Kronshtadt
A small city, NW European Russia, on the small island of
Kotlin in the Gulf of Finland, c.15 mi (20 km) from Saint Petersburg. It is
one of the chief naval bases for the Russian Baltic fleet. The harbor is
icebound for several months each year. It was founded (1703) by Peter I as a
port and a fortress to protect the site of St. Petersburg, and it was the
commercial harbor of St. Petersburg until the 1880s. The port lost its
commercial value after the development of St. Petersburg. The visit (1891)
of a French naval squadron to Kronshtadt was followed by a Franco-Russian
military agreement heralding the formation of the Triple Entente of France,
England, and Russia. Mutinies of the naval garrison took place in 1825 and
1882 and played a part in the revolutions of 1905 and 1917 (see Russian
Revolution). A revolt of the sailors in March 1921, was instrumental in
establishing Lenin's New Economic Policy. The general unrest among peasants
and workers touched off this mutiny of the naval garrison that had been
loyal to the Bolsheviks during the revolution. This was the climax of the
anti-Bolshevik unrest in the country. In World War II, Kronshtadt played a
major role in the defense of St. Petersburg (then Leningrad) against the
Germans. It is also spelled Cronstadt.
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