SH Archive Who really built Russian Saint Petersburg? Did they dig it out?

SH.org OP Username
KorbenDallas
SH.org OP Date
2018-05-06 06:05:31
SH.org Reaction Score
64
SH.org Reply Count
55
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Username: nothingnew
Date: 2018-11-14 14:51:28
Reaction Score: 12
I never had to resarch so many old germanic/french/whatever words but this is what i got so far.

Topographic depiction of the new main residence and sea-city S.Petersburg including their first erected fortress
which was built by their Czaar Maj. PETRO ALEXIEWITZ - the *self-sustainer* of the Russians (*for lack of a better word*)

In i703, built on the top of the Baltic Sea on numerous islands on the spring of the Neva-Stream, and been provided with a powerful fleet for entrance in trade and shipping for the Russian Nation.

from: BAPTIST HOMANN in Nürnberg

There are interesting bits everywhere!

"to the far right"
CROHN SCHLOT ( Crohn - Kron - Crown) (Schlot - Schloss - Castle)
6 miles away from S Petersburg,
was built in i704 as a port in the middle of the winter.

Well this seems odd. They were able to build it in the middle of the winter. Must have been in such a hurry. The description says clearly in the middle of the winter (singular). Could such a structure be build in a couple cold months?

Additionally it says Finnläendische Gegend- which means Finnish area. There are also Stockrooms, a Hospital and a big brewery on the island.

At the bottom right corner it says Neva or Neu-Schantz jetzo ruinirt (jetzt runiert - now ruined!) and depicting a ruined star fort (flooded with mud maybe? And why JETZT, why now?
(neu is new and Schanz could be Schanze -entrenchment/earthwork/fieldwork)

Largest Park at the big island fort to the west - Baumluftgarten (tree-air-garden) for the presence of all people.

I find it interesting why the autor had to emphasize its for the use of all people.

Bottom left island says Noch unbewohnte Insel - Island without any inhabitants yet.

I can see lots of stuff there, from Inns directly on the shore, to huge ropewalks, mills etc. Multiple catholic churches, a Finnish/Luth and Russian church. A Elephanthouse? (wo ein schöner Elephant stehet - where a nice elephant stands). Appartments dedicated for the copper and ireonforge. Bookprinting and even a big tower to easier navigate the ships entering the docs. Even the gardeners and artists had their own dedicated appartments.

Holy shite!
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-11-14 15:51:45
Reaction Score: 6
On 16 May 1703, while looking over sparse marshlands... let’s build a city here, said Peter the Great.

@nothingnew, thank you very much for your translation. Well, we either were totally mislead about their infrastructure and level of technological advancement, or the city was already there, and they simply indoctrinated it.
 
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Username: nothingnew
Date: 2018-11-14 20:06:52
Reaction Score: 8
No problem. Yet I'm still mind boggled hours later, wondering how they could build a crown castle during one winter.

Untitled.jpg

The thing we mostly underestimate is the number of people that were tortured to death and murdered to achieve this. How many casualties were needed to finish this in a couple months?

Additionally the coloring on the map seems very detailed staying inside the outlines of buildings yet the flag on top of the castle is colored in a weird blue shade and overall does not match the precision of the rest. Why would someone try to hide the fact that the flag was white? o_O
 
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Username: Flyinrod
Date: 2018-11-15 10:28:56
Reaction Score: 5
oh wow, once again the war victorious wanted to tell us what faery tales they wanted....
Its clear, and nowdays academic recognized, that a city was here before 1700..
we can see it was already building of high level of engineering. how really big was Nyenskans hard to tell now, we can only assume it was at Least what we see on some maps... seems only star forts survived
only to built one of those monster star fort it's quite a challenge... (and they are on all continents whit exact same style ...)
Plan_Nienshanz_i_Neva_1698.jpg
1703.jpg

nyenskans.jpg
ah ok ,Shlisselburg=nöteborg=nottoborg on 1698 map lol ill be less stupid now )), on this map they just made appear nottoborg/schlötburg but not nyenskans/st petersburg.

In 2009 archélogue said :
Shit man burial mounds seriously ? mmm
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-11-18 11:52:26
Reaction Score: 7
Below is a 1562 map which, in my opinion, clearly displays a submerged city in the exact same place where Saint Pteresburg gets "founded" almost 150 years later. Our future Saint Petersburg is somehow in the water, which I guess could explain where the city came from, and how it got built so fast.


Here is c. 1710 or c.1690 (whatever year that makes) map. This one appears to show the city under water, but it assigns it the proper name of Petersburg.
Use the city of Viburg for reference
 
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Username: Ice Nine
Date: 2018-11-18 12:28:56
Reaction Score: 5
The second map it looks like Petersberg is on a small island, There is definitely a small odd shaped land mass under the circle signifying where Petersburg is/was.
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2018-11-18 12:42:21
Reaction Score: 10
Could be slowly coming out of the water, I guess. Here is 1720 with the city where it belongs in 1720, and today's map.

Saint_Petersburg_4_1.jpg
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2019-01-25 20:02:36
Reaction Score: 1
From here
From the funds of the Russian National Library. Map of Ingermanland: Ivangorod, Pit, Koporye, Noteborg. 1676 Map of former provinces ...

When Sweden was in control of the area, 1676.
BIG map here in 4 parts.
All roads lead to Nyen. Well there is a T junction there.
Map "Plan of Nyen", 1698 - Drawn by J. Meyer on June 29, 1698.
 
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Username: whitewave
Date: 2019-03-26 15:13:09
Reaction Score: 2
Apparently built over a Swedish fort.
"Under the terms of the Treaty of Nystad (1721), Peter the Great occupied Sweden’s Baltic provinces and wasted little time in building a new capital, St. Petersburg, on the site of the old Swedish fortress of Nyenskans. With that, Russia’s entire focus shifted; a nation that had spent centuries looking east and confronting the Tartar threat now had a window on the West, through which new ideas would flow and new rivalries come into focus."
 
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Username: Red Bird
Date: 2019-03-26 16:51:06
Reaction Score: 0
Which map were you looking at and what year was it? I am wondering because of the date they give for Star fort building, and if it was already in ruins that would set the date back, too.
 
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Username: nothingnew
Date: 2019-03-26 19:59:38
Reaction Score: 1
It was the 1720 Map KorbenDallas provided in the first post. ;)
 
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Username: jd755
Date: 2019-03-26 20:26:13
Reaction Score: 1
As ever with these tales of yore there's an alternative. Nyenschantz Swedish fortress seized by Russian troops
On 1 (12) May, 1703 the fortress capitulated. Having captured Nyenschantz, the Russians gained the control over the entire Neva, from source to mouth. The access to the Gulf of Finland was open. After its fall Nyenschantz was renamed to Slotburg (Lock town).

Not sure what to make of this site as Slotburg doesn't get a mention.
Biggish star fort on this Swedish map Link

021.jpg
 
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Username: BrokenAgate
Date: 2019-03-26 22:46:45
Reaction Score: 1
I wish I could afford to travel. I could spend weeks in this one location!
Those maps show subtle changes in the shape of the land over time. How was the cartographer able to draw such precise images? Surely, he had to be flying? These are aerial views on a par with modern maps.

I have noticed that, in these paintings, the knight is usually stabbing the dragon in the mouth. Sometimes, it's the neck, but most often, the mouth. Silencing the spoken word?
The stone in this drawing doesn't look like the actual stone that's in place now. Was it recarved on-site, or is the entire story a load of horse pucky?
 
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Username: JWW427
Date: 2019-08-31 21:50:25
Reaction Score: 7
I visited St. Petersburg in 1990.
It was beyond stunning, and I've always been an admirer of their engineering and cleverness.
But when I watched the Newearth video I nearly collapsed. No wonder the Russians are so proud of this city and Peter's legacy, and no wonder they fought to the death in WW2 to defend her at all costs. This city defines Russia in my book, heart and soul.

One additional item in regards to the engineering and architecture. It was said that Peter toured all of Europe and brought back many architects, artists, sculptors, and engineers to build his romantic city, the "Paris of the North."
He must have emptied Europe of these rare and valued professionals! How many were needed? Thousands. I have to wonder if he just paid them extremely well. Weren't they needed elsewhere? Would foreign governments frown on such an exodus? And for 17 years?
Even just for the restoration of this supposed Tartarian capitol, it must have been quite a feat. Just gilding every dome would be a chore.

Don't forget the nicely finished, stone-lined canals, they must have been a pain to restore. Bridges too. See the pic with the two griffins, the very ones on the old Tartarian flags.
The Russians get full credit for their efforts in building/restoring this city, it must have been a mess when Peter first viewed it.
Anytime you see multiple star forts and those technological Tartarian onion domed "churches," I think we see an important ancient settlement. That's a valuable clue. I really like all the little itty bitty pyramids on the domes if you look closely. WHAT, pray tell, were those used for?

JWW

st. petersburg canal and church.jpeg
st. petersburg Griffin bridge.jpeg
 
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Username: hajni
Date: 2019-09-04 18:28:55
Reaction Score: 11
I'm wondering, who this giant guy was, and why he must remain under the mud near St. Petersbourg so long?

Giant head.jpgGiant head 2.jpgGiant head 3.jpg
 
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Username: Huaqero
Date: 2020-01-30 14:17:05
Reaction Score: 5
Not much time for posting, but I wouldn't like to forget this one...
There is this story of a Princess Tarakanova who died of tuberculosis in 1775 but she was later depicted in a famous painting as dying trapped in her cell (inside the St.Petersburg starfort) during the flood of 1777 and ... A narrative mess if you follow the wiki stories.
Moreover, the painter himself has a weird, not well edited, wiki profile, an exhibition in 1864 is mentioned and generally he sounds like a fictional character to me.

800px-Tarakanova.jpg

I had sent the story to Martin Liedtke a while ago. While he showed the picture, he didn't pay much attention to the story, the characters and the timeline. I personally find these revealing of the PTB modus operandi:
Artwork, either preserved from the Old World, or freshly created, is used to propagate the new timeline, characters and events take new designations and 'exhibitions' reveal the new narrative to the public, in this case through art.
In the new internet era, PTB insert the faux narrative into wiki pages for posterity, but the job is often done clumsily and we end with a mess of names, narratives, timelines, sources, etc like in this case.
 
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Username: Red Bird
Date: 2020-01-30 14:29:33
Reaction Score: 2
This would correspond with the same time period maps showing water over NW America/California. it Seems ocean levels were much higher then receded post ‘1500’s’.
edit: also African desertification
Having just looked into Frisia/Doggerland a bit (Atlantis, too?) perhaps the seas rose twice, or actually just once in 500ad-ish, thus the dark ages and calendar confusion and the seeming weird shift from Greek/Roman times to 1500’s and lost/no writings, graves etc.
However just take British history... how to reconcile the above theory If it was underwater? It could match up 500ad forward, but not 1500ad forward...also ancient history (Brutus) could’ve happened as Doggerland, then inundation, then the rest...
This date thing strains the brain.
One thing is known- sea levels rose then abated, but not as far as before. It’s a fact even mainline can’t ignore.
 
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Username: Cemen
Date: 2020-02-06 13:16:35
Reaction Score: 1
Official historians do not know what kind of head it is and where it came from. A bunch of versions, up to the point that the soldiers cut their heads in my spare time (the last thing I would do when I served in the army was to hollow my head out of stone).
At the head, the right side is interesting, the nostril and below, it seemed to flow. I think that this is an unfinished and / or defective casting.

The head has been known for more than 200 years, but for some reason no one has dug it up yet, although a few people with shovels are enough for the initial stage under the supervision of an archaeologist.
Apparently they do not want to dig out what should not be.

Google Переводчик
 
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Username: ScottFreeman
Date: 2020-02-07 03:30:44
Reaction Score: 2
The more I stare at it...I don't think that the flag portion is original at all. The pole/staff/mast or whatever is original but it looks like someone did a poor job and the swath of color was added to hide smudges/mistakes.

One detail pointing me to this is the very dark line indicating the bottom edge of the flag. It's too dark and seems to follow the text too closely as if not on the mind of the artist and was added after. Similar to starting a long word too close to the edge of a page, one then makes the letters smaller and smaller, indicating poor planning. To me the artist never anticipated adding something waving from that "spire". The flag drawer afterwards had to adjust around the text/words because their planning was poor.

Another is the size of the flag. On a calm day it would lay on the roof of the building. It's HUGE and out of balance with everything else.
So I think we have a good original artist and a bad forger coming later who couldn't even get proportion right.

I may be all wrong, but really, does that look like a flag pole?

Edit: Noticed something else that appears to have been hidden when the colors were added. Check out the roof line on the left side, they colored a part that shouldn't have been. There is a wire strung from the pole parallel to the roof line and attached at the left side of the building.

1581048440885.png
 
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