It doesn't get dark in St Petersburg, Russia during June and July because of the city's location towards the North Pole.
There is still light (called "twilight") after sunset, because of atmospheric effects. That's refraction and, most importantly, the scattering of sunlight by the upper atmosphere.
In the summer, at high latitudes, the Sun is never far below the horizon.
Moscow. It was changed from St. Petersburg in 1918
It was Moscow. A former capital of Russia was Saint Petersburg, it was left in 1918. During the WW2 the capital was not changed.
Saint Petersburg in Russia was known as Petrograd from 1914 to 1924, and then as Leningrad during most of the Communist period from 1924 to 1991.
St. Petersburg Russia was changed to petrograd during Alexander the Great's rule.
it takes place mostly in St. Petersburg, Russia during the Russian revolution.
it takes place mostly in St. Petersburg, Russia during the Russian revolution. =]
Rollarcoasters first appeared during the 17th century throughout Russia, with a particular concentration in the area of in what would become St. Petersburg.
Enlightenment ideas bloomed in Moscow and St. Petersburg in Russia during the 18th century. These cities became important centers for cultural and intellectual developments, influencing social and political changes in the country.
There were two actually--Nikita S. Khruschev and Leonid I. Brezhnev
Not very good, actually. )
Well, technically Russia only has one capital city, which is Moscow. St. Petersburg was the capital between Peter the Great's rule until the end of czarist Russia. The capital was moved to Moscow during the October Revolution. The reason they moved is because Moscow is the only other LARGE city which is closer to all the other Soviet states. Before Peter the Great built St. Petersburg, Moscow was the capital.
Peter the Great, he was a czar that lived and ruled during the late 17th century and early 18th century. He was very fascinated with European culture, and strived to push Russia into European-like culture. This is why Saint Petersburg was named in an English fashion, instead of a Russian one. St. Petersburg was later renamed to Petrograd and then Leningrad in the early 20th century, but however was named back to St. Petersburg when the Soviet Union fell apart.