In this area of Saint Petersburg, which used to be called "
Ingria" by the Finnish and Swedish, the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Ingria has a 400-year history: • In the early 18th century, many Finnish people participated.in the construction of Saint Petersburg and start building churches as
Peter the Great guaranteed the freedom of religion. In 1703, a Swedish-Finnish Evangelical Lutheran church was built and, in 1733, on the land donated by
Anna Petrovna, a new church building was constructed, later named the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saint Anna, which stands now next to the Swedish Consulate General on Malaya Konyushennnaya Street. • In 1745, the Finnish people of this church went independent and built a wooden church on Bolshaya Konyuushnaya Street. In 1805, a new church was built, designed by Architect Paulsson, named Saint Mary's Church, after Mariya Feodorovna, the mother of the tsar at that time, Alexander I. • After the annexation of Finland by Russia, the relationship with the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland became closer, and, during the early 1890s, the membership of the church reached 17,000. • As the
Russian Revolution of 1917 came, the church went through the most difficult time. In 1938, the church was forced to stop functioning and the church building was first used as a residential space and later as a natural history museum. • After
Perestroika, the church building was returned to the church. Refurbishing of the building started in 1999 and the rededication was celebrated in 2002. ==Church activities==