Kaluga
Kaluga (Калу́га) is a city in central Russia 190km South-West from Moscow, administrative center of Kaluga Oblast.Kaluga is connected to Moscow by a railway line and the ancient roadway (E-105 International highway) which is known as the Kaluzhskaya doroga (Kaluga road). This road was the favoured escape route from the Moscow trap for Napoleon in the fall of 1812. But General Kutuzov repelled Napoleon's advances in this direction and forced the retreating French army onto the old Smolensk road, previously devastated by the French during their invasion of Russia.
Kaluga is known for its most famous resident, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, a rocket science pioneer who worked here as a school teacher. There is a Tsiolkovskiy Museum in Kaluga dedicated to his theoretical achievements and their practical implementations for modern space research.
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Regional Information
Kaluga (Huso dauricus) (various groups of sturgeons) are large predatory fish found in the Amur River basin. Also known as the Great Siberian Sturgeon, they are claimed to be the largest freshwater fish in the world, with a maximum weight of at least 1000 kg.
Kaluga caviar comes from the Kaluga sturgeon.