Di recente ho visitato Bratislava e ho preso un trasporto pubblico. Sono stato sorpreso di vedere una fermata dell’autobus che prende il nome da Georgies Capital Tbilisi. C’è un motivo per cui prende il nome?

    https://i.redd.it/rh7cuc83blnf1.jpeg

    di 69Pumpkin_Eater

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    7 commenti

    1. Hrdina_Imperia on

      Lots of streets require lots of names.

      In general, since Georgia was part of USSR, I would guess that their names (and capitals) was much more probable as a pick during the socialist era for a street. But that’s just a guess.

    2. Siriblius on

      I see plenty of streets especially in Bratislava named after places in the former Soviet Union.

    3. A lot of streets/areas were named after then soviet cities and things during the socialist era (You also have Moskovská, Tupolevova, Varšavská and Krakovská streets in Bratislava for example) to my knowledge this was a pretty common naming practice in most eastern bloc countries.

    4. Daniel_D225 on

      Sídlisko Ťahanovce (not to be confused with the former village of Ťahanovce) in Košice has a similar logic to their street names. Originally they were named after communist capitals (Hanojská, Berlínska, Budapeštianska, Pekinská…), but after the revolution the remaining ones that started construction before the revolution had to be named after non-communist capitals (Viedeňská, Aténska, Helsinská a Bruselská). Not Madridská, it’s in Ťahanovce.

    5. Large-Boot-7236 on

      Bratislava’s streets can help you in r/iafisher if you’re into that sort of thing.

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