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The Lemko Region (Rusyn: Лемковина, romanized: Lemkovyna; Polish: Łemkowszczyzna; Ukrainian: Лемківщина, romanized: Lemkivshchyna) is an ethnographic area in southern Poland and Northern Eastern Slovakia that has traditionally been inhabited by the Lemko people.
The Lemko Region, 1939–1947 War, Occupation and Deportation – Articles and Essays, editor Paul Best and Jarosław Moklak; Horbal, Bogdan (April 30, 2010). Lemko Studies: A Handbook. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0-88033-639-0. OCLC 286518760. Laun, Karen (6 December 1999). "A Fractured Identity: The Lemko of Poland". Central Europe Review.
A political conference of Lemko activists in Gładyszów proclaimed that the Lemko region could only belong to a Rusyn state. Jarosław Moklak notes that the resolutions of Gładyszów received support from local Lemkos, as they considered the Ukrainian nation foreign to them and feared being dismissed as a mere regional variant of the ...
Ukraine and Russia have been fighting in the streets of Chasiv Yar, a city in the Donetsk region, since July, when Kyiv’s troops withdrew from the eastern Kanal neighbourhood, establishing the ...
Map of the areas claimed and controlled by the Carpathian Ruthenia, the Lemko Republic and the West Ukrainian People's Republic in 1918 Autonomous Subcarpathian Ruthenia and independent Carpatho-Ukraine 1938–1939.
The Komańcza Republic, [a] also known as the Eastern Lemko Republic, [b] Vyslik Republic, [c] and Lemko Republic, [d] was a short-lived microstate, an association of thirty three Lemko villages, seated in Komańcza in the east of the Lemko Region, that existed between 4 November 1918 and 24 January 1919.
According to the 2001 Ukraine census, only 131 people identified themselves as Boykos, separate from Ukrainians. [1] This is also on top of many attempts within the USSR and modern day Ukraine to assimilate the Rusyn people into the modern Ukraine state. In the Polish census of 2011, 258 people stated Boyko as a national-ethnic identity, with ...
Old Town of Lviv, the capital of the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia [1] from 1272 to 1349 and nowadays, the most populated city of Western Ukraine Old city and Catholic churches in Uzhhorod, showing the influence of Western Christianity on Western Ukraine Fortress of Kamianets, a former Ruthenian-Lithuanian [2] castle and a later three-part Polish fortress [3] [4] [5]