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Bukovina (Duchy)

LC control no.n 84100094
Descriptive conventionsrda
Geographic headingBukovina (Duchy)
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Variant(s)Buchenland (Duchy)
Bucovina (Duchy)
Bucovine (Duchy)
Bucovinei (Duchy)
Bukovyna (Duchy)
Bukowina (Duchy)
Ducatul Bucovinei
Duchy of Bukovina
Hert︠s︡ohstvo Bukovyna
Herzogthum Bukowina
Herzogtum Bukowina
Powkʻovina (Duchy)
Герцогство Буковина
Буковина (Duchy)
See alsoChernivet︠s︡ʹka oblastʹ (Ukraine)
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Other standard no.cnl00035065
146519263
Q4137588
Beginning date1849
Ending date1918
Associated countryAustro-Hungarian Monarchy
Special noteHeading valid 1849-1918.
SUBJECT USAGE: This heading is not valid for use as a subject. Works about this place are entered under the subject heading Bukovina (Romania and Ukraine).
Non-Latin script references not evaluated.
URIs added to 3XX and/or 5XX fields in this record for the PCC URI MARC Pilot. Please do not remove or edit these URIs.
Old catalog heading: Bukowina.
Found inMiclea, I. Sweet Bucovina, 1977: t.p. (Bucovina)
LC data base, 6-4-84 (hdg.: Bukovina) LC manual cat. (hdg.: Bukowina; variants: Bukovina, Buchenland, Bucovine, Powkʻovina; as descriptive access point used for publs. of the Austrian crownland of Bukovina, 1849-1918)
Encyc. Brit., 15th ed. (Bukovina: E. Eur. terr. divided since 1947 between Romania & Soviet Union; acquired its own name & identity in 1775 when ceded to Austria by the Turks; at first admin. as part of Galicia, then became a duchy and separate crownland within Austro-Hungarian Empire, 1849-1918; capital Chernovtsy (Czernowitz, Cernăuți); Romania gained control of whole province in 1919; northern part occupied by Soviets in World War II and officially became part of Ukraine in 1947)
Encyc. Amer., 1975 (Bukovina)
Mic dic. enc., 1978 (Bucovina; historical region, NE Carpathian Mts.)
Col. Lipp. gaz., 1962 (Bukovina; in German, Bukowina; in Romanian, Bucovina)
Webster's new geogr. dict., c1984 (Bukovina, or Bucovina)
Encyc. of Ukraine: v. 1, p. 437 (Chernivtsi oblast formed 08-07-1940 from northern parts of Bukovyna and Bessarabia. Until 13th cent. oblast formed part of Kievan Rusʹ. Then it belonged to the principality of Galicia-Volhynia, and from the 2nd half of the 14th cent. to Moldavia. In 1774 the western part (Bukovyna) was incorporated into Austria, while the northeastern part of the territory was ceded to Russia after 1812 where it was called Bessarabia oblast (later guberniya). From 1919 the whole territory was controlled by Rumania until 1940)
LC data base, 07-16-93 (hdg.: Chernivet︠s︡ʹka oblast ʹ (Ukraine))
Wikipedia, October 9, 2021 (Duchy of Bukovina; was a constituent land of the Austrian Empire from 1849 and a Cisleithanian crown land of Austria-Hungary from 1867 until 1918; Herzogtum Bukowina (German); Ducatul Bucovinei (Romanian); Герцогство Буковина = Hert︠s︡ohstvo Bukovyna (Ukrainian))
Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek, accessed October 9, 2021 (Bukowina; other names: Bucovina; Buchenland; Herzogtum Bukowina; Herzogthum Bukowina)
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