A large and detailed multi-color street map in Russian of the town of Kobryn in southwestern Belarus, published by Belkartografia in 2014. Kobryn is known in Russian as Kobrin and in Yiddish as קאָברין. The map labels major and minor streets throughout greater Kobryn, and a street index adjacent to the map lists and locates more than 200 streets keyed to a grid on the map. Symbols on the map correspond to a legend on the reverse side of the map which identifies tourist services and cultural sites; the reverse side also highlights at high scale the dense historic city center outlined in a rectangle on this side. Kobryn grew to 10,000 residents before WWI, of which more than 80% were Jewish. Surviving Jewish heritage is rare in the town; the Jewish cemetery northwest of the town center is marked on the map with crosses, and the semi-ruined former Great Synagogue is marked as a monument here and described on the reverse side.