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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › OdesaOdesa - Wikipedia

    During the 19th century, Odesa was the fourth largest city of the Russian Empire, after Moscow, Saint Petersburg and Warsaw. 13 Its historical architecture is more Mediterranean than Russian, having been heavily influenced by French and Italian styles.

  2. On 29 October 1914, a prelude to the Russo-Turkish front, the Turkish fleet, with German support, began to raid Russian coastal cities in Odessa, Sevastopol, Novorossiysk, Feodosia, Kerch, and Yalta [113] This led Russia to declare war on the Ottoman Empire on 2 November. [114]

  3. The Odessa Soviet Republic (OSR; Ukrainian: Одеська Радянська Республіка, romanized: Odeska Radianska Respublika; ‹See Tfd› Russian: Одесская Советская Республика) was a short-lived Soviet republic formed on 30 January [O.S. 17 January] 1918 from parts of the Kherson and Bessarabia ...

  4. During the extended period of the Russian Revolution of 1917, several non-ethnic Soviet republics emerged across the former empire, including the Soviet Republic of Odessa (January 18–March 13, 1918) and the Soviet Republic of the Far East (January 7/April 10–September 17, 1918).1 The two republics relied on non-Bolshevik political image-

  5. Odesa was the fourth-largest city in the Russian Empire (after Saint Petersburg, Moscow, and Warsaw). The number of Jews rose sharply. Of the major cities in Ukraine Odesa had the smallest proportion of Ukrainian residents.

  6. 4 days ago · Odesa, seaport, southwestern Ukraine. It stands on a shallow indentation of the Black Sea coast at a point approximately 19 miles (31 km) north of the Dniester River estuary and about 275 miles (443 km) south of Kyiv. The city is an important cultural and educational center as well as a major port.

  7. Jan 11, 2024 · Throughout the Russian imperial period, Odesa stood as a Russian city made of foreigners and embodied a divergence from Russianness rather than its colonial reproduction.