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  1. About this database. This database is an index to the 1890-1891 New York passenger arrival manifests, including only those passengers who indicated that they were citizens of Austria, Poland, or Galicia. There are a total of 96,699 names in this index — 44,052 for 1890, and 52,647 for 1891. Surname and Given Name of the passenger.

  2. Andrew ( Ukrainian: Андрій Юрієвич, romanized : Andrii Yuriievych) (unknown – 1323) was the last king of Ruthenia in 1308–1323 (according to other sources since 1315). He was the son of Yurii I (1252–1308) whom he succeeded on the throne of Galicia. His mother was Euphemia of Kuyavia. After the death of his father, he ruled ...

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  4. Galician. New York: a Cultural. History. When thinking about Galician migration, Latin America immediately comes to mind as the most obvious and well-known geographical location for this phenomenon. However, although the number of Galician migrants arriving in the United States was considerably lower, this country also received a significant ...

  5. From 1933 to 1935, 50% of the 12,000 Spaniards registered in New York were also Galician. The exile Emilio González López goes further and suggests that, in the thirties, 90% of the 15,000 Spaniards who lived in the city were originally from Galicia. This seems to be González López’s own estimate, but we must also take into account the ...

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  6. The FPAG also brought Galician politicians to New York in order to raise funds and gather support for the Republican government. As part of this campaign, the artist, writer and politician Alfonso Daniel Rodríguez Castelao arrived in New York in 1938. On August 14 he began his American tour in a crowded festival organised by the Sociedades ...

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  7. Aug 12, 2015 · The early years of Austrian rule in Galicia between 1772 and 1848 marked the most cosmopolitan period in the history of the region now known as Western Ukraine. The empire collapsed in 1918 and years of insecurity followed. In 1921, L’viv and most of former Galicia joined Poland.

  8. Andrew (Ukrainian: Андрій Юрієвич, romanized: Andrii Yuriievych) (unknown – 1323) was the last king of Ruthenia in 1308–1323 (according to other sources since 1315). He was the son of Yurii I (1252–1308) whom he succeeded on the throne of Galicia. His mother was Euphemia of Kuyavia. After the death of his father, he ruled the kingdom together with his brother Lev II. Though ...

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