Misplaced Pages

Maysionvara (air base)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#764235

6-446: Maysionvara is a former Russian air base 22 km north of Suojarvi . A 1962 US satellite analysis showed a 2560 m (8400 ft) runway with no aircraft on the field. This Russian military article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Suojarvi Suoyarvi ( Russian : Суоя́рви ; Karelian : Suojärvi ; Finnish : Suojärvi ) is a town and the administrative center of Suoyarvsky District of

12-531: Is directly subordinated. As a municipal division , the town of Suoyarvi is incorporated within Suoyarvsky Municipal District as Suoyarvskoye Urban Settlement . The town serves as a railway junction along the railway line linking Helsinki with St. Petersburg and Petrozavodsk . From Suoyarvi, a line branches off to Yushkozero and Kostomuksha . In the Cold War it was the nearest town to

18-568: Is recorded as church community controlled by the Orthodox community of Sortavala. In 1630, Suoyarvi became an independent community. An outcome of the Winter War was that most of West Karelia was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, when Suoyarvi was granted town status. In August 1941, the territory was re-occupied by Finnish troops, but as part of the wider post-war settlement, it reverted to

24-508: The Republic of Karelia , Russia , located 140 kilometers (87 mi) northwest of Petrozavodsk . Population: 9,766 ( 2010 Census ) ; 11,600 ( 2002 Census ) ; 11,772 ( 1989 Soviet census ) . It is known that during the 16th and 17th centuries a settlement existed here known as Shuyezersky pogost (a Russian form of the local Karelian name, meaning "swampy lake"). The first documented mention dates from 1589 when Suoyarvi

30-501: The Karelian people in the former municipality spoke a variety of South Karelian ( suvikarjala ), while the villages in the Hyrsylä ( Khyursyulya ) salient, which also included Ignoila ( Ignoyla ) and Hautavaara ( Khautavaara ), spoke a Livvi dialect instead. Within the framework of administrative divisions , Suoyarvi serves as the administrative center of Suoyarvsky District , to which it

36-586: The Soviets in 1944; it was the second largest territory by area (after Petsamo ) ceded by Finland to the Soviet Union following the Continuation War . Before the occupation, Suoyarvi was geographically the easternmost municipality of Finland. Suoyarvi had its own dialects of the Karelian language before the area was ceded to the Soviet Union and its inhabitants were relocated to other parts of Finland. Most of

#764235