Borderland

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Borderland Page 28

by Anna Reid

Peter the Great, Tsar

  Peter and Paul Cathedral, Kamyanets

  Petlyura, Semyon

  Petrovo, famine deaths

  Pieracki, Bronislaw

  Pilsudski Jozef

  Pipes, Richard

  Podgorodnoye

  Podolchak, Ihor

  Poland

  inter-war population

  invasion under Ribbentrop-Molotov pact

  Partitions

  political system

  Polonisation

  relations with Russia

  relations with Ukraine

  religion

  rule over Bukovyna

  rule over Galicia

  rule over Lviv

  serfdom

  Union of Lublin

  Poles

  deported by Khrushchev

  massacred by Khmelnytsky

  massacred by UPA

  rivalry with Ukrainians under Austro-Hungary

  Russification

  Poltava

  Postyshev, Pavel

  Potemkin, Grigory

  Pravda, Chernobyl accident

  privatisation

  Prosvita (Enlightenment) society

  Prut River

  Prypyat

  Pushkin, Aleksandr

  Eugene Onegin

  Rada (Central Council, 1918)

  Jewish affairs

  The Radetzky March (Roth)

  radiation

  levels at Chernobyl

  research in Narodychy

  Raim fortress

  Rathenau, Walther

  Ravensbriick

  Repin, Ilya, They Weren't Expecting Him

  Repnina, Princess Varvara

  Richelieu, Armand-Emmanuel, Duede

  Riga Treaty

  Riurik dynasty

  Romanians

  in Bukovyna

  massacre of Odessan Jews

  Roth, Joseph

  The Radetzky March

  Rozumovsky, Kyrylo

  Rozumovsky, Oleksiy

  Rukh

  Rus see Kievan Rus

  Russia

  annexation of Crimea (1783)

  nineteenth-century anti-Semitism

  Pereyaslav Treaty

  relations with post-independence Ukraine

  Russification

  see also Soviet Union

  Russians

  in Crimea

  in Ukraine

  Ruthenian

  language

  nobility

  Sacher-Masoch, Count Leopold von

  St Petersburg

  Sakharov, Andrey

  salo

  Samoylovychyivan

  Santa Sofia Cathedral, Kiev

  Sarmatism, Poland

  Saveraux, Bishop Gautier

  Scandinavians, arrival in Slav lands

  Schulz, Bruno

  Schwartzbard, Sholem

  Second World War

  deportation of nationalities

  numbers killed

  Ukrainian participation

  Sejm, Poland

  serfs

  Sevastopol

  Bolsheviks in

  closed city

  Shaw, George Bernard

  Shcherbak, Yuriy, Chernobyl: a Documentary Story

  Shcherban, Yevhen

  Shcherbina, Boris

  Shcherbytsky, Volodymyr

  Sheptytsky, Metropolitan Andriy

  Shevchenko, Taras

  appearance

  exile

  expedition to the Caspian

  freed from serfdom

  poems

  posthumous reverence

  return from exile

  Shukhevych, Roman

  Sienkiewicz, Henryk, By Fire And Sword

  Simferopol

  Skarga, Piotr

  Skoropadsky, Pavlo

  Skrypnyk, Mykola

  Slatinske Doly (Velyky Bychkiv)

  Smotrych River

  Sobieski, Jan

  Socha, Leopold

  Solidarity

  Soros, George

  Soshenko, Ivan

  Soviet Union

  collapse

  coup (1991)

  occupation of Galicia (1941)

  political prisoners

  propaganda tours for Western visitors (1930s)

  reason for collapse

  response to Chernobyl

  see also Russia

  Stadion, Count Franz

  Stalin, Josef

  deportation policy

  famine

  food requisitions

  purges

  Stanyslaviv, Jewish deportation centre

  Stasyuk, Mykola

  Steinbeck, John, A Russian Journal

  steppe, Black Sea

  Stetsko, Yaroslav

  Stus, Vasyl

  Subtelny, Orest, Russification's success

  Svyatopolk, Prince

  Svyatoslav, Prince

  Swedes, defeat at Poltava

  Szeptycki, Stanislaw

  szlachta, Poland

  Szporluk, Roman

  Taras Bulba (Gogol)

  Tatars

  in Civil War (1918-21)

  Crimean khanate

  deportation (1944)

  emigration to Turkey

  return to Crimea

  Taylor, A.J.P, The Habsbmg Monarchy

  Terehovye

  The White Guard (Bulgakov)

  Tisza River

  Tolstonogov, Vitaly

  Tolstoy, Leo

  Tolz, Vera, deportation of nationalities

  Tott, Baron de, envoy to Tatars

  Transcarpathia

  autonomy bid

  Trenos or Lament of the Holy Eastern Church

  Tripartite Agreement

  Turkey

  Cossack attacks

  treaty with Russia

  Turks

  capture of Kamyanets

  in Crimea

  rule over Bukovyna

  Twain, Mark

  Ukraine

  anti-Semitism

  as borderland

  corruption

  countryside

  democracy

  east-west divide

  economy

  ethnic issues

  future dependent on Moscow

  Gorbachev's Union referendum

  independence

  inflation

  inhabitants killed in Second World War

  Jewish emigration

  Jewish population

  legal system

  media

  national character

  national identity

  nationalist movement

  navy

  position in Soviet Union

  post-independence

  relations with Poland

  relations with Russia

  relations with West

  Russian reaction to independence

  Russians in

  Western ignorance

  Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA)

  Ukrainian language

  Ukrainian National Assembly (UNA)

  Ukrainska Povstanska Armiya (UPA) see Ukrainian Insurgent Army

  Ulam, Adam

  Uman, Jewish massacres

  Umansky, Konstantin

  Uniate Church

  Union of Brest (1596)

  Union of Lublin (1569)

  United States

  aid to Ukraine

  ignorance of Ukraine

  Varrenikov, General

  Verhovna Rada

  Versailles Treaty

  Vimina, Alberto

  Vynnytsya, Jews massacred

  Voland, Franz de

  Volhynia

  Volodymyr, Prince (Saint)

  choice of religion

  Vologda

  von Rezzori, Gregor

  The Hussai

  The Snows of Yesteryear

  Vorontsov, Mikhail

  Vyshnya, Ostap

  Waschuk, Roman

  Wehrmacht, treatment of prisoners

  Weliczker We
lls, Leon

  The fanowska Road

  Jewish escapees

  Werth, Alexander, Russia at War

  The White Guard (Bulgakov)

  White Russians

  in Kiev (1918)

  Jewish massacres

  Wilson, Woodrow

  Wisniowiecki, Jarema

  World Bank reports

  Yaroslav the Wise, Prince

  Yekaterinoslav

  Yelizavetgrad, pogroms

  Yellow Waters

  Yeltsin, Boris

  Yusopov, Felix

  Zamoyski, Adam, The Polish Way

  Zaporozhian Sich

  Zaporozhians

  Zaporizhya

  Zhabotinsky, Vladimir

  Zhirinovsky, Vladimir

  Zvyahilsky, Yuhym

  Zygmunt August, King

  Zygmunt the Elder, King

 

 

 


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