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・ Bukovica, Tomislavgrad
・ Bukovica, Škofja Loka
・ Bukovice
・ Bukovice (Brno-Country District)
・ Bukovice (Náchod District)
・ Bukovik
・ Bukovik (Aranđelovac)
・ Bukovik (Breza)
・ Bukovik (mountain)
・ Bukovik (Nova Varoš)
・ Bukovik (Prijepolje)
・ Bukovik (Serbia)
・ Bukovik (Sokolac)
・ Bukovina
・ Bukovina (Blansko District)
Bukovina Germans
・ Bukovina nad Labem
・ Bukovina Society Headquarters and Museum
・ Bukovina u Přelouče
・ Bukovina u Čisté
・ Bukovina, Liptovský Mikuláš District
・ Bukovinian State Medical University
・ Bukovinian Subcarpathians
・ Bukovinka
・ Bukovite
・ Buković
・ Buković, Croatia
・ Bukovje
・ Bukovje Križevačko
・ Bukovje pri Slivnici


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Bukovina Germans : ウィキペディア英語版
Bukovina Germans

The Bukovina Germans were a German ethnic group who lived from about 1780 to 1940 in the historic Bukovina region, part of present-day western Ukraine and northeastern Romania. They were a minority group of approximately 21 percent of the multiethnic population according to a 1910 census (with more Jews than Christians), until the Holocaust and the resettlement of the Christian population into the German Reich after the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in autumn 1940.
== History ==
Ethnic Germans, mainly craftsmen and merchants, had scatteredly settled in the Principality of Moldavia in the course of the late medieval ''Ostsiedlung'' migration. Over the centuries they were assimilated by the local Csango population.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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