Showing posts with label Peter the Great. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter the Great. Show all posts

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Thursday, February 8, 1725. The death of Pyotr Alexeevich Romanov.

Pyotr Alexeevich Romanov, Пётр I Алексеевич, also known as Peter the Great, Czar of all Russia, and them Emperor of All Russia, died at age 52.


He is recalled for having carried out a policy of aggressive Westernization, not all of which stuck (he attempted to introduce the Julian calendar) and expansion that transformed the Tsardom of Russia into the Russian Empire.  He regarded the Russian people, his subjects, with some degree of contempt, finding them to be rude primitives.  Born into a reign that was closely united with the Russian Orthodox Church, he had an unusual interest in Russian Quakers and Dissenters and held Orthodoxy in some degree of contempt, which showed the degree of his power in that he was able to get away with it.

He was married three times, once to Eudoxia Lopukhina, when he was only 16.  She was a wife his mother had found, in the tradition of the Romanov monarchy,  He later divorced  her, something allowed in the Orthodox faith, and forced her to join a convent, although the couple did have three children before then.  He later married Marta Helena Skowrońska, the daughter of a Polish-Lithuanian peasant, whom had been his mistress for some time prior in 1724.  She converted from Catholicism in order to marry him. He later married Catherine, who was crowned crowned as Empress.  He had a total of fifteen children.

Was he great? Well, probably.  He engaged in constant warfare but was a success in expanding the Russian Empire.

Was he admirable, not in my book.

Funny thing about him is that the people for whom he was great, he didn't particularly admire, a trait he shared with Prussian Frederick the Great.

Last edition:

Thursday, February 1, 1725. The Great East Siberian Earthquake.

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Monday, January 6, 2025

Saturday, January 6, 1725. Peter the Great gets sick, again, and instructs Vitus Bearing.

The mysterious disease that afflicted Czar Peter the Great returned, with a cold bringing it on.

In spite of the affliction, on the same day he issued instructions to Vitus Bering to prove definitely that Siberia was separated from North America and to find the nearest European settlement in the New World.

Last edition:

Wednesday, October 11, 1724. Fort Drummer attacked.


Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Monday, January 18, 1943. Encirclement of Leningrad broken.

The Red Army broke the encirclement of Leningrad.  Zhukov was accordingly promoted to the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union on the same day.


The relief came with the capture of the city of the somewhat ironically named, given its very German character, Shlisselburg (Шлиссельбу́рг,) or, in German: Schlüsselburg.  Given the nature of the region, we'll note its name in Finnish: Pähkinälinna and Swedish: Nöteborg.  The city dates to 1323 when a fort was built at the location by Grand Prince Yury of Moscow, in his capacity as Prince of Novgorod on behalf of the Novgorod Republic in 1323. In 1348 Swedish King Magnus Eriksson took the fortress.  It was retaken by the Novgorodians in 1351. In 1478 the Novgorod Republic was absorbed by Muscovy and a new fortress was constructed there. In 1611 the fortress was taken by the Swedes again.  The Russians took it back in 1702, at which time Peter the Great renamed it Shlisselburg, a Russian aliteration of the German word "key fortress", which is what Peter was trying to name it, in German.

It's just to the west of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, on Lake Lagoda.

Zhukov was lucky, and the Soviet Union accordingly lucky, to have been stationed in the Soviet East during the purges, or he likely would have been killed with so many others.  He was well liked by his superior and protected by him, with his superior likewise remaining in Stalin's fickle favor while so many else were killed in a sea of blood that remains almost incapable of being grasped.

The first Warsaw Ghetto Uprising occurred when the Germans began their second deportation from the ghetto.  Members of the Jewish resistance organization Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa (ZOB) took on the SS with pistols and disrupted the deportation sufficiently to halt it after four days of fighting.  ZOB was lead by Mordechai Anielewicz who was only about 24 at the time.

In the U.S. War Food Order No. 1 went into effect requiring white bread be enriched with niacin, riboflavin, thiamin and iron, something that became standard by law in some states, and simply by custom generally, thereafter.  

Also:

January 18, 1943 – Wartime Ban on Sale of Sliced Bread Goes into Effect in the U.S.