Leninsky Avenue
Appearance
Leninsky Avenue (Russian: Ленинский проспект, Leninsky prospekt) or Lenin Avenue (проспект Ленина, Prospekt Lenina) was a common name for major avenues in many cities of the former Soviet Union commemorating Vladimir Lenin. As of 2020[update] there were about 20 Leninsky Avenues and over 100 Lenin Avenues in Russia.[1]
Notable avenues include:
- In Russia
- Leninsky Avenue, an avenue in Moscow
- Leninsky Avenue , an avenue in Saint Petersburg
- Leninsky Avenue , an avenue in Voronezh
- Lenin Avenue , an avenue in Vyborg
- Lenin Avenue, an avenue in Yekaterinburg
- In other countries
- Lenin Avenue , main avenue in Gomel
- Leninsky Avenue , an avenue in Donetsk
- Leninsky Avenue was the 1961−1991 name of the Independence Avenue in Minsk.
- Leninsky Avenue was the 1967−1997 name of the Abul Khair Khan Avenue in Aktobe.
- Lenin Avenue was the Soviet-times name of the Dostyq Avenue in Almaty.
- Lenin Avenue was the pre-1992 name of the Rudaki Avenue in Dushanbe.
- Lenin Avenue was the 1959−1990 name of the Liberty Avenue in Lviv.
- Lenin Avenue was the 1960−2016 name of the Central Avenue in Mykolaiv.
- Lenin Avenue was the Soviet-times name of the Mashtots Avenue in Yerevan.
- Lenin Avenue was the Soviet-times name of the Gediminas Avenue in Vilnius.
- Lenin Avenue was the Soviet-times name of the Stephen the Great Boulevard in Chișinău.
- Lenin Avenue was the 1952−2016 name of the Cathedral Avenue in Zaporizhzhia.
Several train and metro stations are named Leninsky Avenue or Lenin Avenue:
- Leninsky Prospekt (Moscow Metro), a metro station in Moscow
- Leninsky Prospekt (Saint Petersburg Metro), a metro station in Saint Petersburg
See also
[edit]- Lenin Street, Novosibirsk
- Leninsky (disambiguation)
- Lenin Square (disambiguation)
- List of places named after Vladimir Lenin