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The Socalist Republic of Ukraine is a nation led by President Zelenskiy on the continent of Europe. The Socalist Republic of Ukraine's government is a Socialist Republic with very moderate social policies. Economically, The Socalist Republic of Ukraine favors left wing policies. The official currency of The Socalist Republic of Ukraine is the Dollar. At 110 days old, The Socalist Republic of Ukraine is a mature nation. The Socalist Republic of Ukraine has a population of 605,848 and a land area of 2,710.00 sq. miles. This gives it a national average population density of 223.56. Pollution in the nation is almost non-existent. The citizens' faith in the government is seriously lacking with an approval rating of 22.3531%.
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Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It is the second-largest European country after Russia, which borders it to the east and northeast. It also borders Belarus to the north; Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary to the west; and Romania and Moldova to the southwest; with a coastline along the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov to the south and southeast. Kyiv is the nation's capital and largest city, followed by Kharkiv, Dnipro, and Odesa. Ukraine's official language is Ukrainian; Russian is also widely spoken, especially in the east and south.
During the Middle Ages, Ukraine was the site of early Slavic expansion and the area later became a key centre of East Slavic culture under the state of Kievan Rus', which emerged in the 9th century. The state eventually disintegrated into rival regional powers and was ultimately destroyed by the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. The area was then contested, divided, and ruled by a variety of external powers for the next 600 years, including the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Austrian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and the Tsardom of Russia. The Cossack Hetmanate emerged in central Ukraine in the 17th century, but was partitioned between Russia and Poland, and ultimately absorbed by the Russian Empire. Ukrainian nationalism developed and, following the Russian Revolution in 1917, the short-lived Ukrainian People's Republic was formed. The Bolsheviks consolidated control over much of the former empire and established the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, which became a constituent republic of the Soviet Union when it was formed in 1922.
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National Factbook | |
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Flag: | |
Nation Name: | Republic of Ukraine |
Leader Name: | Zelenskiy |
Currency: |
Dollar |
National Animal: |
Golden eagle |
History: | The lands that make up Ukraine’s modern territory are home to thousands of mysteries and the stories of hundreds of peoples, states and cultures. In the history of Ukraine, heroic and dramatic plots have taken place here over the centuries – the formation and destruction of civilizations, the intermingling and confrontations of nations, wars, revolutions, cultural decline and revival. Historians have long been drawn to choosing metaphors to describe this region. It has been called ‘the gates of Europe’ as many people, cultures, tastes and religions have entered Europe through Ukrainian lands. It has also been regarded as ‘the cradle of many peoples and cultures’ because Ukrainians, Poles, Jews, Tatars, Belarusians, Roma, Bulgarians, Greeks, Armenians, Germans and Romanians lived and worked alongside one another for centuries. We learn from Herodotus that the Scythians, the ancient nomadic people, lived here a few centuries before Christ. They traded with Greeks and fought with Persians. Compatriots of the Greek father of history loved Ukraine’s Black Sea coast as well. When the brilliance of the ancient civilization dimmed, the Slavs entered the historic arena. Archaeological research shows that their ancestral homeland was the Ukrainian land. Under the influence of Christianity, the Slavic ancestors of the Ukrainians began to search for their place in Medieval Europe. A powerful medieval state called Rus’ land or just Rus’ was born and it developed into Ukrainian lands, meeting its golden age at the turn of the 11th century. According to scientists, about 100,000 people lived in its main city called Kyiv (the modern capital of Ukraine), which exceeded the total then population of London and Paris. Later, in the 13th century, the princes of Rus’ were the first in Europe to meet the Mongol invasion, which undermined the state-building potential of the local nobility. Ukrainian lands fell under the rule of neighbouring states – Lithuania and Poland. It merged into one of the largest and most powerful monarchies in Europe, the Commonwealth. This state existed from the 16th to the end of the 18th century, gathering the territories of modern Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania, Latvia and western Russia. At the same time, the Ukrainian phenomenon of free chivalry reached its apogee, and Cossacks (‘free men’, from Turkic languages) appeared in the European arena. For a while, they even managed to create their own state called Hetmanate (Zaporizhzhia Host). Cossack detachments took part in almost all the great wars in the region, either as an independent military force or as mercenaries. They had their own unique customs, self-government and an original military tradition. Meanwhile, Crimean Tatars developed on their native soil in their own state — the Crimean Khanate. History both united Crimean Tatars with Cossacks in one coalition and brought them into collision in bloody fights. The Crimean state ceased to exist at about the same time as the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was divided, and the Hetmanate finally lost its autonomy. Imperial Russia contributed to all of these tragic events. From the end of the 18th to the beginning of the 20th century, Ukrainian lands were part of two empires — Austrian (later Austro-Hungarian) and Russian. At that time, Ukrainians took part in the Napoleonic Wars, fought for political and civil rights, built powerful corporations and railways, opened gymnasiums and hospitals, contributed to science and technology as well as developed language and culture along the same lines as other European nations that did not have their own states and were parts of empires. The 20th century began in a stormy way for Ukraine — millions of people were thrown into the chaos of World War I. Witnessing the downfall of the age-old empires, Ukraine made an attempt to build its own nation-state in 1917-1921. Together with the Poles, Ukrainians managed to protect Europe from communism and defeat the Russian Bolshevik troops near Warsaw. Poland resisted, while Ukraine was reconquered by its neighbours. Until 1991, Ukrainians lived under the power of the totalitarian regime as a constituent part of the communist USSR. It was a difficult time with terrible tragedies and challenges — forced collectivization, genocide-Holodomor, The Great Terror, Holocaust, deportations, GULAG, punitive psychiatry, Soviet military interventions, the Chornobyl disaster, among other events, that took the lives of millions of Ukrainians who represented many different nationalities. Despite difficult conditions, Ukrainians founded and rebuilt cities and villages, created space missiles and nuclear power plants, developed medical technologies and invented new methods of welding. Some of the computers developed in Ukraine were among the very first ones the world has ever seen, not to mention the significant contribution to world culture and art (avant-garde, constructivism, futurism, experimental cinema and music). Ukraine was at the heart of World War II not once but twice — first in the time of Hitler’s offensive and occupation, and then during the bloody expulsion of the Nazis. A total of 8 million Ukrainians died between 1939 and 1945, most of them were civilians. 1.5 million Jews from Ukraine became the victims of the Holocaust. The historical truth about all victims of World War II was censored for a long time in the Soviet Union and started to get restored in the late 1980s, shortly before the collapse of the USSR. 3 million soldiers lost their lives in the battles against the Nazis and in captivity, many went missing, died in hospitals during the war and in the first postwar years. Ukrainians fought against Hitler and his allies in the armies of Poland and the USSR, Canada and France, the United States and Czechoslovakia, in theaters of war in Europe, Africa and Asia, in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. After the war and up until its independence, many Ukrainian independence fighters, human rights defenders and dissidents contributed efforts to overthrow the totalitarian communist regime, which eventually succeeded. In 1991, Ukraine declared independence in order to build a free, democratic and sovereign state within internationally recognized borders. Since then, any attempts to restore authoritarianism have faced strong people’s resistance. The Orange Revolution (2004-2005) and the Revolution of Dignity (2013-2014) have proven that freedom is the ultimate choice and expression of the Ukrainian people. In 2019, European and Euro-Atlantic integration was incorporated into Ukraine’s Constitution as a vision of national development. Since 1991, more than 40 million people of different nationalities and religions had enjoyed peace in Ukraine until 2014 when Russia illegally occupied Crimea and sent its troops over the border in Ukraine’s Donbas region. Today, Russia carries out aggression and hybrid warfare against Ukraine and the Ukrainian people, which has already resulted in over 14,000 people killed and more than 33,500 wounded, continuously building up its military capacities and drawing armed forces to the Ukrainian border. On February 21, 2022, Russia made a decision to recognise the ‘independence’ of the quasi-entities it had created in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine — the so-called ‘Luhansk People’s Republic’ and ‘Donetsk People’s Republic.’ While Russia violates the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, Ukraine continues to protect its independence, as well as freedom and democracy in Europe. |
Geography | |
Continent: | Europe |
Land Area: | 4,361.31 sq. km |
Terrain: | Average elevation: 183 m Minimum elevation: -5 m Maximum elevation: 2,993 m |
Highest Peak: | Mt. Hoverla, 2,061 meters |
Lowest Valley: | Kuyalnik Estuary, -5 meters |
Climate: | Ukraine has a mostly temperate climate, with the exception of the Southern Coast of Crimea which has a subtropical Mediterranean climate. The country enjoys sufficient amount of sunshine and year-round rainfall, highly concentrated during the summer months (May to August). |
People & Society | |
Population: | 605,848 people |
Demonym: | Ukrainian, Slavic, Cossack |
Demonym Plural: | Ukrainian,Slavs,Cossacks |
Ethnic Groups: | Ukrainian - 62.8% Russian - 33.2% European - 5.0% |
Languages: | Ukrainian - 20.0% Russian - 70.0% Belarusian - 10.0% |
Religions: | Christianity - 78.3% Islam - 14.6% idk. - 0.0% |
Health | |
Life Expectancy: | 69 years |
Obesity: | 23% |
Alcohol Users: | 86% |
Tobacco Users: | 10% |
Cannabis Users: | 2.3% |
Hard Drug Users: | 1.9% |
Economy | |
Description: | The economy of Ukraine is an emerging, upper-middle income, mixed economy located in Eastern Europe. It grew rapidly from 2000 until 2008 when the Great Recession began worldwide and reached Ukraine. The economy recovered in 2010 and continued improving until 2013. From 2014 to 2015, the Ukrainian economy suffered a severe downturn, with GDP in 2015 being slightly above half of its value in 2013. In 2016, the economy again started to grow. By 2018, the Ukrainian economy was growing rapidly, and reached almost 80% of its size in 2008. The depression during the 1990s included hyperinflation and a fall in economic output to less than half of the GDP of the preceding Ukrainian SSR. GDP growth was recorded for the first time in 2000, and continued for eight years.[31] This growth was halted by the global financial crisis of 2008. The Ukrainian economy recovered and achieved positive GDP growth in the first quarter of 2010. In the early 2010s, Ukraine was noted as possessing many of the components of a major European economy, such as rich farmlands,[32][33] a well-developed industrial base, highly trained labour, and a good education system.[34] It also has important mineral resources.[35] In October 2013, the Ukrainian economy lapsed into a recession.[36] The previous summer, Ukrainian exports to Russia substantially declined due to stricter border and customs control by Russia.[37] The early 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia, and the war in Donbas that started in the spring of 2014 severely damaged Ukraine's economy[38] and two of Ukraine's most industrial regions.[39] In 2013, Ukraine saw zero GDP growth.[39] Ukraine's economy shrank by 6.8% in 2014,[40] and this continued with a 12% decline in GDP in 2015.[41] In April 2017, the World Bank stated that Ukraine's economic growth rate was 2.3% in 2016, ending the recession.[42] Despite these improvements, Ukraine remains the poorest country in Europe,[43] which some have attributed to high corruption levels[44] and the slow pace of economic liberalisation and institutional reform.[45][46][47][48] The Russian Invasion of Ukraine in 2022 further deteriorated the country's crumbling economy. |
Average Yearly Income: | $60.42 |
Gross Domestic Product (GDP): | $427,792,953.00 |
GDP per Capita: | $706.11 |
Gross National Income (GNI): | $246,400,185.00 |
Industries: | n the industry there are approximately 18% of the employed population of Ukraine (2008). Industry has created approximately 26% of GDP (2012). In the structure of industry, the highest share is occupied by ferrous metallurgy, mechanical engineering, electricity, chemical, and food industries.[3] As of 2010, 66.3% of industrial output was accounted for by manufacturing,[4] 22.7% by electricity and 11% by mining.[5] The industry is dominated by the third and fourth technological systems. Their share in industrial production is 95%. The basis of these systems are metallurgical, chemical, light industry, fuel and energy complex, and most branches of mechanical engineering. The share of the fifth and sixth technological systems does not exceed 5%. The basis of these systems is the electronics industry, computing, fiber-optic technology, software,[6] telecommunications, robotics, information services, and biotechnology. Although industrial enterprises receive significant profits, the profitability of products for 2003-2010 does not exceed 3-6%. Of the 55,000 industrial enterprises,[7] more than 18,000 (33%) are unprofitable. Another negative side is the reduction in the number of employees in the complex. In 2001-2007 their number decreased by 14%. The share of industrial exports in gross domestic product is about 40%, but its structure is unsatisfactory due to the predominance of the raw material component, which exceeds 60%. The production of high-tech[8] and science-intensive industries in total is 15%. In the structure of Ukrainian industry, a large share is occupied by heavy industry, especially mechanical engineering, ferrous metallurgy, and coal industry. Heavy industry forms more than 80% of the total value of sold industrial products, including mechanical engineering which accounts for 12-14%. |
Military | |
History: | NO DATA |
Soldiers: | 0 |
Tanks: | 802 |
Aircraft: | 0 |
Ships: | 1 |
Missiles: | 0 |
Nuclear Weapons: | 0 |
Last Updated: 08/10/2024 04:34 pm |