pugachev, Emilian, 171–3

  Pugacheva, Alla, 448

  pugilism, 56

  Pulkovko Airport, 460

  Pulkovo Heights, Battle of (1919), 377

  Purishkevich, Vladimir, 353

  Pushkin, Alexander: on Lomonosov, 120; education, 201; anti-establishment works, 212; overview of life and works, 221–6; favourite café, 232; masterpieces published, 239; Glinka adapts one of his poems into an opera, 242; infatuation with ballerina, 243; music inspired by his works, 280; popularity in Soviet era, 388 WORKS: ‘The Bronze Horseman’, 147, 212, 223–6, 224; The Captain’s Daughter, 172–3; ‘Ode to Liberty’, 175

  Pushkin Museum, 438

  Putilov, Nikolai, 271

  Putilov Iron Works, 271

  Putin, Vladimir: background, 443; Russian critics, 454; as St Petersburg’s deputy mayor, 462; attitude to St Petersburg, 467–8; censorship and propaganda, 471; macho policies and possible shady dealings, 471–2.; wealth, 474, 480; and Trump, 484

  Pyliaev, Mikhail, 288

  Quarenghi, Giacomo, 53–4, 150, 155–6, 199, 207, 209

  queuing, 345, 354, 379, 416, 446–7

  racism, 470–1

  Radek, Karl, 380, 398

  Radishchev, Alexander, 169, 173–5, 374

  Radziwill, Prince, 305–7

  Rag Fair, 47–8, 47

  railways, 247, 258–9, 270, 289, 305

  Ransome, Arthur, 380, 382–3

  RAPM see Russian Association of Proletarian Musicians

  RAPP see Russian Association of Proletarian Writers

  Rasputin, Grigory, 336–8, 346–7, 347, 352–4, 358, 469–70

  Rasputin and the Empress (film), 358

  Rastrelli, Carlo Bartolomeo, 104, 188

  Rastrelli, Francesco Bartolomeo, 54, 103, 104–7, 113, 156

 

‹ Prev