Left-bank Ukraine
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Left-bank Ukraine
Summary
Left-bank Ukraine is an Ukrainian historical regions[1]. It draws 91 Wikipedia views per month (ukrainian_historical_regions category, ranking #6 of 9).[2]
Key Facts
- Left-bank Ukraine is in the country of Ukraine[3].
- Left-bank Ukraine is in the country of Soviet Union[4].
- Left-bank Ukraine is in the country of Russian Empire[5].
- Left-bank Ukraine is on the body of water Dnieper[6].
- Left-bank Ukraine's image is recorded as Р. Десна Новгород-Сіверський.jpg[7].
- Left-bank Ukraine's instance of is recorded as Ukrainian historical regions[8].
- Left-bank Ukraine's locator map image is recorded as Ukraine-Livoberezzhya.png[9].
- Left-bank Ukraine's part of is recorded as Dnieper Ukraine[10].
- Left-bank Ukraine's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03r94t[11].
- Left-bank Ukraine's page banner is recorded as Square - panoramio - Wolodymyr Lavrynenko.jpg[12].
- Left-bank Ukraine's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/Left-Bank-historical-region-Ukraine[13].
- Left-bank Ukraine's Great Russian Encyclopedia Online ID is recorded as 2136134[14].
- Left-bank Ukraine's nighttime view is recorded as Дзвіниця Спасо-Преображенського собору в Сумах.jpg[15].
- Left-bank Ukraine's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Ukraine[16].
Body
Geography
Country listings include Ukraine[3], a sovereign state[17], in Ukraine[18], founded in 1991[19]; Soviet Union[4], a federal republic[20], in Soviet Union[21], founded in 1922[22]; and Russian Empire[5], an empire[23], in Russian Empire[24], founded in 1721[25]. Left-bank Ukraine is on the body of water Dnieper[6]. Its part of is recorded as Dnieper Ukraine[10].
Designation and Status
Left-bank Ukraine's instance of is recorded as Ukrainian historical regions[8].
Cultural Significance
Things named for Left-bank Ukraine include Livoberezhna[26], a metro station[27], in Ukraine[28].
Why It Matters
Left-bank Ukraine draws 91 Wikipedia views per month (ukrainian_historical_regions category, ranking #6 of 9).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]
Entities named for it include Livoberezhna[26], a metro station[27], in Ukraine[28].