The seaport of St. Petersburg was crucial to the Europeanization of Russia. Founded by Peter the Great in 1703, it served as a "window to the West," facilitating trade, cultural exchange, and the influx of Western ideas. Its strategic location along the Baltic Sea allowed Russia to engage more directly with European powers, significantly influencing the country's modernization efforts.
Nicholas I
yes
North-west Russia, Saint-Petersburg and Kronshtadt are the capitals of baltic navy.
Your question is not clear, the Baltic Sea does boarder Russia and Germany
Russia has access to the Baltic Sea - in the Russian exclave "Kaliningrad Oblast" there is an important war harbour. Also, Russia has access to the Eastern part of the Gulf of Finland (part of the Baltic Sea), Sankt-Petersburg is actually on the Baltic coast. What was meant in the question were perhaps "Three Baltic States" - Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia (actually, Lithuania doesn't share a border with Russia). Or maybe Latvia, Estonia and Finland?
Latvia is a Baltic state north of Poland and west of Russia.
Kaliningrad is a seaport city and the administrative center of Kaliningrad Oblast, the Russian exclave between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic Sea. The territory, the northern part of the former East Prussia, borders on NATO and EU members Poland and Lithuania, and is geographically separated from the rest of Russia.
North-west Russia, Saint-Petersburg and Kronshtadt are the capitals of baltic navy.
St. Petersburg is a port on the Baltic Sea
Russia has access to the Baltic Sea through the Gulf of Finland from St Petersburg Also from the Russian Enclave of Kaliningrad directly to the Baltic Sea
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The Baltic