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Bila T︠S︡erkva (Ukraine)

LC control no.n 85288882
Descriptive conventionsrda
Geographic headingBila T︠S︡erkva (Ukraine)
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Geographic subdivision usageUkraine--Bila T︠S︡erkva
Variant(s)Belaya Tserkov (Ukraine)
Belaya Tserkovʹ, Russia
Belai︠a︡ T︠S︡erkovʹ (Ukraine)
Byelaya Tserkov (Ukraine)
Belaja Zerkow (Ukraine)
Bila Tserḳvah (Ukraine)
Bila Zerkwa (Ukraine)
Biał Cerkiew (Ukraine)
Sde Lavan (Ukraine)
Shwartz Timme (Ukraine)
Belaja Cerkov (Ukraine)
Byelotzerkov (Ukraine)
בילא צרקבה
Біла Церква (Ukraine)
Special noteNon-Latin script reference not evaluated.
Found inDvukrylye fauny SSSR i ikh rolʹ v ėkosistemakh, 1984: verso t.p. (Belai︠a︡ T︠S︡erkovʹ)
BGN phone call, 4-17-86 (Belaya Tserkov; popl. 49°47ʹN, 30°07ʹE)
Ukr. rad. ent︠s︡ykl.: v. 1, p. 445 (Bila T︠S︡erkva; village and raĭon center in Kyïvsʹka oblastʹ. It arose on the site of a medieval village named Hi︠u︡rheva (I︠U︡rʹi︠e︡va) [no publs. in LC data base] which was founded in 1032. The village was conquered in the 13th cent. by the Horde of Batu Khan. Soviet power was established there in 1918)
Encyc. of Ukraine: v. 1, p. 223 (Bila Tserkva; city and raion center in Kiev oblast. It was built on the site of Iuriev [no publs. in LC data base], a town established in 1032. In the 16th cent. Bila Tserkva belonged to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Later under Polish rule it was the seat of the Bila Tserkva Regiment [Bilot︠s︡erkivsʹkyĭ polk] during the years 1648-74, and 1702-12. In 1793 it became part of the Russian Empire)
LC PreMARC file (hdg.: Belaya Tserkovʹ, Russia)
Ukraïna [MAP] 1992: (Bila T︠S︡erkva, in Kyïvsʹka oblastʹ)
Mass murder and German society in the Third Reich, 2002: p. 21 (800-900 Jews shot in Byelaya Tserkov in Aug. 1941)
GEOnet, 21 Apr. 2003 (Bila Tserkva, native; variants are Belaya Tserkov and Belaja Zerkow; PPL, 49°47ʹN, 30°07ʹE; Kyyivs'ka Oblast', Ukraine)
I︠E︡vreï Biloï T︠S︡erkvy (seredyna XIX - pochatok XX st.), 2018: p. 728 (בילא צרקבה = Bila Tserḳvah)
Stumacher family history, 2010: page 1, etc. (Town may be listed as Bila Tserkva (Ukraine), Belya Tserkov (Russia), Bila Zerkwa (German), Biał Cerkiew (Polish), Sde Lavan (Hebrew meaning white field), or Shwartz Timme (Yiddish for "black impurity"); alternative spellings: Belaja Zerkow, Belaia Tserkov, Biaka Tserkov, Belaja Cerkov and Byelotzerkov; Біла Церква)
Geographic area codee-un---