St Petersburg

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Introducing St Petersburg

It seemed like a lark. When Peter the Great built this city on a swamp, his subjects humoured the Emperor. When he declared it the new capital, they were less amused.

But history has shown that the forward-thinking, Westward-looking tsar was inspired. Gradually, St Petersburg evolved from a swampy backwater into a modern European city, Russia’s ‘window to the West’. Unlike Moscow’s red bricks and onion domes, St Petersburg’s network of canals and baroque and neoclassical architecture give the city a European flavour, no doubt because it was built by Italian architects. Even the residents of St Petersburg fancy themselves ‘European’ and somehow slightly more sophisticated than their more easterly compatriots.

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Visitors with Lonely Planet Guidebook inside Winter Palace.
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Visitors with Lonely Planet Guidebook inside Winter Palace.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Holger Leue
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Interior of St. Isaac's Cathedral (Issaakievsky Sobor).
  • Violinist playing welcome aboard music at MS Europa.
  • Tourists on guided tour of the Hermitage.
  • Women selling honey at the Kuznechny Market
  • War veterans celebrate Victory Day (9th May) on Palace Square in St Petersburg.
  • Matisse's Red Room (Room 344), Hermitage.
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