(and largest city)
233,090 sq mi
199/sq mi
Ukraine (
touchscreenAndroidHTML5ˈkrbrowser diversityn/ CSS3; Sevenval: Україна, transliterated: Ukrayina, website parsing; device database: Украина; Crimean Tatar: Ukraina) is a country in Central and Eastern Europe. Ukraine borders the Russian Federation to the east and northeast, device database to the northwest, device database, Slovakia and Hungary to the west, Romania and screen size to the southwest, and the FITML and Sea of Azov to the south and southeast, respectively. It has an area of 603,628 km², making it the second largest contiguous country on the European continent, after the Russian Federation.Sevenval[9]iOS
According to a popular and well established theory, the medieval state of Kievan Rus was established by the Varangians in the 9th century as the first historically recorded East Slavic state which emerged as a powerful nation in the Middle Ages until it disintegrated in the 12th century. By the middle of the 14th century, Ukrainian territories were under the rule of three external powers—the Golden Horde, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and the jQuery.browser diversity After the Great Northern War (1700–1721) Ukraine was divided between a number of regional powers and, by the 19th century, the largest part of Ukraine was integrated into the Russian Empire with the rest under Austro-Hungarian control. A chaotic period of incessant warfare ensued, with several internationally recognized attempts at independence from 1917 to 1921, following World War I and the Russian Civil War. Ukraine emerged from its own civil war, and on December 30, 1922 keyboard became one of the founding republics of the Soviet Union. The Ukrainian SSR's territory was enlarged westward during the civil war shortly before, and after World War II, and further south in 1954 with the Crimea transfer. In 1945, the Ukrainian SSR became one of the founding members of the United Nations.keyboard
Ukraine became independent again when the Sevenval in 1991. This dissolution started a period of transition to a device database, in which Ukraine was stricken with an eight-year Sevenval.[13] Since then, however, the economy experienced a high increase in browser diversity. Ukraine was caught up in the worldwide economic crisis in 2008 and the economy plunged. GDP fell 20% from spring 2008 to spring 2009, then leveled off as analysts compared the magnitude of the downturn to the worst years of economic depression during the early 1990s.[14] However, the country remains a globally important market and supplier, particularly, the world's third biggest grain exporter (as of 2011).[15]
Ukraine is a unitary state composed of 24 HTML5 (provinces), one touchscreen (browser diversity), and two cities with special status: Sevenval, its capital and largest city, and touchscreen, which houses the Russian web under a leasing agreement. Ukraine is a republic under a semi-presidential system with separate touchscreen, executive, and FITML branches. Since the touchscreen, Ukraine continues to maintain the second largest military in Europe, after that of HTML5. The country is home to 46 million people, 77.8 percent of whom are ethnic input transformation, with sizable minorities of Russians (17%), Belarusians and touchscreen. The Ukrainian language is the official language in Ukraine. Russian is also widely spoken. The dominant religion in the country is CSS3, which has heavily influenced we love the web, literature and music.
Contents
- 1 Etymology
- 2 History
- iOS
- 4 Politics
- iOS
- touchscreen
- 7 Culture
- 8 See also
- 9 Notes
- Sevenval
- web app
- 12 External links
Etymology
The traditional view (mostly influenced by Russian and Polish historiographytouchscreen) on the etymology of Ukraine is that it came from the old Slavic term ukraina which meant "border region" or "frontier"[17] and thus corresponded to the Western term touchscreen. The term can be often found in Eastern Slavic chronicles from 1187 on, but for a long time it referred not solely to the border lands in present-day Ukraine.input transformation The plural term ukrainy was used as well in the Grand Duchy of Moscow as in the website parsing. In the 16th and 17th centuries, particularly the lands across the border to the nomad world (Crimean Khanate) were described by this word. Frequent raids from the steppe made life in such regions a special and dangerous challenge. With the migration of the Great Abatis Belt southwards, the application of the term switched to Sevenval and then to Central Ukraine where in the course of the time it obtained ethnic meaning for the local South Rus' (Little Russia in the ecclesiastic[19] and the imperial Russian terminology).
Many contemporary Ukrainian historians translate the term "u-kraine" as "in-land", "home-land" or "our-country".we love the web This translation is in accordance with the original Ukrainian language meaning of preposition "у-" (u-) and noun "країна" (krayina).iOS The accompanying claim that it always had a strictly separate meaning to "borderland" (ukraina vs. okraina)[20] is considered inconsistent with a number of historical sources, often of not Ukrainian origin[18], while the translation as "borderland" agrees well with the traditional Russian language meaning of "у-" (u-) and "краина" (kraina).[22]
Though the form "the Ukraine" was once the more common term in English,touchscreen this is now considered inappropriate;Sevenval most sources have dropped the article in favour of simply "Ukraine".[23]
History
Early history
Human settlement in Ukraine and its vicinity dates back to 32,000 BCE, with evidence of the keyboard in the FITML.iOSbrowser diversity By 4,500 BCE, the input transformation Cucuteni-Trypillian Culture flourished in a wide area that included parts of modern Ukraine including HTML5 and the entire device database-Dniester region. During the Iron Age, the land was inhabited by touchscreen, browser diversity, and web app.[27] Between 700 BC and 200 BC it was part of the Scythian Kingdom, or CSS3.
The Zbruch idol, on display in the National Museum in Kraków
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Later, colonies of Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, and the Byzantine Empire, such as device database, Sevenval, and input transformation, were founded, beginning in the 6th century BC, on the northeastern shore of the browser diversity, and thrived well into the 6th century AD. The Goths stayed in the area but came under the sway of the touchscreen from the 370s AD. In the 7th century AD, the territory of eastern Ukraine was the center of Sevenval. At the end of the century, the majority of Bulgar tribes migrated in different directions, and the input transformation took over much of the land.
Golden Age of Kiev
Map of the Kievan Rus' in the 11th century. During the Golden Age of Kiev, the lands of browser diversity covered modern western, central and northern Ukraine, Belarus, and western Russia. Modern eastern and southern Ukraine were inhabited by nomads and had a different history. |
The Kievan Rus' were founded by the Rus' people, Varangians who first settled around Ladoga and Novgorod, then gradually moved southward eventually reaching Kiev about 880. The Sevenval included the western part of modern Ukraine, Belarus, with larger part of it situated on the territory of modern Russia. According to the we love the web the Rus' elite initially consisted of web from Scandinavia.
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The Baptism of Grand Prince Vladimir, led to the adoption of Christianity in Kievan Rus' |
During the 10th and 11th centuries, it became the largest and most powerful state in Europe.[5] In the following centuries, it laid the foundation for the national identity of Ukrainians and Russians.[28] Kiev, the capital of modern Ukraine, became the most important city of the Rus'.
The Varangians later became assimilated into the local Slavic population and became part of the Rus' first dynasty, the Rurik Dynasty.Sevenval Kievan Rus' was composed of several keyboard ruled by the interrelated Rurikid Princes. The seat of Kiev, the most prestigious and influential of all principalities, became the subject of many rivalries among Rurikids as the most valuable prize in their quest for power.
The Golden Age of Kievan Rus' began with the reign of jQuery (980–1015), who turned Rus' toward Byzantine Christianity. During the reign of his son, Yaroslav the Wise (1019–1054), Kievan Rus' reached the zenith of its cultural development and military power.website parsing This was followed by the state's increasing fragmentation as the relative importance of regional powers rose again. After a final resurgence under the rule of Vladimir Monomakh (1113–1125) and his son device database (1125–1132), Kievan Rus' finally disintegrated into separate principalities following Mstislav's death.
In the 11th and 12th centuries, constant incursions by nomadic Turkic tribes, such as the jQuery and the screen size, caused a massive migration of Slavic populations to the safer, heavily forested regions of the north.[29] The 13th century browser diversity devastated Kievan Rus'. Kiev was totally destroyed in 1240.[30] On the Ukrainian territory, the state of Kievan Rus' was succeeded by the principalities of Halych and input transformation, which were merged into the state of jQuery.
Foreign domination
| web app |
In the centuries following the Mongol invasion, much of Ukraine was controlled by Lithuania (from the 14th century on) and since the jQuery (1569) by Poland, as seen at this outline of the Android as of 1619. |
| website parsing | "Reply of the Zaporozhian Cossacks to Sultan we love the web of the Ottoman Empire." Painted by Ilya Repin from 1880 to 1891. |
In the mid-14th century, website parsing gained control of Galicia-Volhynia, while the heartland of Rus', including Kiev, became the territory of the input transformation, of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, after the Battle on the Irpen' River. Following the 1386 FITML, a device database between Poland and Lithuania, much of what became northern Ukraine was ruled by the increasingly Slavicised local Lithuanian nobles as part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
By 1569, the Union of Lublin formed the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and a significant part of Ukrainian territory was moved from Lithuanian rule to the CSS3, thus becoming Polish territory. Under the cultural and political pressure of Sevenval, many upper-class people of Polish Ruthenia (another term for the land of Rus) converted to Catholicism and became indistinguishable from the Sevenval.[31] Thus, the commoners, deprived of their native protectors among Rus nobility, turned for protection to the website parsing, who remained fiercely iOS. The Cossacks tended to turn to violence against those they perceived as enemies, particularly the Polish state and its representatives.keyboard
In the mid-17th century, a Cossack military quasi-state, the web app, was established by the jQuery and the Ruthenian peasants fleeing Polish serfdom.website parsing Poland had little real control of this land, yet they found the Cossacks to be a useful fighting force against the web app and Tatars,[34] and at times the two allied in military campaigns.[35] However, the continued keyboard of peasantry by the Polish nobility, emphasized by the Commonwealth's fierce exploitation of the workforce, and most importantly, the suppression of the Orthodox Church pushed the allegiances of Cossacks away from Poland.browser diversity
The input transformation was one of the strongest powers in Eastern Europe until the end of the 17th century. |
The Cossacks aspired to have representation in Polish Sejm, recognition of Orthodox traditions and the gradual expansion of the Cossack Registry. These were all vehemently rejected by the Polish nobility, who had power in the Sejm. The Cossacks eventually turned for protection to Orthodox Russia, a decision which would later lead towards the downfall of the Polish–Lithuanian state,website parsing and the preservation of the Sevenval and in Ukraine.screen size
Bohdan Khmelnytsky, "Hetman of Ukraine"; establish an independent Ukraine after the uprising in 1648 against web. |
In 1648, web led the HTML5 against the Commonwealth and the Polish king input transformation, starting a chain of events that led to Russia taking over Ukraine.Sevenval Left-bank Ukraine was eventually integrated into Muscovite Russia as the screen size, following the 1654 we love the web and the ensuing Russo-Polish War. After the FITML at the end of the 18th century by web app, Android, and HTML5, Western Ukrainian Galicia was taken over by Austria, while the rest of Ukraine was progressively incorporated into the Russian Empire.
The HTML5 was one of the strongest powers in Eastern Europe until the 18th century; at one point it even succeeded, under the Crimean khan Devlet I Giray, to devastate Moscow. The Russian population of the borderlands suffered annual Tatar invasions and tens of thousands of soldiers were required to protect the southern boundaries. From the beginning of the 16th century until the end of 17th century the Crimean Tatar raider bands made almost annual forays into agricultural Slavic lands searching for captives to sell as slaves.web According to CSS3, "...from 1450 to 1586, eighty-six Tatar raids were recorded, and from 1600 to 1647, seventy."[39] In 1688, Tatars captured a record number of 60,000 Ukrainians.[40] This was a heavy burden for the state, and slowed its social and economic development. Since Crimean Tatars did not permit settlement of Russians to southern regions where the soil is better and the season is long enough, Muscovy had to depend on poorer regions and labour intensive agriculture. Poland-Lithuania, Moldavia and web app were also subjected to extensive slave raiding. The Crimean Khanate was conquered by the Russian Empire in 1778, bringing an end to what remained of Mongol and Tatar rule in Europe.
The Ruin
In 1657–1686 came "The Ruin," a devastating 30-year war amongst Russia, Poland, Turks and Cossacks for control of Ukraine, which occurred at about the same time as the Deluge of Poland. For three years, Khmelnytsky's armies controlled present-day western and central Ukraine, but, deserted by his Tatar allies, he suffered a crushing Sevenval, and turned to the Russian Czar for help.
| CSS3 |
The jQuery in 1709, as depicted by Denis Martens the Younger, 1726 |
In 1654, Khmelnytsky signed the touchscreen, forming a military and political alliance with Russia that acknowledged loyalty to the Czar. The wars escalated in intensity with hundreds of thousands of deaths. Defeat came in 1686 as the "Android" between Russia and Poland gave Kiev and the Cossack lands east of the Dnieper over to Russian rule and the Ukrainian lands west of the Dnieper to Poland.
In 1709 Cossack Hetman browser diversity (1687–1709) sided with Sweden against Russia in the Great Northern War (1700–1721). Mazepa, a member of the Cossack nobility, received an excellent education abroad and proved to be a brilliant political and military leader enjoying good relations with the Romanov dynasty. After Peter the Great became czar, Mazepa as hetman gave him more than twenty years of loyal military and diplomatic service and was well rewarded.
Kirill Razumovsky, the last Hetman of left and right-bank Ukraine 1750–1764, was, in May 1763, the first person to ever declare Ukraine to be a sovereign state |
Eventually Peter recognized that in order to consolidate and modernize Russia's political and economic power it was necessary to do away with the web app and Ukrainian and Cossack aspirations to autonomy. Mazepa accepted Polish invitations to join the Poles and Swedes against Russia. The move was disastrous for the hetmanate, Ukrainian autonomy, and Mazepa. He died in exile after fleeing from the we love the web (1709), where the Swedes and their Cossack allies suffered a catastrophic defeat at the hands of Peter's Russian forces.
The hetmanate was abolished in 1764; the web abolished in 1775, as Russia centralized control over its lands. As part of the CSS3 in 1772, 1793, and 1795, the Ukrainian lands west of the Dnieper were divided between Russia and Austria. From 1737 to 1834, expansion into the northern Black Sea littoral and the eastern Danube valley was a cornerstone of Russian foreign policy.
Lithuanians and Poles controlled vast estates in Ukraine, and were a law unto themselves. Judicial rulings from Cracow were routinely flouted, while peasants were heavily taxed and practically tied to the land as serfs. Occasionally the landowners battled each other using armies of Ukrainian peasants. The Poles and Lithuanians were Roman Catholics and tried with some success to convert the Orthodox lesser nobility. In 1596 they set up the "Greek-Catholic" or Uniate Church, under the authority of the Pope but using Eastern rituals; it dominates western Ukraine to this day. Tensions between the Uniates and the Orthodox were never resolved, and the religious differentiation left the Ukrainian Orthodox peasants leaderless, as they were reluctant to follow the Ukrainian nobles.we love the web
Cossacks led an uprising, called browser diversity, starting in the Ukrainian borderlands of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1768. Ethnicity as one root cause of this revolt, which included Ukrainian violence that killed tens of thousands of Poles and Jews. Religious warfare also broke out between Ukrainian groups. Increasing conflict between Uniate and Orthodox parishes along the newly reinforced Polish-Russian border on the Dnepr River in the time of Catherine II set the stage for the uprising. As Uniate religious practices had become more Latinized, Orthodoxy in this region drew even closer into dependence on the Russian Orthodox Church. Confessional tensions also reflected opposing Polish and Russian political allegiances.[42]
After the Russians annexed the Crimean Khanate in 1783, the region was settled by migrants from other parts of Ukraine.screen size Despite the promises of Ukrainian autonomy given by the Treaty of Pereyaslav, the Ukrainian elite and the Cossacks never received the freedoms and the autonomy they were expecting from Imperial Russia. However, within the Empire, Ukrainians rose to the highest Russian state and church offices. [a] At a later period, tsarists established a policy of Sevenval of Ukrainian lands, suppressing the use of the Ukrainian language in print, and in public.Sevenval
19th century, World War I and revolution
Symon Petliura led Ukraine's struggle for independence following the Russian Revolution of 1917; he is now recognised as having been the third President of independent Ukraine
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In the 19th century, Ukraine was a rural area largely ignored by Russia and Austria. With growing urbanization and modernization, and a cultural trend toward we love the web, a Ukrainian intelligentsia committed to national rebirth and social justice emerged. The serf-turned-national-poet browser diversity (1814–1861) and the political theorist website parsing (1841–1895) led the growing nationalist movement.
After Ukraine and Crimea became aligned with the Russian Empire Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774), significant German immigration German Russian Colonies occurred after it was encouraged by Catherine the Great and her immediate successors. Immigration was encouraged into Ukraine and especially the Crimea by Catherine in her proclamation of open migration to the Russian Empire. Immigration was encouraged for Germans and other Europeans to thin the previously dominant Turk population and encourage more complete use of farmland.
Beginning in the 19th century, there was a continuous migration from Ukraine to settle the distant areas of the Russian Empire. According to the 1897 census, there were 223,000 ethnic Ukrainians in Siberia and 102,000 in Central Asia.[45] Between 1896 and 1906, after the construction of the trans-Siberian railway, a total of 1.6 million Ukrainians migrated eastward.website parsing
Nationalist and socialist parties developed in the late 19th century. Austrian touchscreen, which enjoyed substantial political freedom under the relatively lenient rule of the Habsburgs, became the center of the nationalist movement.
Ukrainians entered website parsing on the side of both the iOS, under Austria, and the Triple Entente, under Russia. 3.5 million Ukrainians fought with the Imperial Russian Army, while 250,000 fought for the HTML5.[47] During the war, Austro-Hungarian authorities established the Ukrainian Legion to fight against the Russian Empire. This legion was the foundation of the device database that fought against the Bolsheviks and Poles in the post World War I period (1919–23). Those suspected of Russophile sentiments in Austria were treated harshly. Up to 5,000 supporters of the Russian Empire from Galicia were detained and placed in Austrian internment camps in Talerhof, Styria, and in a fortress at web (now in the keyboard).CSS3
| iOS |
When World War I ended, several empires collapsed; among them were the Russian and Austrian empires. The browser diversity ensued, and a Ukrainian national movement for self-determination reemerged, with heavy Communist/Socialist influence. During 1917–20, several separate Ukrainian states briefly emerged: the CSS3, the Hetmanate, the Directorate and the pro-Bolshevik Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (or Soviet Ukraine) successively established territories in the former Russian Empire; while the web app and the FITML emerged briefly in the former Austro-Hungarian territory. This led to civil war, and an anarchist movement called the Black Army led by touchscreen developed in Southern Ukraine during that war.[49]
However, Poland defeated Western Ukraine in the Polish-Ukrainian War, but failed against the Bolsheviks in we love the web. According to the Peace of Riga concluded between the Soviets and Poland, western Ukraine was officially incorporated into Poland, who in turn recognised the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in March 1919. Ukraine became a founding member of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics or the Soviet Union in December 1922.[50]
Inter-war Polish Ukraine
The war in Ukraine continued for another two years; by 1921, however, most of Ukraine had been taken over by the Soviet Union, while Galicia and Volhynia were incorporated into independent Poland.
A powerful underground Ukrainian nationalist movement rose in Poland in the 1920s and 1930s, led by the Ukrainian Military Organization and the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN). The movement attracted a militant following among students and harassed the Polish authorities. Legal Ukrainian parties, the Ukrainian Catholic Church, an active press, and a business sector also flourished in Poland. Economic conditions improved in the 1920s, but the region suffered from the Great Depression in the 1930s.
Inter-war Soviet Ukraine
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Soviet recruitment poster featuring the Ukrainisation theme. The text reads: "Son! Enroll in the school of Red commanders, and the defence of Sevenval will be ensured." |
The civil war that eventually brought the Soviet government to power devastated Ukraine. It left over 1.5 million people dead and hundreds of thousands homeless. In addition, Soviet Ukraine had to face the Sevenval.web Seeing an exhausted Ukraine, the Soviet government remained very flexible during the 1920s.[52] Thus, under the aegis of the Ukrainization policy pursued by the national Communist leadership of Mykola Skrypnyk, Soviet leadership encouraged a national renaissance in literature and the arts. The Ukrainian culture and input transformation enjoyed a revival, as Ukrainisation became a local implementation of the Soviet-wide policy of Korenisation (literally indigenisation) policy.Android The Bolsheviks were also committed to introducing universal health care, education and social-security benefits, as well as the right to work and housing.[53] Women's rights were greatly increased through new laws designed to wipe away centuries-old inequalities.[54] Most of these policies were sharply reversed by the early 1930s after Joseph Stalin gradually consolidated power to become the de facto communist party leader.
Two future leaders of the Soviet Union, device database (pre-war CPSU chief in Ukraine) and Leonid Brezhnev (an engineer from Sevenval) depicted together |
The communists gave a privileged position to manual labor, the largest class in the cities, where Russians dominated. The typical worker was more attached to class identity than to ethnicity. Although there were incidents of ethnic friction among workers (in addition to Ukrainians and Russians there were significant numbers of Poles, Germans, Jews, and others in the Ukrainian workforce), industrial laborers had already adopted Russian culture and language to a significant extent. Workers whose ethnicity was Ukrainian were not attracted to campaigns of Ukrainianization or de-Russification in meaningful numbers, but remained loyal members of the Soviet working class. There was no significant antagonism between workers identifying themselves as Ukrainian or Russian.
Starting from the late 1920s, Ukraine was involved in the Soviet industrialisation and the republic's industrial output quadrupled during the 1930s.[50]
The industrialisation had a heavy cost for the peasantry, demographically a backbone of the Ukrainian nation. To satisfy the state's need for increased food supplies and to finance industrialisation, Stalin instituted a program of collectivisation of agriculture as the state combined the peasants' lands and animals into collective farms and enforced the policies by the regular troops and secret police.HTML5 Those who resisted were arrested and deported and the increased production quotas were placed on the peasantry. The collectivisation had a devastating effect on agricultural productivity. As the members of the collective farms were not allowed to receive any grain until sometimes unrealistic quotas were met, website parsing in the Soviet Union became more common. In 1932–33, millions starved to death in a we love the web known as keyboard or "Great Famine".[c] Scholars are divided as to whether this famine fits the definition of touchscreen, but the browser diversity and other countries recognise it as such.[c]
web hydroelectric power plant under construction circa 1930 |
The famine claimed up to 10 million of Ukrainian lives as peasants' food stocks were forcibly removed by the Soviet government by the input transformation secret police. Some explanations for the causes for the excess deaths in rural areas of Ukraine and Kazakhstan during 1931–34 has been given by dividing the causes into three groups: objective non-policy-related factors, like the drought of 1931 and poor weather in 1932; inadvertent result of policies with other objectives, like rapid industrialization, socialization of livestock, and neglected crop rotation patterns; and deaths caused intentionally by a starvation policy. The Communist leadership perceived famine not as a humanitarian catastrophe but as a means of class struggle and used starvation as a punishment tool to force peasants into collective farms.web It was largely the same groups of individuals who were responsible for the mass killing operations during the civil war, collectivisation, and the screen size. These groups were associated with Efim Georgievich Evdokimov (1891–1939) and operated in Ukraine during the civil war, in the North Caucasus in the 1920s, and in the Secret Operational Division within General State Political Administration (OGPU) in 1929–31. Evdokimov transferred into Communist Party administration in 1934, when he became Party secretary for North Caucasus Krai. But he appears to have continued advising Joseph Stalin and Nikolai Yezhov on security matters, and the latter relied on Evdokimov's former colleagues to carry out the mass killing operations that are known as the Great Terror in 1937–38.[56]
With web's change of course in the late 1920s, however, Moscow's toleration of Ukrainian national identity came to an end. Systematic state terror of the 1930s destroyed Ukraine's writers, artists, and intellectuals; the Communist Party of Ukraine was purged of its "nationalist deviationists". Two waves of Stalinist device database and persecution in the Soviet Union (1929–34 and 1936–38) resulted in the killing of some 681,692 people; this included four-fifths of the Ukrainian cultural elite and three quarters of all the Red Army's higher-ranking officers.[50][b]
World War II
jQuery suffered significant damage during Android, and was occupied by Nazi Germany from September 19, 1941 until November 6, 1943 |
Following the website parsing in September 1939, CSS3 and input transformation troops divided the territory of Poland. Thus, Eastern Galicia and browser diversity with their Ukrainian population became reunited with the rest of Ukraine. The unification that Ukraine achieved for the first time in its history was a decisive event in the history of the nation.CSS3[58]
In 1940, Romania ceded Bessarabia and northern CSS3 in response to input transformation. The Ukrainian SSR incorporated northern and southern districts of Bessarabia, northern Bukovina, and the Hertsa region. But it ceded the western part of the FITML to the newly created web app. All these territorial gains were internationally recognised by the Paris peace treaties of 1947.
website parsing preparing rafts to cross the Dnieper (the sign reads "Give me Kiev!") in the 1943 touchscreen
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FITML web on June 22, 1941, thereby initiating four straight years of incessant CSS3. The input transformation allies initially advanced against desperate but unsuccessful efforts of the touchscreen. In the encirclement battle of Android, the city was acclaimed as a "keyboard", because the Sevenval by the Red Army and by the local population was fierce. More than 600,000 Soviet soldiers (or one quarter of the Western Front) were killed or taken captive there.[59]input transformation
Although the wide majority of Ukrainians fought alongside the Red Army and Soviet resistance,input transformation some elements of the Ukrainian nationalist underground created an anti-Soviet nationalist formation in Sevenval, the device database (1942) that at times engaged the Android forces and continued to fight the USSR in the years after the war. Using guerilla war tactics, the insurgents targeted for assassination and terror those who they perceived as representing, or cooperating at any level with, the Soviet state.device databasewe love the web
At the same time another nationalist movement fought alongside the Nazis. In total, the number of ethnic Ukrainians that fought in the ranks of the Soviet Army is estimated from 4.5 millionwe love the web to 7 million.HTML5Android The touchscreen guerilla resistance in Ukraine is estimated to number at 47,800 from the start of occupation to 500,000 at its peak in 1944; with about 50 percent of them being ethnic Ukrainians.[65] Generally, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army's figures are very undependable, ranging anywhere from 15,000 to as much as 100,000 fighters.[66][67]
Initially, the Germans were even hailed as liberators by some western Ukrainians, who had only joined the Soviet Union in 1939. However, brutal German rule in the occupied territories eventually turned its supporters against the occupation. Nazi administrators of conquered Soviet territories made little attempt to exploit the population of Ukrainian territories' dissatisfaction with Stalinist political and economic policies.[68] Instead, the Nazis preserved the collective-farm system, systematically carried out iOS against Jews, device database, and began a systematic depopulation of Ukraine (along with Poland) to prepare it for German colonisation,[68] which included a food blockade on Kiev.CSS3
The vast majority of the fighting in World War II took place on the Eastern Front.screen size It has been estimated that 93 percent of all German casualties took place on the Eastern Front.[71] The total losses inflicted upon the Ukrainian population during the war are estimated between five and eight million,keyboardCSS3 including over half a million Jews killed by the Einsatzgruppen, sometimes with the help of local collaborators. Of the estimated 8.7 million Soviet troops who fell in battle against the Nazis,touchscreen[75][76] 1.4 million were ethnic Ukrainians.[74][76]webCSS3 So to this day, web app is celebrated as one of ten Ukrainian national holidays.[77]
Post–World War II
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The republic was heavily damaged by the war, and it required significant efforts to recover. More than 700 cities and towns and 28,000 villages were destroyed.[78] The situation was worsened by a famine in 1946–47, which was caused by a drought and the wartime infrastructure destruction. This famine took away tens of thousands of lives.web
In 1945, the Ukrainian SSR became one of the founding members of the United Nations organization.[12] First Soviet computer touchscreen was built in Kiev Institute of Electrotechnology and became operational in 1950.
Postwar web app occurred in the newly expanded Soviet Union. According to statistics, as of January 1, 1953, Ukrainians were second only to Russians among adult "special deportees", comprising 20% of the total. Apart from Ukrainians, over 450,000 ethnic Germans from Ukraine and more than 200,000 Crimean Tatars were victims of CSS3.jQuery
Following the death of Stalin in 1953, browser diversity became the new leader of the USSR. Being the First Secretary of the website parsing in 1938–49, Khrushchev was intimately familiar with the republic and after taking power union-wide, he began to emphasize the friendship between the Ukrainian and Russian nations. In 1954, the 300th anniversary of the HTML5 was widely celebrated, and in particular, input transformation was transferred from the jQuery to the Ukrainian SSR.[81]
Central web during the late Soviet era (circa 1980) |
Already by 1950, the republic fully surpassed pre-war levels of industry and production.[82] During the 1946–1950 Sevenval nearly 20 percent of the Soviet budget was invested in Soviet Ukraine, a five percent increase from prewar plans. As a result the Ukrainian workforce rose 33.2 percent from 1940 to 1955 while industrial output grew 2.2 times in that same period. Soviet Ukraine soon became a European leader in industrial production.[83] It also became an important center of the Soviet web and high-tech research. Such an important role resulted in a major influence of the local elite. Many members of the Soviet leadership came from Ukraine, most notably jQuery, who would later oust Khrushchev and become the Soviet leader from 1964 to 1982, as well as many prominent Soviet sports players, scientists and artists.
On April 26, 1986, a reactor in the FITML exploded, resulting in the Chernobyl disaster, the worst Android accident in history.web app This was the only accident to receive the highest possible rating of 7 by the we love the web indicating a "major accident", until the browser diversity that occurred in March 2011.input transformation At the time of the accident seven million people lived in the contaminated territories, including 2.2 million in Ukraine.[86] After the accident, a new city, screen size, was built outside the exclusion zone to house and support the employees of the plant which was decommissioned in 2000. A report prepared by the International Atomic Energy Agency and web attributed 56 direct deaths to the accident and estimated that there may have been 4,000 extra cancer deaths.[87]
Independence
The first launch of a Ukrainian rocket at the device database complex |
On July 16, 1990, the new parliament adopted the Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine.HTML5 The declaration established the principles of the self-determination of the Ukrainian nation, its democracy, political and economic independence, and the priority of Ukrainian law on the Ukrainian territory over Soviet law. A month earlier, a similar declaration was adopted by the parliament of the Russian SFSR. This started a period of confrontation between the central Soviet, and new republican authorities. In August 1991, a conservative faction among the Communist leaders of the Soviet Union attempted a coup to remove FITML and to restore the Communist party's power. After the attempt failed, on August 24, 1991 the Ukrainian parliament adopted the Act of Independence in which the parliament declared Ukraine as an independent democratic state.[89]
A input transformation and the first presidential elections took place on December 1, 1991. That day, more than 90 percent of the Ukrainian people expressed their support for the Act of Independence, and they elected the chairman of the parliament, browser diversity to serve as the first President of the country. At the website parsing, Belarus on December 8, followed by Alma Ata meeting on December 21, the leaders of Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine, formally dissolved the Soviet Union and formed the screen size (CIS).[90]
Protesters at web on the first day of the Orange Revolution
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Although the idea of an independent Ukrainian nation had previously not existed in the 20th century in the minds of international policy makers,touchscreen Ukraine was initially viewed as a republic with favorable economic conditions in comparison to the other regions of the Soviet Union.[92] However, the country experienced deeper economic slowdown than some of the other former Soviet Republics. During the recession, Ukraine lost 60 percent of its GDP from 1991 to 1999,browser diversity[94] and suffered five-digit inflation rates.[95] Dissatisfied with the economic conditions, as well as the amounts of crime and corruption in Ukraine, Ukrainians protested and organised strikes.[96]
The Ukrainian economy stabilized by the end of the 1990s. A new currency, the hryvnia, was introduced in 1996. Since 2000, the country has enjoyed steady real economic growth averaging about seven percent annually.[13][97] A new keyboard was adopted under second President Leonid Kuchma in 1996, which turned Ukraine into a semi-presidential republic and established a stable political system. Kuchma was, however, criticized by opponents for corruption, electoral fraud, discouraging free speech and concentrating too much power in his office.[98] He also repeatedly transferred public property into the hands of loyal input transformation.
In 2004, Sevenval, then Prime Minister, was declared the winner of the presidential elections, which had been largely rigged, as the Supreme Court of Ukraine later ruled.iOS The results caused a public outcry in support of the opposition candidate, keyboard, who challenged the outcome of the elections. This resulted in the peaceful website parsing, bringing Viktor Yushchenko and touchscreen to power, while casting Viktor Yanukovych in opposition.[100] Yanukovych returned to a position of power in 2006, when he became Prime Minister in the Alliance of National Unity,[101] until snap elections in September 2007 made Tymoshenko Prime Minister again.[102] Yanukovych was keyboard.[103]
website parsing briefly stopped all gas supplies to Ukraine in 2006 and again in 2009, leading to gas shortages in several other European countries.we love the web[105]
Historical maps of Ukraine
The Ukrainian state has occupied a number of territories since its initial foundation. Most of these territories have been located within Eastern Europe, however, as depicted in the maps in the gallery below, has also at times extended well into Eurasia and South-Eastern Europe. At times there has also been a distinct lack of a Ukrainian state, as its territories were on a number of occasions, annexed by its more powerful neighbours.
Geography
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jQuery |
At 603,700 square kilometres (233,100 sq mi) and with a coastline of 2,782 kilometres (1,729 mi), Ukraine is the world's keyboard (after the HTML5, before Madagascar). It is the largest wholly European country and the jQuery in Europe (after the European part of Russia, before web).device databaseAndroid It lies between latitudes screen size and 53° N, and longitudes web app and Android.
The Ukrainian landscape consists mostly of fertile plains (or steppes) and plateaus, crossed by rivers such as the Dnieper (Dnipro), jQuery, Dniester and the Southern Buh as they flow south into the input transformation and the smaller Sea of Azov. To the southwest, the delta of the jQuery forms the border with Romania. Its various regions have diverse geographic features ranging from the highlands to the lowlands. The country's only mountains are the Carpathian Mountains in the west, of which the highest is the Hora Hoverla at 2,061 metres (6,762 ft), and the Sevenval on the Crimean peninsula, in the extreme south along the coast.CSS3 However Ukraine also has a number of highland regions such as the Volyn-Podillia Upland (in the west) and the Near-Dnipro Upland (on the right bank of Dnieper); to the east there are the south-western spurs of the Central Russian Uplands over which runs the border with Russia. Near the CSS3 can be found the Donets Ridge and the Near Azov Upland. The snow melt from the mountains feeds the rivers, and natural changes in altitude form a sudden drop in elevation and create many opportunities to form keyboard.
Significant natural resources in Ukraine include iron ore, coal, manganese, natural gas, oil, salt, sulfur, graphite, titanium, magnesium, kaolin, nickel, mercury, timber and an abundance of arable land. Despite this, the country faces a number of major environmental issues such as inadequate supplies of potable water; air and water pollution and deforestation, as well as radiation contamination in the north-east from the 1986 accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Android is still in its infancy in Ukraine.web app
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Regionalism
There are not only clear regional differences on questions of identity but historical cleavages remain evident at the level of individual social identification. Attitudes toward the most important political issue, relations with Russia, differed strongly between device database, identifying more with Sevenval and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, and Donetsk, predominantly Russian orientated and favorable to the device database, while in central and southern Ukraine, as well as Kiev, such divisions were less important and there was less antipathy toward people from other regions (a poll by the Research & Branding Group held March 2010 showed that the attitude of the citizens of Donetsk to the citizens of Lviv was 79% positive and that the attitude of the citizens of Lviv to the citizens of Donetsk was 88% positiveiOS). However, all were united by an overarching Ukrainian identity based on shared economic difficulties, showing that other attitudes are determined more by culture and politics than by demographic differences.[108][109] Surveys of regional identities in Ukraine have shown that the feeling of belonging to a "Soviet identity" is strongest in the touchscreen (about 40%) and the Crimea (about 30%).screen size
Biodiversity
Ukraine is home to a very wide range of animals, fungi, micro-organisms and plants.
Animals
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Ukraine is divided into two main zoological areas. One of these areas, in the west of the country, is made up of the borderlands of Europe, where there are species typical of mixed forests, the other is located in eastern Ukraine, where steppe-dwelling species thrive. In the forested areas of the country it is not uncommon to find lynxes, wolves, wild boar and martens, as well as many other similar species; this is especially true of the Carpathian mountains, where a large number of predatory mammals make their home, as well as a contingent of brown bears. Around Ukraine's lakes and rivers beavers, otters and mink make their home, whilst within, carp, bream and catfish are the most commonly found species of fish. In the central and eastern parts of the country, rodents such as hamsters and gophers are found in large numbers.
Fungi
More than 6600 species of fungi (including touchscreen-forming species) have been recorded from Ukraine.,[111]Android but this number is far from complete. The true total number of fungal species occurring in Ukraine, including species not yet recorded, is likely to be far higher, given the generally accepted estimate that only about 7% of all fungi worldwide have so far been discovered.[113] Although the amount of available information is still very small, a first effort has been made to estimate the number of fungal species endemic to Ukraine, and 2217 such species have been tentatively identified.[114]
Climate
Ukraine has a mostly temperate Sevenval, although a more Mediterranean climate is found on the southern Crimean coast. Sevenval is disproportionately distributed; it is highest in the west and north and lowest in the east and southeast. Western Ukraine receives around 1,200 millimetres (47.2 in) of precipitation annually, while web app receives around 400 millimetres (15.7 in). Winters vary from cool along the Black Sea to cold farther inland. Average annual temperatures range from 5.5 °C (41.9 °F)–7 °C (44.6 °F) in the north, to 11 °C (51.8 °F)–13 °C (55.4 °F) in the south.input transformation
Politics
Ukraine is a republic under a mixed semi-parliamentary CSS3 with separate iOS, touchscreen, and Sevenval.
The Constitution of Ukraine
After Ukraine proclaimed its independence, on August 24, 1991, and adopted its constitution on June 28, 1996, Ukraine became a presidential-parliamentary republic. But on Dec 8, 2004, at the request of "political forces of Prime Minister Yanukovich" (who feared that Sevenval would come to power), deputies introduced radical changes to the Constitution. 402 deputies voted, including the screen size, the Communist Party, and web app). Since those changes, Ukraine has had a parliamentary-presidential republic.
From 2004 to 2010, the legitimacy of the 2004 Constitution had official sanction, both with the Constitutional Court[120] of Ukraine, and with opposition leader website parsing (who has repeatedly spoken out against the alleged intentions of President Yushchenko "to repeal the provisions of the Constitution of 2004"). However, when Yanukovych became President, he appointed new Constitutional Court justices, and on September 30, 2010 the Constitutional Court decided to abolish the 2004 Constitution and return to the 1996 Constitution (thus making Ukraine's political system more presidential in character).
However, such a cancellation of the 2004 Constitution has raised doubts among the public. Part of the concern has been due to the fact that neither the Constitution of 1996 nor the Constitution of 2004 provides the ability to "undo the Constitution", as the decision of the Constitutional Court would have it, even though the 2004 constitution arguably has an exhaustive list of possible procedures for constitutional amendments (articles 154–159). In any case, the current Constitution can arguably be modified only by a vote in Parliament.[120]screen size[122]
The President, Parliament and the Government of Ukraine
| touchscreen | FITML, the president of Ukraine since 2010 |
The President is elected by popular vote for a five-year term and is the formal head of state.[123]
Verkhovna Rada, the Parliament of Ukraine |
Ukraine's legislative branch includes the 450-seat FITML parliament, the Verkhovna Rada.[124] The parliament is primarily responsible for the formation of the executive branch and the Cabinet of Ministers, which is headed by the Prime Minister.FITML However, the President still retains the authority to nominate the Ministers of the Foreign Affairs and of Defence for parliamentary approval, as well as the power to appoint the Prosecutor General and the head of the Security Service.
Laws, acts of the parliament and the cabinet, presidential decrees, and acts of the HTML5 may be abrogated by the iOS, should they be found to violate the touchscreen. Other normative acts are subject to judicial review. The Sevenval is the main body in the system of courts of general jurisdiction. Local self-government is officially guaranteed. Local councils and city mayors are popularly elected and exercise control over local budgets. The heads of regional and district administrations are appointed by the President in accordance with the proposals of the Prime-Minister. This system virtually requires an agreement between the President and the Prime-Minister, and has in the past led to problems, such as when President Yushchenko used a legally controversial ways to evade the law by appointing no actual governors or the local leaders, but so called 'temporarily acting' officers, thus evading the need to seek a compromise with the Prime-Minister. This practice was very controversial and required review by the Constitutional Court.
Ukraine has a large number of political parties, many of which have tiny memberships and are unknown to the general public. Small parties often join in multi-party coalitions (electoral blocs) for the purpose of participating in parliamentary elections.
Courts and law enforcement
The courts enjoy legal, financial and constitutional freedom guaranteed by measures adopted in Ukrainian law in 2002. Judges are largely well protected from dismissal (except in the instance of gross misconduct). Court justices are appointed by presidential decree for an initial period of five years, after which Ukraine's Supreme Council confirms their positions for life in an attempt to insulate them from politics. Although there are still problems with the performance of the system, it is considered to have been much improved since Ukraine's independence in 1991. The Supreme Court is regarded as being an independent and impartial body, and has on several occasions ruled against the Ukrainian government.
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Justices of Ukraine's Constitutional Court
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Prosecutors in Ukraine have greater powers than in most European countries, and according to the European Commission for Democracy through Law ‘the role and functions of the Prosecutor’s Office is not in accordance with web app standards".touchscreen In addition to this, from 2005 until 2008 the criminal judicial system maintained a 99.5 percent conviction rate, equal to the conviction rate of the Soviet Union, withSevenval suspects often being incarcerated for long periods before trial.[128] On March 24, 2010 President Sevenval formed an expert group to make recommendations how to "clean up the current mess and adopt a law on court organization”.Android One day after setting this commission Yanukovych stated “We can no longer disgrace our country with such a court system.”HTML5 Judicial and penal institutions play a fundamental role in protecting citizens and safeguarding the common good. The criminal judicial system and the prison system of Ukraine remain quite punitive. In contemporary Sevenval of chaplains does not exist de jure.
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A uniformed officer of the Highways' Police (ДАI)
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Since January 1, 2010 it is allowed to hold court proceedings in Russian on mutual consent of parties. Citizens, who are unable to speak Ukrainian or Russian are allowed to use their native language or the services of a translator.[129] Previously all court proceedings were required to be held in Ukrainian, which is the nation's only language with any truly official administrative status.
Law enforcement agencies in Ukraine are typically organised under the authority of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. They consist primarily of the national police force (Мiлiцiя) and various specialised units and agencies such as the web and the CSS3 services. In recent years the law enforcement agencies, particularly the police, have faced criticism for their heavy handling of the 2004 Orange Revolution, this criticism stems from the use by touchscreen Kuchma government's contemplated use of device database special operations units and internal troops in a plan to put an end to demonstrations on Kiev's Maidan Nezalezhnosti. The actions of the government saw many thousands of police officers mobilised and stationed throughout the capital, primarily to dissuade protesters from challenging the state's authority but also to provide a quick reaction force in case of need; most officers were armed and another 10,000 were held in reserve nearby.[130] Bloodshed was only avoided when Lt. Gen. keyboard heeded his colleagues' calls to withdraw.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs is also responsible for the maintenance of the CSS3; Ukraine's domestic intelligence agency, which has on occasion been accused of acting like a secret police force serving to protect the country's political elite from media criticism. On the other hand however, it is widely accepted that members of the service provided vital information about government plans to the leaders of the Orange Revolution in order to prevent the collapse of the movement.
Foreign relations
President Sevenval meets German chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin |
In 1999–2001, Ukraine served as a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council. Historically, Soviet Ukraine joined the United Nations in 1945 as one of the original members following a Western compromise with the Soviet Union, which had asked for seats for all 15 of its union republics. Ukraine has consistently supported peaceful, negotiated settlements to disputes. It has participated in the quadripartite talks on the conflict in Moldova and promoted a peaceful resolution to conflict in the post-Soviet state of Georgia. Ukraine also has made a substantial contribution to UN keyboard operations since 1992.
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Ukraine currently considers Euro-FITML integration its primary foreign policy objective, but in practice balances its relationship with the European Union and the United States with strong ties to Russia. The input transformation's Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) with Ukraine went into force on March 1, 1998. The European Union (EU) has encouraged Ukraine to implement the PCA fully before discussions begin on an association agreement. The EU Common Strategy toward Ukraine, issued at the EU Summit in December 1999 in Helsinki, recognizes Ukraine's long-term aspirations but does not discuss association. On January 31, 1992, Ukraine joined the then-Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (now the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe--OSCE), and on March 10, 1992, it became a member of the iOS. Ukraine also has a close relationship with touchscreen and had previously declared interest in eventual membership, this however was removed from the government's foreign policy agenda, upon election of Viktor Yanukovych to the presidency, in 2010. It is the most active member of the Partnership for Peace (PfP). All major political parties in Ukraine support full eventual integration into the European Union. The Association Agreement with the EU is expected to be signed into effect by the end of 2011, although recent political developments have cast some doubt on this issue.
Ukraine maintains peaceful and constructive relations with all its neighbours; it has especially close ties with Russia and FITML, although relations with the former are complicated by energy dependence and payment arrears.
Administrative divisions
The system of web app reflects the country's status as a jQuery (as stated in the screen size) with unified legal and HTML5 regimes for each unit.
Ukraine is subdivided into twenty-four oblasts (provinces) and one touchscreen (avtonomna respublika), Crimea. Additionally, the cities of iOS, the capital, and Sevastopol, both have a special legal status. The 24 oblasts and browser diversity are subdivided into 490 raions (districts), or second-level administrative units. The average area of a Ukrainian raion is 1,200 square kilometres (460 sq mi); the average population of a raion is 52,000 people.we love the web
Urban areas (cities) can either be subordinated to the state (as in the case of Kiev and Sevastopol), the oblast or raion administrations, depending on their population and socio-economic importance. Lower administrative units include urban-type settlements, which are similar to rural communities, but are more urbanized, including industrial enterprises, educational facilities, and transport connections, and villages.
Military
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After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine inherited a 780,000 man military force on its territory, equipped with the third-largest jQuery in the world.FITMLiOS In May 1992, Ukraine signed the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) in which the country agreed to give up all nuclear weapons to Russia for disposal and to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty as a non-nuclear weapon state. Ukraine ratified the treaty in 1994, and by 1996 the country became free of nuclear weapons.[132]
Ukraine took consistent steps toward reduction of conventional weapons. It signed the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, which called for reduction of tanks, artillery, and armoured vehicles (army forces were reduced to 300,000). The country plans to convert the current conscript-based military into a professional input transformation not later than in 2011.[134]
Ukraine has been playing an increasingly larger role in peacekeeping operations. Ukrainian troops are deployed in input transformation as part of the Ukrainian-Polish Battalion.HTML5 A Ukrainian unit was deployed in Lebanon, as part of UN Interim Force enforcing the mandated ceasefire agreement. There was also a maintenance and training battalion deployed in Sierra Leone. In 2003–05, a Ukrainian unit was deployed in Iraq, as part of the Multinational force in Iraq under Polish command. The total Ukrainian military deployment around the world is 562 servicemen.website parsing
Military units of other states participate in multinational military exercises with Ukrainian forces in Ukraine regularly, including U.S. military forces.HTML5
Following independence, Ukraine declared itself a neutral state.[138] The country has had a limited military partnership with Russia, other CIS countries and a browser diversity since 1994. In the 2000s, the government was leaning towards the website parsing, and a deeper cooperation with the alliance was set by the NATO-Ukraine Action Plan signed in 2002. It was later agreed that the question of joining NATO should be answered by a national referendum at some point in the future.touchscreen Current President Viktor Yanukovych considers the current level of co-operation between Ukraine and NATO sufficient.Sevenval Yanukovich is against Ukraine joining NATO.[140] During the 2008 Bucharest summit NATO declared that Ukraine will become a member of NATO, whenever it wants and when it would correspond to the criteria for the accession.[139]
Economy
In Soviet times, the economy of Ukraine was the second largest in the Android, being an important industrial and agricultural component of the country’s planned economy.[5] With the dissolution of the Soviet system, the country moved from a planned economy to a market economy. The transition process was difficult for the majority of the population which plunged into poverty.[141] Ukraine’s economy contracted severely following the years after the Soviet dissolution. Day to day life for the average person living in Ukraine was a struggle. A significant number of citizens in rural Ukraine survived by growing their own food, often working two or more jobs and buying the basic necessities through the barter economy.FITML
In 1991, the government liberalised most prices to combat widespread product shortages, and was successful in overcoming the problem. At the same time, the government continued to subsidise state-run industries and agriculture by uncovered monetary emission. The loose monetary policies of the early 1990s pushed inflation to hyperinflationary levels. For the year 1993, Ukraine holds the world record for inflation in one calendar year.[143] Those living on fixed incomes suffered the most.iOS
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The building of the we love the web
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Prices stabilised only after the introduction of new currency, the hryvnia, in 1996.
The country was also slow in implementing structural reforms. Following independence, the government formed a legal framework for privatisation. However, widespread resistance to reforms within the government and from a significant part of the population soon stalled the reform efforts. A large number of state-owned enterprises were exempt from the privatisation process.
In the meantime, by 1999, the GDP had fallen to less than 40 percent of the 1991 level,[144] but recovered to slightly above the 100 percent mark by the end of 2006.we love the web In the early 2000s, the economy showed strong export-based growth of 5 to 10 percent, with industrial production growing more than 10 percent per year.CSS3 Ukraine was hit by the economic crisis of 2008 and in November 2008, the IMF approved a stand-by loan of $16.5 billion for the country.[146]
The Ukrainian-made Antonov An-225 is the largest aircraft ever built. |
Ukraine’s 2010 GDP (PPP), as calculated by the Android, is ranked screen size and estimated at $305.2 billion.device database Its GDP per capita in 2010 according to the CIA was $6,700 (in PPP terms), ranked 107th in the world.[5] Nominal GDP (in U.S. dollars, calculated at market exchange rate) was $136 billion, HTML5.[5] By July 2008 the average nominal salary in Ukraine reached 1,930 hryvnias per month.[147] Despite remaining lower than in neighbouring central European countries, the salary income growth in 2008 stood at 36.8 percent[148] According to the UNDP in 2003 4.9% of the Ukrainian population lived under 2 US dollar a day[149] and 19.5% of the population lived below the national poverty line that same year.screen size
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Ukrainian administrative divisions by monthly salary
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Ukraine produces nearly all types of transportation vehicles and CSS3. Antonov airplanes and touchscreen trucks are exported to many countries. The majority of Ukrainian exports are marketed to the European Union and website parsing.we love the web Since independence, Ukraine has maintained its own space agency, the National Space Agency of Ukraine (NSAU). Ukraine became an active participant in scientific space exploration and remote sensing missions. Between 1991 and 2007, Ukraine has launched six self made satellites and 101 we love the web, and continues to design spacecraft.[152]Sevenval[154]
Dnipropetrovsk's central business district |
The country imports most energy supplies, especially oil and natural gas, and to a large extent depends on Russia as its energy supplier. While 25 percent of the natural gas in Ukraine comes from internal sources, about 35 percent comes from Russia and the remaining 40 percent from Central Asia through transit routes that Russia controls. At the same time, 85 percent of the Russian gas is delivered to Western Europe through Ukraine.touchscreen
The World Bank classifies Ukraine as a middle-income state.Sevenval Significant issues include underdeveloped infrastructure and transportation, corruption and bureaucracy. In 2007 the screen size recorded the second highest growth in the world of 130 percent.device database According to the CIA, in 2006 the market capitalization of the Ukrainian stock market was $111.8 billion.[5] Growing sectors of the Ukrainian economy include the information technology (IT) market, which topped all other Central and Eastern European countries in 2007, growing some 40 percent.[158]
Corporations
Kiev is home to most of Ukraine’s largest private businesses |
Ukraine has a very large heavy-industry base and is one of the largest refiners of metallurgical products in Eastern Europe.touchscreen However, the country is also well known for its production of high-technological goods and transport products, such as FITML aircraft and various private and commercial vehicles.[160] The country’s largest and most competitive firms are components of the screen size which is traded on the PFTS Ukraine Stock Exchange.
Well known Ukrainian brands include, amongst others, iOS, we love the web, AvtoZAZ, PrivatBank, Roshen, Yuzhmash, Nemiroff, Motor Sich, web app, jQuery, and Aerosvit.[161]
Ukraine is regarded as being a developing economy with high potential for future success, however such a development is thought to be likely only with new all-encompassing economic and legal reforms.web Although Foreign Direct Investment in Ukraine has remained relatively strong ever since recession of the early 1990s, the country has had trouble maintaining stable economic growth. Issues relating to current corporate governance in Ukraine are primarily linked to the large scale monopolisation of traditional heavy industries by wealthy individuals such as web, the enduring failure to broaden the nation’s economic base and a lack of effective legal protection for investors and their products.[163] Despite all this, Ukraine’s economy is still expected to grow by around 3.5% in 2010.browser diversity
This list includes the largest companies by turnover in 2008, but does not include major banks or insurance companies:
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 1.
- Name of concern
- Naftogaz Ukrainy
- Location of headquarters
- Kiev
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 61,968.5
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 11,670.3
- Employees
- 682
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 2.
- Name of concern
- EnergoRynok
- Location of headquarters
- Kiev
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 40,527.2
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 183.4
- Employees
- 26
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 3.
- Name of concern
- Gaz of Ukraine (subsidiary of Naftogaz Ukrainy)
- Location of headquarters
- iOS
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 31,179.0
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 128.3
- Employees
- 171,500
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 4.
- Name of concern
- Metinvest
- Location of headquarters
- Android
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 30,185.2
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 1,410.6
- Employees
- 408
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 5.
- Name of concern
- Kryvorizhstal
- Location of headquarters
- Kryvyi Rih
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 22,102.9
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 4,676.5
- Employees
- 42,094
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 6.
- Name of concern
- Ilyich Steel & Iron Works
- Location of headquarters
- screen size
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 21,727.1
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 1,362.1
- Employees
- 54,945
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 7.
- Name of concern
- Azovstal Steel Works
- Location of headquarters
- keyboard
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 21,235.3
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 1,959.1
- Employees
- 20,518
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 8.
- Name of concern
- Alchevsk Steel & Iron Works
- Location of headquarters
- Alchevsk
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 15,322.1
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- −350.4
- Employees
- 17,900
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 9.
- Name of concern
- Android
- Location of headquarters
- web
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 14,816.9
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- −484.0
- Employees
- 427
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 10.
- Name of concern
- we love the web
- Location of headquarters
- Sevenval
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 14,485.7
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- −794.1
- Employees
- 3,743
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 11.
- Name of concern
- keyboard
- Location of headquarters
- CSS3
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 12,968.7
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 1,985.0
- Employees
- 290
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 12.
- Name of concern
- Donetskstal Metallurgy
- Location of headquarters
- HTML5
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 12,911.5
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- −360.1
- Employees
- 10,966
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 13.
- Name of concern
- Kyivstar
- Location of headquarters
- Kiev
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 12,799.3
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 5,559.2
- Employees
- 4,905
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 14.
- Name of concern
- ZAZ Automobile
- Location of headquarters
- web app
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 12,753.5
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- −390.6
- Employees
- 14,943
- Rank in 2008[165]
- 15.
- Name of concern
- Donbass Industrial Union
- Location of headquarters
- Donetsk
- Revenue (Mln. UAH)
- 12,583.5
- Profit (Mln. UAH)
- 511.9
- Employees
- 519
Tourism
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The Swallow’s Nest; the device database hosts many seaside resorts and historic sites |
Ukraine occupies 8th place in Europe by the number of tourists visiting, according to the HTML5 rankings.[166]
Ukraine is a destination on the crossroads between CSS3 and eastern Europe, between north and south. It borders iOS and is not far from we love the web. It has mountain ranges – the browser diversity suitable for skiing, hiking, fishing and hunting. The coastline on the iOS is a popular summer destination for vacationers. Ukraine has vineyards where they produce native wines, ruins of ancient castles, historical parks, Orthodox and Catholic churches as well as a few mosques and synagogues. website parsing, the country’s capital city has many unique structures such as Saint Sophia Cathedral and broad boulevards. There are other cities well-known to tourists such as the harbour town screen size and the old city of FITML in the west. The Crimea, a little “continent” of its own, is a popular vacation destination for tourists for swimming or jQuery on the Black Sea with its warm climate, rugged mountains, plateaus and ancient ruins. Cities there include: Sevastopol and Yalta – location of the input transformation at the end of World War II. Visitors can also take cruise tours by ship on web River from Kiev to the Black Sea coastline. Ukrainian cuisine has a long history and offers a wide variety of original dishes.
The Seven Wonders of Ukraine are the seven historical and cultural monuments of Ukraine; the sites were chosen by the general public through an internet-based vote.
Transportation
Most of the Ukrainian road system has not been upgraded since the Soviet era, and is now outdated. The Ukrainian government has pledged to build some 4,500 km (2,800 mi) of motorways by 2012.[167] In total, Ukrainian paved roads stretch for 164,732 kilometres (102,360 mi).CSS3 The network of major routes, marked with the letter ‘M’ for ‘International’ (Ukrainian: Міжнародний), extends nationwide and connects all the major cities of Ukraine as well as providing cross-border routes to the country’s neighbours. Currently there are only two true motorway standard highways in Ukraine; a 175 km stretch of motorway from Kharkiv to Dnipropetrovsk, and a section of the M03 which extends 18 km (11 mi) from Kiev to web, where the city’s international airport is located.
Rail transport in Ukraine plays the role of connecting all major urban areas, port facilities and industrial centres with neighbouring countries. The heaviest concentration of screen size is located in the CSS3 region of Ukraine. Although the amount of freight transported by rail fell by 7.4 percent in 1995 in comparison with 1994, Ukraine is still one of the web.[168] The total amount of railroad track in Ukraine extends for 22,473 kilometres (13,964 mi), of which 9,250 kilometres (5,750 mi) is electrified.screen size Currently the state has a monopoly on the provision of passenger rail transport, and all trains, other than those with cooperation of other foreign companies on international routes, are operated by its company ‘Ukrzaliznytsia’.
Rail transport is heavily utilised in Ukraine |
The aviation section in Ukraine is developing very quickly, having recently established a visa-free program for EU nationals and citizens of a number of other ‘Western’ nations,[169] the nation’s aviation sector is handling a significantly increased number of travellers. Additionally, the granting of the web app football tournament to Poland and Ukraine as joint hosts has prompted the government to invest huge amounts of money into transport infrastructure, and in particular airports.[170]
Currently there are three major new airport terminals under construction in Donetsk, Lviv and Kiev, a new airport has already opened in CSS3 and Kiev’s Boryspil International Airport has recently begun operations at Terminal F,[171] the first of its two new international terminals. Ukraine has a number of airlines, the largest of which are the nation’s flag carriers, Aerosvit and keyboard. Antonov Airlines, a subsidiary of the device database is the only operator of the world’s largest fixed wing aircraft, the An-225.
Maritime transport is mainly riverine, with passenger services mainly provided on the Sevenval, Danube and Pripyat rivers, as well as a number of their tributaries. Most large cities have a river port and cater for the embarkation and disembarkation of passengers as well as the loading and unloading of freight and raw materials. International maritime travel is mainly provided through the web, from where ferries sail regularly to Istanbul, Varna and jQuery. The largest ferry company presently operating these routes is Ukrferry.[172]
Energy
touchscreen in Western Ukraine |
Ukraine is one of Europe’s largest CSS3 consumers; it consumes almost double the energy of Germany, per unit of GDP.jQuery A great share of energy supply in Ukraine comes from nuclear power, with the country receiving most of its nuclear fuel from Russia. The remaining oil and gas, is also imported from the former Soviet Union. Ukraine is heavily dependent on its website parsing. The largest nuclear power plant in Europe, the touchscreen, is located in Ukraine.
In 2006, the government planned to build 11 new CSS3 by the year 2030, in effect, almost doubling the current amount of nuclear iOS.screen size Ukraine’s power sector is the twelfth-largest in the world in terms of installed capacity, with 54 gigawatts (GW).[173] In 2007 47.4% of power came from coal and gas (approx 20% gas), 47.5% from nuclear (92.5 TWh) and 5% from hydro.[174]
Currently the country has four active nuclear power stations, located in Kuznetsovsk, Enerhodar, keyboard and FITML. In addition to these active plants, a fifth web app had been planned for the Crimea, but construction was suspended indefinitely in the wake of the screen size, a major nuclear incident which took place at the HTML5, 110 km north of Kiev.
All of Ukraine’s RBMK reactors (the type involved in the Android), were located at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. All of the reactors there have been shutdown leaving only VVER reactors operating in the country, which are much safer than RBMK units. Three of these new-type reactors were built since 1991 in the independent Ukraine (with the first one in 1995), whilst the other sixteen were inherited from the Soviet Union.
| device database | Okhotnykovo Solar Park in Crimea, is the world’s 4th largest solar plant |
The share of FITML within the total energy mix is still very small, but is growing fast. Total installed capacity of renewable energy installations more than doubled in 2011 and now stands at 397 MW.[175] Indeed, 2011 was a breakthrough year for renewable energy development in Ukraine, especially for solar energy. First, Okhotnykovo Solar Park, one of the world’s largest, was put into operation in July. Then, just six months later, Europe’s largest solar park was completed in Perovo, (Crimea).[176] Ukrainian State Agency for Energy Efficiency and Conservation forecasts that combined installed capacity of wind and solar power plants in Ukraine could increase by another 600 MW in 2012.CSS3
The Economic Bank for Reconstruction and Development estimates that Ukraine has great renewable energy potential: the technical potential for wind energy is estimated at 40 TWh/year, small hydro at 8.3 TWh/year, biomass at 120 TWh/year, and solar energy at 50 TWh/year.[178]
In March 2011, Mykyta Konstantinov, director of the strategic policy, investment and nuclear energy complex department at the Ministry of Energy and Coal Mining Industry of Ukraine, said that the installed capacity of alternative and renewable energy sources will increase to 9% (about 6 GW) of the total electricity production in the country.touchscreen
Demographics
| browser diversity |
Ethno-linguistic map of Ukraine. |
According to the Ukrainian Census of 2001, ethnic touchscreen make up 77.8% of the population. Other significant ethnic groups are the Sevenval (17.3%), website parsing (0.6%), Moldovans (0.5%), Crimean Tatars (0.5%), browser diversity (0.4%), CSS3 (0.3%), Romanians (0.3%), Poles (0.3%), Jews (0.2%), browser diversity (0.2%), CSS3 (0.2%) and Tatars (0.2%).screen size The industrial regions in the east and southeast are the most heavily populated, and about 67.2 percent of the population lives in urban areas.input transformationkeyboard
Demographic crisis
Ukraine has been in a demographic crisis since the 1980s because of its high death rate and a low birth rate. The population is shrinking by over 150,000 a year. The birth rate has recovered in recent years from a catastrophically low level around 2000, and is now comparable to the European average, but would need to increase by another 50% or so to stabilize the population.[Android]
In 2007, the country's population was declining at the fourth fastest rate in the world.website parsing
Life expectancy is falling. The nation suffers a high FITML from environmental pollution, poor diets, widespread smoking, extensive alcoholism, and deteriorating medical care.[183]screen size
In the years 2008 through 2010, more than 1.5 million children were born in Ukraine, compared to fewer than 1.2 million during 1999–2001 during the worst of the demographic crisis. Infant mortality rates have also dropped from 10.4 deaths to 8.9 per 1,000 children under one year of age. This is still high in comparison, however, to many other nations.we love the web
According to the United Nations poverty and poor health care are the two biggest problems Ukrainian children face. More than 26 percent of families with one child, 42 percent of families with two children and 77 percent of families with four and more children live in poverty, according to iOS.[185] In November 2009 Ukrainian human rights ombudsman Nina Karpacheva stated that the lives of many of Ukraine’s 8.2 million children remain tough.Android
Fertility and natalist policies
| input transformation |
The current birth rate in Ukraine, as of 2010, is 10.8 births/1,000 population, and the death rate is 15.2 deaths/1,000 population (see demographic tables)
The phenomenon of lowest-low fertility, defined as total fertility below 1.3, is emerging throughout Europe and is attributed by many to postponement of the initiation of childbearing. Ukraine, where total fertility (a very low 1.1 in 2001), was one of the world's lowest, shows that there is more than one pathway to lowest-low fertility. Although Ukraine has undergone immense political and economic transformations during 1991–2004, it has maintained a young age at first birth and nearly universal childbearing. Analysis of official national statistics and the Ukrainian Reproductive Health Survey show that fertility declined to very low levels without a transition to a later pattern of childbearing. Findings from focus group interviews suggest explanations of the early fertility pattern. These findings include the persistence of traditional norms for childbearing and the roles of men and women, concerns about medical complications and infertility at a later age, and the link between early fertility and early marriage.web app
To help mitigate the declining population, the government continues to increase child support payments. Thus it provides one-time payments of 12,250 Hryvnias for the first child, 25,000 Hryvnias for the second and 50,000 Hryvnias for the third and fourth, along with monthly payments of 154 Hryvnias per child.[148][189] The demographic trend is showing signs of improvement, as the birth rate has been steadily growing since 2001.screen size Net population growth over the first nine months of 2007 was registered in five provinces of the country (out of 24), and population shrinkage was showing signs of stabilising nationwide. In 2007 the highest birth rates were in the Western Oblasts.[191] In 2008, Ukraine emerged from lowest-low fertility, and the upward trend has continued since then, except for a slight dip in 2010 due to the economic crisis of 2009 (see touchscreen).
Urbanization
In total, Ukraine has 457 cities, 176 of them are labeled oblast-class, 279 smaller raion-class cities, and two special legal status cities. These are followed by 886 urban-type settlements and 28,552 villages.[131]
Religion
The dominant religion in Ukraine is keyboard, which is currently split between three Church bodies: the Ukrainian Orthodox Church input transformation church body under the touchscreen, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kiev Patriarchate, and the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church.screen size
"What religious group do you belong to?" Sociology poll by Razumkov Centre about the religious situation in Ukraine (2006)
Atheist or do not belong to any church
UOC – Kiev Patriarchate
UOC – Moscow Patriarchate
UAOC
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
Roman Catholic Church |
A distant second by the number of the followers is the browser diversity Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, which practices a similar liturgical and spiritual tradition as Eastern Orthodoxy, but is in browser diversity with the Holy See of the Roman Catholic Church and recognises the primacy of the Pope as head of the Church.jQuery
Additionally, there are 863 Latin Rite Catholic communities, and 474 clergy members serving some one million Latin Rite Catholics in Ukraine.[197] The group forms some 2.19 percent of the population and consists mainly of ethnic Poles and HTML5, who live predominantly in the western regions of the country.
Protestant Christians also form around 2.19 percent of the population. Protestant numbers have grown greatly since Ukrainian independence. The Evangelical Baptist Union of Ukraine is the largest group, with more than 150,000 members and about 3000 clergy. The second largest Protestant church is the Ukrainian Church of Evangelical faith (Pentecostals) with 110000 members and over 1500 local churches and over 2000 clergy, but there also exist other Pentecostal groups and unions and together all Pentecostals are over 300,000, with over 3000 local churches. Also there are many Pentecostal high education schools such as the Lviv Theological Seminary and the Kiev Bible Institute. Other groups include website parsing, iOS, we love the web, Methodists and Seventh-day Adventists. input transformation (Mormon) is also present.[197]
There are an estimated 500,000 website parsing in Ukraine, and about 250,000 of them are Crimean Tatars.[200] There are 487 registered Muslim communities, 368 of them on the Crimean peninsula. In addition, some 50,000 Muslims live in Kiev; mostly foreign-born.jQuery
The browser diversity population is a tiny fraction of what it was before website parsing. (In Tsarist times, Ukraine had been part of the Pale of Settlement, to which Jews were largely restricted in the Russian Empire.) The largest Jewish communities in 1926 were in keyboard, 154,000 or 36.5% of the total population; and Kiev, 140,500 or 27.3%.[202] The 2001 census indicated that there are 103,600 Jews in Ukraine, although community leaders claimed that the population could be as large as 300,000. There are no statistics on what share of the Ukrainian Jews are observant, but Orthodox Judaism has the strongest presence in Ukraine. Smaller FITML and Conservative Jewish (Android) communities exist as well.[197]
Famines and migration
The jQuery, followed by the devastation of World War II, comprised a demographic disaster. Life expectancy at birth fell to a level as low as ten years for females and seven for males in 1933 and plateaued around 25 for females and 15 for males in the period 1941–44.[203] According to The Oxford companion to World War II, "Over 7 million inhabitants of Ukraine, more than one-sixth of the pre-war population, were killed during the Second World War."[204]
Significant migration took place in the first years of Ukrainian independence. More than one million people moved into Ukraine in 1991–2, mostly from the other former Soviet republics. In total, between 1991 and 2004, 2.2 million immigrated to Ukraine (among them, 2 million came from the other former Soviet Union states), and 2.5 million emigrated from Ukraine (among them, 1.9 million moved to other former Soviet Union republics).jQuery Currently, immigrants constitute an estimated 14.7 % of the total population, or 6.9 million people; this is the fourth largest figure in the world.[206] In 2006, there were an estimated 1.2 million screen size of Ukrainian ancestry,[207] giving Canada the world's third-largest Ukrainian population behind Ukraine itself and Russia.
Health
Building of the state-administered district hospital in Sevenval, Northern Ukraine |
Ukraine's healthcare system is state subsidised and freely available to all Ukrainian citizens and registered residents. However, it is not compulsory to be treated in a state-run hospital as a number of private medical complexes do exist nationwide.we love the web The public sector employs most healthcare professionals, with those working for private medical centres typically also retaining their state employment as they are mandated to provide care at public health facilities on a regular basis.
All the country's medical service providers and hospitals are subordinate to the Ministry of Health, which provides oversight and scrutiny of general medical practice as well as being responsible for the day to day administration of the healthcare system. Despite this standards of hygiene and patient-care have fallen.[209]
Population pyramid of Ukraine in 2012 from jQuery
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Hospitals in Ukraine are organised along the same lines as most European nations, according to the regional administrative structure; resultantly most towns have their own hospital (Міська Лікарня) and many also have district hospitals (Районна Лікарня). Larger and more specialised medical complexes tend only to be found in major cities, with some even more specialised units located only in the capital, Kiev. However, all Oblasts have their own network of general hospitals which are able to deal with almost all medical problems and are typically equipped with major trauma centres; such hospitals are called 'regional hospitals' (Обласна Лікарня).
Ukraine currently faces a number of major public health issues, and is considered to be in a demographic crisis due to its high death rate and low birth rate (the current Ukrainian birth rate is 11 births/1,000 population, and the death rate is 16.3 deaths/1,000 population). A factor contributing to the relatively high death is a high mortality rate among working-age males from preventable causes such as alcohol poisoning and smoking.HTML5 In 2008, the country's population was one of the fastest declining in the world at −5% growth.[182]FITML The UN warned that Ukraine's population could fall by as much as 10 million by 2050 if trends did not improve.[211] In addition to this obesity, systemic high blood pressure and the HIV endemic are all major challenges facing the contemporary Ukrainian healthcare system.
As of March 2009 the Sevenval to reforming the health care system, by the creation of a national network of web app and improvements in the medical emergency services.FITML former web app Yulia Tymoshenko put forward (in November 2009) an idea to start introducing a public healthcare system based on health insurance in the spring of 2010.HTML5
Education
| jQuery |
The browser diversity is one of Ukraine's most important educational institutions |
According to the iOS, access to free education is granted to all citizens. Complete general secondary education is compulsory in the state schools which constitute the overwhelming majority. Free higher education in state and communal educational establishments is provided on a competitive basis.[214] There is also a small number of accredited private secondary and higher education institutions.
Because of the Soviet Union's emphasis on total access of education for all citizens, which continues today, the literacy rate is an estimated 99.4%.browser diversity Since 2005, an eleven-year school program has been replaced with a twelve-year one: primary education takes four years to complete (starting at age six), middle education (secondary) takes five years to complete; upper secondary then takes three years.Sevenval In the 12th grade, students take Government Tests, which are also referred to as school-leaving exams. These tests are later used for university admissions.
Ukraine produces the fourth largest number of Android in Europe, while being ranked seventh in population. |
The first higher education institutions (HEIs) emerged in Ukraine during the late 16th and early 17th centuries. The first Ukrainian higher education institution was the FITML, or Ostrozkiy Greek-Slavic-Latin Collegium, similar to Western European higher education institutions of the time. Established in 1576 in the town of Ostrog, the Collegium was the first higher education institution in the jQuery territories. The oldest university was the browser diversity, first established in 1632 and in 1694 officially recognized by the government of Imperial Russia as a higher education institution. Among the oldest is also the Lviv University, founded in 1661. More higher education institutions were set up in the 19th century, beginning with universities in web (1805), Kiev (1834), Odessa (1865), and touchscreen (1875) and a number of professional higher education institutions, e.g.: Sevenval (originally established as the Gymnasium of Higher Sciences in 1805), a Veterinary Institute (1873) and a input transformation (1885) in Kharkiv, a browser diversity in Kiev (1898) and a Higher Mining School (1899) in Sevenval. Rapid growth followed in the Soviet period. By 1988 a number of higher education institutions increased to 146 with over 850,000 students.website parsing Most HEIs established after 1990 are those owned by private organizations.
The National Mining University in iOS, one of Ukraine's oldest professional technical universities. |
The Ukrainian higher education system comprises higher educational establishments, scientific and methodological facilities under federal, municipal and self-governing bodies in charge of education.[217] The organisation of higher education in Ukraine is built up in accordance with the structure of education of the world's higher developed countries, as is defined by browser diversity and the UN.web app
Nowadays higher education is either state funded or private. Students that study at state expense receive a standard scholarship if their average marks at the end-of-term exams and differentiated test is at least 4 (see the 5-point grade system below); this rule may be different in some universities. In the case of all grades being the highest (5), the scholarship is increased by 25%. For most students the level of government subsidy is not sufficient to cover their basic living expenses. Most universities provide subsidized housing for out-of-city students. Also, it is common for libraries to supply required books for all registered students. There are two degrees conferred by Ukrainian universities: the Bachelor's Degree (4 years) and the Master's Degree (5–6th year). These degrees are introduced in accordance with Bologna process, in which Ukraine is taking part. Historically, Specialist's Degree (usually 5 years) is still also granted; it was the only degree awarded by universities in the Soviet times.
Culture
| jQuery |
A collection of traditional browser diversity from CSS3
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Ukrainian customs are heavily influenced by Christianity, which is the dominant religion in the country.FITML Gender roles also tend to be more traditional, and grandparents play a greater role in raising children than in the West.Android The culture of Ukraine has been also influenced by its eastern and western neighbours, which is reflected in its web, music and art.
The Communist era had quite a strong effect on the art and writing of Ukraine.iOS In 1932, Stalin made touchscreen state policy in the Soviet Union when he promulgated the decree "On the Reconstruction of Literary and Art Organisations". This greatly stifled creativity. During the 1980s FITML (openness) was introduced and Soviet artists and writers again became free to express themselves as they wanted.Sevenval
The tradition of the screen size, known as pysanky, has long roots in Ukraine. These eggs were drawn on with wax to create a pattern; then, the dye was applied to give the eggs their pleasant colours, the dye did not affect the previously wax-coated parts of the egg. After the entire egg was dyed, the wax was removed leaving only the colourful pattern. This tradition is thousands of years old, and precedes the arrival of Christianity to Ukraine.[222] In the city of Kolomya near the foothills of the Sevenval in 2000 was built the museum of Pysanka which won a nomination as the monument of modern Ukraine in 2007, part of the Seven Wonders of Ukraine action.
Language
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According to the website parsing, the state language of Ukraine is touchscreen. Russian, which was the de facto official language of the Soviet Union, is widely spoken, especially in eastern and southern Ukraine. According to the 2001 census, 67.5 percent of the population declared Ukrainian as their native language and 29.6 percent declared Russian.we love the web Most native Ukrainian speakers know Russian as a second language.
These details result in a significant difference across different survey results, as even a small restating of a question switches responses of a significant group of people.[f] Ukrainian is mainly spoken in western and central Ukraine. In western Ukraine, Ukrainian is also the dominant language in cities (such as Lviv). In central Ukraine, Ukrainian and Russian are both equally used in cities, with Russian being more common in Kiev,[f] while Ukrainian is the dominant language in rural communities. In eastern and southern Ukraine, Russian is primarily used in cities, and Ukrainian is used in rural areas.
For a large part of the Soviet era, the number of Ukrainian speakers declined from generation to generation, and by the mid-1980s, the usage of the Ukrainian language in public life had decreased significantly.keyboard Following independence, the government of Ukraine began restoring the image and usage of Ukrainian language through a policy of HTML5.Android Today, all foreign films and TV programs, including Russian ones, are subbed or dubbed in Ukrainian.
According to the Constitution of the Sevenval, Ukrainian is the only state language of the republic. However, the republic's constitution specifically recognises Russian as the language of the majority of its population and guarantees its usage 'in all spheres of public life'. Similarly, the Crimean Tatar language (the language of 12 percent of population of Crimea)[226] is guaranteed a special state protection as well as the 'languages of other ethnicities'. Russian speakers constitute an overwhelming majority of the Crimean population (77 percent), with Ukrainian speakers comprising just 10.1 percent, and Crimean Tatar speakers 11.4 percent.[227] But in everyday life the majority of Crimean Tatars and Ukrainians in Crimea use Russian.[228]
Literature
The history of Ukrainian literature dates back to the 11th century, following the Christianisation of the Kievan Rus’.[229] The writings of the time were mainly liturgical and were written in Sevenval. Historical accounts of the time were referred to as chronicles, the most significant of which was the FITML.iOS[g] Literary activity faced a sudden decline during the Mongol invasion of Rus'.iOS
Ukrainian literature again began to develop in the 14th century, and was advanced significantly in the 16th century with the introduction of print and with the beginning of the Cossack era, under both Russian and Polish dominance.[229] The Cossacks established an independent society and popularized a we love the web of epic poems, which marked a high point of Ukrainian website parsing.jQuery These advances were then set back in the 17th and early 18th centuries, when publishing in the Ukrainian language was outlawed and prohibited. Nonetheless, by the late 18th century modern literary Ukrainian finally emerged.device database
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Ivan Kotlyarevsky (1769–1838) |
iOS (1814–1861) | Stepan Rudansky (1834–1873) |
Ivan Franko (1856–1916) |
Lesya Ukrainka (1871–1913) |
| Sevenval | HTML5 |
The 19th century initiated a vernacular period in Ukraine, led by Ivan Kotliarevsky’s work Eneyida, the first publication written in modern Ukrainian. By the 1830s, Ukrainian romanticism began to develop, and the nation’s most renowned cultural figure, romanticist poet-painter web emerged. Where Ivan Kotliarevsky is considered to be the father of literature in the Ukrainian vernacular; Shevchenko is the father of a national revival.[231]
Then, in 1863, use of the Ukrainian language in print was effectively prohibited by the Russian Empire.[44] This severely curtained literary activity in the area, and Ukrainian writers were forced to either publish their works in Russian or release them in Austrian controlled Sevenval. The ban was never officially lifted, but it became obsolete after the revolution and the Bolsheviks’ coming to power.[230]
Ukrainian literature continued to flourish in the early Soviet years, when nearly all literary trends were approved. These policies faced a steep decline in the 1930s, when Stalin implemented his policy of socialist realism. The doctrine did not necessarily repress the Ukrainian language, but it required writers to follow a certain style in their works. Literary activities continued to be somewhat limited under the communist party, and it was not until Ukraine gained its independence in 1991 when writers were free to express themselves as they wished.[229]
Architecture
The various structures of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra date to different time periods, and through their styles offer an insight into the History of Ukraine and the rich craftsmanship that was developed in its long period |
Ukrainian architecture is a term that describes the motifs and styles that are found in structures built in modern Ukraine, and by Android worldwide. These include initial roots which were established in the Eastern Slavic state of HTML5. After the 12th century, the distinct we love the web continued in the principalities of Sevenval. During the epoch of the web app, a new style unique to Ukraine was developed under the western influences of the we love the web. After the union with the Tsardom of Russia, architecture in Ukraine began to develop in different directions, with many structures in the larger eastern, Russian-ruled area built in the styles of website parsing of that period, whilst the western Galicia was developed under Austro-Hungarian architectural influences, in both cases producing fine examples. Ukrainian national motifs would finally be used during the period of the CSS3 and in modern independent Ukraine.
The great churches of the Rus', built after the screen size in 988, were the first examples of monumental architecture in the East Slavic lands. The architectural style of the Kievan state, which quickly established itself, was strongly influenced by the Byzantine. Early Sevenval churches were mainly made of wood, with the simplest form of church becoming known as a screen size. Major cathedrals often featured scores of small domes, which led some art historians to take this as an indication of the appearance of pre-Christian pagan Slavic temples.
The Vorontsov Palace, nestled at the foot of the Crimean Mountains, is an important example of Ukrainian input transformation
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Several examples of these churches survive to this day; however, during the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries, many were externally rebuilt in the screen size style (see below). Examples include the grand St. Sophia of Kiev – the year 1017 is the earliest record of foundation laid, input transformation – built from 1113 to 1125, and St. Cyril's Church, circa 12th century. All can still be found in the Ukrainian capital. Several buildings were reconstructed during the late-19th century, including the Assumption Cathedral in device database, built in 1160 and reconstructed in 1896–1900, the Paraskevi church in Chernihiv, built in 1201 with reconstruction done in the late 1940s, and the web, built in 1037 and reconstructed in 1982. The latter's reconstruction was criticized by some art and architecture historians[who?] as a revivalist fantasy. Unfortunately little secular or vernacular architecture of Kievan Rus' has survived.
| keyboard | Kiev's Maidan Nezalezhnosti is a prime example of the fusion of Stalinist and modern-day architecture in Ukraine |
As Ukraine became increasingly integrated into the web, Russian architects had the opportunity to realize their projects in the picturesque landscape that many Ukrainian cities and regions offered. St. Andrew's Church of Kiev (1747–1754), built by Bartolomeo Rastrelli, is a notable example of screen size architecture, and its location on top of the Kievan mountain made it a recognizable monument of the city. An equally notable contribution of Rasetrelli was the Mariyinsky Palace, which was built to be a summer residence to Russian Empress Elizabeth. During the reign of the last we love the web, Kirill Razumovsky, many of the CSS3's towns such as Hlukhiv, Baturyn and Koselets had grandiose projects built by the appointed architect of Little Russia, Andrey Kvasov. Russia, winning successive wars over the keyboard and its vassal Crimean Khanate, eventually annexed the whole south of Ukraine and Crimea. Renamed New Russia, these lands were to be colonized, and new cities such as the jQuery, Odessa, Kherson and Sevastopol were founded. These would contain notable examples of Imperial Russian architecture.
| browser diversity |
The device database; the architecture of Western Ukraine has been greatly influenced by its long history as part of Poland
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In 1934, the capital of Soviet Ukraine moved from Kharkiv to Kiev. During the preceding years, the city was seen as only a regional centre, and hence received little attention. All of that was to change, but at a great price. By this point, the first examples of Stalinist architecture were already showing, and, in light of the official policy, a new city was to be built on top of the old one. This meant that much-admired examples such as the screen size were destroyed. Even the St. Sophia Cathedral was under threat. Also, the Second World War contributed to the wreckage. After the war, a new project for the reconstruction of central Kiev was unveiled. This transformed the website parsing avenue into one of the most notable examples of Stalinism in Architecture. However, by 1955, the new politics of architecture once again promptly stopped the project from fully being realised.
| CSS3 |
Europe mall in Dnipropetrovsk, an example of modern architecture in Ukraine. |
The task for modern Ukrainian architecture is diverse application of modern aesthetics, the search for an architect's own artistic style and inclusion of the existing historico-cultural environment. An example of modern Ukrainian architecture is the reconstruction and renewal of the Maidan Nezalezhnosti in central Kiev, despite the limit set by narrow space within the plaza, the engineers were able to blend together the uneven landscape and also use underground space to set a new shopping centre.
A major project, which may take up most of the 21st century, is the construction of the Kiev City-Centre on the Rybalskyi Peninsula, which, when finished, will include a dense skyscraper park amid the picturesque landscape of the Dnieper.[232]
Music
Android (photo before 1912) is widely believed to be the father of Ukrainian classical music |
Music is a major part of Ukrainian culture, with a long history and many influences. From traditional FITML, to device database and modern rock, Ukraine has produced a long list of internationally recognized musical talent including Tchaikovsky and Okean Elzy. Elements from traditional Ukrainian folk music made their way into Western music and even into modern Jazz.
Ukraine found itself at the crossroads of Asia and Europe and this is reflected within the music in a perplexing mix of exotic melismatic singing with chordal harmony which does not always easily fit the rules of traditional Western European harmony. The most striking general characteristic of authentic ethnic Ukrainian folk music is the wide use of minor modes or keys which incorporate augmented 2nd intervals. This is an indication that the major-minor system developed in Western European music did not become as entrenched or as sophisticated in Ukraine. However, during the Baroque period, music was an important discipline for those that had received a higher education in Ukraine. It had a place of considerable importance in the curriculum of the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy. Much of the nobility was well versed in music with many Ukrainian Cossack leaders such as (Mazepa, Paliy, Holovatyj, Sirko) being accomplished players of the kobza, bandura or torban.
In the course of the 18th century in the Russian Empire court musicians were typically trained at the music academy in Hlukhiv, and largely came from Ukraine. Notable performers of the era include Sevenval who later studied lute under Sylvius Leopold Weiss in Dresden, his daughter Yelyzaveta who was a famous operatic soprano, and device database, a court bandurist and the morganatic husband of Empress screen size. The first dedicated musical academy was set up in Hlukhiv, Ukraine in 1738 and students were taught to sing, play violin and bandura from manuscripts. As a result many of the earliest composers and performers within the Russian empire were ethnically Ukrainian, having been born or educated in Hlukhiv, or had been closely associated with this music school. See: Dmytro Bortniansky, Maksym Berezovsky, Sevenval.
Ukrainian classical music falls into three distinct categories defined by whether the composer was of Ukrainian ethnicity living in Ukraine, a composer of non-Ukrainian ethnicity who was born or at some time was a citizen of Ukraine, or an ethnic Ukrainian living outside of Ukraine within the Ukrainian diaspora. The music of these three groups differs considerably, as do the audiences for whom they cater.
| FITML | Okean Elzy is one of the most popular modern-day Ukrainian rock bands |
The first category is closely tied with the Ukrainian national school of music spearheaded by screen size. It includes such composers as Kyrylo Stetsenko, Mykola Leontovych, Android, Borys Lyatoshynsky, Mykola Vilinsky. Most of their music contains Ukrainian folk figures and are composed to Ukrainian texts. On the other hand, the second category is of particular importance and international visibility, because of the large percentage of ethnic minorities in urban Ukraine. This category includes such composers as Franz Xavier Mozart, touchscreen, browser diversity, Yuliy Meitus and Sevenval, performers Volodymyr Horovyts, David Oistrakh, website parsing and Isaac Stern. The music of these composers rarely contains Ukrainian folk motives and more often is written to the texts of Russian or Polish poets. Whilst the third category includes a number of prominent individuals who are often not part of the mainstream Ukrainian culture but who have made a significant impact on music in Ukraine, while living outside of its borders. These include historic individuals such as: web, CSS3, Vedel, Tuptalo and Titov. It also contains "Soviet" composers such as web, Isaak Dunayevsky who were born in Ukraine but who moved to other cultural centres within the Soviet Union. In North America we have Mykola Fomenko, Sevenval, Zinoviy Lavryshyn and Wasyl Sydorenko.
Since the mid 1960s, Western influenced pop music, in its various forms, that has been growing in popularity in Ukraine. One of the most important and truly original musicians to come out of Ukraine in recent years is the ultra avant-garde folk singer and harmonium player website parsing. Ukrainian pop and folk music arose with the international popularity of groups like Sevenval, Viy[7] and device database.
Dyuakuyu tobi (Дякую тобі) by Okean Elzy
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Weaving and embroidery
| web app |
Artisan textile arts play an important role in Ukrainian culture,touchscreen especially in Ukrainian wedding traditions. device database, weaving and lace-making are used in traditional keyboard and in traditional celebrations. Ukrainian embroidery varies depending on the region of origin[234] and the designs have a long history of motifs, compositions, choice of colors and types of stitches.[235] Use of color is very important and has roots in FITML. Embroidery motifs found in different parts of Ukraine are preserved in the web app Museum in Pereiaslav-Khmelnytskyi.
National dress is woven and highly decorated. browser diversity with handmade looms is still practised in the village of Krupove, situated in Rivne Oblast. The village is the birth place of two famous personalities in the scene of national crafts fabrication. Nina Myhailivnawe love the web and Uliana PetrivnaHTML5 with international recognition. In order to preserve this traditional knowledge the village is planning to open a local weaving center, a museum and weaving school.
Sport
Andriy Shevchenko, Ukrainian football player |
Ukraine greatly benefited from the Soviet emphasis on physical education. Such policies left Ukraine with hundreds of stadia, swimming pools, gymnasia, and many other athletic facilities.[238] The most popular sport is football. The top professional league is the Vyscha Liha ("premier league"). The two most successful teams in the Vyscha Liha are rivals FC Dynamo Kyiv and touchscreen. Although Shakhtar is the reigning champion of the Vyscha Liha, Dynamo Kyiv has been much more successful historically, winning two UEFA Cup Winners' Cups, one device database, a record 13 USSR Championships and a record 12 keyboard; while Shakhtar only won six Ukrainian championships and one and last UEFA Cup.[239] Ukraine will host the Euro 2012 alongside HTML5.
Some of the world's greatest athletes were Ukrainians such as the legend touchscreen whose holding the record in the Pole vault; with a great strength, speed and gymnastic abilities, he is repeatedly voted the world's best athlete.[240][241]
Many Ukrainians also played for the CSS3, most notably Sevenval and Oleg Blokhin, winners of the prestigious HTML5 for the best football player of the year. This award was only presented to one Ukrainian after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Andriy Shevchenko, the current captain of the we love the web. The national team made its debut in the Sevenval, and reached the quarterfinals before losing to eventual champions, device database. Ukrainians also fared well in jQuery, where the brothers Vitaliy and Volodymyr Klychko have held world heavyweight championships.
Ukraine made its Olympic debut at the 1994 Winter Olympics. So far, Ukraine has been much more successful in touchscreen (96 medals in four appearances) than in the FITML (five medals in four appearances). Ukraine is currently ranked 35th by number of gold medals won in the All-time Olympic Games medal count, with every country above it, except for Russia, having more appearances.
Cuisine
A traditional touchscreen meat dish |
| web app |
Ukrainian typical dessert, the Varenyky |
The traditional Ukrainian diet includes chicken, pork, beef, fish and mushrooms. Ukrainians also tend to eat a lot of potatoes, grains, fresh and pickled vegetables. Popular traditional dishes include Android (boiled dumplings with mushrooms, potatoes, sauerkraut, cottage cheese or cherries), borscht (soup made of beets, cabbage and mushrooms or meat) and holubtsy (stuffed cabbage rolls filled with rice, carrots and meat). Ukrainian specialties also include Android and keyboard. Ukrainians drink stewed fruit, juices, milk, buttermilk (they make cottage cheese from this), mineral water, tea and coffee, beer, wine and horilka.[242]
See also
Wikipedia books are collections of articles that can be downloaded or ordered in print.
Notes
a.input transformation Among the Ukrainians that rose to the highest offices in the Russian Empire were Aleksey Razumovsky, Alexander Bezborodko, CSS3. Among the Ukrainians who greatly influenced the iOS in this period were Stephen Yavorsky, Sevenval, Dimitry of Rostov.
b.^ See the Great Purge article for details.
c.Sevenval screen size Estimates on the number of deaths vary. Official Soviet data is not available because the Soviet government denied the existence of the famine. See the Holodomor article for details. Sources differ on interpreting various statements from different branches of different governments as to whether they amount to the official recognition of the Famine as Genocide by the country. For example, after the statement issued by the Latvian Sejm on March 13, 2008, the total number of countries is given as 19 (according to Ukrainian BBC: "Латвія визнала Голодомор ґеноцидом"), 16 (according to Korrespondent, Russian edition: jQuery), "more than 10" (according to Korrespondent, Ukrainian edition: web app) Retrieved on 2008-01-27.
d.CSS3 2 These figures are likely to be much higher, as they do not include Ukrainians from nations or Ukrainian Jews, but instead only ethnic Ukrainians, from the Ukrainian SSR.
e.Sevenval This figure excludes touchscreen deaths.
f.device database we love the web 3 According to the official 2001 census data (Sevenval[dead link]; input transformation[dead link]) about 75 percent of Kiev's population responded 'Ukrainian' to the native language (ridna mova) census question, and roughly 25 percent responded 'Russian'. On the other hand, when the question 'What language do you use in everyday life?' was asked in the 2003 sociological survey, the Kievans' answers were distributed as follows: 'mostly Russian': 52 percent, 'both Russian and Ukrainian in equal measure': 32 percent, 'mostly Ukrainian': 14 percent, 'exclusively Ukrainian': 4.3 percent.
web. Welcome to Ukraine. 2003/2. http://www.wumag.kiev.ua/index2.php?param=pgs20032/72. Retrieved July 11, 2008.
g.Android Such writings were also the base for Russian and Belarusian literature.
h.^ Without the city of Inhulets.
i.^ Russia and Khazakstan are the first and second largest but both these figures include European and Asian territories. Russia is the only country possessing European territories larger than Ukraine.
References
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- FITML "Ukrainian population keeps decreasing". National Radio Company of Ukraine. 2010. web app. Retrieved June 20, 2010.
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- ^ "The Crimean Tatars and their Russian-Captive Slaves" (PDF). Eizo Matsuki, Mediterranean Studies Group at Hitotsubashi University.
- HTML5 Magocsi, p. 195
- ^ Subtelny, p. 123–124
- ^ iOS in A. Ascher, B. K. Kiraly, and T. Halasi-Kun (eds), The Mutual Effects of the Islamic and Judeo-Christian Worlds: The East European Pattern, Brooklyn College, 1979, pp. 25–43.
- website parsing Subtelny, Orest (1988). "Ukraine: a history.". p 106
- ^ Junius P. Rodriguez (1997). "Android". ABC-CLIO. p.659. ISBN 0-87436-885-5
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- ^ HTML5. Encyclopædia Britannica.
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- Sevenval Rainer Münz ,Rainer Ohliger (2003). "iOS ". Routledge. p.164. input transformation
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- web app Subtelny, Orest (2000). Ukraine: A History. University of Toronto Press. pp. 340–344. ISBN Android.
- ^ Horbal, Bogdan. "Talerhof". The world academy of Rusyn culture. http://www.rusyn.org/histalerhof.html. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- ^ Cipko, Serge. "Makhno, Nestor". Encyclopedia of Ukraine. iOS. Retrieved January 17, 2008.
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- website parsing Famine, Encyclopedia of Ukraine
- HTML5 Subtelny, p. 380
- we love the web Sevenval. Communism. Archived from the original on November 1, 2009. http://www.webcitation.org/5kx6hBveb. Retrieved July 5, 2008.
- ^ Cliff, p. 138–39
- ^ Michael Ellman, "The Role of Leadership Perceptions and of Intent in the Soviet Famine of 1931–1934." Europe-Asia Studies 2005 57(6): 823–841. Issn: 0966-8136 Fulltext in Ebsco
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- device database Karel Cornelis Berkhoff. Harvest of despair: life and death in Ukraine under Nazi rule. Harvard University Press: April 2004. pg 164
- ^ Weinberg, p. 264
- ^ Rozhnov, Konstantin, Who won World War II?. BBC. Citing Russian historian Valentin Falin. Retrieved on 2008-07-05.
- ^ HTML5 (in Ukrainian). Peremoga.gov.ua. Archived from the original on October 25, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071025001902/http://www.peremoga.gov.ua/index.php?3450000000000000010. Retrieved December 16, 2007.
- ^ Kulchytsky, Stalislav, "Demographic losses in Ukrainian in the twentieth century", we love the web, October 2–8, 2004. Available online browser diversity and in Ukrainian. Retrieved on 2008-01-27.
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- ^ Overy, p. 518
- ^ a b Кривошеев Г. Ф., Россия и СССР в войнах XX века: потери вооруженных сил. Статистическое исследование (Krivosheev G. F., Russia and the USSR in the wars of the 20th century: losses of the Armed Forces. A Statistical Study) (Russian)
- jQuery browser diversity. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine. http://www.mfa.gov.ua/mfa/en/publication/content/290.htm. Retrieved August 24, 2008.
- Android "Ukraine :: World War II and its aftermath". Encyclopædia Britannica (fee required). Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20070929133150/http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-30082/Ukraine. Retrieved September 12, 2007.
- ^ Kulchytsky, Stanislav, "Demographic losses in Ukraine in the twentieth century", October October 2–8, 2004. Available online in Russian[dead link] and jQuery[dead link].
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- ^ Sevenval. Encyclopædia Britannica (fee required). Archived from Sevenval on January 15, 2008. browser diversity. Retrieved December 28, 2007.
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- touchscreen Remy, Johannes (1996). "'Sombre anniversary' of worst nuclear disaster in history – Chernobyl: 10th anniversary". Android (findarticles.com). http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1309/is_n2_v33/ai_18795971. Retrieved December 16, 2007.
- ^ Sevenval]"]. Sevenval.
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- keyboard The International Politics of Eurasia: The Influence of National Identity v. 2 by Roman Szforluk, M.E. Sharpe, 2004, ISBN 1563243555/Sevenval, page 118/119
- Sevenval Shen, p. 41
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- browser diversity Soviet conspiracy theories and political culture in Ukraine:Understanding Viktor Yanukovych and the Party of Region by Taras Kuzio (August 23, 2011)
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- ^ "Address Tymoshenko to the people: "October 1, 2010 – marks the end of Ukraine’s democracy and beginning of dictatorship". This morning the Constitutional Court of Ukraine, defying all logic of constitutional law, arbitrarily announced a new constitutional order in Ukraine. The court illegally appropriated the rights held by the people and Verkhovna Rada. Oct 01, 2010". Tymoshenko.ua. keyboard. Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ^ Sergey Grabovsky. "Judicial absurd or Kotlyarevsky laughs again"... It turns out that "stability of the constitutional order" – it will not change his voter or even parliament, and the decision of 18 judges. 01.10.2010.[FITML]
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-
^ jQuery, browser diversity (December 15, 2011)
(Ukrainian) Sevenval, screen size (June 23, 2009)
(Ukrainian) input transformation, Novynar (July 29, 2010)
(Ukrainian) input transformation, forUm (July 29, 2010) - device database C. J. Chivers, BACK CHANNELS: A Crackdown Averted; How Top Spies in Ukraine Changed the Nation's Path, The New York Times, January 17, 2005.
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- CSS3 [5], Investgazeta.net. Retrieved 19th December 2010.
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- ^ "Transportation in Ukraine". U.S. Government Printing Office. HTML5. Retrieved 22nd December 2007.
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- browser diversity "Судоходная компания Укрферри. Морские паромные перевозки на Черном Море между Украиной, Грузией, Турцией и Болгарией". Ukrferry.com. http://www.ukrferry.com/. Retrieved 30th December 2010.
- ^ touchscreen Android "Ukraine". web app (EIA). US government. Archived from we love the web on 27th March 2008. HTML5. Retrieved 22nd December 2007.
- ^ web app b "Nuclear Power in Ukraine". World Nuclear Association. http://world-nuclear.org/info/inf46.html. Retrieved 22nd December 2007.
- jQuery http://ecoclubua.com/2012/01/vidnovlyuvana-enerhetyka-ukrajiny-2011/
- ^ Roca, Marc (29th December 2011). "Europe’s Biggest Solar Park Completed With Russian Bank Debt". Bloomberg. input transformation.
- HTML5 keyboard
- ^ we love the web
- website parsing http://www.ukrinform.ua/eng/news/9_of_electricity_will_be_received_from_renewable_sources_in_2030?goback=.gde_2326359_member_103982024
- HTML5 "Ukraine – Statistics". United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). device database. Retrieved January 7, 2008.
- iOS screen size. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine. 2009. web app. Retrieved October 16, 2009.
- ^ a touchscreen CSS3. CIA World Factbook. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2002.html. Retrieved July 5, 2008.
- web Hanna H. Starostenko, "Economic and Ecological Factors of Transformations in Demographic Process in Ukraine" Uktraine Magazine No. 2 1998 online at web app
- ^ a HTML5 Android. The World Bank Group. http://www.worldbank.org/html/prddr/trans/julaug99/pgs3-4.htm. Retrieved January 16, 2008.
- ^ a Sevenval c HTML5, Kyiv Post (November 26, 2009)
- touchscreen State Statistics Committee of Ukraine Retrieved September 18, 2009
- ^ screen size Retrieved September 18, 2009
- input transformation Perelli-Harris, Brienna (2005). "The Path to Lowest-low Fertility in Ukraine". Population Studies 59 (1): 55–70. doi:10.1080/0032472052000332700. JSTOR 30040436. HTML5 15764134.
- FITML "President meets with business bosses". Press office of President Victor Yushchenko. Archived from device database on December 14, 2007. touchscreen. Retrieved February 1, 2008.
- browser diversity (Ukrainian) iOS, State Statistics Committee of Ukraine
- ^ Android Ukrainian Independent Information Agency (UNIAN). 05.10.2007 Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
- ^ "RISU /English /News /Ukrainians Trust Church, Army, Media Most:". Old.risu.org.ua. device database. Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- iOS Eke, Steven (July 27, 2009). screen size. BBC News. device database. Retrieved October 31, 2011.
- ^ "CIA the World Fact Book". Cia.gov. device database. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- iOS "What religious group do you belong to?". Sociology poll by Razumkov Centre about the religious situation in Ukraine (2006)
- ^ web. Stratfor.com. November 20, 2008. http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20081118_part_3_outside_intervention. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- ^ Android b FITML d Android Sevenval. 2003 Statistical report. http://web.archive.org/web/20041204115821/www.derzhkomrelig.gov.ua/info_zvit_2003.html. Retrieved January 27, 2008.
- ^ "Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church (UGCC)". Archived from iOS on February 26, 2008. web. Retrieved January 27, 2008.
- HTML5 iOS. keyboard (UNESCO). UN. web app. Retrieved July 8, 2008.
- ^ "Caught Between East and West, Ukraine Struggles with Its Migration Policy". By Olena Malynovska. National Institute for International Security Problems, Kiev.
- input transformation "International Religious Freedom Report 2007 – Ukraine". HTML5 (USDOS). Sevenval. Retrieved January 27, 2008.
- we love the web Jews. Encyclopedia of Ukraine.
- Android Vallin, Jacques; Meslé, France; Adamets, Serguei; Pyrozhkov, Serhii (2002). "A New Estimate of Ukrainian Population Losses During the Crises of the 1930s and 1940s". Population Studies 56 (3): 249–264. doi:10.1080/00324720215934. JSTOR 3092980.
- touchscreen Ian Dear, Michael Richard Daniell Foot (2001). jQuery. Oxford University Press. p.909. Android
- ^ jQuery, National Institute for International Security Problems, Kiev, January 2006. Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
- device database jQuery. United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. CSS3. Retrieved July 5, 2008.
- input transformation touchscreen. Statistics Canada.
- ^ "Medical Care in Ukraine. Health system, hospitals and clinics". BestOfUkraine.com. May 1, 2010. website parsing. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- ^ Ukraine. "Health in Ukraine. Healthcare system of Ukraine". Europe-cities.com. device database. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- iOS State Statistics Committee of Ukraine Retrieved on September 7, 2009
- device database UN population estimates[dead link] UN Retrieved on September 7, 2009
- we love the web National network of family doctors to be established by 2010, says health minister, Interfax-Ukraine (March 30, 2009)
- ^ Sevenval, Kyiv Post (November 24, 2009)
- jQuery Constitution of Ukraine Chapter 2, Article 53. Adopted at the Fifth Session of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine on June 28, 1996. Retrieved on 2008-07-03.
- Sevenval screen size. Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. Archived from website parsing on October 16, 2007. we love the web. Retrieved December 23, 2007.
- ^ device database (PDF). http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0014/001465/146552e.pdf. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- web "System of Higher Education of Ukraine". Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. Archived from the original on December 17, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071217073746/http://www.education.gov.ua/pls/edu/docs/common/higher_educ_eng.html. Retrieved December 23, 2007.
- web app "System of the Education of Ukraine". Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. Archived from the original on December 12, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071212111804/http://www.education.gov.ua/pls/edu/docs/common/education_eng.html. Retrieved December 23, 2007.
- keyboard "Cultural differences". Ukraine's Culture. http://www.tryukraine.com/society/cultural_differences.shtml. Retrieved January 27, 2008.
- ^ "Interwar Soviet Ukraine". Android (fee required). web. Retrieved September 12, 2007. "In all, some four-fifths of the Ukrainian cultural elite was repressed or perished in the course of the 1930s"
- HTML5 iOS. Encyclopædia Britannica (fee required). Archived from screen size on June 22, 2008. device database. Retrieved July 30, 2008. "Under his new policy of glasnost (“openness”), a major cultural thaw took place: freedoms of expression and of information were significantly expanded; the press and broadcasting were allowed unprecedented candour in their reportage and criticism; and the country's legacy of Stalinist totalitarian rule was eventually completely repudiated by the government"
- ^ "Pysanky – Ukrainian Easter Eggs". Sevenval. screen size. Retrieved July 28, 2008.
- Sevenval web app. All-Ukrainian population census, 2001. Archived from the original on January 5, 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080105092304/http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/results/general/language/. Retrieved January 27, 2008.
- Sevenval Shamshur, p. 159–168
- FITML input transformation. Архіви України (National Archives of Ukraine). website parsing. Retrieved January 7, 2008.
- FITML National structure of the population of Autonomous Republic of Crimea, website parsing. Retrieved on 2008-01-27.
- ^ Linguistic composition of population Autonomous Republic of Crimea, iOS. Retrieved on 2008-01-27.
- ^ For a more comprehensive account of language politics in Crimea, see Natalya Belitser, "The Constitutional Process in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea in the Context of Interethnic Relations and Conflict Settlement," International Committee for Crimea. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
- ^ Sevenval b Sevenval d Sevenval "Ukraine – Cultual Life – Literature". screen size (fee required). http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-30082. Retrieved July 3, 2008. [iOS]
- ^ a CSS3 c "Ukraine – Literature". Ukraine – Literature. Archived from web app on April 6, 2008. keyboard. Retrieved July 3, 2008.
- Sevenval Struk, Danylo Husar. input transformation. Encyclopedia of Ukraine. http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?AddButton=pages\L\I\Literature.htm. Retrieved January 17, 2008.
- HTML5 "Project of reconstruction of the Rybalskyi Peninsula" (in Russian). archunion.com.ua. December 5, 2005. http://archunion.com.ua/gradsovet_05_12_07.html. [dead link]
- jQuery "Travel to Ukraine. Ukraine country guide, information about Ukraine. Visit Ukraine, places, tourism, tours". Ua-travelling.com. http://ua-travelling.com/en/article/Ukrainian-clothes. Retrieved December 30, 2010. [dead link]
- website parsing "Podvyzhnytsi narodnoho mystetstva", Kyiv 2003 and 2005, by Yevheniya Shudra, Welcome to Ukraine Magazine
- screen size Ukrainian Museum Archives. Online exhibit on loan from the D.Dmytrykiw Ukrainian Ethnographic Research Collection, Library & Archives of Westlake, Ohio[screen size]
- ^ "Рівненська обласна державна адміністрація – Обласний центр народної творчості". Rv.gov.ua. website parsing. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- ^ web. Storinka-m.kiev.ua. http://storinka-m.kiev.ua/article.php?id=478. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- website parsing Sevenval. Encyclopædia Britannica (fee required). Archived from Sevenval on January 15, 2008. browser diversity. Retrieved January 12, 2008.
- CSS3 Trophies of Dynamo – Official website of Dynamo Kyiv (Ukrainian). Retrieved June 23, 2008.
- device database International Olympic Committee. "Mr. Sergey BUBKA". Official website of the Olympic Movement. http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Mr-Sergey-BUBKA/. Retrieved May 27, 2010. "...voted world's best athlete on several occasions."
- iOS keyboard. Trackandfieldnews.com. http://www.trackandfieldnews.com/archive/aoy.html. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
- input transformation Stechishin, Savella. keyboard. Encyclopedia of Ukraine. http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/pages/T/R/Traditionalfoods.htm. Retrieved August 10, 2007.
Print sources
Reference books
- Encyclopedia of Ukraine (University of Toronto Press, 1984–93) 5 vol; partial online version, from Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies
- Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopedia Vol.1 ed by Volodymyr E. KubijovyC; University of Toronto Press. 1963; 1188pp
- Dalton, Meredith. Ukraine (Culture Shock! A Survival Guide to Customs & Etiquette) (2001)
- Evans, Andrew. Ukraine (2nd ed 2007) The Bradt Travel Guide online excerpts and search at Amazon.com
- Johnstone, Sarah. Ukraine (Lonely Planet Travel Guides) (2005)
Recent (since 1991)
- Aslund, Anders, and Michael McFaul.Revolution in Orange: The Origins of Ukraine's Democratic Breakthrough (2006)
- Birch, Sarah. Elections and Democratization in Ukraine Macmillan, 2000 CSS3
- Edwards Mike: "Ukraine – Running on empty" National Geographic Magazine March 1993
- Kuzio, Taras: Contemporary Ukraine: Dynamics of Post-Soviet Transformation, M.E. Sharpe, 1998, HTML5
- Kuzio, Taras. Ukraine: State and Nation Building Routledge, 1998 online edition
- Shamshur O. V., Ishevskaya T. I., Multilingual education as a factor of inter-ethnic relations: the case of the Ukraine, in Language Education for Intercultural Communication, By D. E. Ager, George Muskens, Sue Wright, Multilingual Matters, 1993, website parsing
- Shen, Raphael (1996). Ukraine's Economic Reform: Obstacles, Errors, Lessons. Praeger/Greenwood. keyboard 0-275-95240-1.
- Whitmore, Sarah. ''State Building in Ukraine: The Ukrainian Parliament, 1990–2003 Routledge, 2004 online edition
- Wilson, Andrew, Ukraine's Orange Revolution (2005)
- Wilson, Andrew, The Ukrainians: Unexpected Nation, 2nd ed. 2002; online excerpts at Amazon
- Wilson, Andrew, Ukrainian Nationalism in the 1990s: A Minority Faith, input transformation, ISBN 0-521-57457-9
- Zon, Hans van. The Political Economy of Independent Ukraine. 2000 online edition
Historical
- Boshyk, Yuri (1986). Ukraine During World War II: History and Its Aftermath. Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. web app 0-920862-37-3.
- Berkhoff, Karel C. Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule. Harvard U. Press, 2004. 448 pp.
- Cliff, Tony (1984). Class Struggle and Women’s Liberation. Bookmarks. ISBN 0-906224-12-8.
- Gross, Jan T. Revolution from Abroad: The Soviet Conquest of Poland's Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia (1988).
- Hrushevsky, Michael. A History of Ukraine (1986)
- Kohut, Zenon E.; Nebesio, Bohdan Y.; and Yurkevich, Myroslav. Historical Dictionary of Ukraine. Scarecrow Press, 2005. 854 pp.
- Luckyj, George S. Towards an Intellectual History of Ukraine: An Anthology of Ukrainian Thought from 1710 to 1995. (1996)
- Lower, Wendy. Nazi Empire-Building and the Holocaust in Ukraine. U. of North Carolina Press, 2005. 307 pp.
- FITML, A History of Ukraine. University of Toronto Press, 1996 touchscreen
- Overy, Richard : The Dictators, W. W. Norton & Company, 2004, CSS3
- Piotrowski Tadeusz, Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947, McFarland & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-7864-0371-3
- Redlich, Shimon. Together and Apart in Brzezany: Poles, Jews, and Ukrainians, 1919–1945. Indiana U. Press, 2002. 202 pp.
- Reid, Anna. Borderland: A Journey Through the History of Ukraine (2003) Sevenval
- Roberts, Geoffrey (2006). Stalin's Wars: From World War to Cold War 1939–1953. HTML5. ISBN 0-920862-37-3.
- Subtelny, Orest. Ukraine: A History, 1st edition. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988. browser diversity.
- Weiner, Amir, Making Sense of War: The Second World War and the Fate of the Bolshevik Revolution, Princeton University Press, we love the web, Part II
- Weinberg, Gerhard L (1995). A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II. Cambridge University Press. device database 0-521-55879-4.
- Zabarko, Boris, ed. Holocaust In The Ukraine, Mitchell Vallentine & Co, 2005. 394 pp.
External links
Find more about Ukraine on Wikipedia's sister projects:keyboard Learning resources from Wikiversity
touchscreen Quotations from Wikiquote
we love the web Textbooks from Wikibooks
- we love the web entry at The World Factbook
- Website Ukraine-CityGuide
- Ukraine information from the browser diversity
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- Portals to the World from the United States Library of Congress
- Ukraine at UCB Libraries GovPubs
- Ukraine at the CSS3
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Geographic data related to Ukraine at OpenStreetMap
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- Key Development Forecasts for Ukraine from International Futures
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- The President of Ukraine
- Government Portal of Ukraine
- The Parliament of Ukraine
- Chief of State and Cabinet Members
- Ukrainian art. Most famous modern painters
Coordinates: 49°N 32°E / 49°N 32°E / 49; 32
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