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Yulia Romero (talk | contribs) m The Ukrainian magazine The Ukrainian Week was the source, not the English-language newspaper of the Ukrainian diaspora in the United States and North America with a similar name, The Ukrainian Weekly |
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The earliest mentioning of Samar as a settlement in Lower Dnieper region is a royal edict of the [[King of Poland]] [[Stephen Báthory]] in 1576. It was a river port administrated by local Cossacks.
In 1668 at its ___location was built Novobohorodytska (Bohorodytska) fortress with an area of {{convert|70|hectare|acres|abbr=on}}.<ref name=rlratsybarska160928>{{in lang|uk}} Yulia Ratsybarska. ''[https://www.radiosvoboda.org/a/28017944.html "Dnipro is a city of three fortresses", not a "City of Sovok" («Дніпро – місто трьох фортець», а не «місто совка»)]''. [[Radio Liberty]]. 28 September 2016</ref>
In 2001 the [[Cabinet of Ukraine]] recognized the fortress as a historical landmark of national significance.<ref name=rlratsybarska160928/>
In 2011
==References==
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==External links==
* Iryna Shovkovets. ''[https://www.umoloda.kiev.ua/number/1279/196/45241/ Cossacks' city on Samara (Козацьке місто на Самарі)]''. Ukrayina Moloda. 31 October 2008. {{in lang|uk}}
* [https://www.unian.ua/society/1954514-misto-dnipro-na-250-rokiv-starishe-nij-vvajalos-istoriki.html The city of Dnipro is 250 years older and it was considered, historians (Місто Дніпро на 250 років старіше, ніж вважалось - історики)]. [[UNIAN]]. 1 June 2017 {{in lang|uk}}
{{Dnipro}}
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