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Linnahall (Estonian: Tallinna Linnahall, 'Tallinn City Hall') (originally the V. I. Lenin Palace of Culture and Sports) is a multi-purpose venue in Tallinn, Estonia. It is situated in the harbor, just beyond the walls of the Old Town, and was completed in 1980. The venue also features a heliport and a small seaport.
Representing Finland. European Athletics U23 Championships. 2023 Espoo. Javelin throw. European U20 Championships. 2021 Tallinn. Javelin throw. Anni-Linnea Alanen (born 11 November 2002) is a Finnish javelin thrower. She is a multiple time national champion.
The Estonia women's national football team (Estonian: Eesti naiste jalgpallikoondis) represents Estonia in international women's football matches and are controlled by the Estonian Football Association, the governing body for football in Estonia. Estonia played its first international match on 19 August 1994 against Lithuania.
Kersti Kaljulaid at the Opinion Festival 2021 in Paide, Estonia. Kersti Kaljulaid (Estonian pronunciation: [ˈkersʲːtʲi ˈkɑlʲːjuˈlɑi̯ːːt]; born 30 December 1969) is an Estonian politician who served as the fifth president of Estonia between 2016 and 2021, and was its first and only female head of state since the country declared independence in 1918.
FC Flora (women) FC Flora Tallinn, commonly known as Flora Tallinn, or simply as Flora, is a football club, based in Tallinn, Estonia, that competes in the Naiste Meistriliiga. Established in 1997 as the women's football division of Flora, the team has won 4 Naiste Meistriliiga, 8 Estonian Women's Cups and 6 Estonian Women's Supercups.
After giving birth and during maternity leave, working Estonian women received full monthly income for up to 15 months (equivalent to US$1,560.00); non-working women who gave birth received a monthly subsidy equivalent to US$200.00. [4] The TFR slightly recovered in the subsequent years, but fluctuated by year, and continued to remain below the ...
USSR Women's Chess Championship. The Women's Soviet Chess Championship was played in the Soviet Union from 1927 through 1991 to determine the women's chess national champion. The championship was not played on a regular basis in the years 1927–1937 and there was a break during World War II. From 1950 onward it was played regularly all years.
a collective nomination of 1000 women from over 150 different countries for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize. 2005 [250] Zilda Arns Neumann: 25 August 1934 Forquilhinha, Santa Catarina, Brazil 12 January 2010 Port-au-Prince, Haiti 2005 [cc], 2006 [238] Meaza Ashenafi: 25 July 1964 Asosa, Ethiopia — 2005 [cc], 2015 [251] Medea Benjamin: 10 September ...