Peter the Great: The Tsar Who Modernized Russia — Fexingo History

Peter the Great's Navy: Building Russia's Baltic Fleet from Scratch

6 min · 28. Juni 2026
Episode Peter the Great's Navy: Building Russia's Baltic Fleet from Scratch Cover

Beschreibung

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into Peter the Great's single-minded drive to create a Russian navy from nothing. They explore the Tsar's early fascination with shipbuilding during his Grand Embassy, the founding of the Voronezh shipyard and the Azov fleet, and the desperate race to build a Baltic fleet during the Great Northern War. Key figures like the Dutch shipbuilder Cornelius Cruys, the Scottish admiral Thomas Gordon, and Peter's own right-hand man Alexander Menshikov come to life. Lucas explains the technical challenges—from felling thousands of oak trees to importing foreign specialists—and the strategic triumph at the Battle of Gangut in 1714, Russia's first major naval victory. The conversation also touches on the brutal conditions for serf laborers drafted to the shipyards, the symbolic importance of the St. Andrew's flag, and how the navy transformed St. Petersburg into a true maritime capital. A vivid look at how a landlocked tsar willed a fleet into existence. #PeterTheGreat #RussianNavy #BalticFleet #GreatNorthernWar #BattleOfGangut #AzovFleet #Voronezh #CorneliusCruys #ThomasGordon #AlexanderMenshikov #Shipbuilding #StAndrewFlag #StPetersburg #NavalHistory #18thCentury #Russia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Episode Peter the Great's Alphabet Reform: Creating Modern Russian Cover

Peter the Great's Alphabet Reform: Creating Modern Russian

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore one of Peter the Great's most lasting and least discussed reforms: the creation of the grazhdanskiy shrift, or civil script, in 1708. They dive into how Peter personally edited the new alphabet, removing letters he considered obsolete and simplifying the shapes to match Western European typefaces. The conversation covers the role of the Amsterdam printing house of Jan Thesing, the resistance from the Church and Old Believers who saw the new letters as heretical, and the broader cultural shift from Church Slavonic to a vernacular secular language. They touch on the controversial removal of letters like 'psi', 'xi', and 'yus', and how Peter's alphabet helped spread his decrees, textbooks, and gazettes across the empire. The episode also discusses the parallel reform of numerals, introducing Arabic digits in place of Cyrillic numbers. Throughout, Lucas and Luna tie the alphabet reform to Peter's larger project of westernization and state-building, showing how changing the very shape of letters was a political act. #PeterTheGreat #RussianAlphabet #GrazhdanskiyShrift #CivilScript #LanguageReform #ChurchSlavonic #OldBelievers #TypographicHistory #1708 #AmsterdamPrinting #JanThesing #ArabicNumerals #Westernization #RussianHistory #18thCentury #Orthodoxy #Reform #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

1. Juli 20266 min
Episode Peter the Great and The First Russian Navy Ship Cover

Peter the Great and The First Russian Navy Ship

In 1696, after a failed siege against the Ottoman fortress of Azov, Peter the Great realized a hard truth: Russia had no navy. So he built one from scratch — starting with a single ship, the Goto Predestination, constructed by Dutch and English shipwrights in Voronezh. This episode follows the urgent, chaotic race to create a fleet that could break the Ottoman blockade, the strategic use of the Voronezh shipyards, the role of foreign experts like Franz Timmerman and Karsjen Boom, and the bloody ship-labor of thousands of Russian peasants. We also explore Peter's personal obsession with shipbuilding — how he worked as a carpenter in the Dutch East India Company yards in Zaandam, and how the Azov campaign transformed Russia's geopolitical ambitions. No navy, no sea power. And for the tsar who would modernize Russia, that was an existential threat. #PeterTheGreat #RussianNavy #AzovCampaigns #GotoPredestination #Voronezh #Shipbuilding #OttomanEmpire #BlackSea #GreatNorthernWar #FranzTimmerman #KarsjenBoom #Zaandam #DutchShipwrights #RussianHistory #18thCentury #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern5 min
Episode Peter the Great's Table of Ranks: Bureaucracy and Social Mobility Cover

Peter the Great's Table of Ranks: Bureaucracy and Social Mobility

In 1722, Peter the Great introduced the Table of Ranks — a radical bureaucratic reform that redefined Russian society based on service to the state rather than noble birth. This episode explores how the Tabel' o rangakh created a meritocracy in the military, civil service, and court, allowing talented commoners like Alexander Menshikov to rise to the highest positions. We discuss the 14 ranks, the concept of personal and hereditary nobility, and the resistance from the old boyar aristocracy. The reform was part of Peter's broader westernization drive, following his Grand Embassy and the Great Northern War. We also touch on the lasting impact of the table, which remained in use until the Russian Revolution. Listeners will learn about key figures such as Menshikov, Count Golovkin, and the enigmatic 'Prince-Caesar' Fedor Romodanovsky. We also examine the table's connection to Peter's other reforms, including the beard tax, the Holy Synod, and the founding of St. Petersburg. This episode offers a detailed look at how one document transformed the Russian state. #PeterTheGreat #TableOfRanks #RussianHistory #Bureaucracy #SocialMobility #Meritocracy #AlexanderMenshikov #Boyars #GreatNorthernWar #TabelORangakh #ImperialRussia #18thCentury #EasternEurope #HistoryPodcast #FexingoHistory #RussianNobility #CivilService #Westernization Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern8 min
Episode Peter the Great's Canal Dreams: Russia's Inland Waterway Revolution Cover

Peter the Great's Canal Dreams: Russia's Inland Waterway Revolution

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore one of Peter the Great's most ambitious but often overlooked projects: the construction of canals to link Russia's vast river systems. They discuss the Vyshny Volochyok waterway system, which connected the Volga and Neva basins, enabling grain and goods to flow from the Russian heartland to the new capital of St. Petersburg. The conversation covers the engineering challenges faced by Dutch and Russian builders, the massive use of forced labor, and the economic transformation that followed. They touch on the role of Mikhail Serdyukov, the self-taught Russian engineer who revived the canal after initial failures, and the geopolitical importance of bypassing the Baltic ports controlled by Sweden. This episode sheds light on a lesser-known facet of Peter's modernization drive: his determination to reshape Russia's geography itself. Without canals, the grand vision of St. Petersburg as a window to the West might have remained a pipe dream. But the human cost—thousands of lives lost in the swamps—raises the question: was it worth it? #PeterTheGreat #RussianHistory #Canals #VyshnyVolochyok #MikhailSerdyukov #Volga #Neva #StPetersburg #InlandWaterways #18thCentury #Engineering #ForcedLabor #EconomicHistory #EasternEurope #FexingoHistory #Modernization #Russia #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. Juni 202610 min
Episode Peter the Great's Naval Arsenal: Building Russia's Baltic Fleet Cover

Peter the Great's Naval Arsenal: Building Russia's Baltic Fleet

In 1703, Peter the Great had no Baltic fleet and Sweden ruled the waves. By 1714, Russia won its first major naval battle at Gangut. How did a landlocked tsar build a navy from nothing in just a decade? This episode follows the crash program: the founding of the Admiralty in St. Petersburg, the race to build galleys at the Olonets shipyard, the role of Dutch and Venetian shipwrights, and the brutal training of Russian sailors. We explore the design of the Galley Fleet — shallow-draft vessels that outmaneuvered Swedish ships of the line in the skerries of Finland. We also look at Peter's own hands-on work as a ship carpenter, his obsession with naval engineering, and the cost in lives and resources. The episode ends with the Battle of Gangut and the birth of Russia as a Baltic naval power. #PeterTheGreat #RussianNavy #BalticFleet #Gangut #GreatNorthernWar #Admiralty #StPetersburg #GalleyFleet #Olonets #TsarShipwright #NavalHistory #SwedishEmpire #FexingoHistory #History #EasternEurope #18thCentury #MilitaryHistory #NavalWarfare Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. Juni 20265 min