The vast majority of historical literature discussed in the preceding chapters has dealt with the Ukrainian and to a lesser degree the Polish population of Galicia.
Indeed, the Ukrainians always made up the majority of inhabitants, and it is therefore not surprising that most of the writings on the region deal with the experiences of that nationality. Nonetheless, it should be remembered that eastern Galicia was also the homeland of other national groups, in particular Jews, Armenians, Germans, and Karaites, each of whom has a literature dealing with its “own” history in Galicia. It would seem most appropriate, therefore, to mention at least some of the major works that treat the history of each of these groups.
More on the topic The vast majority of historical literature discussed in the preceding chapters has dealt with the Ukrainian and to a lesser degree the Polish population of Galicia.:
- In the earlier chapters we dealt with diseases affecting one particular age group of cattle.
- As noted in the preceding chapters, there is an extremely large number of statements quoted from Ja'far al-Sadiq in Muslim works of various provenance.
- Polish-Ukrainian war and the Ukrainian Galician Army, 1918-1919
- The vast majority of the autotrophic production of chemical energy on Earth occurs through photosynthesis, a process that uses sunlight to provide the energy needed to take up carbon dioxide and synthesize organic compounds, principally carbohydrates.
- As demonstrated in the preceding chapters, Ja'far alSdiq's legal thought fell very much within the general legal discourse of late Umayyad and early Abbasid times. It was common for the judges and jurists of the period to maintain sharp differences of opinion and to disagree on just about every point.
- The Ukrainian Southwest: Galicia-Volhynia
- The Nature of the Polish-Ukrainian Conflict
- Magocsi P.R.. The roots of Ukrainian nationalism. Galicia as Ukraine's Piedmont. University of Toronto Press,2002. — 214 p., 2002
- The Russian and the Ukrainian Idea in Galicia
- In 1750, the majority of the world’s population lived in the great agrarian empires of Eurasia, spanning the globe from China to Austria but also covering large swathes of Spanish America.
- While cities have always been important in the fortunes of the Indian subcontinent, most of India’s vast population has lived in villages and hamlets whether in pre-colonial, colonial or even post-colonial times.
- The Polish/Ukrainian Confrontation
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