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Post by gnusmas on Nov 18, 2016 11:21:41 GMT
Techically Volga because Yenisei is in Siberia and official eastern border of Europe as a continent is the Ural. Siberiya is included btw sk.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volga
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Post by Tariq ibn Ziyad on Nov 18, 2016 11:26:17 GMT
I'm not Slovakian Yeah, Volga is included in the longest river. But, Danube?
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Post by gnusmas on Nov 18, 2016 11:55:57 GMT
I'm not Slovakian Yeah, Volga is included in the longest river. But, Danube? I havent measured it myself but I think its true
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Post by Quintus Fabius on Nov 18, 2016 12:12:06 GMT
Longest EUropean river is Volga. Longest European+Sybir river is Yenisei. Longest EUrasian river is Yangtze.
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Post by Tariq ibn Ziyad on Nov 19, 2016 11:22:02 GMT
East Prussia?
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Post by Quintus Fabius on Nov 19, 2016 11:46:32 GMT
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Post by Tito on Nov 19, 2016 17:14:05 GMT
Pretoria, Bloemfontein and; Cape Town. (I checked Google maps, the capital sign is visible on these three cities) From all of these three I only know Cape Town, and I thought it was the capital thanks to HoI4 (looks smiling at a camera while thumbs up)
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Post by Frederick the Great on Nov 19, 2016 22:59:35 GMT
Pretoria, Bloemfontein and; Cape Town. (I checked Google maps, the capital sign is visible on these three cities) From all of these three I only know Cape Town, and I thought it was the capital thanks to HoI4 (looks smiling at a camera while thumbs up) HOI4 has Pretoria not Cape Town as the capital.
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Post by Tariq ibn Ziyad on Nov 20, 2016 9:47:33 GMT
Nyet, I meant who is the "owner"? CIS?
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Post by Frederick the Great on Nov 20, 2016 9:58:06 GMT
Nyet, I meant who is the "owner"? CIS? Can you please make posts that actually make sense. So many of your posts make aboslutley no sense and have zero explaination. /skip
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Post by Quintus Fabius on Nov 20, 2016 14:12:31 GMT
Nyet, I meant who is the "owner"? CIS? Russia.
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Post by Tariq ibn Ziyad on Dec 4, 2016 3:40:40 GMT
Nyet, I meant who is the "owner"? CIS? Can you please make posts that actually make sense. So many of your posts make aboslutley no sense and have zero explaination. /skip CIS = Commonwealth of the Independent States or Rossiyskaya Federatsiya
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Post by Tariq ibn Ziyad on Dec 4, 2016 3:42:30 GMT
I still confused with Kaliningrad, Gdansk, Danzig, and Konigsberg. Could some one tell me their differences?
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Post by Frederick the Great on Dec 4, 2016 6:44:35 GMT
I still confused with Kaliningrad, Gdansk, Danzig, and Konigsberg. Could some one tell me their differences? Gdansk and Danzig are the same city only different name. Gdansk is the Polish name and Danzig is the German name. Historically Germany/Prussia and Poland fought over Gdansk and West Prussia (the region Gdansk is in) for hundreds of years. In fact Germany wanting Danzig/Gdansk from Poland is what started WW2. Hitler demanded Poland give up Gdansk because it had a large German population, Poland refused so Germany invaded (though he probably would have invaded the whole country sooner or latter anyway). Konigsberg and Kaliningrad are, again the same city (more or less) only the old German name (Konigsberg) and the name the Russians now call it (Kaliningrad). Koningsberg was probably the second more important city in Prussia after Berlin and was its capital for a long while. It's located in what was East Prussia. During World War Two the Soviets attacked Konigsberg and destroyed most of the city and expelled nearly all of its German population and replaced it with Russians. After the war and when Germany was reunified Russia offered to return Kaliningrad (which is not connected to the rest of Russia) to Germany but Germany declined as the city was a shadow of its former self and mostly populated by Russians now. So basically Gdansk is what Danzig is now called and Konignsberg is the old name for Kaliningrad. And the CIS doesn't "own" any land or cities. It's a fairly weak alliance similar (but much weaker and less unified) to NATO, neither of which own land as they are not sovereign nations.
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