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    <title>Enormo - Flats for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast </title>
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  	<description><![CDATA[Are you looking for a flat for sale in Odessa? We have different types and sizes of flats for sale available, from trendy urban flats to precious little surprises that you'll be certain to like, each one with its own special characteristics. Enormo allows you to search listings easily and conveniently so that you can find the flat in Odessa that's right for you. Buying a flat in Odessa doesn't get any simpler than this.]]></description>
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    <item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH2,009,477  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000043207862/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Sat, 29 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb2.enormo.com/200000000004320/odessa-flat-sale-7862.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000043207862)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000043207862)" /><br/><br/><b>Garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH828,909  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000042081577/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb3.enormo.com/200000000004208/odessa-flat-sale-1577.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000042081577)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000042081577)" /><br/><br/><b>80 m&#178;, garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH1,607,581  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000039901856/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb4.enormo.com/200000000003990/odessa-flat-sale-1856.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039901856)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039901856)" /><br/><br/><b>116 m&#178;, fireplace, garden, jacuzzi, parking</b><br/>Total area of the three-room apartment situated in the 15th floor of the 15-story building is 116m². The layout of the flat is very convenient with separate location of the rooms. The flat provides with a kitchen-studio (combined with a living room in the European style), jacuzzi, shower cabin with hydro massage, bathroom and toilet (floor in the bathroom is heated), bedroom with a sea view from the window, room-cabinet, wardrobe, hall, fireplace. The flat provides with individual heating, water supply and air conditioner system. Most of the rooms (bathroom including) provide high windows (from the floor). There are two lifts in the building. The territory around is permanently guarded. There is a parking by the building. Major plus is that the car place in the parking is available and is included in the price.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH552,606  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000039902343/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb3.enormo.com/200000000003990/odessa-flat-sale-2343.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039902343)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039902343)" /><br/><br/><b>2 bedrooms, garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH326,540  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000039902344/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb2.enormo.com/200000000003990/odessa-flat-sale-2344.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039902344)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039902344)" /><br/><br/><b>Garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH1,356,397  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000039901854/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb4.enormo.com/200000000003990/odessa-flat-sale-1854.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039901854)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000039901854)" /><br/><br/><b>Garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH738,482  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000038510138/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb4.enormo.com/200000000003851/odessa-flat-sale-0138.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000038510138)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000038510138)" /><br/><br/><b>1 bedroom, garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH432,037  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000038509179/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb4.enormo.com/200000000003850/odessa-flat-sale-9179.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000038509179)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000038509179)" /><br/><br/><b>1 bedroom, garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH501,113  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000038511612/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb4.enormo.com/200000000003851/odessa-flat-sale-1612.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000038511612)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000038511612)" /><br/><br/><b>4 bedrooms, garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  - UAH1,476,965  ]]></title><link>http://www.enormo.com/property/698740/2000000000033503486/1/1/rss</link><pubDate>Fri, 26 Sep 2008 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://thumb1.enormo.com/200000000003350/odessa-flat-sale-3486.jpg" width="140" height="100" alt="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000033503486)" title="Flat for Sale in Odessa, Odessa Oblast  (#2000000000033503486)" /><br/><br/><b>Garden</b><br/>The city was officially erected in 1795 as a Russion military stronghold on the ruins of Khadjibey and was given the name Odesa in January 1796, when its new name was first mentioned in official mass media. Neither the origin of the new name nor reasons for giving the other name are known, though the origin and the anecdotes and jokes about the city abound. According to one of such stories, when someone suggested Odess as a name for the new Russian port, Russian Empress Catherina II said that all names in the South of the Empire were already too "manish" and didn't want yet another one, so she decided to rename it to more 'feminine' Odesa. This anecdote is definietly a fairy tail, because there were at least two cities Yevpatoria and Feodosia whose names sound 'feminine' for a Russian; besides, Kzarina was not a native Russian speaker, and finally, all cities had female names in Latin. Another legend obtains the name 'Odesa' from the word myth: in the French language that at that time was mainly spoken by the aristocracy in Russia "much water' is 'assez d'eau'; if said in reverse, it sounds similar to that of the Greek colony's name (and water-related pun makes perfect sense, because Odesa, though located next to tremendous water basin, has limited fresh water supply). Regardless, a link with the name of the ancient Greek colony persists, so there might be some truth in the oral tradition.]]></description><georss:point>46.4666667 30.7333333</georss:point></item>
	
	
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