Neva (La Neva)
Également connu sous : Neva (La Neva), La Neva, Neva
Place places/cities Basic Mis à jour: 2026-03-06
Voir dans le journal 1 mentions Research Status: Basic Last Updated: 2026-02-10 Diary Coverage: St. Petersburg references
Overview
The Neva is the major river flowing through St. Petersburg, Russia. Though only 74 km long, it is one of the most symbolically important rivers in Russian culture, as St. Petersburg was built on its banks and delta by Peter the Great. The Neva's wide, majestic flow through the city center, flanked by palaces, cathedrals, and government buildings, made it the defining feature of St. Petersburg's urban landscape.
Historical Context
- St. Petersburg: The city was built on the marshy delta of the Neva beginning in 1703
- Width: Up to 1,200 meters at its widest in the city
- Bridges: The famous bridges of St. Petersburg span the Neva (Palace Bridge, Trinity Bridge, etc.)
- Flooding: Periodic catastrophic floods threatened the city (notably 1824, the subject of Pushkin's "The Bronze Horseman")
- Freezing: The river froze solid in winter, becoming a roadway
- The embankments: Granite-clad embankments lined with palaces and public buildings
Significance for Marie
- St. Petersburg identity: The Neva was inseparable from the image of the Russian capital
- Cultural symbol: Featured in Russian literature and art the Bashkirtseffs would have known
- Russian heritage: Part of the landscape of Marie's ancestral homeland
Related Entries
- #Petersburg - The city built on the Neva
- #Newski_Prospect - St. Petersburg's main avenue, named for the monastery at the Neva's end