About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 61. Chapters: Crimean Goths, Crimean Jews, Crimean Tatar people, Krymchaks, Ukrainians, Russians, Karaim, Crimean Tatars in Bulgaria, Crimean Khanate, Armenians in Crimea, Crimean Karaites, Crimean Tatar language, Taras Fedorovych, Crimean Tatar diaspora, Taurida Governorate, Server Djeparov, Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Crimean Gothic, Bakhchisaray Palace, Crimean Tatars in Romania, Jamala, Eski Yurt, Crimea Germans, Arkady Gornfeld, Principality of Theodoro, Krymchak language, Mustafa Abdulcemil Q r mo lu, Battle of Podhajce, List of Crimean khans, Crimean People's Republic, Noman Celebicihan, Mikhail Lifshitz, Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People, Deportation of the Crimean Tatars, Enver zmaylov, Tugay Bey, Irfan Ametov, Rustam Khudzhamov, Mangup, Mustafa Edige Kirimal, Bekir Coban-zade, Crimean Oblast, Index of Crimean Tatars related articles, List of Crimean Tatars, Rizvan Ablitarov, Saide Arifova, Anastasiya Sienina, Yaliboyu Tatars, Daniyal Ametov, John of Gothia, Milliy Firqa. Excerpt: Ukrainians (Ukrainian: , Ukrayintsi, ) is an ethnonym that describes an East Slavic ethnic group primarily living in Ukraine, also the sixth-largest ethnic group in Europe. Sometimes citizens of Ukraine can also be addressed as Ukrainians in ethnic terms. In the dictionary definition Ukrainians are also described as "inhabitants of Ukraine." Today, a large ethnic Ukrainian minority have citizenship in Russia, Canada, United States, Brazil, Kazakhstan, Italy and Argentina. According to some sources, around 20 million people outside of Ukraine are identified with the Ukrainian ethnicity.Ukraine therefore has one of the largest diasporas in the world. The oldest recorded ethnonyms used for the Ukrainian people are Rusychi, Rusyny and Rusy (from Rus'). In the 10th to 12th centuries those names applied only to the Slavic inhabita...