Nakhimov Naval School | |
Native Name: | Нахимовское военно-морское училище |
Native Name Lang: | ru |
Type: | boarding school |
Officer In Charge: | Vice Admiral of the Reserve Aleksey Maksimchuk |
Students: | 240 |
Address: | Petrogradskaya Embankment |
City: | Saint Petersburg |
Country: | Russia |
Coordinates: | 59.9556°N 30.3362°W |
Language: | Russian |
Founder: | Ministry of Defense of Russia |
The Nakhimov Naval School in Saint Petersburg is a military boarding school of the Russian Navy.
The Leningrad Nakhimov Naval School was created in accordance with the decree of the Council of People's Commissars on 21 June 1944 and the People's Commissariat for Military and Naval Affairs. The date of publication of the order (23 June), is set as the annual holiday of the school. It was the first Nakhimov Naval School to be formed, with the school being named after admiral of the Imperial Russian Navy Pavel Nakhimov.[1] On 18 September 1944, the first admission to the school took place. In the first academic year, 408 pupils studied at the school. In 1948, the first graduation of cadets took place. In 2016, the Vladivostok Presidential Cadet School and the Sevastopol Presidential Cadet School became branches of the school.[2] [3] By order of President Vladimir Putin on 1 September 2017, the Murmansk Nakhimov Naval School became the third branch of the school.[4] On 25 May 2017, it was awarded the public Order "To the Glory of the Russian Fleet" 1st Degree.[5]
Currently, the term of study at the school is 7 years. It is among the first pre-university educational institutions of the Ministry of Defense of Russia to start the academic year.[6]
The school has been representing the Soviet Navy at military parades on Moscow's Red Square and Saint Petersburg's Palace Square on many occasions (Victory Day (9 May), October Revolution Day (7 November), and International Workers Day (1 May)). In 1996, the parade regiment of the school received a personal certificate of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief (then Boris Yeltsin) for its march in the 1996 Moscow Victory Day Parade. In 2013, by order Minister of Defense Sergey Shoygu, it returned to the Moscow Victory Day Parade. In 2020, thirty-one cadets of the school came down with a case of COVID-19 while preparing for the postponed victory parade that year.[7] [8]