"Víborg, la antigua Viipuri finlandesa (en ruso, ; en finés, Viipuri; en sueco, Viborg; en alemán, Wiburg) es una ciudad portuaria rusa en el mar Báltico situada en el interior de la bahía de Víborg, en el istmo de Carelia, a 138 km al noroeste de San Petersburgo, y a 38 kilómetros de la frontera con Finlandia. Depende administrativamente del óblast de Leningrado."
"Vyborg (Russian Cyrillic: [vbrk], Finnish: Viipuri [vi:puri], Swedish: Viborg [viborj], German: Wiborg [vibok], Estonian: Viiburi [viburi]) is a town and the administrative center of Vyborgsky District in Leningrad Oblast, Russia, located on the Karelian Isthmus near the head of the Vyborg Bay, 130 km (81 miles) to the northwest of St. Petersburg and 38 km (24 miles) south of Russia's border with Finland, where the Saimaa Canal enters the Gulf of Finland. Population: 79,962(2010 Census); 79,224(2002 Census); 80,924(1989 Census). The town lies in the boundary zone between the East Slavic/Russian and Finnish worlds and has changed hands several times in history, most ultimately in 1944 when it was retaken by the Soviet Union from Finland during World War II. The city hosts the Russian end of the 1,222 km (759 mi) Nord Stream gas pipeline, laid in 2011 and operated by a consortium led by Russia's Gazprom state hydrocarbons enterprise to pump 55 billion cubic meters (1.9 trillion cubic feet) of natural gas a year under the Baltic to Greifswald, Germany."