It was founded in 1702 on the spot of the village of
Mokrishvitsa, where
Peter the Great had established the Olonets Shipyard. In 1703, the first ship of the
Baltic Fleet was built here—a 28-cannon
frigate called
Shtandart. In 1704, six more frigates, four
shnyavas, four
galleys, and twenty-four semi-galleys were constructed, which would form the first Russian squadron in the
Baltic Sea. Over four hundred sailboats and rowboats were built throughout the shipyard's existence. In the course of the
administrative reform carried out in 1708 by Peter the Great, Lodeynoye Pole was included into Ingermanland Governorate (known from 1710 as
Saint Petersburg Governorate). In 1727, it was transferred to the newly established
Novgorod Governorate, and in 1776, it was further transferred into newly established
Olonets Oblast. In 1781, Olonets Oblast was transferred to St. Petersburg Governorate, and in 1784, it was transformed into an independent administrative unit,
Olonets Viceroyalty. In 1801,
Olonets Governorate was established, and in 1802, Lodeynopolsky Uyezd was restored. On August 1, 1927, the uyezds in Leningrad Oblast were abolished and Lodeynopolsky District, with the administrative center in Lodeynoye Pole, was established. It was a part of
Lodeynoye Pole Okrug of Leningrad Oblast. In 1931, the infamous Soviet concentration camp
Svirlag was established, with the headquarters in the former
Alexander-Svirsky Monastery, several kilometers from Lodeynoye Pole. Thousands of victims (to a great extent
Russian Orthodox clergy) lost there their lives. During
World War II, Lodeynoye Pole was at the frontline but was not occupied by Finnish troops which kept the areas north of the Svir. ==Administrative and municipal status==