As part of
Peter the Great's establishment of
St Petersburg as the new
Russian capital, he established an imperial
cabinet of curiosities - or kunstkammer - dedicated to preserving "natural and human curiosities and rarities" in the manner of some of the other European courts since the 16th century. Such cabinets allowed rulers and the elite to acquire a fuller knowledge of the world and to demonstrate their control over it. Peter's personal collection was first exhibited to the public at the
Summer Palace in 1714, which is used by the present museum as its founding date. Peter's main interest was in natural things () rather than manmade ones (). A major component of the original collection was a large assortment of human and animal
fetuses with various
birth defects, many of which Peter had acquired in 1697 from
Frederick Ruysch and
Levinus Vincent. Peter encouraged research into
deformities, particularly in order to debunk
superstitious fear of monsters. In particular, he issued a ukase ordering malformed stillborn infants to be sent from anywhere in Russia to the imperial collection. He subsequently had them put on show in the Kunstkamera as examples of accidents of nature. The present Kunstkamera is a turreted
Petrine Baroque building designed by
Prussian architect
Georg Johann Mattarnovy. Its foundation stone was laid in 1719 and it was fully completed in 1727. A separate building had become necessary after the purchase of large collections from the Dutch pharmacologist
Albertus Seba in 1716 and the Dutch anatomist
Frederik Ruysch in 1717. Examination and organization of these collections also spurred the creation of the
Russian Academy of Sciences. A third acquisition came from
Jacob de Wilde, a collector of gems and scientific instruments. These purchases were largely organized by
Robert Erskine, Peter's chief physician, and his secretary
Johann Daniel Schumacher. ==Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography==