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Fiolent Stadium

1935 establishments in UkraineBuildings and structures in SimferopolEuropean sports venue stubsFootball venues in CrimeaSport in Simferopol
Sports venues in CrimeaUkrainian building and structure stubsUkrainian sport stubs
Fiolent stadium
Fiolent stadium

Fiolent, was the home ground of the now defunct Ukrainian football club of FC Ihroservice Simferopol. The ground opened for use on 1 April 1935. The former names it carried were Synie pole (Blue field), Kharchovyk (Food dealer), Avant-garde, Meteor. It can hold 5,000 spectators. The size of the field is 105m x 68m. Ukrainian Second League club Zhemchuzhyna Yalta moved their home games in the 2012–13 seasons from Round 16 onwards while their home ground was under pitch reconstruction.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Fiolent Stadium (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Fiolent Stadium
Shpolianskoy Street,

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Wikipedia: Fiolent StadiumContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 44.960947222222 ° E 34.104855555556 °
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Address

Фиолент

Shpolianskoy Street
295034 , Султанский луг
Republic of Crimea, Russia
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Fiolent stadium
Fiolent stadium
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State Council of Crimea
State Council of Crimea

The State Council of Crimea (Russian: Госуда́рственный Сове́т Респу́блики Крым, romanized: Gosudarstvennyy Sovyet Respubliki Krym, Ukrainian: Державна Рада Республіки Крим, romanized: Derzhavna Rada Respubliky Krym, Crimean Tatar: Къырым Джумхуриетининъ Девлет Шурасы, romanized: Qırım Cumhuriyetiniñ Devlet Şurası) is the parliament of Russian administered Republic of Crimea. It claims to be a continuation of the 'Supreme Council of Crimea' following a vote by the Ukrainian parliament to dissolve the Supreme Council of Crimea. The Parliament is housed in the Parliament building in the centre of Simferopol. Following the events of 2014, Crimea is a territory currently under dispute between Russia and Ukraine with Russia administering the territory but most countries continuing to recognise the territory as Ukrainian. During the period of time in which Crimea was controlled by Ukraine, the Parliament was unable to appoint the Prime Minister of Crimea on its own, being able to appoint him only with the advice and consent of the President of Ukraine. This restriction did not sit well with the Parliament and its constituents, creating a long-standing rift between them and the national government of Ukraine.As the Crimean crisis unfolded, the Parliament building was seized by unidentified pro-Russian gunmen. Under their control, the Parliament removed the incumbent Ukrainian-consented Prime Minister of Crimea and unilaterally appointed Sergey Aksyonov in his stead. The disbandment was also caused by the belief that the Crimean Parliament collaborated with Russian troops in the region against Ukrainian authorities. Days later, the Crimean Parliament reunified its territorial jurisdiction with the city of Sevastopol into a single united nation and unilaterally declared their independence from Ukraine following a referendum. This newly formed nation then acceded to Russia which ultimately transferred the Crimean Parliament under a newly formed federal subject of Russia.