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・ Zelenkova
・ Zelennikovskaya narrow gauge railway
・ Zeleno Brdo
・ Zeleno darvo
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・ Zelenoborsky
・ Zelenodol
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・ Zelenodolsk, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
・ Zelenodolsk, Republic of Tatarstan
・ Zelenodolsk, Russia
・ Zelenodolsky
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・ Zelenogorsk, Krasnoyarsk Krai
Zelenogorsk, Saint Petersburg
・ Zelenograd
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・ Zelenyi Bir
・ Zelenyi Hai
・ Zelenyi Hai, Bilozerka Raion


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Zelenogorsk, Saint Petersburg : ウィキペディア英語版
Zelenogorsk, Saint Petersburg

Zelenogorsk ((ロシア語:Зеленого́рск); before 1948 Terijoki, a name still used in Finnish and Swedish), is a municipal town in Kurortny District of the federal city of St. Petersburg, Russia, located in part of the Karelian Isthmus on the shore of the Gulf of Finland. Population:
It has a station on the St. Petersburg-Vyborg railroad. It is located about northwest of central Saint Petersburg.
==History==

From 1323 to 1721 the Zelenogorsk area was a part of Sweden. It was ceded to Russia in 1721, becoming "Old Finland", which again was united with the Grand-Duchy of Finland in 1811. Until 1917, Terijoki was part of the Grand-Duchy of Finland, ruled by the Grand Dukes of Finland, who were the Tsars of Russia, (1812–1917).
Even though all of Finland was part of the Russian Empire, a customs border was located at Terijoki. A valid Passport was needed for crossing the border between Russia and the Grand Duchy of Finland.
Vladimir Lenin managed to travel in secrecy over the (internal) border to Finland in 1907. Ten years later, in April 1917, he would return through the Terijoki border control at the head of the contingent of Bolshevik exiles that had accompanied him from Switzerland.〔Pearson, Michael, ''The Sealed Train''; Fischer, Louis, ''Lenin; a Biography''〕
With completion of the Riihimäki-St. Petersburg railroad in 1870, Terijoki become a popular summer resort, and was frequented by St. Petersburg's upper class until closure of the border during the Russian Revolution (1917).
When the Republic of Finland gained independence on 6 December 1917, Terijoki became a part of it, and remained so until it was occupied by the Soviet Union during the Winter War (1939-1940). It was regained by Finland in 1941 during the Continuation War (1941-1944), but then was then occupied again by the Red Army during the later stages of the same war and annexed to the Soviet Union in 1944.
During the Winter War Terijoki become known as the seat of Otto Ville Kuusinen's Quisling style Finnish Democratic Republic.
After the Second World War, its original Finnish population chose not to live in the Soviet Union. They were relocated close to Helsinki and Soviet citizens were relocated to Terijoki. Around the start of the 21st century, the town's population was estimated to have been a few thousand, rising to above 50,000 in summer.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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