The Warsaw Pact.
The Warsaw Pact
Seven European countries held land in Africa in 1914.
Rhine
In 1955, the Warsaw Pact included the Soviet Union and seven Eastern European countries: Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and Albania. This military alliance was established as a counterbalance to NATO and solidified the Soviet influence over Eastern Europe during the Cold War. The pact was primarily aimed at mutual defense and cooperation among its member states.
The Warsaw Pact.
FranceUKBelgiumGerman EmpireItalyPortugalSpain
Yes, since 2007 there have been 27 members.
The Soviet Union (USSR) split into 7 countries in Europe: Russia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, the Ukraine, and Moldova; however, it also split into Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Kazakhstan which are partial European countries as well (and so is Russia). You could also say that the Ottoman Empire divided into 7 European nations: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey. But it also split into Cyprus (a country geographically Asian, yet politically European). Turkey is also a Eurasian country, not fully European.
The Warsaw Pact, established in 1955, included the Soviet Union and seven Eastern European countries: Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and Albania. This military alliance was created in response to NATO and aimed to solidify Soviet influence in Eastern Europe during the Cold War. The pact was dissolved in 1991 following the end of the Cold War and the political changes in Eastern Europe.
European countries that have seven letters in their name are:AlbaniaAndorraAustriaBelgiumCroatiaDenmarkEnglandEstoniaFinlandGeorgiaGermanyHungaryIcelandIrelandMoldovaRomaniaUkraine
Yes in the seven (7) European countries that have legalized same-sex marriage. It is also very likely possible in the fourteen European countries that have legalized some form of registered partnership.