Godwynn
March to the Sea
- Joined
- May 17, 2003
- Messages
- 20,502
Ah, we're finally on the right side of the Iron Curtain
Isn't the "heavily guarded borders" bit, inaccurate in Europe there? I thought borders between EU countries were very open, but central/eastern Europe doesn't reflect that in the map.
Czechia is grey on the map.
Isn't the "heavily guarded borders" bit, inaccurate in Europe there? I thought borders between EU countries were very open, but central/eastern Europe doesn't reflect that in the map.
A very dubious map of religious distribution.
It is mentioned, but I thought the open borders was an EU wide thing, not just a thing with most of the EU. The treaty confused me a little. Even after the treaty expansion mentioned, it wouldn't include all EU members in Eastern Europe.
There are no EU members in Eastern Europe.
Anyway, before we joined Schengen, we could travel accross the EU just with an ID card, passport was not required. Similar arrangements now exist with some EU candidate countries and the EU members which have not yet joined the Schengen zone (Romania, Bulgaria plus the British Isles).
There are no EU members in Eastern Europe.
Anyway, before we joined Schengen, we could travel accross the EU just with an ID card, passport was not required. Similar arrangements now exist with some EU candidate countries and the EU members which have not yet joined the Schengen zone (Romania, Bulgaria plus the British Isles).
surely the baltic states are in eastern europe
There are in fact, Poland Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria
There are no EU members in Eastern Europe.
I guess they qualified these areas as areas where are more non-religious people than Christians or Muslims....Why are large swathes of Russia are non-religious, while large swathes are? What's going on? What's going on in Estonia and Czechia too?
I guess they qualified these areas as areas where are more non-religious people than Christians or Muslims....
Unrecognized nations in the Black Sea region (or Central Europe if that is what they call it themselves)
Nations around the Black Sea are not Central Europe either.
Kosovo is now recognized by many countries, isn't it? I'd add Crimea, because that's the next ministate to be liberated by Russia (/sarcasm).
There are different definitions. It depends on how much you divide Europe, on what grounds, and simply the opinion of the person.Eastern Europe:
Belarus, Ukraine, Russia, Moldova and MAYBE Georgia and Armenia (on cultural grounds).