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File:Bałtijsk.jpg
Landsat satellite photo taken circa 2000

The Strait of Baltiysk (Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx) is a strait enabling passage from the Baltic Sea into the brackish Vistula Lagoon, located in Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia. The constructed strait separates the Vistula Spit from the peninsula (called Pillau Peninsula in Russia: Пиллауский полуостров, after the Template:Interlanguage link multi) which was part of the Vistula Spit in the 15th century and now is part of Sambian Peninsula.

ShippingEdit

The strait is the shipping connection from the high sea to the important Russian ports of Baltiysk and Kaliningrad in the northeastern lagoon, as well as to the Polish ports of Elbląg, Braniewo, Tolkmicko, Frombork, Sztutowo, Krynica Morska, and Nowa Pasłęka in the southeastern lagoon.<ref name=dig>What Changes will a Canal on the Vistula Spit bring? Template:In lang</ref> On 17 September 2022, Poland opened a new canal through the Vistula Spit, which will allow ships to enter the Polish port of Elbląg without passing through the Strait of Baltiysk in Russia's Kaliningrad region.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</Ref>

Russian blockadeEdit

The Strait of Baltiysk is a strait where international navigation is governed by a non-suspendable innocent passage regime under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (dead-end strait).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Despite the law since the 1990s Russia periodically blocks navigation via the strait to Polish ports.

Since 2006, Poland had considered digging another canal across the Vistula Spit in order to circumvent this restriction.<ref name=dig/> The Vistula Spit canal started construction in 2019 and opened in 2022.

HistoryEdit

In 1497 a storm surge dug a new gat, then called the Neues [Pillauer] Tief or Pillauer Seetief (New [Pillau] Deep, Pillau Sea Deep), through the Vistula Spit. In 1510 another storm surge widened and deepened that gat to navigability. It measured Template:Convert in length and Template:Convert in width. In 1626 King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden landed with 37 ships next to the gat, at a spot already slightly fortified, transforming it into the Template:Interlanguage link multi, and holding it for ten years (till the Treaty of Stuhmsdorf), also in order to pressure his brother-in-law George William, Duke of Prussia and Elector of Brandenburg, to support him in the Polish–Swedish War and the Thirty Years' War. The Swedes extended the adjacent Pillau village and built its first place of worship, a Lutheran church. In 1638 the Duke moved his residence to the close-by ducal capital Königsberg in Prussia.

In the 1960s the gat was expanded and now it measures Template:Convert in width and Template:Convert in depth.

ReferencesEdit

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