Talk:Ternopil
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Article: de:Ternopil Corresponding English-language article: Ternopil Worth doing because: famous shtetl and no article Originally Requested by: --Sheynhertz-Unbayg 04:38, 12 July 2005 (UTC) Status: translation finished Lectonar 08:20, 14 July 2005 (UTC) Other notes: Supported:
I deleted the jew history paragraph because a city in a country is not a "jew related stub" as the previuos version said. That information about jewish history should be placed in another article. I will add relevant information in the future.
[edit] New edits
Vasyl Avramenko was not born in Ternopil. If anything, he may have passed through there later in life, but I don't have that information at this moment. I will remove him unless there's a reason to keep him. With that in mind, what do the other names signify, and are they from the same source as the one that listed Avramenko?
Can the Jewish Tarnopol paragraph be integrated with the rest of the article? Right now it looks segregated like an alternate history.--tufkaa 22:19, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Demographics 1939
"In 1939 it was a city of 40,000; 50% of the population was Polish, 10% Ukrainian and most of the remaining part was Jewish."
I can't find the source of this. Does anyone have this? --Jeroenvrp 23:20, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Footnotes
Currently there is a huge footnote explaining in short words what happened in 1918. However, it's definitely biased and full of errors.
- The Jewish and German population accepted the new Ukrainian state, but the Poles started the military campaign against the Ukrainian authority. - well, technically it was the other way around
- On November 11, 1918 following the bloody fighting the Polish forces captured Lviv - and again, in reality it were the Ukrainian units that failed to capture Lvov, not the Poles who captured it. Poles were already there :)