1 / 30

Nation and Memory

Nation and Memory. Lecture 5 Ukraine ’ s Struggle Week 5. Mykola Kostomarov 1817-1885. Mykhailo Drahomanov 1841-1895. Volodymyr Antonovych 1834-1908. Mykhailo Hrushevs ’ kyj 1866-1934. Outline Medieval traditions 2 . The Cossacks 3 . Halychyna (Galicia) and the Ruthenians

cbulloch
Télécharger la présentation

Nation and Memory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nation and Memory Lecture 5 Ukraine’s Struggle Week 5

  2. Mykola Kostomarov1817-1885 Mykhailo Drahomanov1841-1895 Volodymyr Antonovych1834-1908 Mykhailo Hrushevs’kyj1866-1934

  3. Outline Medieval traditions 2. The Cossacks 3. Halychyna (Galicia) and the Ruthenians 4. 19th century nation building 5. Conclusion

  4. 1000

  5. The Rus‘ and Ukrainian History • 839 First mention of Rus’ in Western chronicles • 877 Prince Oleh of Novgorod shifts the capital of Rus’ from Novgorod to Kyiv (Ukrainian: Киϊв, Russian: Kiev – Киев) • 988 Official Christianisation of Kyiv Rus’: Prince Volodymyr the Great accepts Orthodoxy and marries Byzantine Princess Anna • 1027 Construction of Svyata Sofia (St. Sophia) Cathedral in Kyiv • 1113 Volodymyr Monomach – the last of the great princes of Kyiv • 1155 – 1169 Destruction of Kyiv by Andrey Bogoliubsky, prince of Vladimir-Suzdal • 1187 “Ukraine” first used to describe Kyiv and Halychyna lands • 1238 Danylo Halytsky becomes Prince of Halychyna, unites Halychyna with Kyiv • 1240 Tatars capture Kyiv

  6. Outline Medieval traditions: the Kievan Rus 2. The Cossacks and the Hetmanate 4. Halychyna (Galicia) and the Ruthenians 5. 19th century nation building 6. Conclusion

  7. Cossack (ukr. Kozak) is derived from the Turkic kazak (free man), meaning anyone who could not find his appropriate place in society and went into the steppes, where he acknowledged no authority. • By the end of the 15th c. the name acquired a wider sense and was applied to those who went to the steppes • In the mid 16th c. the Cossack structure in the Zaporizhia was created – steppe settler’s struggle against Tatar raids • 1569 Union of Lublin between Poland and Lithuania, “Wild Field” now belongs to Polish crown • Growth of cossackdom after Polish magnates established manorial system of agriculture (freedom of movement was limited, corvee was expanded) – profitable grain trade: many peasants fled to steppe

  8. Dilemma for Polish crown: cossacks needed to defend the steppe frontier, threat to Polish magnates and nobility – register cossacks (first 300, later 6,000, than 8,000). Crown tries to appoint leaders (elder, colonels) • 1596 Union of Brest – Uniate Church • 1590 First Cossack uprising, several more uprisings until 1638 • After uprisings of the 1630’s register was significantly decreased • 1637 Petro Mohyla establishes a Collegium in Kyiv • 1648 Beginning of Cossack uprising, led by Hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky in alliance with Tatars from Crimea, several victories over Polish army

  9. The Hetmanate • 1654 Khmel’nytsky signs Pereyaslav treaty with Muscovy • 1663 Hetman of left bank Ukraine in coalition with Russia; Hetman from right bank – against Russia • 1667 Peace treaty of Andrusovo between Moscow and Poland – left bank Ukraine to Russia

  10. The Hetmanate • 1685 Kyiv Orthodox Church Metropolitan becomes a division of Moscow Metropolitan • 1709 Battle of Poltava, Hetman Mazepa in alliance with Charles XII defeated by Peter the Great • 1722 First Ukrainian Hetman appointed by Russian Tsar • 1772 First partition of Poland • 1775 Zaporiz’ka (Zaporizhian) Sich destroyed by Russians • 1780 End of Hetmanate

  11. Outline Medieval traditions: the Kievan Rus 2. The Cossacks and the Hetmanate 4. Halychyna (Galicia) and the Ruthenians 5. 19th century nation building 6. Conclusion

  12. Halychyna • 1387 Kazimierz III (the Great) integrates Halychyna into Polish Kingdom

  13. Ruthenians (Rusyny) • Territory: East Galicia (since 1772 Eastern part of crownland Galicia and Lodomeria), Northern Bukowina, Carpathian mountains (all part of the Austrian Empire) • Religion: Greek-Catholic (Uniate) • Vernacular: Ruthenian (west Ukrainian dialect) • Social structure: overwhelming majority are peasants • Elite: Greek-Catholic priests and a small stratum of secular intelligentsia

  14. Halychyna • 1387 Kazimierz III (the Great) integrates Halychyna into Polish Kingdom • 1596 Union of Brest • 1648 and 1655 Siege of L’viv by cossack troops Bohdan Khmelnytsky with Tugaj or Tuhaj Bej, Painting by Jan Matejko, 1885

  15. Halychyna • 1387 Kazimierz III (the Great) integrates Halychyna into Polish Kingdom • 1596 Union of Brest • 1648 and 1655 Siege of L’viv by Khmelnytsky • 1772 First partition of Poland – Halychyna to Austria • 1793 Second partition of Poland – right bank Ukraine to Russia

  16. Outline Medieval traditions: the Kievan Rus 2. The Cossacks and the Hetmanate 4. Halychyna (Galicia) and the Ruthenians 5. 19th century nation building 6. Conclusion

  17. Nation building in non-dominant ethnies (Phase A) Groups in the ethnic community start to discuss their own ethnicity and conceive of it as a nation-to-be: scholarly enquiry into and dissemination of an awareness of the linguistic, cultural, social and historical attributes of the nation-to-be (Phase B) A new range of activists try to “awaken” national consciousness and to persuade as many members as possible of the ethnic group – the potential compatriots – that it is important to gain all the attributes of a fully-fledged nation: (1) development of a national culture based on the local language and its use in education, administration and economy, (2) civil rights and self-administration, (3) creation of a complete social structure – beginning of a national movement (Phase C) A mass movement is formed which pursues these aims: a fully-fledged social structure of the would-be nation comes into being Miroslav Hroch, From National Movement to the Fully-Fledged Nation, pp. 61-62

  18. Phase A 1798 Ivan Kotlyarevsky publishes “Eneyida” (in the vernacular, i.e. Ukrainian) 1823-1825 Secret Brotherhood of Slavs 1834 Founding of the University of Kyiv (Russian) 1837 Appearance of “Dnister Rusalkas” (Ruthenian Triad: Markiian Shashkevych, Yakiv Holovatsky, and Ivan Vahylevych) 1840 Taras Shevchenko publishes “Kobzar” 1846/47 Brotherhood of Sts. Cyril-Methodius (Kyiv) 1848 Liberation of peasants in Galicia 1861 Emancipation of serfs in the Russian Empire

  19. Phase B 1848 Liberation of peasants in Galicia 1861 Emancipation of serfs in the Russian Empire 1863 Use of Ukrainian language prohibited by Russian government – prohibition confirmed 1876 1861 ff: Railways in Ukraine, industrialization of the Donbas, iron ore mining in Kryviy Rih 1898 Publication of the first volume of Michael Hrushevsky’s History of Ukraine-Rus 1905 Russian Revolution: restrictions on the use of Ukrainian language in Russian Empire lifted

  20. Phase B/C • 1848 Ruthenian Council • Reading Clubs (Prosvita) • Co-operative movement • Emergence of a secular elite • Ruthenian-Ukrainian parties (since 1890s) • Ruthenians/Ukrainians represented in Austrian parliament and in Galician Diet

  21. Outline Medieval traditions: the Kievan Rus 2. The Cossacks and the Hetmanate 4. Halychyna (Galicia) and the Ruthenians 5. 19th century nation building 6. Conclusion

  22. Contested Kyivan Rus' Contested state traditions Contested culture Ukraine – a 'historic' or an 'unhistoric' nation?

More Related