Kamennogorsk Explained

En Name:Kamennogorsk
Ru Name:Каменногорск
Coordinates:60.95°N 37°W
Map Label Position:right
Image Coa:Coat of Arms of Kamennogorskoe GP.png
Federal Subject:Leningrad Oblast
Adm Data As Of:June 2013
Adm District Jur:Vyborgsky District
Adm Selsoviet Jur:Kamennogorskoye Settlement Municipal Formation
Adm Selsoviet Type:Settlement municipal formation
Adm Ctr Of:Kamennogorskoye Settlement Municipal Formation
Inhabloc Cat:Town
Mun Data As Of:June 2013
Mun District Jur:Vyborgsky Municipal District
Urban Settlement Jur:Kamennogorskoye Urban Settlement
Mun Admctr Of:Kamennogorskoye Urban Settlement
Pop 2010Census:6739
Current Cat Date:1940
Postal Codes:188950
Website:http://www.kamennogorsk.vbglenobl.ru

Kamennogorsk (Russian: Каменного́рск; known before 1948 by the Finnish name of Antrea (Russian: А́нтреа; Swedish: S:t Andree)), is a town in Vyborgsky District of Leningrad Oblast, Russia, located on the Karelian Isthmus on the left bank of the Vuoksi River (Lake Ladoga's basin) 170km (110miles) northwest of St. Petersburg. Population:

History

Human habitation in the area where Kamennogorsk now stands goes back to the Stone Age. In the beginning of the 20th century, a Stone Age site was discovered under a layer of peat. Findings at the site included wooden and flint implements, polished instruments of shale, remains of net of nettle fibers, sixteen fishing floats of piny bark, thirty-one stone plummets, a long bone dagger, and remains of nets with a length of 27m (89feet) and a width of up to 3m (10feet).

In the 14th-17th centuries, Antrea was a main administrative center of Karelian settlements on the upper Vuoksi. The name comes from Lutheran community founded in the 17th century and the church of St. Andrew.

In 1710, during the Great Northern War, the troops of Tsar Peter the Great included the whole area of the modern Vyborgsky District to Russia. In the course of Peter's second administrative reform, Antrea became a part of Vyborg Province of St. Petersburg Governorate. The 1721 Treaty of Nystad, which concluded the war with Sweden, finalized the transfer of this part of Old Finland to Russia.[1]

In 1744, Vyborg Governorate, with the seat in Vyborg, was established.[2] After several changes, Vyborg Governorate was renamed Finland Governorate in 1802. In 1812, it was renamed back and included in the Grand Duchy of Finland, which was previously ceded to Russia by Sweden. In Finland, it became known as the Viipuri Province. In 1918, the Viipuri Province became a part of independent Finland.[3]

Antrea, together with the rest of the Karelian Isthmus, was ceded by Finland to the Soviet Union by the Moscow Peace Treaty as a result of the Winter War. It was recaptured by Finns between 1941 and 1944 during Continuation War but was again ceded to the Soviet Union after Moscow Armistice. This secession was formalized after signing Paris Peace Treaty in 1947. The population was resettled to Finland, and population from Central Russia was resettled to populate the Karelian Isthmus.

In 1940, Antrea became a part of newly established Yaskinsky District with the administrative center in the work settlement of Yaski. At the same time, it was granted town status. At that time, it was a part of the Karelian ASSR (after March 30, 1940 of the Karelo-Finnish SSR).[4] On November 24, 1944, Yaskinsky District was transferred from Karelo-Finnish SSR to Leningrad Oblast.[5] To replace Finnish names of the localities with Russian names, on October 1, 1948, the district was renamed Lesogorsky and the town of Antrea was renamed Kamennogorsk. The town's new name was due to the presence of crystalline deposit outcrops and a granite mine in the vicinity.[6] On December 9, 1960, Lesogorsky District was abolished and merged into Vyborgsky District.

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is, together with twenty-nine rural localities, incorporated within Vyborgsky District as Kamennogorskoye Settlement Municipal Formation.[7] As a municipal division, Kamennogorskoye Settlement Municipal Formation is incorporated within Vyborgsky Municipal District as Kamennogorskoye Urban Settlement.[8]

Economy

Industry

A large quarry for extraction of grey granite is situated in Kamennogorsk. Also there is an offset paper factory, which before the war was used for producing sugar from sugar beets.

Transportation

The town has a railway station on the railway line connecting Vyborg and Khiytola (the old Vyborg–Joensuu railroad). Another railway branches up north to Svetogorsk; the continuation beyond Svetogorsk to the Finnish–Russian border is disused. All these railways are served by suburban trains. A new railway to Sosnovo and Losevo is under construction.

The town is connected by roads with Vyborg, Svetogorsk, and Melnikovo.

Notable people

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: http://vbglenobl.ru/raion/istoriya-raiona. ru:История Выборгского района, история Выборгской земли. Муниципальное образование Выборгский район Ленинградской Области. ru. March 20, 2014.
  2. Web site: Изменение административно-территориального деления России за последние 300 лет. С. А. Тархов. 2001. Электронная версия журнала "География".
  3. Book: Энциклопедия Города России. 2003. Большая Российская Энциклопедия. Moscow. 5-7107-7399-9. 176.
  4. Web site: http://istmat.info/files/uploads/17632/sssr_ad-ter_delenie_1941_karelo-finskaya_ssr.pdf. ru:Карело-Финская ССР. Handbook of administrative divisions of Soviet Union. ru. March 12, 2014.
  5. Web site: http://classif.spb.ru/sprav/np_lo/74_Jaskinsky_Lesogorsky_rayon.htm. ru:Яскинский район (ноябрь 1944 г. - октябрь 1948 г.), Лесогорский район (октябрь 1948 г. - декабрь 1960 г.). Система классификаторов исполнительных органов государственной власти Санкт-Петербурга. ru. March 21, 2014.
  6. Pospelov, p. 28
  7. Oblast Law #32-oz
  8. Law #17-oz