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Flag |
Coat of arms |
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Anthem: Ще
не вмерла України ні
слава, ні воля (Ukrainian)
Shche ne vmerla
Ukrayiny ni slava,
ni volya (transliteration)
Ukraine's glory
has not yet
perished, nor her
freedom |
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Location
of Ukraine |
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Capital
(and largest city) |
Kiev (Kyiv)
50°27′N,
30°30′E |
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Official languages |
Ukrainian |
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Demonym |
Ukrainian |
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Government |
Semi-presidential
unitary state |
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- |
President |
Viktor Yushchenko |
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- |
Prime Minister |
Yulia Tymoshenko |
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- |
Speaker of the
Parliament |
Arseniy Yatsenyuk |
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Independence |
from the
Soviet Union |
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- |
Declared |
August 24,
1991 |
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- |
Referendum |
December 1,
1991 |
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- |
Finalized |
December 26,
1991 |
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Area |
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- |
Total |
603,628 kmē (44th)
233,090 sq mi |
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- |
Water (%) |
7% |
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Population |
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- |
2008 estimate |
46,372,700 (27th) |
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2001 census |
48,457,102 |
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- |
Density |
77/kmē (115th)
199/sq mi |
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GDP (PPP) |
2007 estimate |
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- |
Total |
$399.866 billion[1] (29th) |
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- |
Per capita |
$8,624[1] (83rd) |
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GDP
(nominal) |
2007 estimate |
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- |
Total |
$140.5 billion
[2] (45th) |
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Per capita |
$3,061 (88th) |
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Gini (2006) |
31[2] |
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HDI (2005) |
▲ 0.788 (medium) (76th) |
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Currency |
Hryvnia (UAH) |
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Time zone |
EET
(UTC+2) |
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- |
Summer (DST) |
EEST (UTC+3) |
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Internet TLD |
.ua |
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Calling code |
+380 |
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Ukraine
(English
pronunciation /juːˈkreɪn/;
Ukrainian: Україна, Ukrayina, /ukrɑˈjinɑ/)
is a country in Eastern Europe.
It borders Russia to the east,
Belarus to the north, Poland,
Slovakia and Hungary to the
west, Romania and Moldova to the
southwest, and the Black Sea and
Sea of Azov to the south. The
city of Kiev (Kyiv) is both the
capital and the largest city of
Ukraine.
The nation's history began with
that of the East Slavs. From at
least the 9th century, the
territory of Ukraine was a
center of the medieval Varangian
dominated East Slavic
civilization forming the state
of Kievan Rus', which
disintegrated in the 12th
century. From the 14th century
on, the territory of Ukraine was
divided among a number of
regional powers and by the 19th
century the largest part of
Ukraine was integrated into the
Russian Empire with the rest
under Austro-Hungarian control.
After a chaotic period of
incessant warfare and several
attempts at independence
(191721) following the Great
War and the Russian civil war,
Ukraine emerged in 1922 as one
of the founding republics of the
Soviet Union. The Ukrainian
Soviet Socialist Republic's
territory was enlarged westward
shortly before and after the
second World War, and again in
1954 with the Crimea transfer.
In 1945, the Ukrainian SSR
became one of the co-founding
members of the United
Nations.[3] Ukraine became
independent again after the
dissolution of the Soviet Union
in 1991. This began a transition
period to a market economy, in
which Ukraine was stricken with
eight straight years of economic
decline.[4] But since then the
economy has been experiencing a
stable increase, with real GDP
growth averaging seven percent
annually.
Ukraine is a unitary state
composed of 24 oblasts
(provinces), one autonomous
republic (Crimea), and two
cities with special status:
Kiev, its capital, and
Sevastopol, which houses the
Russian Black Sea Fleet under a
leasing agreement. Ukraine is a
republic under a
semi-presidential system with
separate legislative, executive,
and judicial branches. Being the
second largest country in
Europe, Ukraine also posses the
second largest military on the
continent.[5] The country is
home to some 46.4 million
people, 77.8 percent of them are
ethnic Ukrainians, with sizable
minorities of Russians,
Belarusians and Romanians. The
Ukrainian language is only
official language in Ukraine,
while Russian is also widely
spoken and is known to most
Ukrainians as a second language.
The dominant religion in the
country in Christianity, which
has heavily influenced Ukrainian
architecture, literature and
music.