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This is a list of places which are named or renamed after Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known by his alias Lenin. Some or all of the locations in former Soviet republics and satellites were renamed (frequently reverting to pre-Soviet names) after the fall of the Soviet Union, while Russia and aligned countries (mainly Belarus) retained the names of the thousands of streets, avenues, squares, regions, towns, and cities that were given Lenin's name as part of his cult of personality.[1][2][3]

Cities, towns, settlements and districts[edit]

Former Soviet Union[edit]

Azerbaijan[edit]

Armenia[edit]

  • Leninakan (1924–1990) — Gyumri

Kazakhstan[edit]

  • Leninsk (1958–1995) — Baikonur
  • Leninogorsk (1941–2002) — Ridder

Kyrgyzstan[edit]

Moldova[edit]

Russia[edit]

Tajikistan[edit]

Ukraine[edit]

Uzbekistan[edit]

Eastern Europe[edit]

Hungary[edit]

Streets and squares[edit]

Almost every town in the Soviet Union had a street named after Lenin. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, some of streets and squares (primarily outside of Russia and Belarus) reverted to their former names or were given new ones. In Russia, there are still 5,000 streets named after Lenin.[4][5][6] This concerns also the names of city districts. Listed below are some of the streets named after Lenin, with an emphasis on those outside of the former USSR or its Eastern Bloc.

On 15 May 2015 President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko signed a bill into law that started a six months period for the removal of communist monuments and the mandatory renaming of settlements and (the many) streets and squares with names related to the communist regime.[7] Places in Crimea, the Donetsk People's Republic, and Luhansk People's Republic were not practically affected by this law due to their occupation by Russia.

Former Soviet Union[edit]

Armenia[edit]

Azerbaijan[edit]

Belarus[edit]

Estonia[edit]

  • Lenini prospekt (Lenin Prospekt), 1950–1994 – now Joala tänav, Narva[8]
  • Lenini puiestee (Lenin Avenue), ?–1991 – now Pikk tänav, Pärnu[8]
  • Lenini puiestee (Lenin Avenue), 1950–1991 – now Rävala puiestee, Tallinn[8]
  • V. I. Lenini puiestee (V. I. Lenin Avenue) – now Viru puiestee, Sillamäe[8]
  • Lenini tänav (Lenin Street), 1951–1990 – now Uus tänav, Kuressaare[8]
  • Lenini tänav (Lenin Street), ?–1989 – now Kesktänav, Põltsamaa[8]
  • Lenini tänav (Lenin Street), ?–1994 – Tapa[8]
  • Lenini tänav (Lenin Street), ?–1989 – now Kesktänav and Riia tänav, Valga[8]
  • Lenini tänav (Lenin Street), ?–1990 – now Jüri tänav, Võru[8]
  • Lenini väljak (Lenin Square), ?–1991 – now Riiamäe plats, Tartu[8]
  • V. I. Lenini tänav (V. I. Lenin Street), ?–1992 – now Jaama tänav, Jõhvi[8]

Georgia[edit]

Kazakhstan[edit]

Latvia[edit]

Lithuania[edit]

Moldova[edit]

  • Strada Lenin (Lenin Street), 1944–1952 and Bulevardul Lenin (Lenin Boulevard), 1952–1990 – now Bulevardul Ștefan cel Mare și Sfînt, Chișinău
  • Strada Lenin (Lenin Street), Comrat
The House of Culture in Elektrostal, along Prospekt Lenina

Russia[edit]

Tajikistan[edit]

Ukraine[edit]

  • Ploshcha Lenina (Площа Леніна, Lenin Square), Donetsk
  • Prospekt Lenina (Проспект Леніна, Lenin Avenue), Alchevsk
  • Prospekt Lenina (Lenin Avenue), 1959–1990 – now Svobody Prospekt, Lviv
  • Prospekt Lenina (Lenin Avenue), 1960–2016 – now Prospekt Miru, Mariupol
  • Prospekt Lenina (Lenin Avenue), 1960–2016 – now Tsentralnyi Prospekt, Mykolaiv
  • Prospekt Lenina (Lenin Avenue), ?–2016 – now Sobornyi Prospekt, Oleksandriia
  • Prospekt Lenina (Lenin Avenue), 1952–2016 – now Sobornyi Prospekt, Zaporizhia
  • Vulytsya Lenina (Вулиця Леніна, Lenin Street) – now Vulytsya Yevheniya Kharchenka, Kyiv
  • Vulytsya Lenina (Lenin Street), ?–1994 – now Vulytsya Rishelievska, Odesa

Uzbekistan[edit]

Eastern Europe[edit]

Bulgaria[edit]

Czechoslovakia[edit]

  • Leninova ulice (Lenin Street) — now Evropská třída, Prague
  • Leninova ulice (Lenin Street) — now Kounicova ul., Brno
  • Leninova ulice (Lenin Street) — now Klišská ul., Ústí nad Labem
  • Leninova ulice (Lenin Street) — now ul. Palackého, Plzeň
  • Leninova ulice (Lenin Street) — now ul. E. Beneše, Písek
  • Leninova ulice (Lenin Street) – now Nádražní, Krnov
  • Leninovo nábrežie (Lenin riverbank) — now Nábrežie Jána Pavla II., Poprad
  • Ulica V. I. Lenina (V. I. Lenin Street)[11]Šoporňa
  • Leninova (Lenin (metro station)) – now Dejvická, Prague
  • Leninova (Lenin Street) – now Hlavná ulica, Košice

Hungary[edit]

  • Lenin körút (Lenin boulevard) – now Tisza Lajos körút, Szeged
  • Lenin körút (Lenin boulevard) – now Erzsébet körút and Teréz körút, Budapest
  • Lenin tér (Lenin square) – now Hatvani kapu tér, Eger[12]

Poland[edit]

  • Aleja Lenina (Lenin Avenue) – now Aleja Henryka, Chrzanów
  • Aleja Lenina (Lenin Avenue) – now Aleja Jana Pawła II, Częstochowa
  • Aleja Lenina (Lenin Avenue) – now Ulica Chorzowska, Świętochłowice
  • Ulica Lenina (Lenin Street), 1949–1990 – now Ulica Jana Klemensa Branickiego, Białystok
  • Ulica Lenina (Lenin Street) – now Ulica Andersa, Tychy
  • Ulica Lenina (Lenin Street) – now Ulica Brata Alberta, Warsaw
  • Aleja Włodzimierza Lenina (Vladimir Lenin Avenue), 1958–1991 – now Aleja Solidarności, Kraków
  • Aleja Włodzimierza Lenina (Vladimir Lenin Avenue) – now Aleja Mieczysława Smorawińskiego and Aleja Generała Władysława Andersa, Lublin
  • Ulica Włodzimierza Lenina (Vladimir Lenin Street) – now Ulica Henryka Le Ronda, Katowice
  • Ulica Włodzimierza Lenina (Vladimir Lenin Street) – now Ulica Armii Krajowej, Kołobrzeg
  • Ulica Włodzimierza Lenina (Vladimir Lenin Street) – now Ulica Stróżowska, Sanok

Romania[edit]

  • Strada V.I. Lenin (V.I. Lenin Street) – now Strada Revoluției, Târgu Mureş
  • Bulevardul Lenin (Lenin Boulevard) - now Bulevardul 21 Decembrie 1989, Cluj-Napoca
  • Strada V.I. Lenin (V.I. Lenin Street) – now Strada Mihai Eminescu, Timișoara

Slovakia[edit]

Western Europe[edit]

A street sign marking Avenue Lénine in Arcueil

France[edit]

Finland[edit]

Germany[edit]

Italy[edit]

"Master and Guide of the Revolution of the proletariat, the founder of the first socialist state in the world." Lenin Avenue in Luanda.

United Kingdom[edit]

  • Lenin Terrace, Chopwell / England[13]
  • Lenin Terrace, Stanley / England[14]
  • Bevin Court, London, England, was originally intended be called Lenin Court. However, two letters of the building's sign were replaced to rename it after Ernest Bevin who died between its completion and inauguration. A bust of Lenin in the grounds was left in place, but was eventually removed after having been repeatedly vandalised by anti-communists.[15]

Southeastern Europe[edit]

Montenegro[edit]

  • Bulevar Lenjina (Lenin Boulevard), 1948–1991 – now Bulevar Svetog Petra Cetinjski, Podgorica
  • Bulevar Lenjina, Cetinje

Serbia[edit]

Africa[edit]

Angola[edit]

  • Avenida Lenin (Lenin Avenue), Luanda

Benin[edit]

  • Place Lenin (Lenin Square), Cotonou

Mozambique[edit]

  • Avenida Vladimir Lenine (Vladimir Lenin Avenue), Maputo

South Africa[edit]

Somalia[edit]

Tunisia[edit]

  • Rue Lénine (Lenin Street), Tunis

Asia[edit]

India[edit]

Malaysia[edit]

  • Lenin River, a river in the interior of Sarawak
A statue of Lenin in Lenin Flower Garden

Vietnam[edit]

Places and parks[edit]

Eastern Europe[edit]

Azerbaijan[edit]

Belarus[edit]

Czech Republic[edit]

Estonia[edit]

  • Lenini rajoon (Lenin city district), Tallinn - later Lõunarajoon (Southern district), now restructured

Russia[edit]

Tajikistan[edit]

Romania[edit]

  • Raionul Lenin (Lenin city district), Bucharest

Ukraine[edit]

Central America/Caribbean[edit]

Cuba[edit]

Other[edit]

A large number of enterprises and other objects in the former Soviet Union and other countries of the Soviet bloc were named after Lenin: for example, the nuclear-powered icebreaker Lenin and Lenin Stadiums in many towns and cities. Additionally, every reasonably large settlement had a Lenin Street or Lenin Avenue ("Prospekt Lenina/Leninsky Prospekt"), or a Lenin Square.

See also[edit]

References[edit]