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Brusnichnoye

Village in Leningrad Oblast, Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Brusnichnoye (Russian: Брусничное; formerly known as Finnish name Juustila, Finnish: [ˈjuːstilɑ]) is a village located along the Saimaa Canal on the shores of Lake Zaliv Novinski [ru; fi], about 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) north of Vyborg in Leningrad Oblast, Russia. It is one of the villages ceded to the Soviet Union after World War II; before that, it was part of Viipurin maalaiskunta ("Vyborg rural municipality"). The village's current Russian name was adopted in 1948.[1]

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A hotel in the early 20th century
Quick facts Russian: БрусничноеFinnish: Juustila, Country ...

When village was known as Juustila, it was one of the largest villages in the rural municipality in terms of population; in 1937 it had 922 inhabitants.[2] Juustila had a hotel, a health spa and several shops.[3][4] A youth club also operated in Juustila.[5] In 1937, the village of Juustila had 476 hectares (1,180 acres) of fields, 44 hectares (110 acres) of meadows, and 1.545 hectares (3.82 acres) of forest.[6] Juustila Folk School, founded in 1891,[7] had four teachers and 126 students in 1939.[8] An additional building was built for the school in 1927.[9]

The family of Bishop Paulus Juusten, who lived in the 16th century, owned the Juustila farm and took its name from it.[10][11]

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