Mir, Belarus
Mir, Belarus
Mir, Belarus has 24 documented cultural connections to places around the world. Below are 12 of the most distinctive.
Battle of Mir (1792)
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Novogrudok, Grodno Region
Principality of Minsk
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Minsk, Belarus | Principality of Polotsk
Mir Castle Complex
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Belarus | Grodno region
Duchy of Lithuania
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Lithuania | Poznań, Greater Poland | Druskininkai, Dzūkija | Tykocin, Podlaskie | Teplyk
Korczak coat of arms
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Sucha Beskidzka, Lesser Poland Voivodeship | Pruchnik, Subcarpathian | Wereszczyn, Lublin | Strusiv | Białowola, Lublin
Jewish diaspora
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Israel | Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv District | Mogilev, Mogilev Region | Zakho, Kurdistan Region | Tayma, Tabuk province
Principality of Polotsk
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Belarus | Minsk, Belarus | Vawkavysk, Grodno Region | Latgale | Polotsk, Vitebsk Region
Generalbezirk Weissruthenien
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Minsk, Belarus | Baranavichy, Brest Region | Klyetsk, Minsk Region | Valozhyn, Minsk Region | Ivatsevichy, Brest Region
German occupation of Byelorussia during World War II
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Belarus | Braslaw, Vitebsk Region | Klyetsk, Minsk Region | Byerazino, Minsk Region | Kobryn, Brest Region
Reichskommissariat Ostland
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Kaunas, Kaunas County | Ludza, Latvia | Viļāni, Latvia | Baranavichy, Brest Region | Jaunjelgava, Latvia
Soviet invasion of Poland
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Belarus | Kaunas, Kaunas County | Novogrudok, Grodno Region | Brest, Belarus | Kamianets-Podilskyi, Khmelnytskyi Oblast
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic
Connects Mir, Belarus to: Belarus | Minsk, Belarus | Novogrudok, Grodno Region | Brest, Belarus | Vawkavysk, Grodno Region