The frigate Shtandart ( Russian : Штандартъ ) is a modern replica of the first ship of Russia's Baltic fleet . The original ship was launched in 1703 at the Olonetsky shipyard near Olonets by the decree of Tsar Peter I and orders issued by commander Aleksandr Menshikov . The name Shtandart was also given to the royal yachts of the tsars until the Russian Revolution in 1917 . Tsar Nicholas II's royal yacht was last of this series.
22-592: [REDACTED] Look up standart in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Standart may refer to: [REDACTED] Shtandart (Regimental colors of) the 1st Ukrainian Front People [ edit ] Frank W. Standart (1871–1941), American lawyer and politician Joseph G. Standart (1834–1912), American hardware businessman in Detroit Other [ edit ] an alternative translation of Штандартъ,
44-479: A jeweled egg created by the House of Fabergé Standarts , a series of paintings and sculptures made by German artist A. R. Penck See also [ edit ] Standard (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Standart . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
66-427: A jeweled egg created by the House of Fabergé Standarts , a series of paintings and sculptures made by German artist A. R. Penck See also [ edit ] Standard (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Standart . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
88-460: A sailing and team building experience, which is unmatched on shore. Some of them sail (and work!) The total overhaul was done in a small Portuguese port Vila do Conde in the winter of 2016-2017 As a result of sanctions against Russia following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine , Russian ships are denied entry to European ports. However, after an application submitted by Président des Amis des Grands Voiliers association to French Secretary of
110-539: A set of construction drawings and the model. When Vladimir Martus, driving force behind the Maritime Training Center, first saw that model of the imperial warship in the city's Menshikov Palace in 1992, he promised to let her sail again. "On the moment I saw it, I fell in love," he said." In November 1994, 275 years after it sailed for the last time, the actual reconstruction of the Shtandart
132-691: The Neva by a gigantic floating crane, near the Smolny Institute , the same place where its illustrious predecessor was baptized in 1703. And so it happened: on Saturday, September 4, 1999, the Shtandart hoisted the cross, along with the flags of the Imperial Family, the city of Saint Petersburg and the Russian Federation. The ship was now afloat, but there was still more than a year to work on installing and commissioning all
154-529: The "Fêtes maritimes de Douarnenez " of 1992, and that he had sold to finance the construction of the Shtandart. Later, the St. Peter, known better today as "The Black Pearl", starred in the film series Pirates of the Caribbean . The team used the same materials and methods as the original flagship . The keel was laid on November 4, 1994. The oak for the beams was taken from the forests of Saint Petersburg and
176-615: The First gave orders to build a replica , but they were not carried out at the time. Saint Petersburg would celebrate its 300th anniversary in 2003. In 1988 the management of the Hermitage Museum commissioned maritime researcher Viktor Krainukov to construct an exposition model of the first ship built at that time, namely the flagship of Peter the Great: the Shtandart. There was very little data, but after extensive research, he made
198-700: The Great ordered the construction of the Shtandart ( Russian : Штандартъ) . The ship, a 28-gun frigate, was the first part of Russia's later Baltic Fleet . She was responsible for repelling the Swedish naval attack on Saint Petersburg in 1705. The original was designed by Peter the Great himself, after his trip to Netherlands and England. Completed in August 1703 by the Dutch master Vibe Gerense and then, with Peter as captain, sailed to St. Petersburg to be baptized. The ship
220-518: The Leningrad oblast . On April 8, 1995, the first of 44 beams was erected, with more soon to follow.... In that autumn and winter of 1996, larch trees were again removed from the forest over 15 meters in length, to cut skin and decking boards 8 cm thick and 20 cm wide. A 12-metre-long, 18th-century steam box was rebuilt to allow for the bending and shaping of the skin and decking planks. According to Martous, they have even recreated
242-521: The Russian Regimental colors Shtandart (frigate, 1703) , a Russian sailing frigate constructed in 1703–1730 and recreated in 1999 Standart (newspaper) , a Bulgarian newspaper StandArt , album of jazz standards by pianist Tigran Hamasyan Standart (magazine) , print magazine about specialty coffee culture Standart (yacht) , an Imperial Russian yacht serving Nicholas II and his family Standart Yacht (Fabergé egg) ,
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#1732771710941264-583: The Russian name of the ship Shtandart Standart ( Heraldic flag ), the Russian Regimental colors Shtandart (frigate, 1703) , a Russian sailing frigate constructed in 1703–1730 and recreated in 1999 Standart (newspaper) , a Bulgarian newspaper StandArt , album of jazz standards by pianist Tigran Hamasyan Standart (magazine) , print magazine about specialty coffee culture Standart (yacht) , an Imperial Russian yacht serving Nicholas II and his family Standart Yacht (Fabergé egg) ,
286-564: The State, the Shtandart had received permission to attend French and Spanish ports. The ship is forbidden to attend Brest's Fêtes Maritime in 2024 because of the sanctions. From 2007, sailing vessels in Russia faced challenges with a classification. The new National Sea and River Authority (then Росморречнадзор/Rosmorrechnadzor, now Госморречнадзор/ Gosmorrechnadzor ) refused to issue classification certificates for sailing ships. The Shtandart
308-451: The free dictionary. Standart may refer to: [REDACTED] Shtandart (Regimental colors of) the 1st Ukrainian Front People [ edit ] Frank W. Standart (1871–1941), American lawyer and politician Joseph G. Standart (1834–1912), American hardware businessman in Detroit Other [ edit ] an alternative translation of Штандартъ, the Russian name of the ship Shtandart Standart ( Heraldic flag ),
330-416: The fuel used to fuel the steam box - the sawdust and wood shavings left over from their carpentry. and also skin planks: but soon also for the two upper decks, made of pine, fore and aft But because it was necessary to baptize, a temporary stern was made (with the name misspelled, as turned out later!), and also other large pieces: the figurehead and the guardian dwarf "Grumpy" The replica Shtandart
352-421: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Standart&oldid=1211534107 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages standart [REDACTED] Look up standart in Wiktionary,
374-482: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Standart&oldid=1211534107 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Shtandart (frigate, 1999) On January 22, 1702, at the height of the Third Northern War , Peter
396-485: The skin planks had continued all along until the last one was placed on March 20, 1999. The whole summer there was caulking and painting. The rebirth of the first ship of the Russian Baltic Fleet attracted forty thousand Saint Petersburgers on September 4, 1999 to the banks of the Neva . The Frigate measuring 30 by 7 meters, with 28 guns, two masts and bowsprit with figurehead, was launched into
418-647: The technology, engines, tanks, etc. The original Shtandart had a crew of 150 in wartime. For the replica, the permanent crew is 12 people, volunteers who want to learn the "trade" supplement the crew. In the more than 20 years of the "new" Shtandart's existence, the voyages cover all of western Europe, from beyond the North Cape to Kirkenes in 2009, to the Canary Islands (winter 2013-14) and from Cyprus (Nov 2021) to Belfast (2017). As cooperating, young students, more than 9000 young people have gained
440-609: Was christened on May 30, 1998, by the ship's two patrons, Prince Andrew, the Duke of York and the Governor of Saint Petersburg, Vladimir Ykovlev. Also the following winter many accessories and parts were manufactured, the rudder the figurehead were painted, and of course the final transom , with all decorations, and some 'spars' of pine, such as ra 's, foresail , bowsprit , mizzen and large mast (all masts consist of 3 parts). The sawing, steaming, bending and placement of
462-553: Was finally able to start. Martous drew up plans for recreating the Shtandart. Construction drawings were made with the help of researchers such as Greg Palmer, ship historian and Viktor Krainukov, expert on Russian shipbuilding history. He worked on the Batavia Dock in Lelystad under the direction of Willem Vos and used his own experience in the construction of an earlier ship, the St. Peter, which he built especially to visit
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#1732771710941484-661: Was named Shtandart, after a new Royal standard showing all four seas to which Russia now had access. It served in the Third Northern War and was the flagship of the Russian Navy for 16 years. After it was retired in 1719, it remained in the Kronverk Canal behind the Peter and Paul Fortress in Saint Petersburg. In 1728 it was so dilapidated that the hull broke into pieces during lifting. Tsarina Catharina
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