Monday, February 25, 2019

Lecture “The Crimean toponymy in Ukraine" (Berlin)

link

BERLIN,14 March 2019: Lecture “The Crimean toponymy in Ukraine: living evidence of the centuries-old interactions between Crimea and the mainland Ukraine”

We cordially invite you to our next lecture within our “Science first hand” lecture series:

Title: “The Crimean toponymy in Ukraine: living evidence of the centuries-old interactions between Crimea and the mainland Ukraine” (Lecture will be given in Ukrainian)
Speaker: Roman Alieiev, engineer at the Research department of MAN Truck & Bus AG, PhD student at the Technical University of Braunschweig
When: Thursday, 14 March 2019, 18:00 – 19:30 (entry from 17:30 onwards)
Where: Embassy of Ukraine, Albrechtstraße 26, 10117 Berlin
REGISTER by the 11th of March at: berlin (at) ukrainet (dot) eu. At the registration please provide your name, position and employer/ place of study, city, in accordance with the security regulations of the embassyPlease have a valid photo-identity document to enter the venue.
About the speaker:
Roman Alieiev is engineer at the Research department of MAN Truck & Bus AG and PhD student at the Technical University of Braunschweig. He graduated from the National Technical University “Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute” and Technical University Ilmenau. He then continued his training in industry (Volkswagen Group Research Braunschweig) carrying out research into the 5G communication for the Intellectual Transport Systems.
About the lecture:
The Crimean Tatars, the Crimean Karaites, the Krymchaks and the Urums are indigenous peoples of Ukraine. What unites the Bulgarian, German, and Jewish settlers in Ukraine with the peasants from the Poltava region village Turbaї and the Crimeans? Why Russian Federation is so successful in manipulating the facts from the history of the southern regions of Ukraine? What relations exist between “decommunization”, historical toponymy, and how Ukrainian society perceives the changes of geographical names? What lessons could we learnt from this complex story?

No comments:

Post a Comment