of the Artillery Academy. The history of the Strategic Missile Forces (RVSN) is linked with the history of the academy, being one of the oldest military educational institutions in Russia. The educational institution traces its history back to the
Artillery School of the
Imperial Russian Army, which was opened in
St. Petersburg at the initiative of
Grand Duke Michael Pavlovich in 1820. In 1845 the school was given the honorific of
Mikhailovsky after the Grand Duke. In 1925, it became the
Red Army's Military-Technical Academy. In 1934, it became the
Felix Dzerzhinsky Artillery Academy and four years later, it was transferred to Moscow. During the
Second World War, it was stationed in the city of
Samarkand in the
Uzbek SSR. In August 1944, the Department of Rocket Weapons was created with a training laboratory for the training of missilemen. It was later transformed into the Faculty of Rocket Weapons of the artillery academy, which laid the foundation for the domestic education of rocket engineers. In 1958, it return to its Moscow facilities from before the war. In March 1960, the academy became part of the Strategic Missile Forces of the
Soviet Army. It was renamed twice under Soviet rule, (as the Dzerzhinsky Military Engineering Academy in 1963 and the Dzerzhinsky Military Academy in 1972). Its Soviet era headquarters was at Kitayskiy Proyezd 9/5, within a block of the
Rossiya Hotel off
Red Square, with other sources also stating that it was based in the historical building of the
Moscow Orphanage. In August 1997, President
Boris Yeltsin, in a decree which outlined the need "to revive the historical traditions of the Russian Army and taking into account the exceptional merits of Peter the Great in the creation of a regular army", order the renaming of the academy after
Tsar/
Emperor of All Russia,
Peter the Great. In 2015, the academy was relocated to the city of Balashikha in order to develop the existing and future infrastructure of the academy. The first stage of the new building's construction was completed in record time, 242 days to be exact. == 200th anniversary ==