In 1705,
Peter the Great decreed that Protestant churches could be established in St. Petersburg. The first reference to the school is in 1709, in a letter (now in the Archive of the Russian Navy) by Admiral
Cornelius Cruys to the Emperor (Peter) regarding the establishment of a Lutheran church and school at his estate, located on the site of what is now the
New Hermitage on
Millionnaya Street in St. Petersburg's German settlement. In 1761, the German theologian, geographer, historian, and teacher
Anton Friedrich Büsching was invited by the Lutheran community of St. Petersburg to be headmaster of the school at the
Lutheran Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul. The current school building, at numbers 22-24
Nevsky Prospect, was built in the 1760s and rebuilt several times - in 1799, in 1876–1877, and in 1913–1915. Among the educators who taught at the school are: • The natural scientist
Erik Laxmann (1737–1796). • The philosopher and Latin scholar
Alexander Galich (1783–1848), who was a teacher of
Pushkin. • The writer
Ivan Born (1778–1851), compiler of the first Russian language textbook. • The writer and poet
Vasili Popugaev (1778 or 1779–1816 (probable)). • The philologist and pedagogue
Nikolai Gretsch (1787–1867). • The mathematician
Nikolai Brashman (1796–1866). • The physicist
Heinrich Lenz (1804–1865), discoverer of
Lenz's Law. • The
phalerist (scholar of medals)
Julius Iversen (1823–1900). • The physicist
Orest Khvolson (1852–1934). ==War and Revolution==