The center of Karelia is a city. Open left menu Republic of Karelia

Karelia - amazing beautiful region, which has long become a coveted place of pilgrimage for many tourists from all over the world. They are attracted not only by magnificent landscapes, but also by architecture, as well as the sights of cities that are unique and homely. Let's talk about them.

Large cities of Karelia: list

In total, there are 13 cities in Karelia with a relatively low population density. Topping the list is the capital of the region - Petrozavodsk, located on the shores of Lake Onega and occupying 135 square meters. km.

It begins long before 1777, when a small village became a city. It flourished since the time of Peter the Great, by whose decree an arms factory was erected on the banks of the Onega. Picturesque lakes within the city, an abundance of museums, including the famous Kizhi Island, and art galleries make the city amazing and unique. The most tempting tourist routes begin here. capital - 277.1 thousand people

The second largest city (31.2 thousand people) is a fairly young city Kondopoga(1938), located not far from the capital. Mentions of the first settlements in these places date back to the 15th century, and since the 40s of the twentieth century, marble deposits have been discovered here. Unusual belfries - Dutch carillon bells - give the city a special flavor.

Cities of Karelia

The list will continue with Kostomuksha, a city with a population of 29.5 thousand people, formed in 1983 on the site of an ancient village of the same name. Kostomuksha is located on the shore of Lake Kostomuksha, and the Karelsky Okatysh mining and processing enterprise became the city-forming enterprise.

Another city that emerged in 1943 and forms the Segezha urban settlement is Segezha with a population of 27.5 thousand people. Its location is Lake Vygozero, 267 km from Petrozavodsk.

The small but wonderful cities of Karelia are beautiful and attractive, a list of which is presented below:

Sortalava, included in the list of historical cities of Russia, was founded in 1632. Number of people: 18.7 thousand people. Sortalava is the second tourist center after the capital of the republic. This is the starting point of water routes to the famous Valaam.

Medvezhyegorsk is a city with a population of 14.5 thousand people, located 152 km from Petrozavodsk, formed as a settlement for construction workers of the railway to the bays Barents Sea. Recognized as a city in 1938.

Ancient Kem, located on and founded in 1785, and previously a former volost of the posadnitsa donated to the Solovetsky Monastery in 1450. Today the population of the town is 11.8 thousand people.

Small towns

The smallest entities include the following cities of Karelia (list):

Pitkäranta (1940) - a settlement with 10.7 thousand inhabitants;

Belomorsk (1938) - 10.1 thousand people;

Suoyarvi (1940) - 9.1 thousand people;

Pudozh (1785) - 9.2 thousand people;

Olonets (1649) - 8.2 thousand people;

Lahdenpokhya (1945) - 7.5 thousand people.

The cities of Karelia, the list of which we have presented, are unique and amazing. All of them - both ancient and recently emerged - leave a wonderful mark on the soul and make you return to Karelia again and again.

In the northwestern region of Russia there is an amazingly beautiful region - the Republic of Karelia. Besides natural beauty forests, lakes, waterfalls, Karelia is famous for its ancient cities, temples and monasteries, as well as national parks.

Despite the fact that this region of northern nature does not have a warm climate, more and more tourists arrive here every year, each of whom is sure to find something interesting for themselves.

Our article will help you plan independent travel both in your own car and public transport from Saint-Petersburg. And if you are going to have an organized vacation, then you can select and book a suitable tour.

How to get there:

  • By car: from St. Petersburg along the Ring Road you need to get to the Vyborg Highway (exit Vyborg/Pargolovo). Further along the Vyborg highway to the traffic police post, turn right. We move through the villages of Yukki, Luppolovo, Vertemyagi to Agalatovo. Further along the A-129 highway to Priozersk. Further along the road to Sortavala, past the turn to Kuznechnoye, along new road bypassing Khiitoli, through Kurkiyoki, Ikhala, Yakkima - to the city of Lakhdenpokhya.
  • By bus: regular bus from the Northern Bus Station (Murino) runs daily at 7.20, 9.20, 12.20 and 18.50. Travel time is approximately 4 hours, fare is 550 rubles.
  • By train: from Ladozhsky station by train 350A St. Petersburg - Kostomuksha to Yakkima station. Travel time is 4 hours 32 minutes, fare is 1,668 rubles. Next take a regular bus to the Lakhdenpokhya Bus Station.

Lahdenpokhya – small town Karelia, in which several interesting buildings have been preserved. Unfortunately, some of them are in sad condition, for example the Lutheran Church from 1850. Now only the walls remain of the once beautiful building.

Another Lutheran church, built in 1935, also needs serious repairs. However, everyone can go inside and climb the bell tower, from where beautiful views open up.

Guests of Lahdenpokhya will be interested in walking along the streets of the city, where there are ancient wooden Finnish houses, and also visiting the Kurkijoki Local History Center, the exhibits of which tell about the history of the Northern Ladoga region.

Sortavala and Ruskeala

How to get there:

  • By car: from St. Petersburg along the Ring Road you need to get to the Vyborg Highway (exit Vyborg/Pargolovo). Further along the Vyborg highway to the traffic police post, turn right. We move through the villages of Yukki, Luppolovo, Vertemyagi to Agalatovo. Further along the A-129 highway to Priozersk. Further follow the signs to Sortavala.
  • By bus: A regular bus from the Northern Bus Station (Murino) runs daily. Travel time is approximately 5 hours, fare is 689 rubles.
  • By train: from Ladozhsky station by train 350A St. Petersburg - Kostomuksha to Sortavala station. Travel time 5 hours 33 minutes.

The city of Sortavala is small European town, until 1940 owned by Finland. That is why on almost every street in the city you can find many wooden and stone buildings in the Finnish style.

In addition to walking along the city streets, in Sortavala it is interesting to visit the Regional Museum of the Northern Ladoga Region, which contains various natural and industrial exhibits of the region, because the Sortavala region is famous for marble mining.

Sortavala is also interesting for tourists because it is from this city that ships depart for the island of Valaam.

Not far from Sortavala there is a famous Marble Canyon- Ruskeala. Marble has been mined in these places since the times when the Swedes owned the territory.

Ruskeala Park offers tourists to stroll through several walking routes, ride boats through the quarries, and also bungee jump. And since April 1, 2017, a unique underground route through mines and adits has been operating.

On the way to Ruskeala Park, it is worth a look at the ancient settlement of Paaso, at the Ruskeala waterfalls, and after the park you can visit the largest zoo of artiodactyl animals in Europe - GreenPark Zoo.

How to get there:

  • By car:
  • By bus: Bus station No. 2 St. Petersburg, bus No. 965. Travel time 8 hours 23 minutes.
  • By train: from the Ladozhsky station of St. Petersburg by train Lastochka 806CH St. Petersburg - Petrozavodsk (travel time 4 hours 55 minutes), train 012A (travel time 7 hours 40 minutes, cost from 800 rubles) or 022CH St. Petersburg - Murmansk ( travel time 6 hours 41 minutes, cost from 1241 rubles).

The capital of Karelia, Petrozavodsk, is the largest city in the Republic. It has its own airport, two water stations, Train Station. It is from here that tourists go on a trip to Kizhi Island.

It is pleasant to walk along the streets of the city; here you can see many architectural monuments, as well as various museums. Open for history buffs National Museum Republic of Karelia. The Maritime Museum reminds residents and guests of Petrozavodsk of the times of Peter I, when a shipyard was founded on the territory of the city. In addition, the city has the Museum of Industrial History of Petrozavodsk at the tractor plant, the Postal Museum of the Republic of Karelia, and the Museum of Precambrian Geology, the period of ancient fossils.

Onezhskaya embankment deserves special attention, as it is not only a wonderful place for walking, but also a unique museum of modern art.

In Petrozavodsk there is a stone Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, erected under the direction of an Italian architect.
Not far from the capital of Karelia is the village of Marcial Waters - the first balneological and mud resort in Russia, founded by Peter I.

How to get there:

  • By car: along the M18 highway to Petrozavodsk. Further follow the signs to Kondopoga.
  • By bus: Bus station No. 2 St. Petersburg, bus No. 965 to Petrozavodsk. Next, transfer to bus No. 133E Petrozavodsk-Kondopoga. Travel time is 10 hours 31 minutes.
  • By train: from Ladozhsky station in St. Petersburg by train 022Ч St. Petersburg - Murmansk to Kondopoga station (travel time 8 hours 4 minutes).

Kondopoga is the second largest city in Karelia after Petrozavodsk. Excavations on the territory of the city showed that the first human settlement in these places was formed around 1495.

On the territory of the city there is a wooden Assumption Church. In addition, in Kondopoga you can find several Carillons, compositions of bells. Every hour they make a melodious ringing.

Near Kondopoga there is the village of Kivach, famous for its waterfall of the same name, the highest flat waterfall in Europe. Another natural attraction of these places is Mount Sampo, which keeps many legends and secrets. Opens from the mountain beautiful view to the lake and forest.

Also in Kondopoga it is interesting to visit the oldest hydroelectric power station in Russia and the Konchezersky iron smelting plant, built by order of Peter I.

How to get there:

  • By car: along the M18 highway connecting St. Petersburg and Murmansk.
  • By bus: Bus station No. 2 St. Petersburg, bus No. 965. Travel time is 5 hours 15 minutes. The fare is 617 rubles.

Olonets is one of the oldest cities in Karelia and the northern part of Russia. The uniqueness of this city lies in the preserved layout of the 18th century and in the unusual landscape - Olonets is located on a flat area between two rivers.

There are many churches and cathedrals in the city. In the center of Olonets, the rivers formed a small island on which the Cathedral of the Icon of the Mother of God of Smolensk, built in 1752, is located.

It is also interesting to visit the Church of Frol and Lavra - a striking example of wooden Novgorod architecture of the 17th century, the Church of the Holy Cross of the Church of Ingria, and the Assumption Church. Not far from the city is the village of Interposelok, where you can visit Vazheozersky monastery, founded in the 16th century.

Connoisseurs of ethnographic collections should visit the first local history museum of Karelia - the Museum of Livvik Karelians named after N.T. Prilukin. Also in the city is the Olonets Art Gallery, where paintings by Karelia artists are collected.

Medvezhyegorsk

How to get there:

  • By car: along the M18 highway connecting St. Petersburg and Murmansk.
  • By train: from Ladozhsky station in St. Petersburg by train 022Ч St. Petersburg - Murmansk to Medvezhya Gora station (travel time 9 hours 56 minutes).

The history of the fairly young city of Medvezhyegorsk began during the First World War with the construction of a railway connecting the Barents Sea and St. Petersburg. Later, the famous White Sea-Baltic Canal passed here. That is why railroad station Bear Mountain and History Museum railway transport are of particular interest to city guests.

The city has many attractions, and the nature in these places of Karelia is especially beautiful and surrounded by many legends and secrets. One of these places of power is the abandoned village of Pegrema. Also, nature lovers will be interested in the Vodlozersky National Park. There are hiking and water hiking trails along the way, along which you will encounter monuments of wooden architecture, sites and burials of ancient people.

In Medvezhyegorsk there is a City Museum in the former building of the White Sea Canal Administration of the NKVD of the USSR, where you can see various household items of the ancient population of these places and get acquainted with the exhibition “ Small city in the Great War,” which tells about the events of the Great Patriotic War, and also learn the history of the construction of the White Sea Canal.

Another museum dedicated to the history of the White Sea-Baltic Canal is located in the city of Povenets. Here it is also interesting to visit the Sandarmokh tract and the memorial cemetery for the victims of the construction of the White Sea Canal.

How to get there:

  • By car: along the M18 highway connecting St. Petersburg and Murmansk.
  • By train: from Ladozhsky station in St. Petersburg by train 022Ч St. Petersburg - Murmansk to Kem station (travel time 15 hours 7 minutes).

Old northern city Kem is located on the banks of the river of the same name. The buildings of the city are mostly small wooden houses, representing striking examples of traditional architecture of the North.

In the center of the city is the Assumption Cathedral. The wooden temple is more than 300 years old, and it was erected without a single nail. Not far from the Cathedral is the Pomorie Museum, the exhibits of which give a complete picture of the life of the local population - the Pomors.

In the vicinity of Kemi there are also many interesting places. For example, in the village of Krivoy Porog there is an impressive Krivoporozhskaya hydroelectric power station.

26 kilometers from the city of Kem in Lake Onega there are 2 unusual islands– German and Russian. The islands have preserved places where ancient peoples lived.

In the village of Rabocheostrovsk on Popov Island there is an equally interesting attraction - the scenery from the filming of P. Lungin's film "The Island": a wooden church, a sunken barge, piers made of boards, stone shores - all this was left after filming.

Entertainment

Troll Park

Address: Kulikovo village, Lakhdenpokhsky district, Republic of Karelia.
Website: www.mishkina-skazka.ru
Telephone: +7 911 231 90 61
Price: 450 rubles - adults, 350 rubles - children. Locals (Karelia, Priozersky district) - discount upon presentation of a passport.
How to get there:
From St. Petersburg by car- along the highway (A-121) St. Petersburg-Priozersk-Sortavala, go to the border of the Leningrad region with Karelia. After 200 m, turn left to Khiitola (Kulikovo). After 4 km, climb uphill, at the top of the hill on the right there are pink stones, to the right into the forest. If you have reached the railway crossing, then you have already passed 700 meters.
From the side Sortovala by car- along the Sortavala-St. Petersburg highway (A-121), before reaching 200 m to the border of Karelia and the Leningrad region, turn right to Khiitola, then as described above.
By bus- from the Devyatkino metro station (Severny Bus Station) the St. Petersburg – Petrozavodsk bus leaves at 9:20 am. Buy a ticket to Kulikovo and at 12:40 the bus will arrive in the village. Kulikovo, which is 5 minutes from Troll Park.
By train- the train St. Petersburg - Kostomuksha departs from Ladozhsky Station at 14:48. Take a ticket to Khiitol (note, it does not run every day - check the schedule on the carrier’s website).
GPS coordinates: 61°11’01.0″N 29°46’51.4″E , 61.183600, 29.780945

A fabulous Troll Park has opened in the enchanted Karelian forest on the ruins of a Finnish farm. More than 50 figures from 40 cm to 4 meters presented under open air. Mysteriously, the Trolls were taken by surprise by dawn and froze in unusual positions. What do we know about these mysterious creatures? Some say that Trolls steal children and kidnap beautiful girls. Others say that Trolls love wealth and hunt for gold and precious stones. Are they good or evil? Scary or cute? Can they harm us or are tales about Trolls just inventions of Scandinavian elders? Here you will find answers to these questions.

  • trail over 500 meters
  • more than 50 figures (trolls, mermaids, sirins, nagas, dragons)
  • mini-farm with small piglets and rabbits, goats and chickens, you can pet them and feed them.
  • hammocks
  • children's trolling (rope ride)
  • wild musical instruments
  • master classes for children and adults
  • secret troll trail
  • interactive games (big slingshots, pillow fight on a log)
  • colored crystal and treasure hunt (found crystal is a gift)

Zoo Greenpark Karelia

Address: Sortavala, village. Kirkkolahti
Telephone:+7 921 622-97-93
Website: http://www.zoogreenpark.ru/
Operating mode: autumn-winter from 10:00 - 18:00 (box office until 17:00), from 05/01/17 from 10:00-19:00 (box office until 18:00)
Price: 400 rubles adult ticket.
How to get there: In the city of Sortavala you need to drive in the direction of Petrozavodsk, following the main road. After the city of Sortavala, after about 10 km there will be a large intersection, at which you need to turn left following the sign for the village of Vyartsilya and drive under the railway bridge. Drive 31.5 km in this direction, then on the right there will be a sign for the Recreation Center “Black Stones”, turn, drive 10 km, follow the signs, there will be three of them. Coordinates 61° 59′ 27.38″ N, 30° 46′ 22.97″ E

The Greenpark Zoo near Sortavala will not leave either adults or children indifferent. This is the largest zoo of artiodactyl animals in Europe, located on an area of ​​30 hectares on the territory of the Black Stones recreation center.

The inhabitants of the zoo are not only various types of deer and bulls, ponies, roe deer, fallow deer, but also many other interesting species, including those listed in the Red Book. In addition, at the zoo you can meet ostriches, different types and breeds of birds, as well as foxes, raccoons and other animals.

For children, there is a petting zoo on the territory, where there are no nets or fences, and the animals can be petted and fed. The children's zoo is home to dwarf sheep, fawns, Cameroonian goats, rabbits, Shetlen ponies and other animals.

The zoo offers excursions, but tourists are also offered independent walks. There are route signs throughout the entire territory, and at each paddock there are signs with the name of the species and brief description its characteristics and habitat.

Famous islands of Karelia

How to get there:

  • From St. Petersburg by boat as part of excursion groups.
  • From Priozersk by meteor: travel time 1 hour, cost about 2000 rubles. There and back again.
  • From Sortavala by meteor - travel time 50 minutes. In summer, meteors occur daily at 9.00, 11.00, 13.15 and 16.00. Round trip fare includes walking tour: Mon-Fri and Sunday - 2300 rub./person, Saturday - 2570 rub./person.
  • From Pitkäranta, meteors leave the pier of the Long Beach recreation center. Travel time 1 hour. The cost of round trip travel includes a walking tour: Mon-Fri and Sunday - 2460 rubles per person, Saturday - 2750 rubles per person.

Valaam Island – unique place with my unique nature, climate, architecture, people. Every year, pilgrims and tourists from all over the world come here to touch these holy places.

There are many spiritual places on the island. Of course, the main temple of the island is the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery, the construction of which dates back to the 14th century. On the territory of the monastery there is the Valaam Church, Archaeological and Natural Museum-Reserve, which tells about the history of the island.

The island itself is very green; after a walk along it you can visit the monasteries: Konevsky Igumensky monastery, Resurrection (Red) monastery, Gethsemane yellow monastery, St. Nicholas monastery, St. Vladimir monastery. Another monastery is located on the island of Putsaari. Visiting the skete is possible only with the blessing of the abbot.

The Kizhi Museum-Reserve is a unique open-air museum of wooden architecture. There are about 76 buildings collected here, which will take more than one day to explore.

Of course, the most grandiose building on the island is the Church of the Transfiguration. The temple can be seen from anywhere on the island. Like all Kizhi buildings, the temple was built without a single nail. The 22 domes, handmade from pine, look especially beautiful.

In addition to churches and temples, there are other buildings on the island: mills, peasant houses, baths, barns. In the interiors of these buildings, the life and traditions of ancient northern settlements have been preserved as much as possible.

The museums of Kizhi Island contain unique collections of ancient Russian icons, paintings, weaving, and wood carvings. Also among the exhibits you can find various archival documents and drawings that give an idea of ​​how the main buildings of the island were built and restored.

Natural attractions of Karelia

Coordinates: 61.7551484, 31.4160496
How to get there by car: On the Sortavala-Petrozavodsk highway you need to turn towards Lake Ruokoyarvi. Then continue straight along the dirt road until you reach the sign “White Bridges Waterfall”. After this you need to walk 2-2.5 km.

Not far from the village of Leppäsilta there is a picturesque White Bridges waterfall. Its height reaches 19 meters, which is almost 2 times higher than the famous Karelian Kivach waterfall. However, due to its inaccessibility (to get to the waterfall you need to walk about 2 kilometers along a forest road), tourists do not visit these places very often. The nature around the waterfall is very picturesque; you can often see various forest animals here.

Coordinates: 65.762970, 31.074407
How to get there by car: along the M18 St. Petersburg–Murmansk highway to the village of Loukhi, then along highway 110 km west to the village of Pyaozersky.
Website: http://paanajarvi-park.com/

The national park is located around the picturesque Lake Paanajärvi. Its territory is a unique natural complex consisting of mountain peaks, deep gorges, numerous lakes, swamps and rivers with noisy rapids and waterfalls. There are several hiking, water-walking and snowmobile tourist routes of varying complexity and length in the park.

Coordinates: 62°29’9″N 33°40’26″E
How to get there by car: along the M18 St. Petersburg–Murmansk highway to the sign for the village of Girvas (70 km after Petrozavodsk), then at the central intersection in the village you need to turn left and follow for 10-15 minutes to the bridge and the hydroelectric power station.

50 km from Kondopoga in the village of Girvas there is a unique natural object with a history of more than 3 billion years - Girvas volcano. This is the oldest paleovolcano on earth. It is surprising that it was discovered quite recently - about 60 years ago. Now there is no mountain or crater here. However, scientists have found a lot of evidence of the once former activity of the volcano: in the bed of the Suna River you can see a one and a half meter magmatic “tongue”, the lava field extends for a thousand square kilometers, and the river bank is formed by solidified magma.

Coordinates: 63.106814, 32.641242
How to get there by car: Drive through Sortavala or Petrozavodsk to the villages of Gimoly or Sukkozero. Then follow the GPS coordinates to the nearest parking lot.

The most mysterious mountain of Karelia, Vottovaara, is located near the villages of Sukkozero and Gimoly. Scientists consider this place a unique geological monument, and residents of nearby villages consider it a concentration of evil forces. There are numerous stone structures on the mountain, the history of which is full of legends and secrets. It is believed that in ancient times there was a cult complex here. The trees also amaze with their bizarre shape.

All this gives rise to a wide variety of legends, from shamans living on this mountain to UFOs.

Get to know others no less interesting places Karelia you can in our article Monasteries, petroglyphs, quarries and other attractions of Lake Onega

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The Republic of Karelia is located in the north-west of the European part of the RSFSR, bordering Finland, between the Baltic, Former and Barents seas. The republic has a vast area of ​​180.5 thousand square kilometers, and at the same time its total population is just over 700 thousand people. There are only 13 cities on the Karelian territory, the largest is the capital - Petrozavodsk, the cities of Kondopoga, Segezha, Kostomuksha can also be classified as large settlements.

Detailed map of Karelia


Online map of Karelia

This map allows you to explore the republic and individual cities in various viewing modes. To study the map in detail, you need to enlarge it:

The main landscape of Karelia is a hilly plain with obvious traces of glaciers: the remains of ancient rocks, ridges, ridges, and lake basins. To the west, the area rises, turning into the Western Karelian Upland; wet, swampy lowlands are found on the sea coasts and in the vicinity of lakes.
The climate is transitional (from continental to maritime), so winters in Karelia are long, warm, humid, summers are cool and damp, the climate is generally unstable, windy, and the weather changes frequently. Average temperature fluctuations are -10-14 Celsius in winter – +14-16 in summer. Tourists are especially attracted by the white nights in summer and the opportunity to see the splendor of the northern lights in winter.
Karelia rightfully bears the nickname “country of lakes and forests”; forests of extraordinary beauty (about 50 percent of the total area) hide picturesque, cleanest lakes, of which there are more than 61 thousand, the water surface occupies about a quarter of the republic’s area! The largest lakes are Ladoga and Onega (as well as Vygozero, Segozero, Topozero, Pyaozero, etc.), rivers (the total number of which is about 27 thousand) - Vyg, Vodla, Kovda, Kem, Shuya, Suna.
In terms of opportunities for hiking, skiing, cycling and water tourism, hunting and fishing, the region is in no way inferior to the popular Transbaikalia and the Urals. Two large protected areas: “Kostumuksha” reserve and “Kivach”, part of the Kandalaksha reserve, three natural complex, having the status national parks– “Vodlozersky”, “Kalevalsky” and “Paanajärvi”, a huge number of various nature reserves - in the region there is something to see, even for the most demanding tourist.
In addition, more than 4 thousand various cultural, historical, ethnographic, archaeological and natural objects are offered to the attention of residents and guests of the republic: two museum-reserves: “Kizhi” and “Valaam” with their unique story and architecture, complexes of petroglyphs of the White Sea and Lake Onega, rune-singing villages on the White Sea, the beauty of the Kivach waterfall, the healing springs of the Marcial Waters resort, the mysterious labyrinths of the Solovetsky Islands and the Kuzov seids and the Vottovaara mountains, the architecture of the ancient villages of Kinerma, Sheltozero, Rubcheyla, Korza, Manga, ancient volcanoes, numerous monasteries and temples. You should not ignore the capital of the republic, which has in its luggage 205 different objects of historical and cultural heritage Russia: original architectural ensembles, city churches, interesting residential buildings, many parks and squares.

Basic moments

Karelia, northern pearl international tourism Russia, – link tourist route"Blue Road" connecting the country with Norway, Sweden, Finland.

The delightful nature of Karelia, the original culture of the peoples inhabiting it, architectural masterpieces and religious shrines attract travel lovers and admirers of beauty here at any time of the year. Here you can ski and sled, kayak and raft, hunt, fish, and get acquainted with unique architectural, cultural and historical sights. IN last years“Green” ecological routes are very popular, including visits to national parks and protected areas, as well as ethnographic tours that provide the opportunity to visit Karelian, Pomeranian, and Vepsian settlements that have a centuries-old history.

History of Karelia

Back in the 7th-6th centuries BC. e. people began to settle on the territory of Karelia. This is evidenced by the world famous Karelian petroglyphs discovered on east coast Lake Onega, near the village of Besov Nos. There are ancient images in the Belomorsky region of Karelia, at the mouth of the Vyg River. It is known that in the 1st century BC. e. Finno-Ugric tribes, Karelians, Vepsians and Sami lived here. At the beginning of our era, Slavic tribes appeared on the shores of the White Sea, bringing here the culture of cultivating the land.

With the emergence of Kievan Rus in the 9th century, the Karelian lands found themselves in its sphere of influence. After the breakup of this ancient state Karelia became part of the Novgorod Republic, and in 1478, together with other lands of Veliky Novgorod, became part of the Russian state.

In the 16th-17th centuries, the Swedes, who laid claim to this territory, undertook another expansion to the east, and, as a result of the three-year Russian-Swedish war, in 1617, under the Treaty of Stolbovo, Russia ceded the Karelian Isthmus to Sweden. In the next century, according to the Treaty of Nystadt (1721), which ended the Northern War, this part of the land returned to Russia.

Since 1923, Karelia had the status of an Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1990, the Supreme Council of Karelia adopted a declaration on the state sovereignty of the Karelian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and the following year it was renamed the Republic of Karelia. On March 31, 1992, the Republic of Karelia, having signed a federal agreement, became a full-fledged subject Russian Federation and became part of the Northwestern Federal District of Russia.

Karelia has its own coat of arms, anthem and flag, and its capital is the city of Petrozavodsk.

Capital of Karelia


The emergence of the main city of the Republic of Karelia is associated with the name of Peter the Great and dramatic historical events beginning of the 18th century: Russia’s access to Baltic Sea, the reorganization of the state in a “European manner”, the rapid development of industrial production.

In 1703, at the mouth of Lake Onega, on the banks of the Lososenka River, they began to build the Petrovsky plant, which became the largest weapons factory in Russia. The Petrovskaya Sloboda arose around it, where artisans, soldiers, and officials of the mining department lived. According to the decree of Catherine II, in 1777 this settlement received the status of a city, and in 1781 Petrozavodsk became the center of the Olonets province. The first governor of the region was the poet and nobleman Gavrila Derzhavin.


Business card of Petrozavodsk – Old city, where are located architectural buildings XVIII-XIX centuries. Among the most famous are the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral (1823), the Exaltation of the Cross Cathedral (1852), the Solomensky Pogost with the Church of the Apostles Peter and Paul (1781), and the Stretenskaya Church (1798).

The capital of Karelia is the central hub tourism infrastructure republics. From here, roads and railways diverge, leading to the main attractions of the region.

Petrozavodsk station

Historical and cultural sights

The uniqueness of the culture of Karelia is a symbiosis of the heritage of four indigenous peoples who have lived together on this land for ten centuries - Karelians, Finns, Vepsians, and Russians. Many architectural and historical landmarks located in the Republic of Karelia have the status of national heritage of Russia, and some are on the list World Heritage UNESCO.

The three main treasures in the treasury of Karelia are Kizhi, Valaam and the Solovetsky Islands. These cultural and spiritual centers of world significance annually welcome hundreds of thousands of guests who want to get acquainted with the vibrant and original historical sights of the republic, visit unique museums, and learn about the artistic and folklore traditions of Karelia.

Kizhi

Kizhi is one of one and a half thousand islands located in Lake Onega. On the island there is the Kizhi Pogost, an outstanding monument of ancient wooden architecture in the north of Russia, included in the UNESCO World Heritage List.

This architectural ensemble was created in the 18th century. In 1714, local residents, using their own funds, built a magnificent twenty-two-domed Church of the Transfiguration here. Half a century later, the Church of the Intercession grew not far from it, and then a slender bell tower, which gave the ensemble integrity and completeness. Art historians believe that this composition probably embodied the believers’ idea of ​​the essence of the divine universe.

The architectural ensemble of the Kizhi Pogost, located in the southern part of the island, became the basis on which a huge open-air museum-reserve was created. It presents monuments of ancient architecture, household items (about 30 thousand exhibits), religious relics, including 500 icons of the 16th-19th centuries. All this was created over the centuries in Russian, Karelian, Vepsian villages located in different regions of Obonezhye and in the villages of South and North Karelia.

In addition to the monuments that represent the main exposition of the complex, there are several ancient villages.

Kizhi shrouded in evening haze

Over the half-century of its existence, the museum has been replenished with unique exhibits: one of the oldest surviving wooden churches in Russia - the 14th-century Church of the Resurrection of Lazarus, several chapels, and more than twenty peasant houses - were transported here. Among the transported structures were barns, barns, bathhouses and other outbuildings.

In the central part of the island there are the villages of Yamka and Vasilyevo, in the north there is an exhibition center, the exhibition of which introduces tourists to the culture of the Russian population of Pudozh, a separate sector is dedicated to the culture of the Pryazha Karelians.


The museum-reserve is not only a repository of masterpieces with a century-old history, but also a research center where they are engaged in the revival of folk traditions. The museum hosts folk festivals, folk games, and Days of Folk Crafts.

Today, divine services are held in ancient temples, and bells ring in Kizhi belfries.

Infrastructure facilities - a cafe, a bar, souvenir kiosks, a post office and a first-aid post - are located in the southern part of the island. There is also a pier from where you can go on a boat trip along the route called “Kizhi Necklace”. During the trip, you will be able to see the peculiar round dance of ancient chapels scattered in different parts of the island of Kizhi and on neighboring islands. Each of them is unique, different from the other, and located in its own natural and historical environment.

The tour takes 3 hours. Cost: 100 rubles per person.

Kizhi Island, Karelia

Recently a new one appeared on the island of Kizhi excursion route– ecological trail. Considering that the museum-reserve is located in a unique natural region of Karelia, it was stretched for almost 3 km and equipped with viewing platforms, from where magnificent panoramas of the territory, cut by traces of ancient earthquakes and a glacier that descended about 12 thousand years ago, open up. From here you can watch rare birds and admire the mixed-grass meadows of Kizhi Island. Along the route there are information stands and places for rest.

The entire island is under the jurisdiction of the museum-reserve, and for an individual visit you need to pay 500 rubles to enter it. A ticket for pensioners costs 300 rubles, for students – 200 rubles, children under 16 years old can visit the island for free.

You can book a tour right on the spot. Choice excursion programs are large, their duration is from a quarter of an hour to three hours, the cost is from 200 to 1000 rubles per person.

Balaam

In the northern part of Lake Ladoga is the Valaam archipelago, whose name was given by the island of Valaam. The world-famous monastery built on it also bears this name. The history of the Valaam Monastery dates back to the 10th-11th centuries. Since then, an outstanding landscape and architectural complex has gradually formed around it.

These places in Karelia were inhabited back in the 10th century, and around the same time the first Orthodox monks appeared here. It is reliably known that in the 14th century there was already a monastery here. In 1611 it was devastated by the Swedes, and stood in ruins for more than a hundred years. Restoration of the monastery began only in 1715, but the wooden buildings were destroyed by fires in the mid-18th century. Large-scale construction of monastery buildings made of stone began in 1781. Churches, chapels, and outbuildings were erected here. Over time, roads were laid on the lands belonging to the monastery, dams were poured, canals were dug, bridges were erected and drainage structures were equipped.

The Christianly persistent and patient Valaam monks literally manually created a fertile soil layer on the rocky slopes of the island, adding soil brought from the mainland. Here they began to grow trees and garden crops that were unusual for these places.



The architectural decoration of the monastery and the man-made beauty of the surrounding landscape form a single whole with the unique nature of Valaam. It is so impressive that in the 19th century the island became a kind of workshop where Russian artists honed their skills in painting landscapes. Thus, the Valaam Monastery and the island itself were depicted in many paintings kept today in famous museums.

The magnificent stone monastery complex is the high-rise and semantic dominant of the entire Valaam archipelago. The central monastery estate includes the Transfiguration Cathedral, the cell buildings that frame it, hotels for pilgrims, the Holy Gate with the gateway church of Peter and Paul, the temples of the Assumption and the Life-Giving Trinity.


Valaam Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery, Karelia

The central estate is surrounded by the Intercession Chapel, the Church of the Reverend Fathers, near the walls of which lie the remains of the abbots of the monastery, monasteries and other buildings.

Operating temples are open to the public, but you must be dressed appropriately. Women wearing trousers, shorts, short skirts and bare heads will not be allowed entry. Shorts, T-shirts and tracksuits on men are also not acceptable.

Excursions to Valaam depart from Petrozavodsk and Ladoga region. As a rule, buses go to the city of Sortavala, from where in the warm season there are daily flights on the Meteor ship. Travel time by water is 1 hour.


When ordering an excursion in this city, you can choose one of two options: a short program, which includes a transfer, a walking tour of the monastery estate (from 2,300 rubles per person) or full program, which additionally includes a tour of a large territory called “New Jerusalem”, a visit to Nikon Bay, lunch in the refectory, as well as the opportunity to listen to church spiritual chants (from 3170 rubles per person).

If you are traveling by personal or rented water transport, you can moor at the pier in Monastyrskaya Bay.

Winter on Valaam travel companies organize ski tours and snowmobile trips.

Valaam Island in winter

Solovki


The Solovetsky Islands administratively belong to the Arkhangelsk region, but historically they are connected with Karelia and are located near its northern administrative boundaries in the White Sea. Most shortcut to Solovki lies just from the Karelian coast, and most of the tourist routes in Karelia include a visit to the Solovetsky archipelago.

It is located near the Arctic Circle and includes six large islands and about a hundred smaller ones. The coastline of Solovki is uniquely picturesque: it impresses travelers with boulder deposits along the sea, similar to the ruined walls of ancient cities, a wide strip of mixed forests and lakes scattered among them.

The archipelago has the status of a specially protected area, a historical, architectural and natural museum-reserve.



The architectural complex of the museum, the basis of which is the Solovetsky Monastery, is included in the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage List.

The most famous among the islands of the archipelago is Bolshoi Solovetsky Island. It is here that the only village of the archipelago and the main historical, spiritual and natural attractions of the museum-reserve are located: the monastery itself, the Ascension monastery on Sekirnaya Mountain, the Savvatievsky monastery, as well as the Isaac, Filipovskaya and Makarievskaya hermitages.


Some other shrines of the Solovetsky Monastery - monasteries, hermitages, as well as Stone labyrinths are located on the islands of Bolshaya Muksalma, Anzer and on Bolshoi Zayatsky Island.

The Solovetsky Monastery, one of the largest spiritual and cultural centers in Russia, was founded in the 15th century by the monks Zosima and Herman. The monastery is known for its outstanding role in the history of the strengthening of the Russian state in the northern territories.

The monastic architectural ensemble includes archaeological complexes of the pre-Christian era, the grandiose Kremlin - a powerful fortress built from wild boulders, monumental white-stone temple buildings, a system of man-made canals connecting the island lakes, and an ancient botanical garden.

In the 20s of the last century, the Bolsheviks considered the construction of the monastery quite suitable place for the arrangement of places of detention for criminals and “unreliable” citizens. It should be said that criminals and heretics were previously isolated within the walls of the Solovetsky Monastery. But if over the previous four centuries about 300 prisoners languished here, then in less than two decades more than a hundred thousand people were in the prison cells of the “Solovetsky Special Purpose Camp” located here, most of whom never left Solovki. Their ashes rest in unmarked mass graves.

In 1990, the Solovetsky Monastery returned to the fold Orthodox Church, gradually restoring its role in the spiritual life of Russia. Tens of thousands of pilgrims and tourists come here every year to see the majestic monastery complex covered in legends.

It is most convenient to get to the Solovetsky Islands from the cities of Kem and Belomorsk.

From the pier of the village of Rabocheostrovsk, located 12 km from Kem, motor ships depart twice a day from June to September. The cost of a one-way ticket is 1,500 rubles for an adult, 750 rubles for children from 3 to 10 years old, for children under three years old the trip is free. Travel time – 2 hours.

The same cost of tickets for passengers traveling to the Solovetsky Islands from the Fishing Port in Belomorsk. The ship, which sails daily from June to September, travels for 4 hours, and has 4 comfortable passenger lounges, a café, a promenade deck and even a library on board.

In the kingdom of northern nature


Karelia is a kind of georeserve. This pristine region preserves traces of the geological history of Northern Europe. Here you can see the consequences of cataclysms that shaped the appearance of the planet long before the appearance of people. Local landscapes that preserve the memory of prehistoric earthquakes, volcanic eruptions Falls of giant meteorites make a tremendous impression on tourists, and students of geological faculties come to these parts to study the classic traces of glaciers that once advanced onto the continent from the North Sea. Colossal masses of ice that melted about 12 thousand years ago left their “ Business Cards" - huge boulders, deep grooves in the rocks, and ridges of stones, as if collected by the bucket of a giant bulldozer - moraines. All these titanic transformations of the earth's surface exposed many placers of useful minerals and even precious stones.

Almost half of Karelia is covered by forests, a quarter of its area is occupied by numerous lakes. The landscape is complemented by swamps and picturesque rocks, overgrown with moss.

Basics natural wealth Karelia - forest. Coniferous and mixed taiga forests are the habitat of reindeer, bears, wolves, lynxes, moose, wild boars, and there are about 270 species of birds.


Under the green canopy of pine trees, bushes of blueberries, lingonberries, wild rosemary, crowberries, forest herbs and mosses, including many medicinal ones, grow luxuriantly. These pine forests - best places for collecting porcini mushrooms. In the undergrowth grow willow, bird cherry, rowan, juniper, alder, including a valuable species with black wood.

Another rare tree, Karelian birch, is found in small areas in the forests of the southern region of the country. This short tree, recognizable by its uneven, bumpy or ribbed trunk, is one of the most valuable tree species on the planet. Its distinctive feature is its very beautiful patterned wood. Products made from Karelian birch decorate both simple Karelian houses and the most famous palaces in the world.


There are 27 thousand rivers in Karelia, and more than 60 thousand lakes. Figuratively speaking, each Karelian family owns one lake. Someone “got” Ladoga, and someone is the “owner” of the lambushka - that’s what the Karelians call forest lakes without sources.

The country's lake-river system is unique: there is no such ratio of land and water surface anywhere else.

Lake Ladoga (17.7 thousand km²) and Lake Onega (9.9 thousand km²), most of whose water area is located in the Republic of Karelia, are the largest in Europe. The northern coasts of these lakes are incredibly picturesque - the Kizhi and Ladoga skerries - rocky islands separated by narrow straits and making up archipelagos.

The most large rivers Karelia - Vodla, Vyg, Kovda, Kem, Suna, Shuya. Karelian reservoirs are home to 60 species of fish, including whitefish, pike perch, trout, brown trout, salmon, pike, bream, and burbot.


The only inland sea in Russia, the White Sea, is located on the territory of the Republic of Karelia. In ancient times it was called “Snake Bay” due to its curved, serpentine coastline. The picturesque rocky coastline, covered with beautiful deciduous and coniferous forests, healing air, and excellent fishing attract romantics, yachtsmen, and sports fishermen to the shores of the harsh White Sea. Unfortunately, holidays here are only available in short summer, but most of the year the sea is covered with ice.

It is best to travel around Karelia in summer or winter, but it is worth considering that the weather here is unstable at any time of the year, since the territory of the republic is located in a cyclone zone. IN summer months shipping is established here, and at this time it is pleasant to see the sights, many of which are located in rather “wild” corners. Another highlight of summer holidays in Karelia is the white nights; in June the sun does not set 22 hours a day.


Summer in Karelia is usually cool: in July in the north of the republic the average is +14 °C; in the southern regions - about +18 °C, but here, sometimes, heat reigns for 2-3 weeks, and the temperature can exceed +30 °C. You need to be prepared for such a whim of nature as prolonged rains - they are not uncommon in the summer.

During the winter season, the weather can also be capricious. The Karelian winter can be called mild (the average temperature of the coldest months is about -13 °C), but there is always a chance that frost will strike and the temperature will drop to -35 °C.

Natural attractions of Karelia

In Karelia, almost a million hectares (5% of the republic’s territory) are occupied by state-protected national parks, nature reserves, and wildlife sanctuaries.


Near the Arctic Circle, on the border of Karelia with Finland and Murmansk region, spread over an area of ​​104 thousand hectares national park"Paanajärvi." Travelers are attracted to this remote corner by virgin forests that occupy most of the park's territory, clean forest air, clear waters of rivers and lakes and the opportunity to be alone with nature.

In the park you can climb to the top of Mount Nuorunen - the most high point Karelia (576.7 m), go on a trip to the small but deep-water lake Paanayavari (124 m), hidden in a deep gorge, admire the view of the Olanga River with its delightful cascading waterfall Kivakkakoski, consisting of seven ledges. There are three more amazing waterfalls here - Mutkakoski, Mäntykoski, Selkäkoski, which also deserve attention.

For tourists, the park has ecological trails equipped with bridges over streams and swamps. Information signs and signs will guide you along the way.

Here you can rent a wooden house (without amenities) with a stove, bunks; in the yard you will find a place for a fire, a woodpile with firewood, boilers, and axes.


Camping sites and, of course, bathhouses are available for tourists. There is parking (in other places vehicles prohibited from being present). You can rent a motor boat, kayak, or snowmobile.


Nearby is the village of Pyaozersky, where the park’s visitor center operates. Here you can get permission for fishing, picking berries and mushrooms, and walking around Lake Paanayavari on a boat or a wooden sailing boat “Nadezhda”.

Hunting, river rafting, and collecting medicinal plants are prohibited in the park. Minerals and rocks cannot be removed from here either.

There is no electricity or cell phone service in this protected area.

Vodlozersky National Park

In Vodlozersky national park, which was awarded the status of a biosphere reserve by UNESCO, each guest can spend time according to their ideas about relaxation. Fans of leisurely educational trips can stay in cozy houses scattered on the banks of a lake or river, and from time to time take excursions on a motor boat around the islands of Vodlozero, admiring the boundless Vodlozero expanses, spread out under the low-hanging sky. During your trip, you can visit villages located on the islands with a centuries-old history, where today the ancient rituals of the local residents are being revived, and ancient temples are being restored to their former appearance.

Fans of active recreation can go on specially laid routes for hiking and skiing, they also have snowmobile safaris and sport fishing at their disposal.



The unique Kalevala National Park was created to preserve a large tract of natural forests and the natural and cultural landscape, which became the environment in which the plot of the world famous Karelian epic “Kalevala” develops.

The local landscape is like a mosaic created from forests, swamps and lakes, the largest of which is Lake Lapukka, where game and fish have been hunted for centuries. Here you can see smokehouses for fish and bait holes for martens sunk into the ground.

The reserve is home to bears, and in the summer you can watch reindeer and their cubs mincing along the path along the river bank.

Reserve "Kivach"

In the southern part of Karelia there is the Kivach Nature Reserve, the oldest in Russia. 85% of its territory is occupied by specially protected forests; hunting and fishing are prohibited here, but you can pick mushrooms and berries for your own consumption (commercial picking is prohibited here).

The reserve is named after the waterfall, which for centuries has attracted travelers to this place with its beauty. Approaching the waterfall, you will see how the waters of the Suna River, bursting out of the basalt rocks through which it flows, thunder down from an eight-meter height in a heavy cast stream, forming a grandiose foaming whirlpool.

Waterfall "Kivach"

Today this natural miracle is the main attraction of the reserve and is part of the main excursion programs in Karelia.

The waterfall owes its fame to the famous Russian poet and first Karelian (at that time Olonets) governor Gabriel Derzhavin, who after visiting this place wrote an ode, which he called “Waterfall”. Today, not a single description of the Kivach waterfall is complete without the first lines of the work: “The mountain is falling like diamonds.”

Emperor Alexander II also honored the waterfall with his presence. On the occasion of his visit to Kivach, a road was paved. A bridge was built across the Suna, below the waterfall, for the distinguished guest, and near the waterfall itself, on the right side, a gazebo and a house for the night.

A visit to the waterfall, as well as the Nature Museum and Arboretum of the reserve will cost you 150 rubles (free admission for children, schoolchildren and students). You will have to pay an additional 65 rubles for the excursion.

Many people believe that best time For an excursion to this protected place it is winter, so the museum staff have prepared a special program “Tales of the Reserved Forest” for the winter season. It includes open-air theatrical performances, games, competitions, and sleigh rides. For children - tea with Santa Claus, meeting with fairy tale characters, sweet gifts.

The cost of visiting a two-hour show is 350 rubles.


The first Russian resort, Marcial Waters, is located 54 km north of the capital of Karelia. It was founded at the beginning of the 18th century by order of Peter I.

ABOUT healing power glandular mineral springs, on the basis of which the resort was built, local residents was known for a long time, and in 1719 medicinal properties waters were confirmed by research by court doctors.

The emperor, accompanied by his retinue, came here more than once for treatment. For his first visit, three wooden palaces and a large building with two dozen rooms were built here, along a long corridor of which one could go to the springs.

From pre-revolutionary times, pavilions built over the springs and the building of the Church of Peter and Paul have been preserved here. On their basis in 1946, the Museum of the History of the First Russian resort"Marcial Waters".



Today you can also spend time here with health benefits. The modern balneological resort “Marcial Waters” is the largest in northern Russia health complex, where there are well-equipped hydropathic clinics, mud baths with healing Gabozero mud, physiotherapy and other departments.

The sanatorium is surrounded by a forest, three sections of which are unique: a reserve where Karelian birch grows, a grove of elms and a deciduous forest with giant linden trees.

Active recreation in Karelia

The expanses of Karelia are a paradise for travelers who love thrill and those seeking individual acquaintance with unexplored corners of the Earth, as well as fishermen, hunters and simply sports lovers who flock here from all regions of Russia and neighboring northern countries.

For extreme sports enthusiasts and those who prefer leisure tourists - all-terrain vehicles and boats, ATVs, off-road bicycles, snowmobiles, helicopters. River rafting routes, horseback riding and skiing routes have been developed for them, as well as skating rinks, paintball fields and vast areas for hunting wild animals.

Lake Onega, Ladoga skerries, lakes Sandal, Segozero, Keret - the reservoirs through which they pass water routes for tourists traveling on kayaks, boats, boats, yachts.

An exciting and exciting adventure - rafting on the rivers of Karelia. Desperate tourists raft on catamarans, kayaks, rafts - small inflatable rafts. Beginners are offered easy, short routes (3-5 hours), usually along the Shuya River, overcoming simple rapids, which end with a picnic with a well-deserved “fighting 100 grams”. This extreme entertainment will cost you at least 3,100 rubles.

Rafting on the rivers of Karelia

Rafting on the Umba and Keret rivers with access to White Sea, during which, in the intervals between overcoming the rapids, you will be able to admire the changing landscapes and even have time to catch fish, will require you to part with an amount of 10,000 rubles.

The best cycling routes pass around Lakes Onega and Lake Ladoga, in the Ladoga region, South and Middle Karelia.

The winter season is the time for ski trips and snowmobile safaris, which give the opportunity to visit the hard-to-reach sights of Karelia, located, for example, in Zaonezhie, and most importantly - to fully enjoy the wonderful beauty of the snow-covered Karelian expanses.

Most of the routes are designed so that they can be completed by a person with average physical fitness: there are points for a planned stop where you can rest and have a snack. If you go on a long journey, you will always have the opportunity to stay at one of the recreation centers or guest houses located along your route.

The same high-speed transport that overcomes snow barriers will take you to one of the most famous islands of Karelia - Kizhi Island. A two-day snowmobile tour from Petrozavodsk to Kizhi with one night in a hotel will cost from 26,400 rubles.

Karelian cuisine

From time immemorial, Karelians consider fish to be the most respected food item. The most popular is lake fish, which in Karelia is sold steamed, fried, salted, dried, dried and even fresh. First and second courses are prepared from it, and added to salads.

The most revered dish of Karelia is fish soup, which you should definitely try. Here it is called "Kalaruokka". There are countless recipes for its preparation, but most often fish soup is cooked from whitefish, adding milk, cream, and butter.


A traditional stew made with white fish meat is called “Kalakeitto” in restaurant menus. Red fish soup (salmon) is a festive option, it is called “Lohikeitto” and is world famous. This dish, thanks to the addition of cream, has an excellent velvety flavor and is devoid of fishy smell. IN good restaurant this treat will cost you approximately 800 rubles.

Karelians often eat fish soup for breakfast, lunch and dinner, but the range of second courses here is not so wide. Mainly among them are products made from rye and wheat flour, potatoes and all kinds of cereals. Pancakes and flatbreads made from unleavened dough are served with porridge and mashed potatoes, generously flavored with butter.

In Karelia, porridge pies and fish pies are very popular, the unleavened dough for which is made from rye flour.


Delicious dishes here are prepared from the meat of wild animals - deer, elk, bear and forest products - mushrooms, berries. Be sure to try local berry fruit drinks, kvass, and delicious liqueurs. You should also treat yourself to aromatic Karelian honey.

The best restaurant in the Republic of Karelia, where national dishes are served, is considered to be “Karelian Gornitsa”, located in the center of Petrozavodsk. Many even call it a city landmark.

In remote corners of Karelia, as a rule, small establishments are available to tourists, where, however, as in any tourist region, international cuisine is presented: local, traditional European, Russian, Italian, Oriental, Mexican, fast food. Prices depend on the class of the establishment and the choice of dishes; a hearty lunch or dinner will cost from 500 to 3,000 rubles.

Where to stay

Living in Karelia has its own nuances. Large hotels can only be found in the capital. Stop here business people and tourists who have chosen Petrozavodsk as their base and go on excursions from here. There are premium hotels here, where you will have to shell out tens of thousands of rubles for a night’s stay, but you can find a cheaper hotel - about 2,000 rubles per day, or choose one of the motels - about 1,000 rubles per day.



Mostly, tourists prefer to stay in tourist complexes located in nature. As elite holiday you can choose camp sites that are located directly on the territory of nature reserves or historical monuments. And the most budget option in Karelia is to spend the night in tents in places specially designated for such recreation.

In general, tourist complexes have a wide price range of rooms from economy class to luxury class.


One of the largest hotel complexes Karelia is located in the village of Aleksandrovka (50 km from Petrozavodsk) and is located on the coast of Petrozero. Not far from it are two attractions - the Kivach nature reserve and the Marcial Waters resort. The complex includes a hotel and several cottages. Cost of living in a comfortable double room hotel room– 2500 rubles per day (for two). A day in a luxury cottage will cost 6,400 rubles. (for four).

The tourist base “The Thirteenth Cordon” attracts travelers with its location on the shores of the magnificent Lake Ladoga. Here you can stay in two-story cottages, divided into categories “economy” (from 1,500 rubles per person/day) and “luxury” (from 2,000 rubles per person/day).


A heavenly place, where you can feel complete unity with the nature of Karelia, is called the Kanapelka camp site, located on the coast of the Rasinselka Strait. Tourists have access to fishing equipment, a sauna, boats, and a fire pit equipped with everything necessary. You can pick berries and mushrooms right on the premises, and you will be fed with products from your own eco-farm. The cost of living in a comfortable cottage is from 6,000 to 9,000 rubles per day.

IN Lately so-called hamlets are popular. One of them is the Karelian farm, which is often called a men's settlement. Avid fishermen love to stay here. All conditions have been created for them, and the place itself is located in pine forest on the banks of the Syapsi River, not far from a large reservoir - Syamozero. Guest houses with all amenities and individual parking are available to vacationers. The cost of living is from 3000 rubles/day.

Karelia is one of the most beautiful regions of Russia, a land of taiga forests, lakes and ancient monuments

How to get there

The main airport of Karelia is located 12 km from Petrozavodsk and is named after the city (the old name was Besovets). It receives planes from different cities Russia and foreign countries. The cost of a flight on the Moscow – Petrozavodsk route starts from 3,600 rubles; travel time will be 1 hour 30 minutes – 1 hour 45 minutes. The airport accepts helicopters; there are also sites for them located in small towns in Karelia.

A railway line runs through the territory of Karelia from south to north. Trains from St. Petersburg to Petrozavodsk travel through the Karelian Isthmus and the stations of the Northern Ladoga region. The St. Petersburg – Kostomuksha train will take you to the west of the republic.

Bus traffic is well developed in Karelia. There are routes to St. Petersburg, Novgorod, Vologda and other cities.

Main highway, passing through the territory of Karelia - highway M18 St. Petersburg - Murmansk. The road surface is well-surfaced, but secondary roads are often bumpy dirt roads.

The Republic of Karelia in northern Russia is attractive to tourists for its archaeological, historical and cultural monuments, pristine nature and low population density. There are 13 cities and about 800 towns and villages in the republic. The population of Karelia is 618 thousand people. About 80% are urban residents. A third of them live in the capital – Petrozavodsk.

Also to major cities and tourist centers include Kostomuksha, Kondopoga, Olonets, Sortavala. Some of them date back to the Middle Ages, and cities such as Sortavala, Kem, Olonets, Petrozavodsk have historical status Russian cities. In a few settlements Karelia passes famous a tourist route, connecting Russia, Finland, Sweden and Norway. It's called "Blue Road".

The largest cities of Karelia

List of the largest cities in the region by population.

1. Petrozavodsk

By decree of Peter the Great it was founded in 1703. The capital and the only one in Karelia Big City. Located on Lake Onega. It has access to 5 seas thanks to a system of canals and rivers. There are many lakes and springs within the city. Onezhskaya embankment with a park of modern sculptures, Kamenny Bor, Holy Cross and Alexander Nevsky cathedrals are attractive for tourists. Granted the status of a city of military glory and a historical city.

Population – 279 thousand people.

2. Kondopoga

It is located 46 km from Petrozavodsk, on Lake Onega. First mentioned in 1495. In the 18th century, deposits of marble and ore were discovered. A hydroelectric power station was built in 1929. City status was granted in 1938. In 2001, the Ice Palace was opened - the only one in Karelia. In the surrounding area there is the Kivach waterfall and the Marcial Waters resort. The city's attractions include two carillons, with 18 and 23 bells.

Population – 30 thousand people.


3. Kostomuksha

The city is 30 km from the Russian-Finnish border. History dates back to the 70s last century, when the development of a new ore deposit and the construction of a mining and processing plant began. Has the status of a city since 1983. The main attractions are the Kostomuksha Nature Reserve, the Kalevalsky National Park, and ethnic villages famous for the art of rune singing. Every year the city hosts festivals of chamber and rock music and original songs.

Population – 29 thousand people.


4. Segezha

A city on the river of the same name, near Vygozero. The name translates as “light, pure.” It was founded in 1914 as a small railway station on the Murmansk road. In 1943 it was given city status. Since the 30s, a plant producing paper containers has been operating in Segezha - a city-forming enterprise. The Voitsky Padun waterfall, the archaeological monument - the village of Nadvoitsy, and the Museum Center are attractive for tourists.

Population – 26 thousand people.


5. Sortavala

Founded by the Swedes in 1632, although a Karelian settlement existed on this site back in the 12th century. Until 1918 - Serdobol. Until 1940 – part of Finland. Situated on Lake Ladoga. The only city in Karelia with surviving ancient buildings. On the list of historical cities. Of interest are the Ladoga Museum, the modern gallery of Kronid Gogolev, a wood carver, natural Park Ruskeala. Valaam Island is 40 km away.

Population – 18 thousand people.


6. Medvezhyegorsk

A city on the coast of Lake Onega. It was created in 1916 as a settlement under construction railway. Until 1938 it was called Bear Mountain. The railway station is still called that way. In the 30s, the construction management of the White Sea Canal was located here, and 3 prison camps were created. 15 km away is the Sandarmokh tract, a former place where prisoners were executed. The area is famous for its shungite deposits.

Population – 14 thousand people.


7. Kem

The name translates as “Big River”. It was founded in the 14th century. Received city status in 1785. Located on the Kem River. Attractive for tourists by the Kem skerries - a group of rocky sea ​​islands. Among the valuable architectural monuments are the Assumption Cathedral, built 3 centuries ago from wood, and the Annunciation Cathedral of the beginning of the last century. The Pomorie Museum is opened in the building of the former treasury.

Population – 11 thousand people.


8. Pitkäranta

Until 1940 it was part of Finland. In the same year it was given city status. The name translates as “Long Shore”. Located on Lake Ladoga. Founded in the 15th century. It developed rapidly in the 19th century after the discovery of ore deposits. It is famous for the beauty of the Ladoga skerries, the Uksinskaya ozovaya ridge, and the Yukankoski waterfall - the highest in Karelia. Of interest are fragments of the Mannerheim Line and a local history museum.

Population – 10 thousand people.


9. Belomorsk

It is located on the White Sea coast, at the mouth of the Vyg River. The first mention was in 1419. In 1938 it was given city status. Large railway junction and sea ​​port. Part of the White Sea-Baltic Canal. Water tourism on the Shuya, Okhta, and Suma rivers is popular. The main attraction is the Neolithic petroglyphs. The city has many monuments and memorials from the Soviet period. The Solovetsky Islands are located nearby.

Population – 9600 people.


10. Suoyarvi

It was founded in the 16th century. Located on the coast of the lake of the same name. The name translated from Finnish means “Swamp Lake”. Until 1940 it was part of Finland. Railway junction. In the surrounding area there is the Talvojärvi nature reserve with an extensive network of lakes and swamps. Historical objects include the railway station building at Kaipa station and the building of the House of Creativity, built in the 1920s.

Population – 8900 people.