Download PDF The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine Serhii Plokhy 9780465094868 Books
Download PDF The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine Serhii Plokhy 9780465094868 Books
"[An] exemplary account of Europe's least-known large country... leavened by aphorism and anecdote." --Wall Street Journal
Download PDF The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine Serhii Plokhy 9780465094868 Books
"Well, it is full of information. the facts are very interesting, and they really could have you hanging on the edge of your seat. however, pretty.....scholarly? even with details about the people written about, its dry.
I enjoy history, and read this type of thing for fun. I give it 4 stars for clarity, flow, and as far as a non scholar can tell, accuracy.
there's a hell of a novel in here, just waiting to be written. it's just not in this book."
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Tags : The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine [Serhii Plokhy] on . <div><b> [An] exemplary account of Europe's least-known large country... leavened by aphorism and anecdote. -- Wall Street Journal</i></b></div><div> </div><div>Award-winning historian Serhii Plokhy presents the authoritative history of Ukraine and its people from the time of Herodotus to the present crisis with Russia. As Ukraine once again finds itself at the center of global attention,Serhii Plokhy,The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine,Basic Books,0465094864,Europe - Eastern,Europe - Russia The Former Soviet Union,EASTERN EUROPE - HISTORY,FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS - HISTORY - POST COLD WAR (1991-),GENERAL,General Adult,HISTORY / Europe / Eastern,HISTORY / Russia the Former Soviet Union,History,History / Europe / Former Soviet Republics,History/Russia the Former Soviet Union,History/World,History World,Non-Fiction,Ukraine,United States
The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine Serhii Plokhy 9780465094868 Books Reviews :
The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine Serhii Plokhy 9780465094868 Books Reviews
- The history of Ukraine is so complicated that most Ukrainians do not understand it. It seems that Ukraine has changed its borders at least once every century and has also changed its name a few times. It is best described as a fallen medieval country which took over 700 years to re-establish its independence.
Its history is largely determined by its geography which consists of three east-west bands. The northern band which contains Chernobyl is forest. The middle band which contains Kiev is the biggest and is forest-plain. The southern band consists of the steppes, a treeless plain which stretches from the Black Sea through Central Asia to Mongolia. This band was historically controlled by nomadic Asian tribes and did not fall under Russo-Ukrainian control until the time of Catherine the Great in the 1760s.
Ukraine entered history in 882 when Vikings looking for a trade route to Byzantium occupied Kiev on the Dnieper River. They consolidated the twelve Ukrainian tribes into a large medieval kingdom ruled by the Vikings. It stretched from today's eastern Poland to today's western Russia. Its capital was Kiev and Moscow was a minor border outpost at that time. It called itself Rus (a Viking word) and is nowadays called Kievan Rus. Its high point was from 980 to 1054.
It gradually became weak due to succession wars and in 1240 was destroyed by a Mongol Invasion from the steppes, led by the grandson of Genghis Khan. The term Mongol Invasion is somewhat of a misnomer as the invaders were mostly Turkic-speaking nomadic tribes (Tartars) from Central Asia, led by the Mongols. The Mongols established a new state in the Russo-Ukrainian steppes called the Golden Horde. With Kiev destroyed, the center of Ukraine moved to the western and eastern peripheries. The Principality of Galicia-Volhyn survived in the west as did the Grand Duchy of Muscovy in the east (initially called Vladimir-Suzdal). Also surviving was the Republic of Novgorod (now the St. Petersburg area). The Mongols gave these areas autonomy but they had to pay tribute. So just like the fall of Charlemagne's Carolingian Empire eventually produced the countries of France and Germany, the fall of Kievan Rus eventually produced the countries of Ukraine and Russia (and also Belarus).
In 1349 the Kingdom of Poland invaded Galicia-Volhynia and the next year the Grand Duchy of Lithuania took central Ukraine. The two conquerors later formed a union known as the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Kingdom of Poland was the senior partner here and nearly all further acts by the Commonwealth in Ukraine were done by Poland. Nevertheless, the Lithuanian occupation of northern Ukraine eventually resulted in that area acquiring a separate identity, resulting in the nation known today as Belarus (formerly White Russia).
Meanwhile, the Grand Duchy of Muscovy had become the major power in the east, largely because the Mongols used it as their tax collector, and by 1476 had become strong enough under Ivan III to gain independence from the Mongols. So Ukraine was now dominated by the Commonwealth with a growing Russian state to the east. With Ukraine subjugated and Moscow growing, it was around this time that term Little Russia was introduced for Ukraine, in contrast to the term Great Russia for the Moscow area.
The Golden Horde was also weakening and in 1449 broke up into three khanates with the Crimean Khanate controlling the Ukrainian steppes. In 1478 the Ottoman Empire, a fellow Turkic Muslim state, took over the Crimean Khanate and made it a vassal state. Meanwhile, an autonomous warrior state of escaped Ukrainian slaves (from the Ottoman Empire) and escaped serfs (from Polish Ukraine) was developing in the borderland between Polish-Lithuanian Ukraine and the Crimean Khanate. These warriors called themselves Cossacks (a Turkish word meaning freemen) and as a people called themselves Ukrainians (borderlanders) where Ukraine basically means borderland. This is when the name Ukraine apparently originated.
In 1648 the Cossacks were powerful enough to launch a major revolt against the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and conquer most of central Ukraine including Kiev. This uprising was led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky the leader (Hetman) of the Cossacks and the independent state he established is known as Hetmanate Ukraine. This independent state only lasted until 1654 when increasing pressure from the Commonwealth forced it into an alliance for protection with what was now called the Tsardom of Muscovy. This brief period of independence is constantly celebrated in Ukraine and was the only real independence between Kievan Ukraine and modern Ukraine.
The Hetmanate thought it was entering into an equal treaty but Moscow saw it as a chance to gain new territory and new subjects. By 1663 Ukraine was divided into two with Right Bank Ukraine (west of the Dnieper River) controlled by the Commonwealth and Left Bank Ukraine (east of the Dnieper River) controlled by Moscow. This split accelerated the differences between western Ukraine (ruled by an elected and more liberal Polish King) and eastern Ukraine (ruled by a hereditary and oppressive Russian Tsar). So today western Ukraine is pro-Western and largely Ukrainian-speaking while eastern Ukraine is largely pro-Russian and mostly Russian-speaking.
Meanwhile, an expanding Moscow had become a major power under Peter the Great, especially with his 1709 victory over the Kingdom of Sweden and others at the Battle of Poltava. In 1721 he renamed the Tsardom of Muscovy the Russian Empire, thereby giving it its modern name of Russia. The main Russian objective was a continuation of its policy to unite the lands of Kievan Rus under Moscow's control. The name Ukraine was largely forgotten by now and Right Bank Ukrainians were mostly called Rusyns or Ruthenians and Left Bank Ukrainians were mostly called Little Russians.
The next big Russian move came in 1768 under Catherine the Great when the Russian Empire took Crimea and the Russo-Ukrainian steppes from the Ottoman Empire. This was the first time the Slavs controlled the steppes. In 1772 Russia, Prussia, and Austria defeated the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and partitioned Poland. Russian got all of Ukraine except Galicia which went to Austria. Apparently this is when Russia gained control of the Baltic countries for the first time. Ukraine then became more Russified while Galicia became more westernized under the liberal Austrian Empire.
As education spread in the 19th century, Ukrainian intellectuals re-introduced the term Ukraine and compared the legacy of the egalitarian and democratic Hetmanate Cossack state with the autocratic and oppressive state of Imperial Russia. Russia's response was a crackdown on Ukrainian culture including the prohibition of the Ukrainian language which they called Little Russian. Meanwhile, industrialization was spreading at this time and iron as well as coal were discovered in the steppes of what is now eastern Ukraine. The Russians built new cities such as Donetsk and Luhansk around these deposits. The steel industries there initially used Western European management and mainly Russian peasant labor. Two of the families that moved to this area to take advantage of the employment opportunities included the Khrushchev and Brezhnev families.
When the Russian Empire collapsed in 1917 near the end of World War I, the Ukrainians in Kiev established the Ukrainian National Republic. When the Austrian Empire (now called the Austro-Hungarian Empire) collapsed in 1918, the Ukrainians in Galicia established the Western Ukrainian National Republic. These lasted until the Russo-Polish War in 1920 when the Soviets captured Ukraine and the Poles captured Galicia and Volhyn. While western Ukrainians were relatively free under Polish rule during the interwar period the rest of Ukraine suffered under Stalin.
This included the Great Famine of 1932-1933 where millions died (estimates run from 4 million to 6 million) when armed Soviet bands confiscated most of the grain in Ukraine under the theory that Ukrainian farmers were resisting collectivization, hoarding grain, and sabotaging Soviet goals because of their bourgeois beliefs. This was followed by the show trials and purges of 1936-1940 where hundreds of thousands were executed on suspicion of being anti-Soviet because they had formerly lived in non-Soviet countries. This usually meant Ukrainians initially from originally Austrian areas (now Polish again) who had accidentally found themselves on the Soviet side when World War I ended.
World War II began with the Hitler-Stalin Pact of 1939 which divided Poland again with the Germans taking Polish-speaking Poland and the Russians taking the Ukrainian-speaking eastern part of Poland which meant Galicia. All Ukrainian speaking areas were now under one government for the first time since the fall of Kievan Rus. In 1941 Hitler attacked the Soviet Union and divided Ukraine into three parts. He incorporated western Poland into Germany and ruled eastern Poland, which included Warsaw and Ukrainian Galicia, as an administrative area called the General Government. Ukrainians were treated relatively well here. Formerly Soviet Ukraine was divided in two. Central Ukraine became the Reichskommissariat Ukraine and suffered the most. Stalin had refused to sign the Geneva Convention on the treatment of prisoners and civilians because it was a bourgeois institution, so Hitler obliged him by not following the convention there. Eastern Ukraine was near the frontlines in Russia and remained under German military command.
In 1944 the Soviets took back all of Ukraine and united it once again as a Soviet Republic. In 1939 they had abolished the historical name Galicia (Halychyna in Ukrainian) because of its association with Ukrainian nationalism. They renamed it Lvivshchyna (formally the Lviv Oblast) which it still maintains today. In 1954, when the Soviets celebrated the three hundred year anniversary of the forced union of Ukraine and Russia, Khrushchev decided to transfer Crimea from Russia to Ukraine. This made sense geographically since Crimea (a peninsula) was physically attached to Ukraine but across the sea from Russia. But the problem was that Crimea had never belonged to Ukraine before and was populated mostly by Russians and whatever Tartars Stalin had not deported to Central Asia.
In 1991 the Soviet Union collapsed and Ukraine declared its independence. The newly independent Russia signed various agreements guaranteeing Ukraine's borders. The most important of these was the Budapest Memorandum of 1994 where Ukraine, with American encouragement, agreed to give up its nuclear weapons in exchange for Russian guarantees of its integrity. Ukraine has now once again found itself a victim of an agreement with Russia. Its nuclear weapons are gone while Russia is once again challenging its integrity. After independence, Ukraine was initially run by former Communist officials who were pro-Russian but also pro-independence. These included the first two Ukrainian presidents Kravchuk and Kuchma.
In the 2004 presidential election a pro-western candidate, Yushchenko from north-central Ukraine, appeared for the first time. His pro-Russian opponent was Yanukovych from Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. Faced with a pro-western opponent, the easterners employed old Russian-type tactics such as first trying to poison Yushchenko and then hacking the electoral computer to give Yanukovych a victory. This resulted in the famous Orange Revolution of 2004 which forced the government to reschedule the election which Yushchenko then won. Ukrainian hopes for a national renaissance fell apart after rivalries in the Yushchenko government, especially between President Yushchenko and Prime Minister Tymoshenko, produced no progress. This rivalry repeated the pattern which finished Kievan Rus.
This instability led to Yanukovych winning the 2010 presidential race against Tymoshenko, as a Putin-style strong leader who could get things done after the disorder of the previous administration. Then in true Soviet style he had her imprisoned on some trumped up charge. Nevertheless, in order to win Yanukovych had promised to increase ties with the European Union. When it came time to sign an economic agreement with the European Union in late 2013, Yanukovych reneged, apparently persuaded by Putin. This resulted in massive and violent demonstrations in Kiev. Yanukovych was forced to flee to Russia and the Ukrainian parliament removed him from office, established a provisional government, and an interim president. Later the candy billionaire Poroshenko was elected president.
In 2014 Putin waited for the Winter Olympic games to end in Sochi and then invaded Crimea to re-incorporate it back into Russia. Pro-Russian rebels in Donetsk and Luhansk, with the help of Russian mercenaries and secret agents, then began a rebellion against the Ukrainian government to establish Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine as a new country called New Russia and allied with Russia. They ended up declaring two new states the Donetsk Peoples Republic and the Luhansk Peoples Republic. As a result of Ukrainian government resistance and Western economic sanctions against Russia, they didn't get very far and the situation is now a stalemate where the rebels control just the areas around the two cities.
Nevertheless, Putin may be waiting for the 2018 soccer World Cup in Russia to end before making another move. - The author starts in a distant past, when the inhabitants of the area were few and reasonably uniform and relates an ever more complex story that sees the 'locals' divided among themselves by culture. Linguistic, Religious, Political and other social ties have divided and subdivided the allegiances such that there are now Russian-speaking Ukranian adherents, Ukranian-speaking Russian adherents, pro-independence and anti-NATO parties and many other various fragmentations present. The Russian land grab has solidified a greater pro-western and Russophobic tendency, but apparently the will to have a Ukranian state is more uniform than the population holding this opinion. The Epilogue deals with the rather confused situation. As phrased, the business remains confused even after the book's lengthy exploration of the historical context. The maps are good, but I wish that there were more of them. A Time Line of sorts is appended at the end, but I would have hoped to see some more abbreviated pictorial time line to aid in showing points of potential ethnic divide, perhaps as a three page fold out.
Ukraine has become a complex fusion of disparate allegiances which has been well shown. What could perhaps become a bit clearer in revision is the depiction of the various forking-points and their temporal and geographic relation to each other. - This history of the Ukraine has long been overdue to make English language readers aware of the history of a great East European nation and its struggle for independence from the former Russian empire and more recent Soviet empire and now from Russia. The book is written with scholarly precision and is still a page turner. Having spent my childhood in the former Austrian city of Cernowitz, later Romanian Cernăuți that is now in the Ukraine, I was fascinated by recognizing so many facets of this moving history.
- Well, it is full of information. the facts are very interesting, and they really could have you hanging on the edge of your seat. however, pretty.....scholarly? even with details about the people written about, its dry.
I enjoy history, and read this type of thing for fun. I give it 4 stars for clarity, flow, and as far as a non scholar can tell, accuracy.
there's a hell of a novel in here, just waiting to be written. it's just not in this book. - An amazing book that details the travails of Ukraine since fifth century BC to the war of the Donbas and the annexation of Crimea. With a rich and varied past, Ukraine has lain at the center of a swirl of history as empires and nations have grown and faded upon its soil. From the Ottoman Empire, to the days of the mighty Cossacks, through the encroachment and abatement of Russian, Polish, Austrian and German forces, a history is carved out on land that ultimately is Ukraine’s.
- It seems fair to say that very few people in the United States know much about Ukraine. Yet it is currently front and center as a major topic in our foreign policy. Should Ukraine be autonomous or should it be a part of Russia? The answer may differ depending on one's viewpoint. Nevertheless it does not make much sense to weigh in on the matter when one is totally ignorant of the subject. Ukrainian history is not easy. The author has addressed this difficulty by writing chapters which can easily be read in one sitting. This is the book to read if you want to discuss the subject.
Readers who want to know the author's view on the current status of Ukraine can go to page 104 to begin that search. - I purchased both the hard copy and eBook versions. A fascinating, detailed, and entertaining history of this key area of Europe. I am using Audible to listen to this book. My son is now stationed at a NATO base there - he wanted the hard copy to read in the barracks when off-duty.
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