Historical Dictionary of the Russian Federation

EURASIA

Eurasia: translation

Eurasia is a large landmass covering about 53,990,000 square kilometers, or 10 percent of the Earth’s surface and more than one-third of its land area. The population of Eurasia is 4.8 billion, or more than 70 percent of the world’s population. Eurasia is comprised of both Europe and Asia but is recognized by some geographers to constitute a single continent, as the traditional continental divides—theUral Mountains, the Ural River, theCaspian Sea, theCaucasus, and the waters connecting theBlack Seato the Mediterranean— do not present significant barriers to the movement of human beings, fauna, or flora.
The historical division of Europe from Asia results from ancient Greek geographers’ fallacious conviction that the two spaces were separated by large bodies of water; however, during the 18th century, Russia’s rise as a European power forced a reconceptualization of the borders of the European continent.The word itself is a portmanteau of “Europe” and “Asia,” names of female characters in Greek mythology.
In terms of geopolitics, the word “Eurasia” (Evraziia) is uniquely associated with the former Soviet Union and is somewhat controversial. TheBaltic Statesand, to a lesser extent,Ukrainereject categorization as Eurasian states, though Russia, the Transcaucasian republics, and Central Asian countries embrace the term.Kazakhstan, in particular, promotes itself as a Eurasian nation, both territorially (likeTurkeyand the Russian Federation, Kazakhstan has both European and Asian portions) and ethnically (a slight majority of Kazakhstanis are Asiatic, with the rest being mostly European in terms of their ancestry). With thedissolution of the Soviet Union, Russian politicians briefly considered renaming theRussian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic“Eurasia” before settling on “Russian Federation.” The move had support fromneo-Eurasianistpolitical elites, who stress the multicultural and multiconfessional nature of the various peoples of contemporary Russia, which include Finnic, Ugric, Caucasian, Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic nations alongside the numerically dominant Slavs, as well as practitioners ofOrthodox Christianity,Islam,Buddhism,Judaism, andshamanism. The Russian Federation covers about one-third of the Eurasian supercontinent, though it contains less than 3 percent of its human population.
See alsoEurasia Party.

  1. eufrasiaEufrasia bersetzung. sieh auch Euphrasia...Vollstandiges Heiligen-Lexikon
  2. eurasia[jre jre]Евразия...Англо-русский большой универсальный переводческий словарь
  3. eurasiaЕвразия...Англо-русский геологический словарь
  4. eurasian Евразия...Англо-русский словарь Лингвистика-98
  5. eurasiaсущ. геогр. Евразия материк...Англо-русский словарь общей лексики
  6. eurasian. Евразия...Англо-русский словарь редакция bed
  7. eurasian геогр. н. вразя....Англо-український словник Балла М.І.
  8. eufrasiafЭуфрасия Евфрасия...Большой испанско-русский словарь
  9. eufrasiaf бот. очанка Итальянорусский словарь....Большой итальяно-русский и русско-итальянский словарь
  10. euràsiaЕвразия Итальянорусский словарь....Большой итальяно-русский и русско-итальянский словарь
  11. eurasia[jrejre] n геогр.Евразия материк...Новый большой англо-русский словарь
  12. eurasiaEurasia [jrejre] n геогр.i Евразия материкi...Новый большой англо-русский словарь II
  13. eurasiajrejre n геогр. Евразия материкem...Новый большой англо-русский словарь под общим руководством акад. Ю.Д. Апресяна