Comments by "Pilum1000" (@Pilum1000) on "VICE News"
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one of my grandfathers was Russian, and the other is Ukrainian. i was born in USSR, and "Russia and Ukraine" is one thing fo me, and nationalists-idiots-monsterfreaks must be hanged always. :)
and Crimea was part of the USSR, it was handed over to Ukraine(Ukrainian SSR) only by Khrushchev - for the convenience of management as part of the USSR; and in general, it belongs to Russia - for the most part Russians live there(biggest part of population of Crimea)...
And historically, Russia has more rights to Crimea.
one of my grandfathers was Russian, and the other is Ukrainian. Long live the USSR.
Do you know that the word "ukraine" itself means in the Russian language (and in Old Russian language, in the Ancient Rus', in the Kievan Rus') the "outskirt"? One of the many outskirts.
As the specific name of a specific area, it appeared only in the 16-17th century, when these territories were still captured by Poland...
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one of my grandfathers was Russian, and the other is Ukrainian. i was born in USSR, and "Russia and Ukraine" is one thing fo me, and nationalists-idiots-monsterfreaks must be hanged always. :)
and Crimea was part of the USSR, it was handed over to Ukraine(Ukrainian SSR) only by Khrushchev - for the convenience of management as part of the USSR; and in general, it belongs to Russia - for the most part Russians live there(biggest part of population of Crimea)...
And historically, Russia has more rights to Crimea.
one of my grandfathers was Russian, and the other is Ukrainian. Long live the USSR.
Do you know that the word "ukraine" itself means in the Russian language (and in Old Russian language, in the Ancient Rus', in the Kievan Rus') the "outskirt"? One of the many outskirts.
As the specific name of a specific area, it appeared only in the 16-17th century, when these territories were still captured by Poland...
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@jimmiekarlsson4458 are you normal? :) I/m Russian and 1/4 Ukrainian, so typically. “Kiev is the mother of Russian cities”(c)knyaz Oleg, 9th century AD. :
"И седе Олегъ, княжа в Киеве, и рече Олегъ: «Се буди мати городом русскымъ».",
“And the Oleg, who sat down in Kiev, and Oleg said: “Seo will be the mother of Russian cities.”,”
(c)"The Tale of Bygone Years"-"Russian Primary chronicle".
___
"9. About Rus departing with monoxiles from Rusia to Constantinople.
[Let it be known] that the monoxyls coming from outer Rusia to Constantinople are some from Nemogard, in which Sfendoslav, the son of Ingor, the archon of Rusia, sat, and others from the fortress of Miliniski, from Teliutsa, Chernigoga and from Vusegrad. So, they all descend along the Dnieper River and converge in the fortress of Kioava, called Samvatas..." (c) Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, the Byzantine Emperor, "On the Administration of the Empire", ~960 AD.
Oukraina - in Old Russian and in Russian actually means the same thing - the outskirt. One of many. In Russian there are also words with the same kind of word formation - okolitsa, obochina, okalina, etc. ... All of them mean - the edge, the extremity of something...:>
And so it - as the name of some lands with a capital letter - is not mentioned in truly ancient chronicles. No one has. Nowhere. Right up to the century of the 16th-17th....
The Ukrainian-Okrainians-Outskirters are a part of the Russian nation that only broke away due to the Mongol invasion, the Yoke, and the subsequent Polish occupation of those lands.
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one of my grandfathers was Russian, and the other is Ukrainian. i was born in USSR, and "Russia and Ukraine" is one thing fo me, and nationalists-idiots-monsterfreaks must be hanged always. :)
and Crimea was part of the USSR, it was handed over to Ukraine(Ukrainian SSR) only by Khrushchev - for the convenience of management as part of the USSR; and in general, it belongs to Russia - for the most part Russians live there(biggest part of population of Crimea)...
And historically, Russia has more rights to Crimea.
one of my grandfathers was Russian, and the other is Ukrainian. Long live the USSR.
Do you know that the word "ukraine" itself means in the Russian language (and in Old Russian language, in the Ancient Rus', in the Kievan Rus') the "outskirt"? One of the many outskirts.
As the specific name of a specific area, it appeared only in the 16-17th century, when these territories were still captured by Poland...
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