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Jun 12, by Asya Pereltsvaig. The special role of these two cities is further highlighted by a consideration of the space between them. A recent photo diary in The New York Times documented a trip taken by journalist Ellen Barry and photographer Dmitry Kostyukov between the two principal Russian cities. This trip was inspired by an imaginary journey described by liberal-minded bureaucrat Alexander Radishchev in his book A Journey from St.
Petersburg to Moscow , written in In it, Radishchev interspersed description of the towns and villages between the capital of Imperial Russia, Saint Petersburg, and the former capital, Moscow, with harsh critique of serfdom which would be abolished by Tsar Alexander II more than seventy years later and of the limits to personal freedom imposed by the autocracy.
Each stop along the way reveals particular problems for the traveler. The author printed it in his private shop. A Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow sold well and ultimately a copy was given to Empress Catherine, who read the manuscript closely, scribbling furious notes in the margins, and immediately saw in it a challenge to her rather tyrannical rule. The book was banished and remained virtually unknown to the reading public for the next sixty years, reappearing in free circulation only at the turn of the twentieth century.
Also memorable is their account of an year old man who is the last inhabitant of his village. As can be seen from the map on the left, no cities of the size comparable to Moscow and Saint Petersburg can be found anywhere in Russia. Moscow and Saint Petersburg form the peaks of population density in northwestern Russia. Surprisingly, there is no peak corresponding to Saint Petersburg on the visualization created by James Cheshire of spatial.