Neva, a river of Russia, flows westward from the south-west corner of Lake Ladoga to the Bay of Cronstadt, in the Gulf of Finland, passing through St Petersburg, and carries to the sea an enormous volume of water (greater than that of the Rhine) from the lakes Ladoga, Onega, Ilmen, and others. Its total length, with windings, is about 40 miles; in places it is over 4000 feet wide, elsewhere the channel is narrowed to 180 feet; and in one or two places the navigation is embarrassed by reefs and rapids. It is frozen on an average from November 25 to April 21. By the Ladoga Canal the Neva communicates with the vast water-system of the Volga, and thus it may be said to join the Baltic with the Caspian Sea.
Neva
Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 7: Maltebrun to Pearson, p. 451
Source scan(s): p. 0460