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Date: 27 January 2018: Source: Own work using: Ukraine adm location map improved.svg, according to Закон України від 15.04.2014 № 1207-VII «Про забезпечення прав і свобод громадян та правовий режим на тимчасово окупованій території України» (On Ensuring Civil Rights and Freedoms, and the ...
Topographic map of Ukraine with borders and cities. Ukraine is the second-largest European country, after Russia, and the largest country entirely in Europe. Lying between latitudes 44° and 53° N, and longitudes 22° and 41° E., it is mostly in the East European Plain. Ukraine covers an area of 603,550 square kilometres (233,030 sq mi), with ...
This is because it is substituted by a tool or script, it is used as part of a short-term or less active Wikipedia process, or for some other reason. The above documentation is transcluded from Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map/doc .
Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Annexion russe du Sud et de l'Est de l'Ukraine; Discussion:Annexion russe du Sud et de l'Est de l'Ukraine; Usage on lv.wikipedia.org Krievijas—Ukrainas—NATO krīze (kopš 2021) Usage on nl.wikipedia.org Russische annexatie van de Oekraïense oblasten Donetsk, Cherson, Loehansk en Zaporizja; Usage on pl.wikipedia ...
Animated map of Russia's invasion of Ukraine through 5 December 2022 (click to play animation) Ukrainian soldiers killed in the Russo-Ukrainian War in 2022. The Russian invasion of Ukraine began on the morning of 24 February 2022, [236] when Putin announced a "special military operation" to "demilitarise and denazify" Ukraine.
Regions of Ukraine annexed by Russia, with a red line marking the area of actual control by Russia on 30 September 2022 2024 United Nations map of Russian-occupied Ukraine in December 2023. After Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022, the Russian military and Russian proxy forces further occupied additional Ukrainian territory.
In summary, when the status of a map object changes, the color of the icon has to be updated and the write-up (along with the source) has to be added as well. Example 2: How to keep town dots linked to the latest status source when the town does not have its own Wikipedia article. The example concerns the town of "Kabajeb".
Two centuries later Guillaume le Vasseur, sieur de Beauplan became one of the more prominent cartographers working with Ukrainian data. His 1639 descriptive map of the region was the first such one produced, and after he published a pair of Ukraine maps of different scale in 1660, his drawings were republished [by whom?] throughout much of Europe. [2]