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| imperial russian navy admirals | |
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| russian nobility | |
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| 1655 births | |
| 1727 deaths | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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Cornelis Cruys ( , of the Imperial Russian Navy and the first commander of the Russian Baltic Fleet . He was born as Niels Olsen (Olufsen) in the city of Stavanger in Norway in 1655 and was half Norwegian half Dutch . It is still uncertain when the Norwegian Niels Olsen (in Dutch `Cornelis Roelofsz') emigrated to the Dutch Republic and changed his name in Cornelis Cruys (''Kornelius Krøys'' or ''Cornelis Cruijs''). However, according to several municipal sources Cruys lived in Amsterdam for at least eighteen years before he joined the Russian Navy . The first time information about him was put on paper by the local administration of Amsterdam was probably in 1681 . That year he married the nineteen year old Catharina Voogt. She was born in Amsterdam and the daughter of Claas Pieterszoon Voogt, a Dutch captain of a merchantman, and Jannetje Jans. In the civilian registration of his coming marriage, Cruys was called a sailor from Amsterdam , 24 years old, with no parents left. In December, about seven months after his marriage, Cruys was officially registrated as a citizen or `poorter' of Amsterdam . In 1680 he was captain of a Dutch merchantman. Until 1696 he sailed to Portugal , Spain and the Caribbean . In July 1696 he joined the Dutch Navy . He was appointed onder-equipagemeester at the naval dockyard of the Amsterdam Admiralty. In less than two years he would leave Holland and change the Dutch to the Russian Navy . and published in Amsterdam in 1703-1704.© TaganrogCity.Com]] In the tsar engaged, with the help of Russian and Dutch assistants, many skilled workers such as builders of locks, fortresses, shipwrights and seamen. They had to help him with his ` Westernization ' of Russia . The best-known sailor who made the journey from the Netherlands to Russia was Cornelis Cruys. Cruys accepted the tsar's generous offer to enter into his service as vice-admiral. He emigrated to Russia in 1698 and became the tsar's most important advisor in maritime affairs. Cruys performed so well that he can be regarded as the architect of the Russian Navy . After his return to Russia the tsar put his Azov Flotilla under the command of admiral Fyodor Golovin , a Russian nobleman who was the successor of the Swiss Franz Lefort . Golovin was assisted by vice-admiral Cornelis Cruys and rear-admiral Jan Van Rees . Cornelius Cruys became the first "Russian" mayor of Taganrog 1698-1702 and in 1711, and he made the first maps of Azov Sea and Don River . Since 1705 - commander of the Russian Baltic Fleet , masterminded the construction of Kronstadt fortress, which was essential in the Great Northern War against Sweden and many years later against German Kriegsmarine during World War II . Cornelis Cruys worked for the tsar for more than 25 years. Although his career was not prosperous all the time he finally reached the highest Russian naval rank of admiral ( 1721 ). He died in a palace in Saint Petersburg in 1727 , two years after the death of his master Peter The Great . See also |