2010, An G. López Martin, International Straits: Concept, Classification and Rules of Passage, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, p 102:
It is situated between the southwest coast of Russia to the east and the Ukrainian Peninsula of Crimea to the west.
2001, Wolf Dietrich, “Rom Music for the Tatars of the Crimea,” in Music and Minorities, conference proceedings, Ljubljana: International Council for Traditional Music, p 207:
As a consequence about 60.000 Tatars of the Crimea fled from their homes on the Peninsula of Crimea to this part of the Ottoman Empire, for them, as Muslims, a better alternative than to stay with the Russians.
1892, Strabo, transl. H.C. Hamilton, The Geography of Strabo, v 1, London: George Bell & Sons, p 471:
[footnote] 4 The Isthmus of Perecop, which connects the Peninsula of Crimea, the ancient Taurica Chersonesus.
1835, Penny Cyclopædia, v 3, London: Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, p 204:
This sea extends from the eastern shores of the Peninsula of Crimea in an east-north-east direction to the embouchure of the river Don.