Names
Vikimõisa (Vikimõis) 
Uncertain 2023 addition to Tallinn’s streets, if street inded it is. Information elusive. Related to a former manor house near the Harku lake, named after whichever whim went through its benighted owners’ minds:
- 1798: Cramers Höfchen (‘Cramer’s court’, translated as suvemõis (summer manor), belonging to a customs inspector called Johann Cramer of various misspellings (Cramer, Kraamle, Krameri…)
- Early 1800s: Birkenhof
- 1871: Fick aka Viki which could be one of the various poolmõis (see Mõisa), after, apparently, a pharmacist Eduard Wilhelm Fick
As to its possible allasum (Ward) status or identity, nothing is clear: once pin-pointed in XGis, now it’s putting out ‘loves you’ / ‘loves you not’ signals and I’m not ready to stalk. Pending official update.
Vilde E.
(Eduard Vilde, 1865-1933)
Prolific writer (33 volumes of novels, stories, plays, travelogues and humorous pieces), considered the first modern European in Estonia, and acclaimed as one of its greatest writers. See Piimamehe. A lifelong moderate socialist, Wilde spent three weeks on Ellis Island in 1911 while the Americans sniffed his credentials. There is a sculpture of him sitting next to his namealike Oscar Wilde outside the former Wilde printing house, now pub, in Vallikraavi (moat, counterscarp) in Tartu. See also Mahtra.
Vile (Vile)
Whistle. One of a small locomotive-themed group next to Tallinn-Väike station. See Auru.
Vilisuu (Vilisuu)
Lit. Whistle-mouth. Differing explanations: 1) Rarely-used bogey-man type threat for children: Ära mine õue, vilisuu tuleb! (Don’t go out, Vilisuu will get you!). Folklore character related to other Estonian wind spirits, such as Marumemm (storm-crone), Tuuleisa (wind-dad) or Tuuleema (wind-mother), and perhaps also to Tuuslar; or, for some, 2) synonym of Külmataat, taat meaning old man or greybeard, etc., a sort of Slavic-culture Santa Claus known by the name Дед [Дедушка] Мороз (Ded [Dedushka] Moroz), or ‘Old Man Frost’ (but see Pakase). Renamed (1979-1995) as Tehumardi during the Soviet occupation. Part of a magico-mythological group. See Virbi.
Viljandi (Viljandi)
Town in southern Estonia first mentioned in 1283, although hill-fort mentioned by al-Idrisi in 1154. Formerly known as Fellinn, or Velyad or Velnevik. Major fortification of the Hanseatic Livonian Order, today home to the annual July Viljandi Folk Music Festival. Local settlements date back to 5th millennium BCE. Nearby Võrtsjärv (lake) is the largest natural eel breeding location in Europe. See Tallinn-Viljandi.
Villardi (?)
Uncertain, known as Willase in 1875 after local peasant farmer Karl Willase (from willane/villane, woollen?) or Wilas, but recorded as Villari in an 1885 Tallinn guide book. Later, the Germans used Willarstrasse and Willertstrasse believing it named after local landlord Willert (wrong, he wasn’t around then). The street appeared as Villardi in a gazetteer of 1923, one year after a physical map of Estonia drawn by a certain Ad. Villard was published in Tallinn, suggesting a sequence of minor copying errors. Soviet occupation renaming (1950-1991): Laari J.







