The German-born Russian engineer
Moritz von Jacobi designed the Jacobi
naval mine in 1853. An anchor tied the mine to the seabed; a cable connected it to a
galvanic cell which powered it from the shore, the power of its explosive charge equated to of
black powder. In the summer of 1853 the Committee for Mines of the
Ministry of War of the Russian Empire approved the production of the Jacobi mine. What became the
Crimean War formally started between the
Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire in October 1853.
France and
Great Britain declared war on Russia in March 1854. In 1854 the Russians laid 60 Jacobi mines in the vicinity of the Forts Pavel and
Alexander (
Kronstadt), in order to deter the
British Baltic Fleet and its allied French fleet from attacking them. (The Royal Navy arrived in the Baltic in April 1854; the French force in June 1854.) The Jacobi mines gradually phased out their direct competitors, the
Nobel mines, on the insistence of admiral
Fyodor Litke. The Russians bought their Nobel mines from the Russia-based Swedish industrialist
Immanuel Nobel, who had entered into
collusion with Russian
Minister of the Navy, Prince
Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov. Despite their high cost (100
Russian rubles), the Nobel mines proved fault-prone, exploding during the laying process, failing to explode, or detaching from their wires and drifting uncontrollably; the British subsequently disarmed at least 70 of them. In 1855 Russia laid 301 more Jacobi mines around Kronstadt and
Lisy Nos; British ships did not dare to approach them. ==Notes==