- The
Krivichs or
Kryvichs (Russian: кри́вичи, romanized:
krivichi, IPA: [ˈkrʲivʲɪtɕɪ]; Belarusian: крывічы́, romanized: kryvičý, IPA: [krɨvʲiˈt͡ʂɨ]) were...
-
Krivichi were a
tribal union of
Early East
Slavs between the 6th and the 12th centuries.
Krivichi may also
refer to: Kryvichy,
several inhabited localities...
-
hunters and gatherers.
Around 950 AD, two
Slavic tribes,
Vyatichi and
Krivichi,
settled here. The
Vyatichi may have
formed the
majority of Moscow's indigenous...
-
Kryvichy (Belarusian: Крывічы; Russian: Кривичи, romanized:
Krivichi) may
refer to the
following places in Belarus: Kryvichy,
Brest Region, a
village in...
- (Belarusian: Крывічы, romanized: Kryvičy; Russian: Кривичи, romanized:
Krivichi) is an
agrotown in
Salihorsk District,
Minsk Region, Belarus. It is part...
- (Belarusian: Крывічы, romanized: Kryvičy; Russian: Кривичи, romanized:
Krivichi) is an urban-type
settlement in
Myadzyel District,
Minsk Region, Belarus...
-
governorate was
inhabited in the 10th
century by the Slav
tribes of the
Krivichi and Radimichi. In the 14th century, the land
became part of Lithuania,...
- Polish: język krewicki) –
derived from the name of the
Slavonic tribe Krivichi, one of the main
tribes in the
foundations of the
forming of the Belarusian...
-
Located on the
upper Dnieper river,
Smolensk emerged as a
centre of the
Krivichi people,
controlling access from
Veliky Novgorod and
Polotsk to the Dnieper...
-
Chayka Velikiye Luki 1996–2000: FC
Energiya Velikiye Luki 2001–2002: FC
Krivichi Velikiye Luki 2003–2005: FC Luki-SKIF
Velikiye Luki 2014– : FC Luki-Energiya...