[2] The following table displays the reported native languages of the 259 residents who responded to the 2001 Ukrainian census:[8] Vyshneve spans 64 hectares and is part of the Krymskorozyvska Rural Council [uk].
[9] Vyshneve is located in Bilohirsk Raion, on the eastern bank of the Zuya river, a tributary of the Salhyr.
[11] The village, originally known as the farmstead Novo-Alekseevka (Russian: Ново-Алексеевка; Crimean Tatar: نو و آله که به فکا), likely emerged in the early 1900s.
According to the 1915 Statistical Handbook of the Taurida Governorate, Part II, Statistical Sketch, issue six, the village of Novo-Alekseevka in the Zuya Volost (a former administrative subdivision) of Simferopol Uyezd (another former administrative subdivision) had 7 households with a population of 29 people, including 14 men and 15 women.
[12] After the establishment of Soviet power in Crimea, the volost system was abolished by a decree of the Crimean Revolutionary Committee on 8 January 1921, and the village was included in the newly formed Pidgorodne-Petrivske Raion [uk; ru] of Simferopol Uyezd.
On 11 October 1923, according to a decree by the All-Russian Central Executive Committee (VTSIK), administrative changes were made in the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Crimean ASSR), resulting in the elimination of Pidgorodne-Petrivske Raion and the inclusion of the village in the Simferopol Raion.
[4] A new Zuya Raion [uk; ru] was formed by a VTSIK decree on 10 June 1937,[15] and the village was included in it.