- Cernăuți ([tʃernəˈutsʲ] ); German:
Czernowitz ([ˈtʃɛɐ̯novɪts] ); Polish:
Czerniowce; Hungarian: Csernovic, Yiddish: טשערנאָוויץ, romanized: Tshernovits, Russian:...
- who
worked mainly in the
German Empire. He was born on 16 May 1850 in
Czerniowce in the
Austrian Empire (present-day
Chernivtsi in Ukraine) and died on...
- The
Polish House in Cernăuți (Polish:
Czerniowce, German: Czernowitz)...
-
first multi-segment
international flight along the
route Warsaw – Lwów –
Czerniowce –
Bucharest was launched. In next
years there followed services to Berlin...
- 1880 he
became the
regional director of the
commissars postal service in
Czerniowce, he
quickly rose up the
ranks of the
postal service until he
became the...
-
Csernivci or
Csernovic (Hungarian variants),
Csernyivci (Hungarian*),
Czerniowce (Polish*),
Czernovicensia (Ecclesiastical Latin),
Czernowitz (German*)...
-
Juliusz Słowacki's Balladyna. From 1863 she
appeared at Stanisławów and
Czerniowce, in
plays by Słowacki. In 1865
Zimajer tried to get her a
contract with...
-
junctions of
Cieszyn and Bohumin. In 1866 the Lwów-
Czerniowce-J****y
Railway connected Lwów with
Czerniowce, the
capital of the
Duchy of
Bukovina and a year...
- Strauch's
infantry regiment at Stanisławów and the next year was
spent in
Czerniowce. Here he
spent 22 years,
returning to
Krakow in 1856 and
staying on there...
-
managed to
return to Turkey;
those captured were
hanged on 11 July near
Czerniowce. By the end of July, all
Polish military camps were destro****. Denisko...