No I can not anwser this. thats why Im asking you.
Don't you mean countries?
if you mean Transylvania then its in Romania, Eastern Europe
Ashkenazi Jews are from Eastern Europe.
Eastern Europe was state capitalist, not Communist (which would mean no wages system and production for use).
If you mean Prussia, it no longer exists. It officially ceased existence in 1947. In the 18th and 19th centuries it was a powerful force in eastern Europe. You may be referring to Russia. It does exist and is still a major power in eastern Europe.
Ashkenaz in the Biblical Hebrew word for Germany, though it's often also undestood as Europe or Eastern Europe.
51 countries have land in Europe, and there are much more counties than 5. Maybe you mean regions, in which Europe could be split into Southern Europe, Western Europe, Northern Europe, Central Europe, and Eastern Europe.
Do you mean time zones? If yes, there are 5 time zones on the continent. (UTC±0 - UTC+4) Do you mean zones as in regions? As defined by the United Nations, there are five regions in Europe: Northern Europe, Southern Europe, Central Europe, Western Europe, and Eastern Europe.
I wonder if you mean Russia, which is partly in Europe and Asia.
I presume that by content you mean continent. The Mongol Empire reached Eastern Europe.
Do you mean the US State of Georgia or the nation of Georgia in Eastern Europe? If the former, then it is in the South East corner of the US, between Alabama and South Carolina and above Florida. If the latter, then it is in the region of Eastern Europe known as the Caucasus, on the Eastern shore of the Black Sea and separating North-Eastern Turkey from Southern Russia- Armenia and Azerbaijan lie to it's East.
You mean Cyril and Methodius, the two byzantine missionaries? if so the two brothers brought the eastern orthodoxy religion to much of eastern Europe which summarily spread to places they themselves didn't go. I can't tell you specific countries but the Cyrillic alphabet, eastern orthodoxy, and much of their knowledge spread rapidly through eastern Europe among Slavic peoples