Rough Guide to St Petersburg: The Rough Guide (Rough Guide Travel Guides)
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INTRODUCTION
Where were you born? St Petersburg. Where did you go to school? Petrograd. Where do you live now? Leningrad. And where would you like to live? St Petersburg.
St Petersburg, Petrograd, Leningrad and now, again, St Petersburg – as this tongue-in-cheek Russian catechism suggests, the city’s succession of names mirrors Russia’s turbulent history. Founded in 1703 as a window on the West by Peter the Great, St Petersburg was for two centuries the capital of the Tsarist Empire, synonymous with hubris, excess and magnificence. During World War I the city renounced its Germanic-sounding name and became Petrograd, and as such was the cradle of the revolutions that overthrew Tsarism and brought the Bolsheviks to power in 1917. Later, as Leningrad, it epitomized the Soviet Union’s heroic sacrifices in the war against Fascism, withstanding almost nine hundred days of Nazi siege. Finally, in 1991 – the year that Communism and the USSR collapsed – the change of name, back to St Petersburg, proved deeply symbolic, infuriating the wartime generation and die-hard Communists, but overjoying those who pined for a pre-revolutionary golden age; a dream kept alive throughout the years of Stalinist terror, when the poet Osip Mandelstam (who died in a labour camp) wrote: We shall meet again in Petersburg . . .
St Petersburg’s sense of its own identity owes much to its origins and to the interweaving of myth and reality throughout its history. Created by the will of an autocrat, on a barren river delta on the same latitude as the southern tip of Greenland, the Imperial capital embodied both Peter the Great’s rejection of Old Russia – represented by the former capital, Asiatic Moscow – and his embrace of Europe. The city’s architecture, administration and social life were all copied or imported, the splendid buildings appearing alien to the indigenous forms and out of place in the surrounding countryside. Artificiality and self-consciousness were present from the beginning and this showpiece city of palaces and canals soon decreed itself the arbiter of Russia’s sensibility and imagination. Petersburgers still tend to look down on the earthier Muscovites, who regard them in turn as snobbish. As the last tsar, Nicholas II, once remarked, Remember, St Petersburg is Russian – but it is not Russia. For all that, the city is associated with a host of renowned figures from Russian culture and history. It was here that Tchaikovsky, Stravinsky and Shostakovich composed; Pushkin, Dostoyevsky and Gogol wrote their masterpieces; Mendeleyev and Pavlov made their contributions to science; and Rasputin, Lenin and Trotsky made history. So, too, are various buildings and sites inseparable from their former occupants or visitors: the amazing Imperial palaces outside St Petersburg, where Peter and Catherine the Great led the field in exuberant living; the Yusupov Palace, where Rasputin was murdered; Finland Station, where Lenin returned from seventeen years in exile; and the Winter Palace, the storming of which was heralded by the guns of the cruiser Aurora, now moored along the embankment from the Peter and Paul Fortress – itself a Tsarist prison to generations of revolutionaries.
Today, St Petersburg is coming to terms with the seismic changes that occurred in Russia in the early 1990s, when hyperinflation impoverished millions and the Mafia was so rampant that people likened the city to Chicago in the 1920s. Now there’s a feeling that the worst is past and life is becoming more normal, as the consumer goods and services enjoyed by other nations become commonplace, and politics is a matter of balancing budgets rather than averting mayhem. Even so, visitors are confused by the city’s paradoxes: beautiful yet filthy, both progressive and stagnant, sophisticated and cerebral, industrial and maritime. Echoes of an anachronistic character are everywhere, from the sailors who look like they’ve just walked off the battleship Potemkin, to the promenading and champagne-quaffing that accompanies performances at the Mariinskiy (formerly the Kirov Ballet). Grandiose facades conceal warrens of communal apartments where disparate lifestyles flourish behind triple-locked doors, and courtyards where babushki gossip and drunkards philosophize, just as in stories by Dostoyevsky and Gogol.
Although the city is impossible to understand without some knowledge of its history, it is easy for visitors to enjoy – not least for its magnificent architecture. Planned on a grandiose scale, the city centre is awash with palaces and cathedrals calculated to impress, their colonnaded facades painted in bold Mediterranean colours and reflected in the dark waters of St Petersburg’s canals and rivers. Its cultural life is equally abundant, embracing the staggering riches of the Hermitage art collection and the Russian Museum, the Mariinskiy, all kinds of music and drama, offbeat pursuits and wild nightlife. The people and the seasons provide the rest of the city’s entertainment, as visitors are sucked in by the intensity of life – at its most intoxicating during the midsummer White Nights, when the city barely sleeps and darkness never falls. It’s easy to make friends in St Petersburg and anyone staying for more than just a few days is sure to be initiated into such Russian pleasures as going to the bathhouse or spending an evening talking round the kitchen table over a plateful of snacks washed down with vodka.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #552497 in Books
- Published on: 2001-04-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 453 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
The Rough Guide to St Petersburg is the definitive guide to Russia's most beautiful city. Features include lively accounts of all the great sights, from the grandiose Nevskiy prospekt to the peerless art collection of the Hermitage. Candid reviews of the best places to stay, eat and drink, in all price ranges. Detailed accounts of day-trips to the imperial palaces of Peterhof and Tsarskoe Selo, and the ancient city of Novgorod. Informed coverage of St Petersburg's history and politics, from Peter the Great to the post-communist era.
Excerpted from The Rough Guide to St Petersburg by Dan Richardson. Copyright © 2001. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved
WHEN TO GO St Petersburg lies on the same latitude as the Shetland Islands and Anchorage, Alaska, but its climate is less harsh than you’d imagine, being moderated by warm air blowing in from the Atlantic Ocean. Summers are hot and while winters may be cold by Western European standards, they rarely compare with the ferocious cold of winter in Moscow, let alone Siberia. The most popular time to go is summer, lasting from the beginning of June to early September, when the city celebrates the famous White Nights (mid-June to mid-July) with a special festival and weeks of partying. Days are baking hot and nights sultry with the occasional downpour providing relief from the humidity. In August, everyone who can afford to leaves the city, if only to stay in a dacha (cottage) in the surrounding countryside. Although tourism is at its height in the summer, ballet fans should bear in mind that the Mariinskiy is closed in August. By mid-September autumn is under way, with cloudy skies and falling temperatures. October sees the first frosts (and sometimes snowfalls), though it’s not unknown for there to be warm and sunny days, when the city looks especially beautiful in the soft northern light. Subzero temperatures and snow can set in weeks before winter officially begins in December. The canals and rivers soon freeze over and a blanket of snow creates enchanting vistas that almost make you forget the cold. The secular New Year occasions shopping and merrymaking, much as Christmas in the West, though you need to stick around a while longer to catch the traditional Russian Orthodox Church celebrations of both holidays, in early January. While temperatures rarely fall below -15°C, the snow soon loses its charm as it compacts into black ice which lingers on until March, by which time everyone is longing for spring. Like winter, its arrival is somewhat unpredictable – the fabulous sight of the Neva ice floes breaking up and flowing through the heart of the city may not occur until April, or even early May.
CHANGES IN THE NEW RUSSIA Inevitably, the speed of change in Russian society means that certain sections of this book are going to be out of date by the time you read them, not to mention the more humdrum but frequent changes to opening times, phone numbers, and suchlike. More positively, the prospect of political uncertainty has receded for the time being, and the apocalyptic scenarios of civil war that were popular in the media a few years ago now look ridiculous.
Customer Reviews
Needs updating, but good overall
A good overall explanation of what to expect, and clearly the main attractions are all included. However, beware, as the bars and restaurants listed do not all exist any more (this edition is from 2004). Given that navigating is difficult enough with street names in cyrillic, beware and phone before you leave your hotel!
Additionally, the visa requirements have changed, so you will save yourself a lot of worry if you check them out first.
Great city though, highly recommended
You cannot travel without it...
I discovered this guide in the pubblic library when I was getting organized to travel to Skt. Petersburg. From the first minute it looked well made: detailed and clear at the same time. But it is when I was there that I discovered how great it was. All the classical description of the city and of the monuments is very well organized and easy to consult. The map of the underground presented also with the cirillic alphabet has been very useful. And not to mention how interesting can be for a traveller to be presented with a list of the different restaurants along with a brief desciption of every single one and a price range... we loved it so much we are going to buy it now that we came back, just to have it home!
The most comprehensive guide.
In typical Rough-guide style, this book is very comprehensive and generally very good and truthful about one of the visually and culturally finest big-cities in Europe. Read it before you go, as the load of information might be just a little too much to cope with for those who are unprepared...(Lonely Planet-guides are easier to use on-the-spot, but in my opinion less interesting). And don't forget to bring a good map as supplement!





