Belarus
Byelorussia*classe="mw-headline" id="Geschichte">Geschichte[change U| U| U| Href= "/w/index.php?title=Belarus&action=edit§ion=1" Chap: "Change section: History">Change Source]>>
Nationalities ((2009)83. 7 per cent Belarus, 8 per cent Russians, 3 per cent Poland, The State is a member of the UN, the Commonwealth of Independent States, the Organization of the Collective Security Treaty, the Eurasian Economic Community, the Union state of Russia and Belarus (since 2 April 1997), and other non-governmental organisations. Up to the twentieth centuries, the present Belarus was one of several states.
Belarus became part of the USSR after the Russian Revolution. Its name was changed to the Belarusian Socialist Republic of the USSR (BSSR). In 1939, the boundaries of Belarus took on their contemporary form. A number of territories of the Second Polish Republic were added after the Sovjet occupation of Poland. Belorussia was deprived of about a third of its people and more than half of its economy.
In 1945, the Belarusian SSR became a founder member of the United Nations alongside the Soviet Union and the Ukraine's SSR. On 27 July 1990 the Assembly of the Rep. proclaimed the independence of Belarus. Belarus became sovereign during the break-up of the Soviet Union on 25 August 1991.
More than 70% of the 9.49 million inhabitants of Belarus are living in the city areas. 17 ] More than 80% of the local populace are Belorussian. It has two formal languages: Belorussian and the russian. Orthodox Christianity is the principal religious denomination of the state. Today's Belarus was first populated by ancient slaic people in the sixth cent.
1939 Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union entered Poland. Part of Poland was added to the Soviet Republic of Belarus. You are now Western Belarus. The Russians were sent to the Soviet Union from other parts of the state. Use of the Belarussian was restricted. Belorussia is enclosed by land and mostly shallow.
34 ] There are many creeks and 11,000 seas in Belarus. 34 ] Three great tributaries flow through the country: the Neman, the Pripyat and the Dnieper. Belorussia has a hemiboreally moist mainland climatic (Dfb in the Koeppen classification). Belorussia is a Presidency of the European Union. Under Lukashenko, the West called Belarus a regime of dictatorships.
37 ] The Council of Europe has excluded Belarus from the EU since 1997 because of non-democratic elections. The 2009 survey showed 9,503,807 inhabitants. 2 ] The Belarusians are 83. 7 percent of the entire Belarusian people. Minsk, the country's biggest and most populous town, has been home to 1,836,808 inhabitants since 2009. 45 ] For other places in Belarus see Belarus.
The Belarusian literary tradition began with 11th to thirteenth centuries written religion. Francysk Skaryna, who lives in Polotsk, translates the Bible into Belarusian in the sixteenth c.. Belorussian literary history began at the end of the nineteenth centuary. After the Nazi invasion of Belarus, several writers and writers went into banishment. 46 ] The last great revitalization of Belarusian literary life took place in the 1960' with Vasil Byka? and Uladzimir Karatkievich novel.
In the late nineteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the great Belarussian towns founded their own operatic and business ballets. Tradional Belarussian clothing dates back to the time of the Kiev Rus. we-car.ch "President of the Republic of Belarus". Accessed October 30, 2016. Three Belarus. Accessed April 20, 2011. Accessed September 1, 2009. Accessed November 5, 2011.
www. timeanddate.com. Accessed November 26, 2011. www. UN Statistics Department (1 April 2010). "and area code classifications (M49)". Accessed April 22, 2010. Belarus: Windows of opportunity (see Table 15, page 66)" (PDF). Accessed November 10, 2009. Accessed November 10, 2009.
www.Belarus - Population". Office of the United Nations in Belarus. Accessed October 7, 2007. Dictionary of ethnohistory of the Soviet and Russians empire. Understand Belarus and how Western foreign policy misses the mark. Belarus: A denationalized nation. Accessed November 10, 2009. Accessed November 10, 2009. Accessed November 10, 2009. "Belorussia - Stalin and Russification".
Belarus: A country study. Accessed March 26, 2006. "Perestroika". Belarus: A country study. Accessed March 26, 2007. Belarus Cultural Studies - Prelude to Independence. Accessed March 21, 2007. Welcome-Geography". 2007. Accessed November 7, 2007. Rainsford, Sarah (April 26, 2005). "Chernobyl curses Belarus". Accessed March 26, 2006.
March 20, 2006. Accessed March 26, 2006. Accessed December 21, 2007. ? "High Military Officials of the Republic of Belarus". The Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Belarus. Accessed December 22, 2007. Constitutional Treaty of Belarus. Pressservice of the President of the Republic of Belarus. Archives from the orginal of 17 December 2007.
Accessed December 22, 2007. Constitutional Treaty of Belarus. Pressservice of the President of the Republic of Belarus. Archives from the orginal of 17 December 2007. Accessed December 22, 2007. we-www. United States Government (2007). "background-information: Belarus". Archives from the 14 November 2007 org. Accessed November 7, 2007. www.belarus avoids moscow in the midst of the credit crisis".
May 29, 2009. Accessed May 30, 2009. Part of the USSR economic activity in Belarus was supported by low-cost Russia's natural gas and fuel, and Lukashenko has demanded the reunification of his own two states. "Russia-Belarus Union and the Near Foreign Countries" (PDF). Accessed November 7, 2007. "Byelorussia Exports". Surveys of countries.
Accessed November 4, 2007. The World Gazette Largest Cities of Belarus (2007). Released in 2007. Accessed March 19, 2007. www.Belarus Classical Music". Belarusführer.com. Retracted 2013-04-29. we-? National State Teleradiocompany Page about Belarus' participation in the Eurovision Song Contest 2004. Accessed March 18, 2007. wwww. Cultures Profile Project - Cultures Profile Project - Eating Guide to the Belorussian Way.
Accessed March 21, 2007. Released in April 2000. Accessed March 21, 2007. Belarus - UNESCO World Heritage Centre". Accessed March 26, 2006.