LC control no. | nr 92010187 |
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Geographic heading | Ti︠a︡chiv (Ukraine) |
Geographic subdivision usage | Ukraine--Ti︠a︡chiv |
Variant(s) | Ti︠a︡chevo (Ukraine) Tyachevo (Ukraine) Ṭeṭsh (Ukraine) Técsö (Ukraine) Tiačev (Ukraine) Ťačovo (Ukraine) Tiačevo (Ukraine) Tja-tseu (Ukraine) Tschau-Tschau (Ukraine) |
Found in | Tapuaḥ, 1986 or 1987- : ḳovets 2, cover (Ṭeṭsh) p. 15 (Técsö [in rom.]; Tiačev [in rom.]; Ťačovo [in rom.]) Columbia Lip. gaz., 1966 (Tyachevo; Tačovo; Tiačevo; Técso; town in the Ukraine) NIS gazetteer: v. 6, p. 721 (Tyachev; PPL; 48°01ʹN 23°35ʹE; ref. from Tyachevo) Ukraïna, masshtab 1:500 000, 1993: (Ti︠a︡chiv, in Zakarpatsʹka oblastʹ) Ukr. rad. ent︠s︡kl., 1984: v. 11, p. 421 (Ti︠a︡chiv; in Zakarpatsʹka oblastʹ, Ukraine. Founded in the middle of the 13th cent., was occupied by Austria-Hungary and Romania at various times. In April 1919 Soviet power was established but later that same month Ti︠a︡chiv was seized by Romania. In Sept. 1919 it was annexed by Czechoslovakia. In 1939 it was seized by Hungary. In 1945 as part of Zakarpatsʹka Ukraïna it was reunited with Soviet Ukraine) From the hell of the Holocaust, 2000: CIP text (Tecso; kown variously as: Tschau-Tschau; Tja-tseu; a town divided by the river Tisza with the larger part belonging to then Czechoslovakia, the smaller to Romania) GeoNames, algorithmically matched, 2009 (ppl; 48°01ʹ00ʺN 023°35ʹ00ʺE) |
Geographic area code | e-un--- |