Myerachowshchyna
Belarus
Myerachowshchyna has 13 documented cultural connections to places around the world. Below are 12 of the most distinctive.
Sapieha family
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Seda, Lithuania | Syanno, Belarus
Brest Litovsk Voivodeship
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Brest, Belarus | Biała Podlaska, Poland | Terespol, Poland | Principality of Turov | Motal
Tadeusz Kościuszko
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Katowice, Poland | Logan Square, Chicago | Janów Lubelski, Poland | Terespol, Poland | Skała, Poland
folwark
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Biecz, Poland | Kiekrz, Poland | Głogów Małopolski, Poland | Międzyświeć, Poland | Nur, Poland
Soviet invasion of Poland
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Belarus | Kaunas, Lithuania | Novogrudok, Belarus | Brest, Belarus | Kamianets-Podilskyi, Ukraine
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Belarus | Minsk, Belarus | Novogrudok, Belarus | Brest, Belarus | Vawkavysk, Belarus
Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Lviv, Ukraine | Lithuania | Ukraine | Moscow, Central | Odesa, Ukraine
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Sweden | Lithuania | Ukraine | Warsaw, Poland | Moscow, Central
Partitions of Poland
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Austria | Lithuania | Germany | Poland | Belarus
Second Polish Republic
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Lviv, Ukraine | Ukraine | Poznań, Poland | Katowice, Poland | Bielsko-Biała, Poland
Occupation of Poland (1939–1945)
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Silesia, Poland | Tarnów, Poland | Kuyavia, Poland | Gdynia, Poland | Olomouc, Czech Republic
Soviet Union
Connects Myerachowshchyna to: Slovakia | Georgia (U.S. state) | Finland | Lviv, Ukraine | Austria