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Cultural Changes In Eastern Europe

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After World War II, Eastern Europe area was in ruins. Europe had been destroyed from years of fights and bombing. Europe was in need of capital because their bridges, roads, and were demolished. Also, Europe was divided into hostile alliance systems. Eastern Europe countries were dominated by The USSR, which was Russia, where they had battled the Germans. These countries included; Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. The domination which was governed by communist governments who had their own alliance called the Warsaw Pact. Eastern Europe is a region that enclose numerous of ethnicities, languages, histories and cultures. The most eastern part of Europe makes up Eastern Europe. The boundaries that are present of Eastern Europe were developed during the final stages of World War II. Belarus, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, and Ukraine were all the European countries which were …show more content…

Russia separates Europe from Asia and puts both continents over a broad geographical area that consumes many cultures, terrains, and climates. In Eastern Europe surrounded by Russia to the northeast is Belarus. In East Central Europe is Czech Republic, which was combined with Slovakia, and Hungary. In the north of the East and East Central European area is Poland. Southeastern-Central Europe is Romania and Moldova which is north of the Balkan Peninsula and on the western shore of the Black Sea. All of these Eastern European countries have one thing in common, which they were all behind the Iron Curtain before its recession. Since of all Eastern Europe’s countries are in the same geographical region, they’ll most likely have the same climate. Overall, Europe is in the northern temperate climate zone. It is grouped in the cool-summer humid climate. Unlike southern Europe, Four seasons occur in Eastern Europe; winter, spring, summer and

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