St. Petersburg, Russia
Petersburg in 1830
In the opening decade of the eighteenth century Czar Peter the Great decided to build a new
capital city for imperial Russia and picked for
his site the swampy estuary of the Neva River
where it flowed into the Baltic Sea.
There he built the city named after his patron saint, officially
establishing it as his capital in 1712. The extraordinary
dimensions of this achievement were till retailed with awe by the end of
the century when the 4th edition of the Encyclopaedia Brittanica
(1797). dwelt at length on the founding of St.
Petersburg. Only in the second half of the century, however, did it
achieve the grandiose dimensions we now associate with the city. The
major impetus to its development was the building of the Winter Palace, the official home of the
Czars of Russia, begun by Peter III in 1754. In a palace coup that seems
to have been universally praised, the Czar's wife Catherine seized power from Peter III
in 1762, inaugurating the
development of Russia into a modern and formidable nation. German by
birth, Catherine aspired to make her country not just a major European
political power but, more, one of its principal cultural centers. In her
thirty-four years on the imperial throne she amassed an extraordinary
collection of art to supplement and eventually supplant the Dutch-Flemish
collection of Peter the Great: beginning in 1764. She had the fancifully
named but grandly outfitted Hermitage built to house these treasures.
Likewise, she gathered a major library of over 30,000 books, whose
crowning glory was the acquisition of the entire library of Voltaire after his death in 1778. In his later years he had
been a frequent correspondent with Catherine, as was Denis Diderot, the leading figure in
creating for the French Enlightenment a compendium of all that was known,
the Encyclopédie. Diderot became her chief advisor on the
acquisition of art and in 1774
was himself persuaded to remove to St. Petersburg where he had the
singular duty of providing Catherine with an hour of learned conversation
every afternoon. Autocrat that she was, by the end of her life in 1796 Catherine had repented of
her patronage of the leading philosophical forces that had spawned the
French Revolution.
That the novel is first set in St. Petersburg may be, then, not
a mere curiosity, but a careful signal of its intellectual and
cultural dimensions. Through it the reader of Mary Shelley's
novel is to understand that it begins intellectually where it
stands geographically, in the shadow of Catherine's
enlightenment vision of a modernized culture. Robert Walton's
thrilling sense of scientific discovery, detailed throughout
this first letter, and Victor Frankenstein's endeavor to create
a new being both share that ambience. The open question subtly
articulated by this initial postmark is whether the dream of the
new city or of the new human can alter the conditions that have
determined the old. Will the novel, like Catherine, repudiate
the world it brings forth?
A map of Petrograd, from A. Ilin, ZHeleznyia dorogo
Rossii (1918), No. XXII.