DOSTOEVSKY

CHAPTER 4 - LIFE in ST. PETERSBURG

Despite its tendency to flood, St. Petersburg thrived. What did this place - the setting for so many scenes in Dostoevsky’s novels - look like as the writer penned his stories?

Nevsky Prospect (Nevski Prospekt) was then - as it is now - the city’s main avenue. Describing it, in 1835, the famous author Nikolai Gogol said:

There is nothing finer than Nevsky Prospect, not in St. Petersburg at any rate; for in St. Petersburg it is everything. And indeed, is there anything more gay, more brilliant, more resplendent than this beautiful street of our capital?

With the help of vintage postcards - thanks to Nevsky-Prospekt.com and the Library of Congress - let’s step back in time to view the city as Dostoevsky knew it:

The royal family had a different kind of home - a summer palace called Peterhof - which remains one of the city’s main attractions. The stunning grounds have dozens of beautiful gold fountains and a canal to the sea. For anyone traveling to St. Petersburg, especially in the summer months, it is a "must-see." (Don’t miss this link which takes you to dozens of fountain panoramas plus tours inside the palace and the cottage.)

Life in St. Petersburg, especially for the privileged class, could be luxurious. But it was also in St. Petersburg, that city of palaces and cathedrals, where Dostoevsky found himself in prison. Not long thereafter, he experienced an event so traumatic that it haunted him forever.

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