- significance: A 133
Petrozavodsk —
Suoyarvi and R19
Petrozavodsk —
Voznesenye —
Oshtinsky Pogost.
Petrozavodsk station is a
major junction of
railway lines (to...
-
invasions of
Poland and Finland, and
later for
German POWs.
Parts of
Oshtinsky District in the west of the
oblast became the only
areas of
Vologda Oblast...
-
started to advance. Andomsky,
Oshtinsky, and
Kovzhinsky Districts were all
abolished in the 1950s. On December 12, 1955,
Oshtinsky District was
divided between...
-
Oblast to
Vologda Oblast. On December 12, 1955,
Oshtinsky District was abolished. The area of
Oshtinsky District was
split between Vytegorsky and Borisovo-Sudsky...
- Oblast.
During World War II,
Finnish troops occupied the
western part of
Oshtinsky District and in
October 1941,
prepared an
advance to Vytegra.[citation...
- Charozersky, Cherepovetsky, Kaduysky, Kirillovsky, Kovzhinsky, Myaksinsky,
Oshtinsky, Petrinevsky, Prisheksninsky, Sholsky, Ustyuzhensky, Vashikinsky, Vytegorsky...
-
Oblast crosses the
junction from west to east, p****ing Podporozhye. In
Oshtinsky Pogost, just
behind the
oblast border,
another road
branches north, returns...
- Zhukovsky. In
Lodeynoye Pole Okrug: Andomsky, Kovzhinsky, Lodeynopolsky,
Oshtinsky, Pashsky, Podporozhsky, Shapshinsky, Vinnitsky, Voznesensky, Vytegorsky...
-
western end at Voznesenye.
Voznesenye is
located on the road
connecting Oshtinsky Pogost, just
behind the
border of
Leningrad Oblast, and Petrozavodsk,...