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Montaña rusa en el río Neva congelado frente al Palacio de Invierno en San Petersburgo, Rusia, siglo XVIII
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San Petersburgo, Rusia. /Tomando Agua Del Río Neva En San Petersburgo. Grabado en madera de un periódico inglés de 1874
Tómelos como quiera, pero parece que en los siglos XVIII y XIX era bastante común ver que el río Neva se congelaba hasta el punto en que podía soportar bastante peso. Teniendo en cuenta que esos períodos eran mucho más fríos de lo que son ahora, por lo que si bien es poco común ver fotos modernas de personas divirtiéndose en el río congelado, puede haber sido más frecuente en el pasado.
Thanks for the info, I just thought it was an interesting illustration and that there might be more illustrations or engravings from the site.
- Do you think those trees are artificial like the ones in the first photo you shared?
I did my little comparison and selected some very beautiful illustrations directly from wikipedia of the specific building that serve as a comparison, they are from 1810 - 1817.
The Old Stock Exchange ( Bourse ) as seen in an 1817 engraving.
Fyodor Alekseyev , View of the Stock Exchange and the Admiralty from the Peter and Paul Fortress , 1810
The Stock Exchange was founded by an edict of Peter the Great, ordering the establishment of a stock exchange for his capital city, inspired by the Amsterdam Stock Exchange. In 1767, the City Building Committee decided to develop the vacant space on the Vasilevsky Island spit and create a new home for the St. Petersburg Stock Exchange. The area was developed over six years, from 1783 to 1789, according to a design by Giacomo Quarenghi. A series of buildings were constructed on the banks of the Bolshaya Neva River, including the main building of the Academy of Sciences and the concave part of the north warehouse (1795-1797). These buildings enclosed the left and right sides of the spit, the projected location of the Stock Exchange building. Construction of the Stock Exchange building itself began in 1783, but was suspended in 1787.
The project was restarted in 1805, supervised by architect Thomas de Thomon, but by 1810 work had stalled again due to the upheavals of the Napoleonic Wars. The architectural ensemble was completed between 1826 and 1832 with the construction of the south and north warehouses and the customs buildings according to the design of architect Giovanni Luchini.
Old Saint Petersburg Stock Exchange and Rostral Columns - Wikipedia
- The Stock Exchange was founded by an edict of Peter the Great.
- In 1767, the City Building Committee decided to develop the vacant space on the Vasilevsky Island spit and create a new home for the St. Petersburg Stock Exchange. The area was developed over six years, from 1783 to 1789.
- Construction of the Stock Exchange building itself began in 1783, but was suspended in 1787.
- The project was restarted in 1805, supervised by the architect Thomas de Thomon, but by 1810 work had stalled again due to the upheavals of the Napoleonic wars. The architectural ensemble was completed between 1826 and 1832.
And it seems that destiny was guiding me and I went to a view with google maps from the frozen river at the moment.
Google Maps
I remembered some curious things from other threads about St. Petersburg from the "fiction".
Book - The Year 4338. Letters from Petersburg.
Small novel of 1835.
SH Archive - Book | - The Year 4338. Petersburg Letters.
The world described in Odoevsky's work is in some respects similar to that of the 21st century and yet differs significantly from the present one we encounter today. Some of the technological advances included in Petersburg Letters are air and space travel, the telephone, artificially controlled climates, and the ability to photocopy. Hallucinogenic and truth drugs, in the form of fizzy drinks and "magnetic baths," eliminate hypocrisy from social life. In this foreseen future, Russia and China are the centers of world power.
The main character of the story is actually a Chinese student, Ippolit Tsunguev, (not a Russian character, as expected) who attends the "Main School" in St. Petersburg. His letters to his fellow students constitute the novel.
The Year 4338: Petersburg Letters - Wikipedia
So the student was able to travel from China to St. Petersburg in 8 days, by train through tunnels and then from the Russian border by airship.
Another thing is that his mentor mentions the bias of monopoly producing scientists. Reminds me of something. In his time, these scum scientists now had power over the state, we all know what kind of society we have now.
It represents a totally different society that promotes the common good, rather than violence and personal gain. And I think only this kind of society is capable of building monumental star fortresses.
Well, the guy supposedly wrote this in the 1830s. To me, heat delivery alone sounds pretty crazy. But there's a lot of other stuff in there. Jules Verne is considered the pioneer of the science fiction genre. His first book was published in 1863.
Global heat delivery systems, transporting warm air from the equator to the colder regions of the world. Equatorial heat delivered to people's homes?
Tunnels under the Caspian Sea and through the Himalayas. Flying through tunnels?
Electric train ideas in the 1830s?
Indicators of having social networks with a-la FB capabilities. Not sure if the author understood the sources he was working with.
Telephones?
SH Archive - Book | - The Year 4338. Petersburg Letters.
'Books are invented that, using a machine, change the letters in several other books simultaneously'
Windows, Apple, Google, internet, wiki, smart device, perfectly explained here.
'There are machines to produce novels and theater' (photo/film).
SH Archive - Book | - The Year 4338. Petersburg Letters.
- About the stock exchange building, take some texts:
It's an absolute work of art! It's completely built on arches that are constantly heated with hot air, so only a few steps separate the tropical and temperate climate zones. The garden is like a miniature version of the entire planet, so walking through it is like walking around the world.
The schools I went to did not inform me of the existence of this technology before 1835. As far as I know, we still don't have hot air pipes. Naturally, to me this is crazy, given the date. There is nothing special about the Boeing 747s flying in the air today. If I knew of a fleet of those in use in 1600, I'd say that's crazy too.
SH Archive - Book | - The Year 4338. Petersburg Letters.
SH Archive - Book | - The Year 4338. Petersburg Letters.
See this thread as well:
1914: vision of Moscow in the 22nd and 23rd centuries.
SH Archive - 1914: vision of Moscow in 22nd, and 23rd Centuries