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  1. Belorussian Station (Russian: Белорусский вокзал, romanized: Belorusski vokzal) is a 1971 Soviet drama film directed by Andrei Smirnov.

  2. Belorussky railway station serves long distance trains to regions west and south-west of Moscow, and one train each to the north-east (on the Savyolovsky branch to Rybinsk with continuing service to Uglich, Vesegonsk, and Pestovo) and to the south (to Anapa through Tula, Kursk, Voronezh, and Rostov-on-Don ).

    Train Number
    Train Name
    Destination
    Operated By
    001/002
    Belarus (bel, rus: Беларусь)
    Minsk (Main)
    003/004
    Minsk (bel: Мінск, rus: Минск)
    Minsk (Main)
    009/010
    Polonez (pol: Polonez, rus: ...
    Warsaw (Zachodnia)
    Polish State Railways Russian Railways
    013/014
    Strizh (rus: Стриж)
    Berlin (HBF)
  3. Opened in 1870, Belorusskiy station is one of nine main railway hubs in the heart of Russia. Interestingly, this railway terminal first welcomed the returning Soviet soldiers who also brought the news about the victory over Germans in 1945.

  4. Apr 30, 1971 · Belorussky Station: Directed by Andrey Smirnov. With Aleksey Glazyrin, Evgeniy Leonov, Anatoliy Papanov, Vsevolod Safonov. An emotionally persuasive drama describing the friendship of four World War II veterans, their sudden reunion after 25 years and the subsequent effect of this occasion upon their thoughts and evaluations of the ...

    • (1.3K)
    • Drama
    • Andrey Smirnov
    • 1971-04-30
  5. Belorussky station (Russian: Белорусский вокзал, IPA: [bʲeɫaˈruskʲij vaɡˈzaɫ]) is one of nine main railway stations in Moscow. It was opened in 1870 and rebuilt in its current form in 1910-12.

  6. Belorussky station is a gateway to west and southwest regions (Smolensk) for Moscow, as well as to north-east (Rybinsk and Uglich) and south (Anapa, Voronezh, and Rostov-on-Don). Belorussky station is often called Russian “gate to Europe”, from where trains depart to Minsk (the capital of Belarus), Berlin, Warsaw, and many other European ...

  7. Belorussky Station was opened in 1870. It serves Belorussky Railway, connecting Moscow with western and south-western regions of Russia and a vast variety of European cities. Trains to Berlin, Minsk, Warsaw, Kaliningrad and many other cities depart from here.