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  2. Chernivtsi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernivtsi

    "Czarnowce" on a 1639 Beauplan map centered on Pokuttia; placed in "Wallachia or Little Moldavia", bottom right. Chernivtsi (Ukrainian: Чернівці, pronounced [tʃerniu̯ˈtsi] ⓘ; Romanian: Cernăuți, pronounced [tʃernəˈutsʲ] ⓘ; see also other names) is a city in southwestern Ukraine on the upper course of the Prut River.

  3. Vorwärts (Cernăuți) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorwärts_(Cernăuți)

    Vorwärts ('Forward') was a German-language socialist daily newspaper published from Czernowitz/Cernăuți, Bukovina (in Austria-Hungary, later in Romania; present-day Chernivtsi, Ukraine). [1] [2] [3] The newspaper was founded in 1899 with the name Volkspresse ('People's Press'). [4] [5] During its initial phase, Volkspresse was published ...

  4. Duchy of Bukovina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duchy_of_Bukovina

    In 2011, an anthropological analysis of the Russian census of the population of Moldavia in 1774 asserted a population of 68,700 people in 1774, out of which 40,920 (59.6%) were Romanians, 22,810 Ruthenians and Hutsuls (33.2%), and 7.2% Jews, Roma, and Armenians. [31]

  5. Union of Bukovina with Romania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_of_Bukovina_with_Romania

    [1] [4] 10 November - The Ukrainian National Committee together with its military supporters retreat from Czernowitz. [3] 11 November - Czernowitz (claimed by the West Ukrainian People's Republic) is seized by the Romanian Army. [1] [5] [3] 12 November - The Romanian National Council establishes a new government in Bukovina under Flondor's ...

  6. Residence of Bukovinian and Dalmatian Metropolitans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residence_of_Bukovinian...

    In 1782, following the incorporation of Bukovina into the Habsburg monarchy, the seat of the Moldavian Eastern Orthodox Bishops of Rădăuți was moved to Chernivtsi (then known as Czernowitz). The province's military administration built a residence in haste for bishop Dosoftei Herescu . The edifice, completed in 1783, bore a shabby aspect ...

  7. Bukovina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bukovina

    The region was temporarily recovered by Romania as an ally of Nazi Germany after the latter invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, but retaken by the Soviet army in 1944. [2] Bukovina's population was historically ethnically diverse. Today, Bukovina's northern half is the Chernivtsi Oblast of Ukraine, while the southern part is Suceava County of ...

  8. Arboroasa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arboroasa

    Arboroasa's initiator, Teodor V. Ștefanelli, had been a member of the Romania Jună Society, and used the latter group's statute as a model for the new organization. Its stated purpose was to perfect members' patriotic, literary and cultural consciousness, to develop a social spirit and to assist poorer members, [ 2 ] including free medical ...

  9. Josef Burg (writer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josef_Burg_(writer)

    In the years before World War I, the city of Chernivtsi, also called Czernowitz in both German and Yiddish, was the capital of the Bukovina region and a center of Yiddish language and culture. [1] The region became part of Romania following World War I. Burg published his first professional writing in the Chernovitser Bleter, a Yiddish ...