Peter the Great's Naval Fortress

Peter the Great's Naval Fortress

Peter the Great's naval fortress or the Tallinn-Porkkala defence station was a Russian fortification line, which aimed to block access to the Russian capital Saint Petersburg via the sea. The plans for the fortress included heavy coastal artillery pieces along the northern and southern shores of the Gulf of Finland. The emphasis was put on the defences of the gulf's narrowest point, between Porkkala, (in current day Finland) and Tallinn, (in current day Estonia). This was a strategic point, as the two fortresses of Mäkiluoto and Naissaar were only 36 kilometres apart. The coastal artillery had a range of about 25 kilometres and could thus "close" the gap between the shores, trapping enemy ships in a crossfire. Furthermore, a new major naval base was constructed in Tallinn.

The reason for the naval fortress

The decision to start construction the naval fortress line came after the disastrous events at Tsushima, where the whole Russian Baltic Fleet had been annihilated. The road to Saint Petersburg was now unprotected and open. The quickest and cheapest way of dealing with this problem was to protect Saint Petersburg with a seemingly impenetrable zone of coastal artillery until a new fleet had been constructed. The idea was presented for the first time in 1907. Czar Nicholas II approved the plans on July 5, 1912 and the construction began soon thereafter.

Defensive lines

The system consisted of several zones of defence.

#The innermost zone consisted of the fortresses at Kronstadt and the land and coastal fortresses near Vyborg. The latter were to prevent that the enemy circeled the Kronstadt line by landing near the Bay of Vyborg.
# The second line was between Kotka and Narva, following the between-laying islands.
# The third and main line of defence was between Tallinn and Porkkala.
# The fourth line was between Hiiumaa and the Hanko Peninsula.

Further, Helsinki was encircled with defensive lines on land. This defensive line was called "Krepost Sveaborg"

The construction of the defensive system was slowed down due to the outbreak of World War I. The naval fortress was only partly finished when both Finland and Estonia declared their independence, following the Russian October revolution. The German Navy performed one major landing operation on the shores of the Gulf of Finland during World War I. In April 1918, following a request from the Senate of Vaasa in Finland, the German Ostsee Division, led by Rüdiger von der Goltz landed in Hankoo, joined the Finnish "Whites" in the fight against the "Reds" and conquered Helsinki.

The heavy batteries of the Tallinn-Porkkala line

The heaviest batteries were supposed to consist of 356 mm/52 m 1913 guns. However, at the time of the Russian revolution of 1917, these were still under construction and were not finished.

*Mäkiluoto:
**4x 203 mm/50 V

*Naissaar:
**4x 305 mm/52 O
**4x 234 mm/50 Be
**4x 203 mm/50
**4x 152 mm/45 C
**3x 120 mm/50 V

*Aegna:
**2x 305/52 O

*Viimsi
**4x 120/50 V

*Suurupi:
**4x 234/50 Be

*Kakumägi
**3x 120/50 V

Aftermath

In the 1930s the Finnish and Estonian coastal defenses made extensive plans to use the fortresses against their former masters, and prevent the Soviet Baltic Fleet from gaining access to the seas. The defense would be strengthened by minefields and patrolling submarines from the Finnish and Estonian navies. These plans were however nullified with the Soviet demands of air and naval bases in the Baltic States in 1939.

The fortress in Porkkala, along with its 305 mm guns was leased to the Soviet Union in the Moscow Armistice of 1944. When the territory was returned to Finland in 1956, the guns were demolished.

ources

*
*


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Peter the Great — This article is about the Russian monarch. For other uses, see Peter the Great (disambiguation). Peter the Great …   Wikipedia

  • Wars of Alexander the Great — Alexander fighting Persian king Darius III. From Alexander Mosaic of Pompeii, Naples, Naples National Archaeol …   Wikipedia

  • Alexander the Great — This article is about the ancient king of Macedon. For other uses, see Alexander the Great (disambiguation). Alexander the Great Basileus of Macedon …   Wikipedia

  • Darius the Great — Darius I Khshayathiya Khshayathiyanam , King of Kings Outline tracing of the figure representing Darius in the Behistun Inscription Reign Sep 522 BCE to …   Wikipedia

  • Peter I — 1. ( the Great ), 1672 1725, czar of Russia 1682 1725. 2. (Peter Karageorgevich), 1844 1921, king of Serbia 1903 21. * * * I born с 903 died Jan. 30, 969 Tsar of Bulgaria (927–969). The second son of Simeon I, he inherited the throne on his… …   Universalium

  • Peter I of Russia — Infobox Russian Royalty|monarch name =Peter I the Great title =Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias Duke of Estonia and Livonia caption = reign = 7 May 1682 ndash;8 February 1725 coronation =25 June 1682 predecessor =Feodor III successor… …   Wikipedia

  • Fortress (Osprey) — Fortress ... Pays  Royaume Uni Langue Anglais Genre Histoire militair …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Peter Tordenskjold — Peter Jansen Wessel (alt. spelling Peder), better known as Tordenskjold (lit. thundershield ), but also known as Peter Wessel , Peter Tordenskjold , or Peter Tordenskiold , (October 28 1691 November 20 1720), was an eminent Norwegian naval… …   Wikipedia

  • Great Northern War and Norway — The Great Northern War was the war fought between a coalition of Denmark–Norway, Russia and Saxony Poland (from 1715 also Prussia and Hanover) on one side and Sweden on the other side from 1700 to 1721. It started by a coordinated attack on… …   Wikipedia

  • The Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game — Players 2+ Setup time < 10 minutes Playing time ≈1 hour per 500 points of miniatures (approx.) Random chance Medium High …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”