Ruins of ancient buildings and piers. Vyborg Bay. Ruins of ancient buildings and piers Name of the bay in the Vyborg Bay

    Coordinates: 59°53′ N. w. 26°06′ E. d. / 59.883333° n. w. 26.1° east. d. ... Wikipedia

    In the eastern part of the Baltic Sea, between the USSR in the east and south and Finland in the north. The area is about 30 thousand km2. Length 390 km, width at the entrance 70 km, greatest 130 km (near Narva). North the coast is heavily indented, rocky, with many islands... ... Great Soviet Encyclopedia

    Fin. Suomenlahti, est. Soome laht, Swedish. Finska viken ... Wikipedia

    The eastern part of the Baltic Sea, protruding deeply into the mainland. In the northeast, the bay washes Finland and partly the S. Petersburg province, and from the east and south the provinces of St. Petersburg and Estland. S Z. sea ​​border The bay is considered to be a line connecting Cape Gangaeudd... ... Encyclopedic Dictionary F.A. Brockhaus and I.A. Efron

    The Black River originates from the confluence of two rivers, Roshchinka and Gladyshevka. Length 4 km. It flows into the Gulf of Finland, forming a wide shallow bay. There are perches, roaches, salmon and trout. On the right bank is the village of Molodezhnoe, on the left ... ... Wikipedia

    - (Finnish Viipurin lääni, Swedish Viborgs län) administrative territorial unit consisting of Russian Empire from 1744 to 1917 In 1719-1744 there was a Vyborg province of St. Petersburg province. In 1812 it was transferred to ... Wikipedia

    Russian-Swedish War (1788 1790) ... Wikipedia

    Soviet-Finnish War 1939-1940 (Winter War)- Soviet-Finnish war of 1939-1940 (Soviet Finnish war, in Finland known as the Winter War) was an armed conflict between the USSR and Finland from November 30, 1939 to March 12, 1940. Its reason was the desire of the Soviet... ... Encyclopedia of Newsmakers

On the other side of the peninsula, the bay widens greatly towards the southeast and is covered with many islands; in the Trongsund Strait (Finnish Uuras or Swedish Trångsund - narrow strait) between the islands of Vysotsky and Krepysh they stop at anchor for loading and unloading large ships, and less significant ones go all the way to Vyborg and further, to the entrance to the Saimaa Canal.

To the west of the Vyborg Bay, a strip of real skerries begins. In the northern part of the bay is the Lohaniemi Peninsula. Zashchitnaya Bay is distinguished by the Gvardeysky and Tverdysh islands in the northern part of the bay.

Vyborg Bay
Characteristics
Bay typebay
Location
60°42′27″ n. w. 28°43′06″ E. d.
Higher water areaBaltic Sea
A country
The subject of the Russian FederationLeningrad region
AreaVyborg district

Vyborg Bay

Vyborg Bay

Notes

Björk landing operation

Bjork landing operation June 20 - 25, 1944 - a landing operation of the Soviet Baltic Fleet to capture the islands of the Bjork archipelago during the Vyborg-Petrozavodsk operation in the Great Patriotic War.

Voytyuk, Ivan Denisovich

Ivan Denisovich Voytyuk (November 9, 1911, Volynka, Tomsk Province, Russian Empire - July 4, 1944, Vyborg Bay, Leningrad Region, USSR) - Soviet journalist, war correspondent for the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper, writer.

Vseslav (battleship)

"Vseslav" - 74-gun sailing ship battleship Russian Baltic Fleet. One of nineteen ships of the Yaroslav class. It was laid down on September 19 (30), 1782 at the Solombala shipyard in Arkhangelsk, and launched on May 12 (23), 1784. Construction was carried out by shipwright Mikhail Dmitrievich Portnov.

The ship took part in the war with Sweden of 1788-1790 and the war with France of 1792-1797.

Vyborg naval battle

The Vyborg naval battle is a battle during the Russian-Swedish War (1788-1790), which took place on June 22 (July 3), 1790 in the Vyborg Bay of the Baltic Sea. The Swedish fleet under the command of King Gustav III of Sweden and Grand Admiral Prince Charles, Duke of Södermanland, blocked in the northern part of the bay by two squadrons of the Russian Baltic Fleet under the overall command of Admiral Vasily Chichagov, barely broke through the encirclement and retreated to Sveaborg, suffering heavy losses - 7 linear ships, 3 frigates, 4-5 thousand (according to some estimates - 6-7 thousand) personnel.

The Battle of Vyborg immediately preceded the Second Battle of Rochensalm on June 28 (July 9), 1790, which ended in a catastrophic defeat of the Russian fleet and forced Russia to end the almost won war with Sweden on status quo terms.

Gorokhovka (river, flows into the Gulf of Finland)

Gorokhovka (Finnish: Rokkalanjoki) - a river in Russia, flows through the territory of the Vyborg region Leningrad region. It is formed by the confluence of two rivers - Aleksandrovka and Kamyshovka; the length of Gorokhovka and Aleksandrovka is 30 km. The general direction of the Gorokhovka flow is to the west. The villages of Chernichnoe and Tokarevo are located on the river, and it flows into the Vyborg Bay in the village of Sovetsky.

Drema (river)

Drema, Korpelanjoki - a river in Russia, flows in the Vyborg district of the Leningrad region. The river flows into the Vyborg Bay in the Malaya Guba Bay area. The length of the river is 18 km, the drainage basin area is 45.7 km².

Protective

Protective Bay is a bay located on the edge of Vyborg Bay in the Leningrad Region Russian Federation, entirely within the city of Vyborg.

The bay is connected to the rest of the bay by the Fortress Strait and the Gvardeysky Strait, which separate the islands of Gvardeysky and Tverdysh. Vyborg Bay itself is part Gulf of Finland Baltic Sea. On the shore of the bay there is a rocky landscape park called Mon Repos, and on the Castle Island in the Fortress Strait is the Vyborg Castle.

In the Middle Ages, a branch of the Vuoksa River flowed into the Protective Bay, which gradually dried up. It completely dried out by 1857. Built in 1845, the Saimaa Canal was opened as a replacement in 1856. It connects the Protective Bay with Novinsky Bay. Used until 1944 Finnish name"Suomenvedenpohja" (Finnish Suomenvedenpohja, "north of the waters of the Gulf of Finland"), but after the Soviet-Finnish wars the bay received modern name. The translation of the old name - "Northern Bay" - is sometimes used as a common name for Protective Bay and Raduga Bay.

Kiperort

Kiperort is a peninsula on the northern coast of the Gulf of Finland, in the Vyborg district of the Leningrad region, in the western part of the Karelian Isthmus. Northern part The peninsula is occupied by the protected area “Vyborgsky State Natural Complex Reserve”.

Cyrus John (battleship, 1786)

"Cyrus John" is a 74-gun sailing battleship of the Russian Baltic Fleet. One of nineteen ships of the Yaroslav class. It was laid down on June 20 (July 1), 1785 at the Solombala shipyard in Arkhangelsk, launched on May 14 (25), 1786. Construction was carried out by shipwright Mikhail Dmitrievich Portnov.

The ship took part in the war with Sweden in 1788-1790 and with France in 1792-1797.

Nikolaev, Nikolai Ivanovich (Hero of the Soviet Union)

Nikolai Ivanovich Nikolaev (1914-1944) - guard captain of the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, participant in the Great Patriotic War, Hero Soviet Union (1944).

Pobedoslav

"Pobedoslav" is a 74-gun sailing battleship of the Russian Baltic Fleet. One of four ships of the Tsar Constantine class. It was laid down on January 26 (February 6), 1777 at the St. Petersburg Admiralty, launched on June 26 (July 7), 1782. Construction was carried out by shipwrights V. Selyaninov and I. V. Yames. When the ship was launched, Catherine II was present, who gave the ship the name “Simon Relative of the Lord,” but in the lists it was listed as “Pobedoslav.”

The ship took part in the war with Sweden of 1788-1790.

Breaking through the Mannerheim Line

Breaking through the Mannerheim Line (sometimes referred to as the Battle of Summa) was an offensive operation of Soviet troops during the Soviet-Finnish War of 1939-1940 with the goal of breaking through the Mannerheim Line and further advancing towards Finland.

Svyatoslav (battleship, 1781)

Svyatoslav is a 66-gun sailing battleship of the Baltic Fleet of the Russian Empire. One of the Asia-class ships. It was laid down in 1776 in Arkhangelsk and launched in 1781. During his service, he took part in ensuring “armed neutrality” and the Russian-Swedish war of 1788-90. Dismantled in Kronstadt after 1800.

Seleznyovka (river)

Seleznyovka (Finnish: Rakkolanjoki) is a river in the Vyborg district of the Leningrad region and Finland. Length - 53 km (on Russian territory - 20 km), drainage basin area - 623 km², average slope - 0.94 m/km (in the Russian part 1.27 m/km). The source is near the Finnish city of Lappenranta, the mouth is in the Vyborg Bay of the Gulf of Finland.

Seleznyovskoe rural settlement (Leningrad region)

Seleznyovskoe rural settlement - municipality as part of the Vyborg district of the Leningrad region. The center is the village of Seleznevo.

IN There are many islands, large and small, in the Gulf of Finland...
However, only a few will be able to name any islands other than Kotlin Island, on which Kronstadt is located. At the same time, there are very interesting and beautiful islands.


1. Kotlin Island
The most famous, most important and most populated island in the Gulf of Finland. The length of the island is about 12 km, the maximum width is less than 3 km, the area is about 16 square meters. km. The island is connected to mainland a road passing through a complex of flood protection structures (Dambe). On part of the island is the city of Kronstadt.

The island is located on the legendary routes “from the Varangians to the Greeks” and “from the Varangians to the Arabs”, and is mentioned in the 1269 agreement between Novgorod and the Hansa. The city that stood on this site was at least 500 years older than St. Petersburg. And given that the contract stated that ships would be reloaded on the island, “as it was in ancient times,” the city was much older. Subsequently, arriving merchants waited on the island for pilots from Novgorod, who led trade caravans across the Neva and Volkhov to Ilmen.

There is a legend according to which the Swedes, when landing on the Russian island, hastily fled, leaving a pot on the fire. This legendary bowler hat is depicted on the coat of arms of Kronstadt. The name Kotlin supposedly comes from the word “boiler”. According to another legend, Kotlin was named so because on old maps the neck of the Gulf of Finland east of the island resembled a cauldron.

On an islet dumped on the shallows south of Kotlin Island, Peter I founded Fort Kronshlot in 1703, which blocked the main fairway leading to the mouth of the Neva, where the new capital of the empire, St. Petersburg, was being built for a potential enemy. On May 7, 1704, the fortifications, which included two batteries on Kotlin Island, came into operation (the date of the founding of Kronstadt).

In 1723, a fortress was founded on Kotlin and given the name Kronstadt. Peter I considered Kronstadt part of the capital.

1. Gogland Island
This small granite island, located in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland, is one of the most famous islands Gulf of Finland. Gogland is located 180 km west of St. Petersburg. Its area is about 21 square meters. km, height - up to 176 m.

The basis of the island is granite, which forms many different-sized hills and valleys, where small fresh lakes glacial origin. The entire coastline is indented with hundreds of bays of all shapes and sizes.


Although the island is considered one of the most dangerous places for shipping in the Baltic, local residents have long been considered excellent sailors and were willingly hired as sailors on sailing ships.

The nature of Gogland is rich and diverse. There are about 700 species of vascular plants alone (for comparison, the same number of species are in the Leningrad and Pskov regions, which are tens of times larger than Gogland). Almost 80% of the island's territory is covered with coniferous and small-leaved forests. The foot of the rocks is covered with blueberries, raspberries, alpine currant and juniper bushes.

The fauna is represented by 25 species of beetles, 6 species of amphibians and reptiles, 126 species of birds (a quarter are listed in the Red Book of Nature of the Leningrad Region). As for mammals, their composition is unknown because it is constantly changing. Here they often see shrews and various mice, sometimes white hares, squirrels and foxes, European mink, and raccoon dogs.

Gogland is a Mecca for archaeologists and historians. Stone Age human sites, medieval pirates, the Battle of Hogland, envoys of Peter the Great, the death of "Lefort", "America", the Struve meridian, Popov's radio communication session in 1900, 300 years of wars, endless fortifications and dozens of sunken ships, battles of World War II, constant a change of owners, which ended only in 1947 with the return of the island home to Russia.


2. Transund Archipelago
The island is located in the Vyborg Bay; for a long time it was known only to history buffs and radio amateurs. Previously there was a Finnish artillery battery.

At the turn of the 19th - 20th centuries, Alexander Popov tested his wireless telegraph on the islands of the archipelago, and from 1963 to 2012, Maly Vysotsky Island was leased from Finland. During this period, specialized expeditions to Maly Vysotsky, which did not belong to Finland, but temporarily did not belong to Russia, were popular among radio amateurs, and where a special call sign was used for communication sessions.

3. Sommers
Peter the Great gave this rocky island to his jester Jan Lacoste along with the mocking title of “Samoyed King.” It is located in the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland.

The next time the island made its mark in Russian history was during the Great Patriotic War, and this happened under very tragic circumstances. In June 1942, Sommers, captured by Finnish troops, was recklessly landed by amphibious assault. The desperate battle lasted for three days, but the poor planning of the operation prevailed over the steadfastness and courage of the Soviet soldiers. Of the one and a half thousand Red Navy men who landed on this piece of land, none survived. The island was only liberated after Finland left the war in 1944.

4. Moshchny Island
It's pretty big Island. It used to be densely populated. Now on the island there is only a small border post with a radio technical post and a post for illuminating the surface and underwater situation of the Leningrad naval base.

5. Big Tyuters and Maly Tyuters
The two islands are located in the central part of the Gulf of Finland. There are lighthouses on both islands; the attendants are the only inhabitants of the islands. On Maly Tyuters there is a ringed seal.

Bolshoi Tyuters has long been known as the “island of death.” During the Second World War, the Germans mined it; in subsequent years, several attempts were made to clear the island of mines, but only the last seventh was successful. In 2005, Russian and Swedish specialists neutralized more than 30 thousand explosive objects. There are lighthouses on both islands, and members of the staff are the only inhabitants of Tyuters, with the exception of the ringed seal, which is very common on Maly.

6. Fox Island
One of the calmest and greenest islands, lost in Klyuchevskaya Bay of the Vyborg region. Beautiful forests with plenty of mushrooms and berries have been preserved here, as well as clean shores along which all kinds of fish swim and spawn.

This is perhaps one of the calmest and greenest islands of all those listed. There are no conservation restrictions and the island is quite popular place recreation for those who have a boat.

7. Virgin Islands
The Gulf of Finland has its own Virgin Islands. These are practically namesakes Virgin Islands that are located in the Caribbean Sea. South Virgin is especially interesting: it contains a mysterious round labyrinth of pebbles, built by ancient people.

This labyrinth is called Paris: some say that in honor of the intricate streets of Paris, others say that this name comes from the Swedish word Paris, that is, church parish, and reflects the sacred essence of this place.

More information about the islands on the website


Stone pier of the "Advanced Pilskaya Battery" on Chernova Island (Mustasaari). Vyborg Bay.

Vyborg Bay is a bay that protrudes deeply into the shore in the northern part of the Gulf of Finland in the Baltic Sea. It got its name from the city of Vyborg, located in the northernmost part of the bay.
There are quite a lot of different ancient (and not so ancient) buildings in the bay. Let's stop at some of them.

Cape South Spear (Keihasniemi)

Judging by the Finnish map, along the entire north-eastern coast of the peninsula, from Cape Keihasniemi itself, now South Kopje, there were land, on which numerous buildings were located. The shore is lined with granite; closer to the tip of the cape there is a long granite pier. A little to the east there is a small, also made of stones, closed harbor with a small passage for boats. From the pier, steps lead to the shore, where a path leads past the foundations of destroyed buildings.


Pier at Cape South Spear (Keihasniemi)

There are decent gaps between the blocks, but in places where they fit tightly, the blocks are fitted along a curved plane.


Closed harbor at Cape South Spear

During the summer:

Tura Tower on Verkholaz Island (Korkeasaari)

Externally, the tower really resembles a classic chess tour. Its history is unknown to us. On some maps it is marked as a monument of the 14th century. The arrangement of the windows suggests that perhaps earlier a spiral staircase ran upward along the inner wall of the tower.
It is clearly visible that the tower was rebuilt and repaired many times - some of the seams between the stones were sealed with modern mortar, and a concrete platform on metal rails is visible at the top. The stones of the upper tier are fastened with metal brackets.

Ruins of the Suur-Merijoki manor

Mexican style

The foundation of the estate. It can be seen that the brick walls were lined with granite

For what purpose was it necessary to cut and move such facing slabs? A strange combination of brick and granite.

Estimated composition of the megalithic complex of the Vyborg Bay.
Already discovered objects.
1. Ring complex in Mon Repos Park.
2. Northern rock reflector in Mon Repos Park.
3. Ring complex in Zimino on the Lohaniemi Peninsula.
4. Ring complex on the islands of Big and Small Shield and Neighbor.
5. Southern terraced reflector on the islands of Big and Small Shield and Neighboring.
6. Western terrace reflector on the Keihasniemi Peninsula.
7. Western reflector wall on the Keihasniemi Peninsula.
Proposed objects of the megalithic complex of the Vyborg Bay.
1. Ring complex on the Ala Somme peninsula southwest of Sokolinskoye village.
2. Ring complex in the north-west of the Keihasniemi Peninsula on the isthmus in
side of the village of Podberezye.
3. Ring complex south of the village Podberezie.
4. Ring complex in the Vysotsk area on the islands of Krepysh and Peredovik.
5. Ring complex in the area of ​​Shcherbakovo.
6. Southern and northern reflectors about. Vysotsky.
Destroyed objects of the megalithic complex of the Vyborg Bay.
1. Ring complex in Vyborg opposite the Annensky fortifications.
2. Ring complex in the area of ​​the Sorvali cemetery.(?)
3. Southern terraced reflector of the rocky foundations of Mon Repos Park and the southern
coast of Tverdysh Island (?)