1. Russian Core 2. Siberia 3. South Eastern Frontier 4. Far East
If you are in the far eastern provinces of Canada, Argentina is due south. Otherwise, it is more of a south-south-east direction, becoming further east the further west you are in Canada.
Ireland is not in eastern Europe. It is about as far west as you can get!
"Middle east" is inherently Euro-centric, as it refers to how far the area is from Europe. The Middle East is between the "Near East," around Turkey, and the "Far East," which encompasses all of eastern Russia and Asia.
At it's largest the Mongols conquered much of Asia (central and south (excluding the far south east), Northern India, much of the Middle Eastern area and a little bit of Europe. So any lands outside of that were unconquered (examples are North America, South America, Antarctica, Austrailia, Africa and many more).
Following are the 9 regions of the world: Europe,North America,South america,South Asia,Southeast Asia,Central Asia,Africa,Far East,Middle East.
Countries in the theoretical region known as the Eastern hemisphere include countries in Oceania, Asia most of Europe and most of Africa. Among them are:AfghanistanAustraliaAustriaChinaEgyptEthiopiaFranceGermanyIndiaIranIraqIsraelItalyJapanNew ZealandLibyaRussiaSpainTaiwanThailandUnited KingdomThe countries of the eastern hemisphere are all east of the Prime Meridian. Oddly, countries in Europe and Africa are split by this line. In Europe The UK, France and Spain are all split.
Uganda is landlocked in eastern Africa, ditto Malawi and Zambia. Zimbabwe is perhaps too far south and Ethiopia perhaps too far north.
The eastern side of Africa abuts the Red Sea (as far south as Djibouti), then the Indian Ocean the rest of the way.
No, it is in Far-East Asia.
No. Serbia is a country in Europe.
Spread of Islam was not hindered in east africa, it reached as far as Zambia, Mozambique and further south to Rwanda