Suceava, Suceava County, Romaniai
Regional Level Types | |
---|---|
Suceava | Commune |
Suceava County | County |
Romania | Country |
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Locality type:
Largest Settlements:
Place | Population |
---|---|
Suceava | 105,796 (2016) |
Other Languages:
French:
Suceava, Suceava, Roumanie
German:
Suczawa, Suczawa, Rumänien
Italian:
Suceava, distretto di Suceava, Romania
Romanian:
Suceava, Suceava, România
Russian:
Сучава, Сучава, Румыния
Simplified Chinese:
蘇恰瓦, 蘇恰瓦縣, 羅馬尼亞
Spanish:
Suceava, Suceava, Rumania
Ukrainian:
Сучава, Сучава, Румунія
Achinese:
Suceava, Propinsi Suceava, Rumania
Arabic:
سوتشافا, إقليم سوتشيافا, رومانيا
Armenian:
Սուչավա, Ռումինիա
Azeri:
Suçava , Rumıniya
Basque:
Suceava, Suceava, Errumania
Belarusian:
Сучава, жудзец Сучава, Румынія
Bengali:
সুচেভা, সুচিভা কাউন্টি, রোমানিয়া
Bulgarian:
Сучава, Сучава, Румъния
Catalan:
Suceava, Província de Suceava, Romania
Croatian:
Suceava, Suceava, Rumunjska
Czech:
Sučava, Sučava, Rumunsko
Danish:
Suceava, Suceava, Rumænien
Dutch:
Suceava, District Suceava, Roemenië
Esperanto:
Suceava, Distrikto Suceava, Rumanio
Estonian:
Suceava, Suceava maakond, Rumeenia
Farsi/Persian:
سوچاوا, شهرستان سوچاوا, رومانی
Finnish:
Suceava, Suceava, Romania
Georgian:
სუჩავა, სუჩავის ჟუდეცი, რუმინეთი
Greek:
Σουτσεάβα, Σουκεάβα, Ρουμανία
Gujarati:
સુસેવા, સુસેવા કાઉન્ટી, રોમાનિયા
Hebrew:
סוצ'אבה, סוצ'אבה , רומניה
Hindi:
सुकीयावा, सुसेवा काउंटी, रोमानिया
Hungarian:
Szucsáva, Suceava megye, Románia
Indonesian:
Suceava, Provinsi Suceava, Rumania
Irish Gaelic:
Suceava, An Rómáin
Japanese:
スチャヴァ, スチャヴァ県, ルーマニア
Kannada:
ಸಸೇವ, ಸೂಸವ ಕೌಂಟಿ, ರೊಮಾನಿಯ
Korean:
수체아바, 수체아바주, 루마니아
Latin:
Suceava, Suceava, Romania
Latvian:
Sučava, Sučavas žudecs, Rumānija
Limburgian:
Suceava, Roemenië
Lithuanian:
Sučava, Sučavos apskritis, Rumunija
Lombard:
Suceava, Rumania
Macedonian:
Сучава, Романија
Malay:
Suceava, Wilayah Suceava, Romania
Marathi:
सुसेवा, सुसेवा काउंटी, रोमेनिया
Minangkabau:
Suceava
Norwegian:
Suceava, Suceava, Romania
Norwegian (Nynorsk):
Suceava, Suceava fylke, Romania
Occitan:
Suceava, Romania
Polish:
Suczawa, Suczawa, Rumunia
Portuguese:
Suceava, Suceava, Romênia
Scots:
Suceava, Suceava Coonty, Romanie
Scottish Gaelic:
Suceava, Suceava, Romàinia
Serbian:
Сучава, Сучава, Румунија
Serbo-Croatian:
Suceava, Suceava, Rumunija
Sinhalese:
සුසීවා, සුසේආවා ප්රාන්තය, රුමේනියාව
Slovak:
Suceava, Suceava, Rumunsko
Slovenian:
Suceava, Okrožje Suceava, Romunija
South Azerbaijani:
سوچهآوا, رومانی
Swedish:
Suceava, Suceava, Rumänien
Tajik (Cyrillic Script):
Сучава, Вилояти Сучеава, Руминия
Tamil:
சுசெவா, சுசாவா கவுண்டி, உருமேனியா
Tatar:
Сучәва, Румыния
Telugu:
సుసెవ, సుకియావా కౌంటీ, రొమేనియా
Thai:
ซูซาวา, เทศมณฑลซูชาวา, ประเทศโรมาเนีย
Turkish:
Suceava, Suceava ili, Romanya
Upper Sorbian:
Suceava, Rumunska
Urdu:
سوچاوا, سوچاوا کاؤنٹی, رومانیہ
Venetian:
Suceava, Distreto de Suceava, Romanìa
Vietnamese:
Suceava, Hạt Suceava, România
Waray:
Suceava, Kondado han Suceava, Rumania
Western Punjabi:
سوچاوا, سوچاوا کاؤنٹی, رومانیہ
Wu Chinese:
苏恰瓦, 罗马尼亚
Yiddish:
שאץ, שאצער קאנט, רומעניע
Suceava (Romanian: [suˈtʃe̯ava]) is the largest urban settlement and the seat town (Romanian: oraș reședință de județ) of Suceava County, situated in the historical region of Bukovina, northeastern Romania, and at the crossroads of Central and Eastern Europe. During the late Middle Ages, namely between 1388 and 1564, this middle-sized town was the capital of the Principality of Moldavia.
From 1775 to 1918, Suceava was controlled by the Habsburg monarchy, initially part of its Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, then gradually becoming the third most populous urban settlement of the Duchy of Bukovina, a constituent land of the Austrian Empire and subsequently a crown land within the Austrian part of Austria-Hungary. During this time, Suceava was an important, strategically-located commercial border town with the then Romanian Old Kingdom.
Throughout the Austrian-ruled period of Bukovina, Suceava was also regarded as a "miniature Austria" by native intellectual Rudolf Gassauer given its significant ethnic diversity (which, up until the early 20th century, included an overwhelming majority of ethnic Germans, more specifically Bukovina Germans, as well). An even older ethnic German presence in the town (as well as in the entire region of Bukovina) can be traced back to the end of the 14th century, during the late Middle Ages.
In the wake of World War I, after 1918, along with the rest of Bukovina, Suceava became part of the then newly enlarged Kingdom of Romania. After the end of World War II, the town slowly underwent a process of communist systematization, which increased its population approximately tenfold throughout the decades prior to the 1989 Romanian Revolution. It became a municipality in 1968. Suceava is also crossed by the namesake river, a tributary of Siret, to the northwest, in the neighbourhood of Ițcani (German: Itzkany).
List of minerals for each chemical element
Fossils
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Wikipedia: | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suceava |
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Wikidata ID: | Q46400 |
GeoNames ID: | 8334903 |
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Suceava, Suceava County, Romania