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Glehni N.v.

(Nikolai von Glehn, Count, 1841-1923)

Founder of the then town, now Tallinn suburb, of Nõmme. Died in Brazil. One of the last scions of a family descended from the German merchant Heinrich von Glehn who arrived in Estonia in the mid-17th C. Street has a fairly motley history of name change, with (ignoring the minor Ger. & Rus. versions) Glehni (1927-39), followed by Niine (1939-59), interluding as Marana (Potentilla spp., 1940-41), then Niineõie (bast tree blossom, 1959-60), and Välgu (1960-89) during the Soviet occupation. The Glehni streetname was reinstated in 1939, upped to Nikolai v. Glehni tn in 1989 and restored to all its aristocratic pre-1939 fullness of Nikolai von Glehni tänav in 2010. In addition to the street, his home, a mock castle called Hohenhaupt after the nearby (400 m) Kõrgepea Nukk, is host to Tallinn’s observatory (see Tähetorni), a park and various sculptures.