Repino, Saint Petersburg Explained

En Name:Repino
Ru Name:Репино
Other Name:Kuokkala
Other Lang:Finnish
Coordinates:60.1667°N 81°W
Map Label Position:right
Image Coa:Coat_of_Arms_of_Repino_(municipality_in_St_Petersburg).png
Federal Subject:Saint Petersburg
Inhabloc Cat:Municipal Settlement
Area Km2:15.88
Pop 2010Census:2478
Postal Codes:197738
Dialing Codes:+7 812
Date:March 2012

Repino (Russian: Ре́пино) is an area of Saint Petersburg, Russia, and a station of the Saint Petersburg-Vyborg railroad. It was known by its Finnish name Kuokkala until 1948, when it was renamed after its most famous inhabitant, the painter Ilya Repin. It is 30km (20miles) northwest of St. Petersburg[1] on the Karelian Isthmus and Gulf of Finland. The population was 2,478 at the 2010 Census.

History

The first mention of Kuokkala is in a peace treaty between the Republic of Novgorod and the Kingdom of Sweden in 1323. The territory where the village is located was fought over between the Muscovites and Swedes in the 16th and 17th centuries and came under Russian control after the Great Northern War in the early 18th century. The village was inhabited by fishermen of Finnish and Russian ethnicities. The area developed further after 1870 when the railway linking St Petersburg and Helsinki passed through the town. Wealthier residents of St Peterburg built holiday villas in the area and a new railway station was built in 1889. Kuokkala was located in the Grand Duchy of Finland, a self-governing part of the Russian Empire, which had a more liberal environment, attracting artists and intellectuals including the artist Ilya Repin. The Bolshevik leaders, Bogdanov and Lenin spent some time in Kuokkala during 1905 to 1907, staying at the Vasa Villa, which served as the Bolshevik headquarters.[2]

Shortly after the October Revolution in 1917, Finland declared its independence from the Russian SFSR and Kuokkala became part of the new independent nation while retaining a significant ethnic Russian population. There was a skirmish between White and Russia-backed Red Finns at Kuokkala during the Finnish Civil War on 28 April 1918. In 1939, Kuokkala was taken over by the Soviet Union as the Karelian Isthmus was ceded by Finland to the USSR after the Soviet invasion of Finland (1939–1940). Kuokkala became a part of the Leningrad Oblast in 1948 and was renamed Repino by the Soviet regime in memory of the painter Ilya Repin.[1] After the war, the area was developed as a tourist area with several hotels and sanatoriums and was transferred to the jurisdiction of the city of St Petersburg as part of the Kurortny District.

Penates

In 1899, Repin bought an estate here and called it Penaty (Russian: Пенаты, meaning Penates, Roman household deities). He designed his own house, and after it had been built several years later, Repin moved to Kuokkala. He lived there until his death in 1930. The house is surrounded by a large park.

The estate is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site "Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments".[3] The estate has been a museum since 1940.[4]

Famous inhabitants

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.petersburg.aktuell.ru/petersburg/sehenswert/ausflug/repino_zu_gast_beim_grossen_meister_9.html Petersburg-Aktuell, "Repino: Zu Gast beim großen Meister"
  2. Web site: Biggart . John . White . James . A Memoir of Natalia Bogdanovna Korsak (Malinovskaia) . Academia.edu . 6 February 2021.
  3. https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/540/multiple=1&unique_number=635 Unesco World Heritage Site Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments
  4. http://www.russianmuseums.info/M267 Info on the museum "Penates"
  5. Book: Tych, Feliks. 2018. Wielgosz. Przemysław. O rewolucji: 1905, 1917. Instytut Wydawniczy „Książka i Prasa". 17. Przedmowa. 9788365304599.
  6. Web site: Shostakovich Gallery – Katya Chiligiri Photography. katyachilingiri.com.