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Carpathian Ruthenia

Carpathian Ruthenia[a] (Rusyn: Карпатьска Русь, romanized: Karpat'ska Rus'[b]) is a historical region on the border between Central and Eastern Europe, mostly located in western Ukraine's Zakarpattia Oblast, with smaller parts in eastern Slovakia (largely in Prešov Region and Košice Region) and the Lemko Region in Poland.

The flag of the Ruhenian Ethnic Minority Council[1]
Carpatho-Rusyn sub-groups – Prešov area Lemkos (left side) and Przemyśl area Ukrainians in folk-costumes. Photo: Village Mokre near Sanok (2007)

From the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin (in the 10th century) to the end of World War I (Treaty of Trianon in 1920), most of this region was part of the Kingdom of Hungary. In the interwar period, it was part of the First and Second Czechoslovak Republic. Before World War II the region was annexed by the Kingdom of Hungary once again. After the war, it was annexed by the Soviet Union and became part of Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

It is an ethnically diverse region, inhabited mostly by people who regard themselves as ethnic Ukrainians, Rusyns, Lemkos, Boykos, Hutsuls, Hungarians, Romanians, Slovaks and Poles. It also has small Jewish and Romani minorities. The most commonly spoken languages are Rusyn, Ukrainian, Hungarian, Romanian, Slovak, and Polish.

Etymology

 
Former Hungarian counties in Zakarpattia Oblast:
  Ung
  Bereg
  Ugocsa

The name Carpathian Ruthenia is sometimes used for the contiguous cross-border area of Ukraine, Slovakia and Poland inhabited by Ruthenians. The local Ruthenian population self-identifies in different ways: some consider themselves to be Ukrainians; some consider themselves to be Russians; and some consider themselves to be a separate and unique Slavic group of Rusyns. To describe their home region, most Rusyns use the term Zakarpattia (Trans-Carpathia; literally "beyond the Carpathian mountains").[citation needed] This is contrasted implicitly with Prykarpattia (Ciscarpathia; "Near-Carpathia"), an unofficial region in Ukraine, to the immediate north-east of the central area of the Carpathian Range, and potentially including its foothills, the Subcarpathian basin and part of the surrounding plains.[citation needed]

From a Hungarian, and to an extent Slovak and Czech perspectives the region is usually described as Subcarpathia (literally "below the Carpathians"), although technically this name refers only to a long, narrow basin that flanks the northern side of the mountains.[citation needed]

During the period in which the region was administered by the Hungarian states it was officially referred to in Hungarian as Kárpátalja (literally: "the base of the Carpathians") or the north-eastern regions of medieval Upper Hungary, which in the 16th century was contested between the Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire.[citation needed]

The Romanian name of the region is Maramureș, which is geographically located in the eastern and south-eastern portions of the region.[citation needed]

During the period of Czechoslovak administration in the first half of the 20th century, the region was referred to for a while as Rusinsko (Ruthenia) or Karpatske Rusinsko, and later as Subcarpathian Rus (Czech and Slovak: Podkarpatská Rus) or Subcarpathian Ukraine (Czech and Slovak: Podkarpatská Ukrajina), and from 1928 as Subcarpathian Ruthenian Land.[2] (Czech: Země podkarpatoruská, Slovak: Krajina podkarpatoruská).

Alternative, unofficial names used in Czechoslovakia before World War II included Subcarpathia (Czech and Slovak: Podkarpatsko), Transcarpathia (Czech and Slovak: Zakarpatsko), Transcarpathian Ukraine (Czech and Slovak: Zakarpatská Ukrajina), Carpathian Rus/Ruthenia (Czech and Slovak: Karpatská Rus) and, occasionally, Hungarian Rus/Ruthenia (Czech: Uherská Rus; Slovak: Uhorská Rus).[citation needed]

The region declared its independence as Carpatho-Ukraine on March 15, 1939, but was occupied and annexed by Hungary on the same day, and remained under Hungarian control until the end of the World War II. During this period the region continued to possess a special administration and the term Kárpátalja was locally used.[3][4]

In 1944–1946, the region was occupied by the Soviet Army and was a separate political formation known as Transcarpathian Ukraine or Subcarpathian Ruthenia. During this period the region possessed some form of quasi-autonomy with its own legislature, while remaining under the governance of the Communist Party of Transcarpathian Ukraine. After the signing of a treaty between Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union as well as the decision of the regional council, Transcarpathia joined the Ukrainian SSR as the Zakarpattia Oblast.[5]

The region has subsequently been referred to as Zakarpattia (Ukrainian: Закарпаття) or Transcarpathia, and on occasions as Carpathian Rus’ (Ukrainian: Карпатська Русь, romanizedKarpatska Rus), Transcarpathian Rus’ (Ukrainian: Закарпатська Русь, romanizedZakarpatska Rus), or Subcarpathian Rus’ (Ukrainian: Підкарпатська Русь, romanizedPidkarpatska Rus).[citation needed]

Geography

 
August 2006 view from Kamianka-Buzka-Skole-Volovets railroad

Carpathian Ruthenia rests on the southern slopes of the eastern Carpathian Mountains, bordered to the east and south by the Tisza River, and to the west by the Hornád and Poprad Rivers. The region borders Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania, and makes up part of the Pannonian Plain.

The region is predominantly rural and infrastructurally underdeveloped. The landscape is mostly mountainous; it is geographically separated from Ukraine, Slovakia, and Romania by mountains, and from Hungary by the Tisza river. The two major cities are Uzhhorod and Mukachevo, both with populations around 100,000. The population of the other five cities (including Khust and Berehovo) varies between 10,000 and 30,000. Other urban and rural populated places have a population of less than 10,000.

History

 
Kievan Rus' (11th century)

Prehistoric cultures

During the Late Bronze Age in the 2nd millennium BCE, the region was characterized by Stanove culture,[6] however, it only gained more advanced metalworking skills with the arrival of Thracians from the South with Kushtanovytsia culture in the 6th-3rd century BCE. In the 5th-3rd century BCE, Celts arrived from the West, bringing iron-melting skills and La Tène culture. A Thracian-Celtic symbiosis existed for a time in the region, after which appeared the Bastarnae.[7] At that time, the Iranian-speaking Scythians and later a Sarmatian tribe called the Iazyges were present in the region. Proto-Slavic settlement began between the 2nd-century BCE and 2nd century CE,[8][9] and during the Migration Period, the region was traversed by Huns and Gepids (4th century) and Pannonian Avars (6th century).

Slavic settlement

By the 8th and 9th century, the valleys of the Northern and Southern slopes of the Carpathian Mountains were "densely" settled by Slavic tribe of White Croats,[9][10][11][12] who were closely related to East Slavic tribes who inhabited Prykarpattia, Volhynia, Transnistria and Dnieper Ukraine.[7] Whereas some White Croats remained behind in Carpathian Ruthenia, others moved southward into the Balkans in the 7th century. Those who remained were conquered by Kievan Rus' in the late 10th century.[9]

Hungarian arrival

In 896 the Hungarians crossed the Carpathian Range and migrated into the Pannonian Basin.[9] Nestor's Chronicle wrote that Hungarian tribes had to fight against the Volochi and settled among Slavs when on their way to Pannonia. Prince Laborec fell from power under the efforts of the Hungarians and the Kievan forces.[13][14][15] According to Gesta Hungarorum, the Hungarians defeated a united Bulgarian and Byzantine army led by Salan in the early 10th century on the plains of Alpár, who ruled over territory that was finally conquered by Hungarians. During the tenth and for most of the eleventh century the territory remained a borderland between the Kingdom of Hungary to the south and the Kievan Rus' Principality of Halych to the north.[16]

Slavs from the north (Galicia) and east – who actually arrived from Podolia via the mountain passes of Transylvania – continued to settle in small numbers in various parts of the Carpathian borderland, which the Hungarians and other medieval writers referred to as the Marchia Ruthenorum – the Rus' March. These new immigrants, from the north and east, like the Slavs already living in Carpathian Ruthenia, had by the eleventh century come to be known as the people of Rus', or Rusyns. Local Slavic nobility often intermarried with the Hungarian nobles to the south. Prince Rostislav, a Ruthenian noble unable to continue his family's rule of Kiev, governed a great deal of Transcarpathia from 1243 to 1261 for his father-in-law, Béla IV of Hungary.[17] The territory's ethnic diversity increased with the influx of some 40,000 Cuman settlers, who came to the Pannonian Basin after their defeat by Vladimir II (Monomakh) in the 12th century and their ultimate defeat at the hands of the Mongols in 1238.[18]

During the early period of Hungarian administration, part of the area was included into the Gyepű border region, while the other part was under county authority and was included into the counties of Ung, Borsova and Szatmár. Later, the county administrative system was expanded to the whole of Transcarpathia, and the area was divided between the counties of Ung, Bereg, Ugocsa, and Máramaros. At the end of the 13th and beginning of the 14th century, during the collapse of the central power in the Kingdom of Hungary, the region was part of the domains of semi-independent oligarchs Amadeus Aba and Nicholas Pok. From 1280 to 1320, the north-western part of Carpathian Ruthenia was part of the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia.[19]

Between the 12th and 15th centuries, the area was probably colonized by Eastern Orthodox groups of Vlach highlanders with accompanying Ruthenian populations. All the groups, including local Slavic population, blended together, creating a distinctive culture from the main Ruthenian-speaking areas. Over time, because of geographical and political isolation from the main Ruthenian-speaking territory, the inhabitants developed distinctive features.[citation needed]

Part of Hungary and Transylvania

 
1885 ethnographic map of the Hungarian Crown
 
1904 Central Europe – national and linguistic regions (Russen u. Ruthenen in green, Russniaken)
 
1910 ethnographic map of Austria-Hungary

In 1526 the region was divided between the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary and the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom. Beginning in 1570 the latter transformed to the Principality of Transylvania, which soon fell under Ottoman suzerainty. The part of Transcarpathia under Habsburg administration was included into the Captaincy of Upper Hungary, which was one of the administrative units of the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary. During this period, an important factor in the Ruthenian cultural identity, namely religion, came to the forefront. The Unions of Brest-Lytovsk (1595) and Ungvár (Uzhorod) (1646) were instituted, causing the Byzantine Orthodox Churches of Carpathian and Transcarpathian Rus' to come under the jurisdiction of Rome, thus establishing the so-called "Unia" of Eastern Catholic churches, the Ruthenian Catholic Church and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.

In the 17th century (until 1648) the entire region was part of the Principality of Transylvania and between 1682 and 1685 its north-western part was administered by the Ottoman vassal state of Upper Hungary, while the south-eastern parts remained under the administration of Transylvania. From 1699 the entire region eventually became part of the Habsburg monarchy, divided between the Kingdom of Hungary and the Principality of Transylvania. Later, the entire region was included into the Kingdom of Hungary. Between 1850 and 1860 the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary was divided into five military districts, and the region was part of the Military District of Kaschau.

Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen

After 1867, the region was administratively included into Transleithania or the Hungarian part of Austria-Hungary.

In the 19th and 20th centuries, many nationalist groups vied for unification or alignment with many different possible nationalities, all arguing that the Rus people would be better off uniting with that nation for security or staying within the nation of Hungary. Many of these groups utilized the ethnic makeup of the region, with ideas such as the Lemko-Boiko-Hutsul schema looking to prove the Slavic nature of the Rus, and therefore justifying union with Russia (or later a Ukrainian state) under the claim that the Rus were part of that Slavic cultural sphere. These Rus or Ruthenians would argue this point until the early 1900's when action would be taken.[20]

In 1910, the population of Transcarpathia was 605,942, of which 330,010 (54.5%) were speakers of Ruthenian, 185,433 (30.6%) were speakers of Hungarian, 64,257 (10.6%) were speakers of German, 11,668 (1.9%) were speakers of Romanian, 6,346 (1%) were speakers of Slovak or Czech, and 8,228 (1.4%) were speakers of other languages.

Transitional period (1918–1919)

 
West Ukrainian People's Republic (1918), incorporating Carpathian Ruthenia
 
The vast majority of people were peasant farmers
 
Gregory Žatkovich signing the Declaration of Common Aims at Independence Hall, Philadelphia 10-26-1918.

After World War I, the Austro-Hungarian monarchy collapsed and the region was briefly (in 1918 and 1919) claimed as part of the independent West Ukraine Republic.[dubious ] However, for most of this period the region was controlled by the newly formed independent Hungarian Democratic Republic, with a short period of West Ukrainian control.

On November 8, 1918, the first National Council (the Lubovňa Council, which later reconvened as the Prešov Council) was held in western Ruthenia. The first of many councils, it simply stated the desire of its members to separate from the newly formed Hungarian state but did not specify a particular alternative — only that it must involve the right to self-determination.[21]

Other councils, such as the Carpatho-Ruthenian National Council meetings in Huszt (Khust) (November 1918), called for unification with the West Ukrainian People's Republic. Only in early January 1919 were the first calls heard in Ruthenia for union with Czechoslovakia.[21]

Rus'ka Krajina

Throughout November and the following few months, councils met every few weeks, calling for various solutions. Some wanted to remain part of the Hungarian Democratic Republic, but with greater autonomy; the most notable of these, the Uzhhorod Council (November 9, 1918), declared itself the representative of the Rusyn people and began negotiations with Hungarian authorities. These negotiations ultimately resulted in the passage of Law no. 10[21] by the Hungarian government on December 21, 1918, thereby establishing the autonymous Rusyn province of Rus'ka Krajina from the Rusyn-inhabited parts of four eastern counties (Maramorosh County, Ugocha County, Bereg County, Ung County.[22]

On February 5, 1919, a provisional government for Rus'ka Krajina was established. The "Rus'ka rada" (or Rusyn Council), was made up of 42 representatives from the four constituent counties and headed by a chairman, Orest Sabov, and vice-chairman, Avhustyn Shtefan. The following month, on March 4th, elections were held for a formal diet of 36 deputies. Upon election, the new diet requested the Hungarian government define the borders of the autonomous region, which had not yet been elaborated; without an established territory, the deputies argued that the diet was useless.[22]

On March 21, 1919 the Democratic Republic of Hungary was replaced by the Hungarian Soviet Republic, which then announced the existence of a "Soviet Rus'ka Krajina". Elections organized by the new Hungarian government of a people's soviet (council) on April 6 and 7, 1919 led to Rus'ka Krajina then had two councils: the original diet, and the newly elected soviet. Representatives from both councils then decided to join, forming the Uriadova rada ("Governing Council) of Rus'ka Krajina.[22]

Fall of Soviet Hungary

Prior to this, in July 1918, Rusyn immigrants in the United States had convened and called for complete independence. Failing that, they would try to unite with Galicia and Bukovina; and failing that, they would demand autonomy, though they did not specify under which state. They approached the American government and were told that the only viable option was unification with Czechoslovakia. Their leader, Gregory Zatkovich, then signed the "Philadelphia Agreement" with Czechoslovak President Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, guaranteeing Rusyn autonomy upon unification with Czechoslovakia on 25 October 1918.[23] A referendum was held among American Rusyn parishes in November 1918, with a resulting 67% in favor. Another 28% voted for union with Ukraine, and less than one percent each for Galicia, Hungary and Russia. Less than 2% desired complete independence.

In April 1919, Czechoslovak control on the ground was established, when Czechoslovak Army troops acting in coordination with Royal Romanian Army forces arriving from the east – both acting under French auspices – entered the area. In a series of battles they defeated and crushed the local militias of the newly formed Hungarian Soviet Republic, which had created the Slovak Soviet Republic and whose proclaimed aim was to "unite the Hungarian, Rusyn and Jewish toilers against the exploiters of the same nationalities". Communist sympathizers accused the Czechoslovaks and Romanians of atrocities, such as public hangings and the clubbing to death of wounded prisoners.[24]

This fighting prevented the arrival of Soviet aid, for which the Hungarian Communists hoped in vain; the Bolsheviks were also too preoccupied with their own civil war to assist. Transcarpathia, as well as a broader region, was occupied by Romania from April 1919 until July or August 1919, and then was again occupied by the Hungarian state.

In May 1919, a Central National Council convened in the United States under Zatkovich and voted unanimously to accept the admission of Carpathian Ruthenia to Czechoslovakia. Back in Ruthenia, on May 8, 1919, a general meeting of representatives from all the previous councils was held, and declared that "The Central Russian National Council... completely endorse the decision of the American Uhro-Rusin Council to unite with the Czech-Slovak nation on the basis of full national autonomy." Note that the Central Russian National Council was an offshoot of the Central Ruthenian National Council and represented a Carpathian branch of the Russophiles movement that existed in the Austrian Galicia.[c]

The Hungarian left-wing writer Béla Illés claimed that the meeting was little more than a farce, with various "notables" fetched from their homes by police, formed into a "National Assembly" without any semblance of a democratic process, and effectively ordered to endorse incorporation into Czechoslovakia. He further asserts that Clemenceau had personally instructed the French general on the spot to get the area incorporated into Czechoslovakia "at all costs", so as to create a buffer separating Soviet Ukraine from Hungary, as part of the French anti-Communist "Cordon sanitaire" policy, and that it was the French rather than the Czechoslovaks who made the effective decisions.[26]

Part of Czechoslovakia (1920–1938)

The Article 53, Treaty of St. Germain (September 10, 1919) granted the Carpathian Ruthenians autonomy,[27] which was later upheld to some extent by the Czechoslovak constitution. Some rights were, however, withheld by Prague, which justified its actions by claiming that the process was to be a gradual one; and Ruthenians representation in the national sphere was less than that hoped for. Carpathian Ruthenia included former Hungarian territories of Ung County, Bereg County, Ugocsa County and Máramaros County.

After the Paris Peace Conference, Transcarpathia became part of Czechoslovakia. Whether this was widely popular among the mainly peasant population, is debatable; clearly, however, what mattered most to Ruthenians was not which country they would join, but that they be granted autonomy within it. After their experience of Magyarization, few Carpathian Rusyns were eager to remain under Hungarian rule, and they desired to ensure self-determination.[28] According to the Czechoslovak Constitution of 1920, the former region of the Kingdom of Hungary, Ruthenian Land (Ruszka Krajna), was officially renamed to Subcarpathian Ruthenia (Podkarpatská Rus).

In 1920, the area was used as a conduit for arms and ammunition for the anti-Soviet Poles fighting in the Polish-Soviet War directly to the north, while local Communists sabotaged the trains and tried to help the Soviet side.[29] During and after the war many Ukrainian nationalists in East Galicia who opposed both Polish and Soviet rule fled to Carpathian Ruthenia.[30]

Gregory Žatkovich was appointed governor of the province by Masaryk on April 20, 1920 and resigned almost a year later, on April 17, 1921, to return to his law practice in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. The reason for his resignation was dissatisfaction with the borders with Slovakia.[31] His tenure is a historical anomaly as the only American citizen ever acting as governor of a province that later became a part of the USSR.

Subcarpathian Rus' (1928–1938)

Subcarpathian Rus'
Podkarpatská Rus
Region of Czechoslovakia
1928–1939
 
Subcarpathian Rus within Czechoslovakia (1928)
CapitalUžhorod (1928–1938)
Chust (1938–1939)
Area 
• 1921
12,097 km2 (4,671 sq mi)
Population 
• 1921
592044
History
Historical eraInterwar period
• Region established
1928
2 November 1938
• Autonomy
22 November 1938
• Name changed to Carpathian Ukraine
30 November 1938
• Proclamation of independence as Carpatho-Ukraine
15 March 1939
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part of  Ukraine
 
Linguistic map of Czechoslovakia in 1930
  Ukrainian (Rusyn)

In 1928, Czechoslovakia was divided into four provinces, Bohemia, Moravia-Silesia, Slovakia and the Subcarpathian Rus'. In the period 1918–1938 the Czechoslovak government attempted to bring the Subcarpathian Rus', with 70% of the population illiterate, no industry, and a herdsman way of life,[32] up to the level of the rest of Czechoslovakia. Thousands of Czech teachers, policemen, clerks and businessmen went to the region. The Czechoslovak government built thousands of kilometers of railways, roads, airports, and hundreds of schools and residential buildings.[32]

The Rusyn people decided to join the new state of Czechoslovakia, a decision that happened parallel to other events that affected these proceedings. At the Paris Peace Conference, several other countries (including Hungary, Ukraine and Russia) laid claim to Carpathian Rus'. The Allies, however, had few alternatives to choosing Czechoslovakia. Hungary had lost the war and therefore gave up its claims; Ukraine was seen as politically unviable; and Russia was in the midst of a civil war. Thus the only importance of Rusyns' decision to become part of Czechoslovakia was in creating, at least initially, good relations between the leaders of Carpathian Rus' and Czechoslovakia. The Ukrainian language was not actively persecuted in Czechoslovakia during the interwar period, unlike in Poland and Romania.[33] 73 percent of local parents voted against Ukrainian language education for their children in a referendum conducted in Subcarpathian Rus' in 1937.[34]

Carpathian Ukraine (1938–1939)

 

In November 1938, under the First Vienna Award—a result of the Munich AgreementCzechoslovakia ceded southern Carpathian Rus to Hungary. The remainder of Subcarpathian Rus' received autonomy, with Andrej Bródy as prime minister of the autonomous government. After the resignation of the government following a local political crisis, Avhustyn Voloshyn became prime minister of the new government. In December 1938, Subcarpathian Rus' was renamed to Carpathian Ukraine.

Following the Slovak proclamation of independence on March 14, 1939 and the Nazis' seizure of the Czech lands on March 15, Carpathian Ukraine declared its independence as the Republic of Carpatho-Ukraine, with

Avhustyn Voloshyn as head of state, and was immediately occupied and annexed by Hungary, restoring provisionally the former counties of Ung, Bereg and partially Máramaros.[35]

Governorate of Subcarpathia (1939–1945)

 
Carpathian Ruthenian Jews arrive at Auschwitz–Birkenau, May 1944. Without being registered to the camp system, most were killed in gas chambers hours after arriving.

On March 23, 1939, Hungary annexed further territories disputed with Slovakia bordering with the west of the former Carpatho-Rus. The Hungarian invasion was followed by a few weeks of terror in which more than 27,000 people were shot dead without trial and investigation.[35] Over 75,000 Ukrainians decided to seek asylum in the Soviet Union; of those almost 60,000 of them died in Gulag prison-camps.[35] Others joined the remaining Czech troops from the Czechoslovak army-in-exile.[35]

Upon liquidation of Carpatho-Ukraine, in the territory annexed the Governorate of Subcarpathia was installed and divided into three, the administrative branch offices of Ung (Hungarian: Ungi közigazgatási kirendeltség), Bereg (Hungarian: Beregi közigazgatási kirendeltség) and Máramaros (Hungarian: Máramarosi közigazgatási kirendeltség) governed from Ungvár, Munkács and Huszt respectively, having Hungarian and Rusyn language as official languages.

Memoirs and historical studies provide much evidence that in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Rusyn-Jewish relations were generally peaceful.{{Citation needed}} In 1939, census records showed that 80,000 Jews lived in the autonomous province of Ruthenia. Jews made up approximately 14% of the prewar population, however this population was concentrated in the larger towns, especially Mukachevo, where they constituted 43% of the prewar population. After the German occupation of Hungary (19th March 1944) the pro-Nazi policies of the Hungarian government resulted in emigration and deportation of Hungarian-speaking Jews, and other groups living in the territory were decimated by war. During the Holocaust, 17 main ghettos were set up in cities in Carpathian Ruthenia, from which all Jews were taken to Auschwitz for extermination. Ruthenian ghettos were set up in May 1944 and liquidated by June 1944. Most of the Jews of Transcarpathia were killed, though a number survived, either because they were hidden by their neighbours, or were forced into labour battalions, which often guaranteed food and shelter.

The end of the war had a significant impact on the ethnic Hungarian population of the area: 10,000 fled before the arrival of Soviet forces. Many of the remaining adult men (25,000) were deported to the Soviet Union; about 30% of them died in Soviet labor camps. As a result of this development since 1938, the Hungarian and Hungarian-speaking population of Transcarpathia was recorded differently in various censuses and estimations from that time: 1930 census recorded 116,548 ethnic Hungarians, while the contested Hungarian census from 1941 shows as much as 233,840 speakers of Hungarian language in the region. Subsequent estimations are showing 66,000 ethnic Hungarians in 1946 and 139,700 in 1950, while the Soviet census from 1959 recorded 146,247 Hungarians.

Transition to Soviet takeover and control (1944-1945)

 
Front page of the Zakarpattia Ukraine newspaper (1944) with manifest of unification with Soviet Ukraine

The Soviet takeover of the region started with the East Carpathian Strategic Offensive in the fall of 1944. This offensive consisted of two parts: the Battle of the Dukla Pass in effort to support the Slovak National Uprising; and the Battle of Uzhgorod to break through to the Hungarian plains and encircle German troops in Transylvania. On 28 October 1944, upon conclusion of the offensive campaign, most of Subcarpathian Ruthenia was secured by the Workers-Peasants Red Army (RKKA).

The Czechoslovak government delegation led by minister František Němec arrived in Khust to establish the provisional Czechoslovak administration,[36] according to the treaties between the Soviet and Czechoslovak governments on 8 May 1944.[36] According to the Soviet–Czechoslovak treaty, it was agreed that once any liberated territory of Czechoslovakia ceased to be a combat zone of the Red Army, those lands would be transferred to full control of the Czechoslovak state.[36] However, after a few weeks, the Red Army and NKVD started to obstruct the Czechoslovak delegation's work. Communications between Khust and the government center in exile in London were obstructed and the Czechoslovak officials were forced to use underground radio.[36]

On 14 November 1944 the underground radio "Vladislav" transmitted the following message from Khust to London: "The Red Army is subjugating everything to it. We are requesting information, whether it is discussed with the government. Our situation is critical. An open campaign is ongoing for uniting Subcarpathian Ukraine with the Soviet Union. Forced recruitment to the ranks of the Red Army. People are uneducated. Awaiting your recommendations. We urgently need instructions from the government."[36]

On 5 November 1944, in anticipation of Soviet rule, the Uzhgorod city council introduced Moscow time (2 hours ahead of Central European Time). According to Magdalena Lavrincova, this was perceived by many as a sign of the totalitarianism to come.[37]

In November 1944, in Mukachevo, there was a meeting of representatives of Communist Party organization from local districts, who created an organization committee to call for a party conference.[38] On 19 November 1944 at the conference in Mukachevo, the Communist Party of Zakarpattia Ukraine was established.[38] The conference also decided to unite Carpathian Ruthenia with the Ukrainian SSR, to strengthen People's committees as organs of revolutionary authority, and to organize help for the Red Army.[38] The conference also elected its central committee and its first secretary, Ivan Turyanytsia, and agreed to hold a congress of the People's committees on 26 November 1944.[38]

The "National Council of Transcarpatho-Ukraine" was set up in Mukachevo under the protection of the Red Army. On November 26 this committee, led by Ivan Turyanitsa (a Rusyn who deserted from the Czechoslovak army) proclaimed the will of Ukrainian people to separate from Czechoslovakia and join Soviet Ukraine. After two months of conflicts and negotiations the Czechoslovak government delegation departed from Khust on February 1, 1945, leaving Carpathian Ukraine under Soviet control.

Transcarpathian Ukraine - Soviet Union (1945-1991)

On 29 June 1945, Czechoslovakia signed a treaty with the Soviet Union, officially ceding the region.[39][40] Between 1945 and 1947, the new Soviet authorities fortified the new borders, and in July 1947 declared Transcarpathia as a "restricted zone of the highest level", with checkpoints on the mountain passes connecting the region to mainland Ukraine.[37]

In December 1944 the National Council of Transcarpatho-Ukraine set up a special people's tribunal in Uzhgorod to try and condemn all collaborationists with the previous regimes - both Hungary and Carpatho-Ukraine. The court was allowed to hand down either 10 years of forced labour, or the death penalty. Several Ruthenian leaders, including Andrej Bródy and Shtefan Fentsyk, were condemned and executed in May 1946. Avgustyn Voloshyn also died in prison. The extent of the repression showed to many Carpatho-Ruthenian activists how it would not have been possible to find an accommodation with the coming Soviet regime as it had been with all previous ones.[37]

After breaking the Greek Catholic Church in Eastern Galicia in 1946, Soviet authorities pushed for the return to Orthodoxy of Greek-Catholic parishes in Transcarpathia too, including by engineering an accident leading to the death of recalcitrant bishop Theodore Romzha on 1 November 1947. In January 1949 the Greek-Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo was declared illegal; remaining priests and nuns were arrested, and church properties were nationalised and parcelled for public use or lent to the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate), the only accepted religious authority in the region.[37]

Cultural institutions were also forbidden, including the Russophile Dukhnovych Society, the Ukrainophile Prosvita, and the Subcarpathian Scholarly Society. New books and publications were circulated, including the Zakarpatsk'a Pravda (130,000 copies). The Uzhhorod National University was opened in 1945 and over 816 cinematographs were open by 1967. The Ukrainian language was the first language of instruction in schools throughout the region, followed by Russian, which was used in academia.[citation needed] Most new generations had a passive knowledge of Rusyn language, but no knowledge about local culture. XIX-century Rusyn intellectuals were labelled as "members of the reactionary class and instruments of Vatican obscurantism". The Rusyn anthem and hymn were banned from public performance. Carpatho-Rusyn folk culture and songs, which were promoted, were presented as part of Transcarpathian regional culture as a local variant of Ukrainian culture.[37][41]

In 1924, the Comintern declared all East Slavic inhabitants of Czechoslovakia (Rusyns, Carpatho-Russians, Rusnaks) to be Ukrainians. Starting with the 1946 census, all Rusyns were recorded as Ukrainians; anyone clinging to the old label was considered a separatist and a potential counter-revolutionary.

In February 1945, the National Council confiscated 53,000 hectares of land from large landowners and redistribute it to 54,000 peasant households (37% of the population). Collectivisation of land started in 1946; around 2,000 peasants were arrested during protests in 1948-49 and sent for forced labour in the gulags. Collectivisation, including of mountain shepherds, was completed by May 1950. Central planning decisions set Transcarpatia to become a "land of orchards and vineyards" between 1955 and 1965, planting 98,000 hectares with little results. Attempt to cultivate tea and citrus also failed due to the climate. Most vineyards were uprooted twenty years later, during Gorbachev's anti-alcohol campaign in 1985–87.[37]

The Soviet period also meant the upscaling of industrialization in Transcarpathia. State-owned lumber mills, chemical and food-processing plants widened, with Mukachevo's tobacco factory and Solotvyno's salt works as the biggest ones, providing steady employment to the residents of the region, beyond the traditional subsistence agriculture. And while traditional labour migration routes to the fields of Hungary or the factories of the United States were now closed, Carpathian Ruthens and Romanians could now move for seasonal work in Russia's North and East.[37]

The inhabitants of the region grew steadily in the Soviet period, from 776,000 in 1946 to over 1.2 million in 1989. Uzhgorod's population increased five-fold, from 26,000 to 117,000, and Mukachevo likewise from 26,600 to 84,000. This population increase also reflected demographic changes. The arrival of the Red Army meant the departure of 5,100 Magyars and 2,500 Germans, while 15–20,000 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust also decided to move out before the borders were sealed. By 1945, around 30,000 Hungarians and Germans had been interned and sent for labour camps in Eastern Ukraine and Siberia; while amnestied in 1955, around 5,000 did not come back. In January 1946, 2,000 more Germans were deported. In return, a large number of Ukrainians and Russians moved to Transcarpathia, were they found jobs in the industry, the military, or the civilian administration. By 1989, around 170,000 Ukrainians (mainly from nearby Galizia) and 49,000 Russians were living in Transcarpatia, mainly in new residential blocks in the main towns of Uzhgorod and Mukachevo, where the dominant language had soon turned from Hungarian and Yiddish to Russian. They kept being considered newcomers (novoprybuli) due to their disconnect from the Rusyn- and Hungarian-speaking countryside.[37]

Transition to independent Ukraine (1991-)

In July 1991 the Ukrainian SSR adopted a law about referendums that lasted until 2012. Soon after the August coup in Moscow (19–22), on 24 August 1991 the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian parliament) of the Ukrainian SSR proclaimed declaration about its independence and also prohibited the Communist Party in the republic.[42] The local nomenklatura remained in confusion for several days following those events.[42] The local People's Movement of Ukraine (Rukh) and other activists were organizing protests across the whole oblast (region).[42] The local council of Uzhhorod city renamed the Lenin Square to People's Square.[42] On 30 August 1991 during a protest in Uzhhorod a monument of Lenin was removed.[42] Monuments of Lenin were also removed in other settlements, however this decision was not universally accepted and faced resistance in some instances.[42] In Tiachiv, a municipality which also adopted the decision to remove the monument faced resistance from local "supporters of Lenin" of Roma ethnicity who clashed with Rukh activists.[42] Due to support of the Zakarpattia regional council of the putsch organizers in Moscow (GKChP), the local "democratic forces" were requesting for the council to announce its dissolution.[42] Among those "democratic forces" were members of the Uzhhorod city council, deputies of "Democratic platform" in the regional council, National Movement of Ukraine, Ukrainian Republican Party, Democratic Party of Ukraine, Hungarian Cultural Federation in Transcarpathia (KMKSZ), Shevchenko Association of Ukrainian Language and the regional branch of Prosvita.[42]

Because of the situation in the region, on 26 August 1991 the deputy chairman of the regional council Yuriy Vorobets signed an order to hold an extraordinary session of the council on 30 August, but on 29 August the head of the council Mykhailo Voloshchuk (formerly the 1st secretary of the Zakarpattia regional communist party committee) postponed it by a separate order.[42] On 28 August 1991 the demand for the extraordinary session was supported by the Zakarpattia Democratic League of Youth that previously was part of the Komsomol of Ukraine (LKSMU).[42] To relieve the pressure, Voloshchuk approved a composition of provisional deputy commission for inspection of activity of officials during the putsch that consisted of 17 members mostly of the recently dissolved Communist Party and couple of Rukh members (Mykhailo Tyvodar and Lyubov Karavanska).[42] At the same time Voloshchuk was urgently seeking for other managing positions for other party officials who lost their job with recent liquidation of the party.[42] Concurrently, the regional ispolkom (executive committee) suddenly registered 208 religious communities and transferred property ownership of 83 church buildings to them.[42]

The government of Zakarpattia decided to bet on separatist actions.[42] On 27 August 1991 the Mukachevo city council decided to ask the Zakarpattia regional council to adopt a decision about proclamation of the region as the "Zakarpattia autonomous land of Ukraine".[42] In two days the Mukachevo Raion council has decided to ask the regional council to petition before the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian parliament) to "grant the Zakarpattia Oblast status of autonomous republic".[42] The latter decision was supported by the Berehove Raion council, Uzhhorod city council and Svalyava Raion council.[42] On 1 September 1991 in Mukachevo, the Association of Carpatho-Rusyns organized a picket with anti-Ukrainian slogans and accusations in "forceful Ukrainization of Rusyns".[42] At the gathering were adopted statement with demand for autonomy and carrying out a regional referendum on the issue.[42] On 15 September 1991 the same demand were put forward by KMKSZ.[42] Those Rusyns questioned legality of Zakarpattia unification with the Ukrainian SSR in 1945.[42]

By the end of September 1991 in Zakarpattia Oblast has formed two opposing political camps.[42] One camp pro-Ukrainian has united around the National Movement of Ukraine also included URP, DemPU, Party of Greens, Shevchenko Association of Ukrainian Language, regional branches of Prosvita, Memorial and others.[42] The camp also supported by students of the Uzhhorod State University, several members of the Uzhhorod city council, Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo, and small faction of deputies in the regional council.[42] The pro-Ukrainian camp was seeking to reelect the regional council.[42] The other camp consisted of sympathizers of the regional nomenklatura officials (and formerly communist) who were supported by Association of Carpatho-Rusyns, later it was joined by KMKSZ (Association of Hungarian Culture of Zakarpattia).[42] The latter camp also was supported by the Zakarpattia eparchy of Russian Orthodox Church, selected members of the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo as well as by the majority of the regional council.[42] The camp was aimed to prevent reelection of the regional council and obtain autonomous status for the region.[42]

On 27 September 1991 it was finally announced about the extraordinary session of the regional council.[42] The leadership of the council planned to end its work the same day, but the session stretched until 31 October 1991 and the center of political life in Zakarpattia Oblast had relocated to the regional council and the People's Square in front of the council's building.[42]

In December 1991 Zakarpattia became a part of independent Ukraine. A majority 92.59% of voters of Zakarpattia oblast approved the Declaration of Independence of Ukraine.[43] On the same day in Zakarpattia oblast a regional referendum also took place. 78 percent of voters voted for autonomy within Ukraine, which was not granted.[44]

Demographics

Ethnic groups

census Ruthenians, Ukrainians and Rusyns "Czechoslovaks"
(Czechs and Slovaks)
Germans Hungarians Jews Romanians others Total population
1880 244,742 (59.84%) 8,611 (2.11%) 31,745 (7.76%) 105,343 (25.76%) (not a census option) 16,713 (4.09%) 1,817 (0.44%) 408,971 (100%)
1921[45] 372,884 (62.98%) 19,737 (3.33%) 10,460 (1.77%) 102,144 (17.25%) 80,059 (13.52%) (with "others") 6,760 (1.14%) 592,044 (100%)
1930[46] 450,925 (62.17%) 34,511 (4.76%) 13,804 (1.90%) 115,805 (15.97%) 95,008 (13.10%) 12,777 (1.76%) 2,527 (0.35%) 725,357 (100%)
1959[47] 686,464 (74.6%) Slovaks
12,289 (1.3%)
Czechs
964 (0.1%)
3,504 (0.4%) 146,247 (15.9%) 12,169 (1.3%) 18,346 (2%) Russians
29,599 (3.2%)
920,173 (100%)
1970[48] 808,131 (76.5%) Slovaks
9,573 (0.9%)
Czechs
721 (0.1%)
4,230 (0.4%) 151,949 (14.4%) 10,856 (1%) 23,454 (2.2%) Russians
35,189 (3.3%)
1,056,799 (100%)
1979[49] 898,606 (77.8%) Slovaks
8,245 (0.7%)
Czechs
669 (0.1%)
3,746 (0.3%) 158,446 (13.7%) 3,848 (0.3%) 27,155 (2.3%) Russians
41,713 (3.6%)
1,155,759 (100%)
1989[50] 976,749 (78.4%) Slovaks
7,329 (0.6%)
3,478 (0.3%) 155,711 (12.5%) 2,639 (0.2%) 29,485 (2.4%) Russians
49,456 (4.0%)
Romani
(1.0%)
1,245,618 (100%)
2001[51] Ukrainians (including Rusyns)
1,010,100 (80.5%)
Slovaks
5,600 (0.5%)
3,500 (0.3%) 151,500 (12.1%) no data 32,100 (2.6%) Russians
31,000 (2.5%)
Roma
14,000 (1.1%)
Others
(0.4%)
(100%)

Religion

Religion in Zakarpattia Oblast (2015)[52][failed verification]

  Unaffiliated Christian (3%)
  Protestantism (1%)
  No religion (1%)
  Undecided (1%)

According to a 2015 survey, 68% of the population of Zakarpattia Oblast adheres to Eastern Orthodoxy, while 19% are followers of the Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church and 7% are Roman Catholics. Protestants and unaffiliated generic Christians make up 1% and 3% of the population respectively. Only one percent of the population does not follow any religion.[52][failed verification]

The Orthodox community of Zakarpattia is divided as follows:

Issue with self-identity: Ukrainians or Rusyns

 
Hutsuls and their habitations, Carpathian Mountains, c. 1872

Carpathian Ruthenia is inhabited mainly by people who self-identify as Ukrainians, many of whom may refer to themselves as Rusyns, Rusnak or Lemko. Places inhabited by Rusyns also span adjacent regions of the Carpathian Mountains, including regions of present-day Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania. Ruthenian settlements exist in the Balkans as well.

In the 19th century and the first part of the 20th, the inhabitants of Transcarpathia continued to call themselves "Ruthenians" ("Rusyny"). After Soviet annexation the ethnonym "Ukrainian", which had replaced "Ruthenian" in eastern Ukraine at the turn of the century, was also applied to Ruthenians/Rusyns of Transcarpathia. Most present-day inhabitants consider themselves ethnically Ukrainians, although in the most recent census 10,100 people (0.8% of Zakarpattia Oblast's 1.26 million) identified themselves as ethnically Rusyn.

Hungarians

 
Percentage of Hungarian native speakers in Zakarpattia oblast according to 2001 census

The following data is according to the Ukrainian census of 2001.

The 1910 Austro-Hungarian census showed 185,433 speakers of the Hungarian language, while the Czechoslovak census of 1921 showed 111,052 ethnic Hungarians and 80,132 ethnic Jews, many of whom were speakers of the Hungarian language. Much of the difference in these censuses reflects differences in methodology and definitions rather than a decline in the region's ethnic Hungarian (Magyar) or Hungarian-speaking population. According to the 1921 census, Hungarians constituted about 17.9% of the region's total population.

The end of World War II had a significant impact on the ethnic Hungarian population of the area: 10,000 fled before the arrival of Soviet forces. Many of the remaining adult men (25,000) were deported to the Soviet Union; about 30% of them died in Soviet labor camps. As a result of this development since 1938, the Hungarian and Hungarian-speaking population of Transcarpathia was recorded differently in various censuses and estimations from that time: 1930 census recorded 116,548 ethnic Hungarians, while the contested Hungarian census from 1941 shows as much as 233,840 speakers of Hungarian language in the region. Subsequent estimations are showing 66,000 ethnic Hungarians in 1946 and 139,700 in 1950, while the Soviet census from 1959 recorded 146,247 Hungarians.

As of 2004, about 170,000 (12–13%) inhabitants of Transcarpathia declare Hungarian as their mother tongue. Homeland Hungarians refer to Hungarians in Ukraine as kárpátaljaiak.

Jews

 
Jews from Galicia (left) and Mukachevo (right), 1821

Memoirs and historical studies provide much evidence that in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Rusyn-Jewish relations were generally peaceful. In 1939, census records showed that 80,000 Jews lived in the autonomous province of Ruthenia. Jews made up approximately 14% of the prewar population, however this population was concentrated in the larger towns, especially Mukachevo, where they constituted 43% of the prewar population. Most of them perished during the Holocaust.

Germans

See Carpathian Germans for more information (mainly Germans from Bohemia, Moravia and the territories from present-day central and eastern Germany) about their settlement in the 16th to 18th centuries.

Czechs

Czechs in Carpathian Ruthenia are ethnoculturally distinct from other West Slavic groups like the Slovaks, as they originated from Czech-speaking groups from Bohemia and Moravia instead of Slovakia.

Romani

There are approximately 25,000 ethnic Romani in present-day Transcarpathia. Some estimates point to a number as high as 50,000 but a true count is hard to obtain as many Roma cannot afford ID documents for themselves and their children.[53] Additionally, many Romani will claim to be Hungarian or Romanian when interviewed by Ukrainian authorities.[citation needed]

They are by far the poorest and least-represented ethnic group in the region and face intense prejudice. The years since the fall of the Soviet Union have not been kind to the Romani of the region, as they have been particularly hard hit by the economic problems faced by peoples all over the former USSR. Some Romani in western Ukraine live in major cities such as Uzhhorod and Mukachevo, but most live in ghettos on the outskirts of cities. These ghettos are known as "taberi" and can house up to 300 families. These encampments tend to be fairly primitive with no running water or electricity.[54]

Romanians

 
Stylized traditional folk costume of Romanians of Zakarpattia

Today some 30,000 Romanians live in this region, mostly in northern Maramureș, around the southern towns of Rahău/Rakhiv and Teceu Mare/Tiachiv and close to the border with Romania. However, there also are Romanians in Carpathian Ruthenia living outside Maramureș, mostly in the village of Poroshkovo. They are usually called volohi in Romanian and live closer to Poland and Slovakia than Romania.[55]

Greeks

There are a few Greeks in Carpathian Ruthenia. They are also known as Carpatho-Greeks and Greek-Carpathians.[citation needed]

Western views

For urban European readers in the 19th century, Ruthenia was one origin of the 19th century's imaginary "Ruritania" the most rural, most rustic and deeply provincial tiny province lost in forested mountains that could be imagined.[citation needed] Conceived sometimes as a kingdom of central Europe, Ruritania was the setting of several novels by Anthony Hope, especially The Prisoner of Zenda (1894).[citation needed]

Recently a writer named Vesna Goldsworthy, in Inventing Ruritania: the imperialism of the imagination (1998) has theorized on the origins of the ideas that underpin Western perceptions of the "Wild East" of Europe, especially of Ruthenian and other rural Slavs in the upper Balkans. The ideas are supposed by this writer to be highly applicable to Transcarpathia, who describes "an innocent process: a cultural great power seizes and exploits the resources of an area, while imposing new frontiers on its mind-map and creating ideas which, reflected back, have the ability to reshape reality.” The viewpoint does not have wide academic support.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Also Transcarpathian Ruthenia, Transcarpathian Ukraine, Rusinko, Subcarpathian Rus', Subcarpathia
  2. ^ Additionally: Ukrainian: Закарпаття, romanizedZakarpattia; Slovak: Podkarpatská Rus; Hungarian: Kárpátalja; Romanian: Transcarpatia; Polish: Zakarpacie; Russian: Карпатская Русь, romanizedKarpatskaya Rus'; Czech: Podkarpatská Rus; German: Karpatenukraine
  3. ^ Similarly as in Galicia, Subcarpathian Ruthenia also had two main movements for self determination (Ukrainophile and Russophile).[25]

References

  1. ^ "Ruthenians (Ukraine)". www.crwflags.com. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-07-24. Retrieved 2007-06-10.
  3. ^ Shandor 1997, pp. 257–258
  4. ^ Markus, Vasyl (1954). "Carpatho-Ukraine under Hungarian Occupation". The Ukrainian Quarterly. 10 (3): 252ff.
  5. ^ "Transcarpathian Ukraine". The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (third (1970-1979) ed.) – via The Free Dictionary.
  6. ^ Stanove culture. Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 5. University of Toronto Press. 2001 [1993]. ISBN 9780802030108.
  7. ^ a b Віднянський С.В. (2005). ЗАКАРПАТСЬКА УКРАЇНА, ЗАКАРПАТТЯ. Encyclopedia of Ukrainian History (in Ukrainian). Vol. 3. Naukova Dumka, NASU Institute of History of Ukraine. ISBN 966-00-0610-1. Тут знайдено чимало предметів часів мідного віку, бронзового віку та залізного віку. Помірно континентальний клімат і природні багатства Закарпаття роблять цю місцевість привабливою для проживання. Тут свого часу осіли фракійські племена, які залишили після себе пам'ятки куштановицької культури, та кельти, репрезентовані пам'ятками латенської к-ри (див. Латенські пам'ятки). Вчені вважають, що в Закарпатті в 3–1 ст. до н. е. склалася змішана кельто-фракійська к-ра, на основі якої утворився досить стійкий симбіоз племен, що проіснував бл. 200 років і сприяв поширенню цивілізаційних досягнень із зх. на укр. тер. Пізніше на Закарпатті з'явилися бастарни (їхня етнічна приналежність не з'ясована). В 2 ст. н. е. ч. Закарпаття була приєднана до рим. провінції Дакія. В часи Великого переселення народів через Закарпаття проходили гуни й авари. На Закарпатті побували герм. племена, в т. ч. гепіди. З перших століть н. е. почалося розселення слов'ян. За археол. даними, з 2 ст. н. е. тут міцно осіло хліборобське слов'ян. нас. – білі хорвати (див. Хорвати), матеріальна й духовна к-ра яких була тісно пов'язана з к-рою східнослов'ян. племен, що населяли Прикарпаття, Волинь, Придністров'я і Придніпров'я. В 9–10 ст. Закарпаття входило до складу Болг. д-ви, а з 2-ї пол. 10 ст. перебувало у сфері впливу Київської Русі, про що свідчить, зокрема, міграція сюди нас. із Прикарпаття. В "Повісті временних літ" є згадки про участь білих хорватів у війнах київ. князів проти Візантії та про похід вел. кн. київ. Володимира Святославича на білих хорватів 992. З того часу за Закарпаттям закріплюється назва "Русь". Після смерті вел. кн. київ. Володимира Святославича (1015) Закарпаття почав завойовувати угор. король Стефан I, його син Емеріх мав титул "князь русинів". На поч. 13 ст. всі землі Закарпаття опинилися під владою Угорщини. До поч. 20 ст. Закарпаття, перебуваючи в складі Угорщини, Австрії та Австро-Угорщини, мало назву "Угорська Русь".
  8. ^ Volodymyr Mezentsev (2001) [1988]. Iron Age. Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 2. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802034441. In Transcarpathia, descendants of the Thracian Hallstatt culture constituted the Kushtanovytsia culture in the 6th to 3rd centuries BC. In the course of the 2nd and 1st centuries BC the indigenous Thracian and proto-Slavic population of Transcarpathia, western Podilia, Bukovyna, Galicia, and Volhynia intermingled with the Celtic tribes of the La Tàene culture that spread there from central Europe.
  9. ^ a b c d Volodymyr Kubijovyč; Vasyl Markus; Ivan L. Rudnytsky; Ihor Stebelsky (2005) [1993]. Transcarpathia. Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 5. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802030108. In the Bronze Age (ca 1800 BC) Transcarpathia maintained continuity in its painted pottery style of the Stanove culture but gained metalworking skills (swords, knives, sickles, axes) as a result of the arrival of Thracian tribes from Transylvania. Subsequently Transcarpathia came under the control of the Celts, who arrived from the west and brought with them iron-smelting (ca 400–200 bc); the first local coins were minted in the 3rd century BC. Of the eastern nomadic peoples the earliest to influence Transcarpathia were the Iranian-speaking Scythians (expressed locally from the 6th century BC in the Kushtanovytsia culture) and then the Iazyges, a Sarmatian tribe confronting the Romans in Dacia (50 AD); their influence was followed by the invasions of the Turkic-speaking Huns (380 AD), the Avars (558 AD), and, finally, the Ugro-Finnic Magyars (896 AD). In the 2nd century AD neighboring Dacia (Transylvania) became a Roman province, and Roman merchants visited Transcarpathia. In the early Middle Ages Transcarpathia was traversed by Germanic tribes. Remnants of the Ostrogoths (the Gepidae) remained in neighboring Transylvania until the 10th century. The Slavic colonization of Transcarpathia began in the 2nd century, with migration from the north across the mountain passes. By the 8th and 9th centuries the lowlands of Transcarpathia were fairly densely peopled by White Croatians (at the time inhabiting both the north and the south side of the Carpathians). The Slavs in the upper Tysa River and in Transylvania were subject to the Avars (6th–8th centuries) and later to the Bulgarian kingdom (9th–10th centuries). With the collapse of Bulgaria in the second half of the 10th century, Transcarpathia came under the sphere of influence of the Kievan Rus'. The Kievan chroniclers noted the participation of the White Croatians in the campaigns on Byzantium. Following the incorporation of the White Croatians by Prince Volodymyr the Great into his realm, the name Rus' or Ruthenia became entrenched in Transcarpathia.
  10. ^ Magocsi, Paul Robert (1995). "The Carpatho-Rusyns". Carpatho-Rusyn American. Carpatho-Rusyn Research Center. XVIII (4).
  11. ^ Magocsi, Paul Robert (2002). The Roots of Ukrainian Nationalism: Galicia as Ukraine's Piedmont. University of Toronto Press. pp. 2–4. ISBN 9780802047380.
  12. ^ Sedov, Valentin Vasilyevich (2013) [1995]. Славяне в раннем Средневековье [Sloveni u ranom srednjem veku (Slavs in Early Middle Ages)]. Novi Sad: Akademska knjiga. pp. 168, 444, 451. ISBN 978-86-6263-026-1.
  13. ^ Uzhgorod and Mukachevo: a guide, Dmitriĭ Ivanovich Pop, Ivan Ivanovich Pop, Raduga Publishers, 1987, page 14.,
  14. ^ Magocsi, Paul R. (30 July 2005). Our people: Carpatho-Rusyns and their descendants in North America. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 9780865166110 – via Google Books.
  15. ^ Forward, Jean S. (22 June 2018). Endangered Peoples of Europe: Struggles to Survive and Thrive. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313310065 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ Magocsi, Paul. Historical Atlas of East Central Europe (1st ed.). University of Washington Press. p. 14. ISBN 9780295972480.
  17. ^ Dimnik, Martin (2003). The Dynasty of Chernigov-1146-1246. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  18. ^ Kincses-Nagy, Eva (2013). "A Disappeared People and a Disappeared Language: The Cumans and the Cuman language of Hungary". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ "Images" (JPG). www.conflicts.rem33.com.
  20. ^ Magocsi, Paul (2015). With Their Backs to the Mountains: A History of Carpathian Rus' and Carpatho-Rusyns. New York, New York: Central European University Press. p. 5. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  21. ^ a b c Preclík, Vratislav. Masaryk a legie (Masaryk and legions), váz. kniha, 219 pages, first issue vydalo nakladatelství Paris Karviná, Žižkova 2379 (734 01 Karvina, Czech Republic) ve spolupráci s Masarykovým demokratickým hnutím (Masaryk Democratic Movement, Prague), 2019, ISBN 978-80-87173-47-3, pages 35 – 53, 106 - 107, 111-112, 124–125, 128, 129, 132, 140–148, 184–199.
  22. ^ a b c Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture. Paul R. Magocsi, Ivan Pop. Toronto, Ont.: University of Toronto Press. 2002. ISBN 978-1-4426-7443-1. OCLC 244768154.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  23. ^ PRECLÍK, Vratislav. Masaryk a legie (Masaryk and legions), váz. kniha, 219 str., vydalo nakladatelství Paris Karviná, Žižkova 2379 (734 01 Karvina, Czech Republic) ve spolupráci s Masarykovým demokratickým hnutím (Masaryk Democratic Movement, Prague), 2019, ISBN 978-80-87173-47-3, pp. 87 - 89, 110 - 112, 124 - 128,140 - 148,184 - 190
  24. ^ Quoted extensively in Béla Illés, "A Carpathian Raphosody", 1939
  25. ^ Shevchenko, K. How Subcarpathian Ruthenian became Carpathian Ukraine (Как Подкарпатская Русь стала Карпатской Украиной). Zapadnaya Rus. 4 April 2011
  26. ^ Illés, op.cit.
  27. ^ "Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and Austria; Protocol, Declaration and Special Declaration [1920] ATS 3". www.austlii.edu.au.
  28. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  29. ^ Illés, op.cit., refers to local Communists lighting fires on Carpathian peaks, which they hoped would show the way to Budyonny's Red Cavalry
  30. ^ Steiner, Zara (2005). The lights that failed : European international history, 1919-1933. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-151881-2. OCLC 86068902.
  31. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2014-01-07. p. 223
  32. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2015-02-19. Retrieved 2009-08-02.
  33. ^ Serhy Yekelchyk "Ukraine: Birth of a Modern Nation", Oxford University Press (2007), ISBN 978-0-19-530546-3 (page 128-130)
  34. ^ Paul R. Magocsi. Ivan Ivanovich Pop. Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture. University of Toronto Press. 2002. p. 512.
  35. ^ a b c d (in Ukrainian) Today is the 80th anniversary of the proclamation of the Carpathian Ukraine, Ukrinform (15 March 2019)
  36. ^ a b c d e Bryzh, Yevhen. . Poltava 365. 26 November 2018.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h With Their Backs to the Mountains: A History of Carpathian Rus? and Carpatho-Rusyns, by Paul Robert Magocsi, Central European University Press, 2015
  38. ^ a b c d Hranchak, I. Communist Party of Zakarpattia Ukraine (КОМУНІСТИЧНА ПАРТІЯ ЗАКАРПАТСЬКОЇ УКРАЇНИ). Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia.
  39. ^ "On this Day, in 1945: Carpathian Ruthenia was annexed by the Soviet Union". Kafkadesk. 29 June 1992. from the original on 26 July 2021.
  40. ^ For a discussion of the treaty see O'Connell, Daniel P. (1967). State Succession in Municipal Law and International Law: Internal relations. Vol. 1. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-521-05858-2.; for a copy of the treaty see British and Foreign State Papers, volume cxlv, page 1096.
  41. ^ [1]| Воскресеніє народ, Resurrection Of A Nation, John and Helen Timo Foundation 2019
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Pipash, Volodymyr. . Zakarpattia online. 22 September 2011
  43. ^ . archives.gov.ua. ЦДАВО України. Archived from the original on 14 October 2019. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  44. ^ ""Novyny Zakarpattya", the newspaper of the Regional Council of People's Deputies". No. 231.
  45. ^ Slovenský náučný slovník, I. zväzok, Bratislava-Český Těšín, 1932
  46. ^ Nikolaus G. Kozauer, Die Karpaten-Ukraine zwischen den beiden Weltkriegen, Esslingen am Neckar 1979, p. 136
  47. ^ "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1959 года. Распределение городского и сельского населения областей республик СССР по полу и национальности". www.demoscope.ru. Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  48. ^ "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1970 года. Распределение городского и сельского населения областей республик СССР по полу и национальности". www.demoscope.ru. Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  49. ^ "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1979 года. Городское и сельское население областей республик СССР (кроме РСФСР) по полу и национальности". www.demoscope.ru. Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  50. ^ "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 года. Распределение городского и сельского населения областей республик СССР по полу и национальности". www.demoscope.ru. Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  51. ^ [About the number and composition of the Transcarpathian oblast according to the results of the National Census of 2001] (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 30 April 2009.
  52. ^ a b "Релігійні вподобання населення України". 26 May 2015.
  53. ^ Nikolay, Polischuk (May 12, 2016). "Stay Where There Are Songs: How Thousands of Roma People Survive in Transcarpathia". Bird in Flight. Retrieved June 1, 2022.
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-03-14. Retrieved 2008-12-26.
  55. ^ Peiu, Petrisor (2 February 2020). "Și ei sunt români. Și ei sunt ai noștri. Și ei au nevoie de România". Ziare.com (in Romanian).

Sources

  • Baerlein, Henri (1938). In Czechoslovakia's Hinterland, Hutchinson. ISBN B00085K1BA
  • Boysak, Basil (1963). The Fate of the Holy Union in Carpatho-Ukraine, Toronto-New York.
  • (in Russian) Fentsik, Stefan A. (1935). Greetings from the Old Country to all of the American Russian people! (Pozdravlenije iz staroho Kraja vsemu Amerikanskomu Karpatorusskomu Narodu!). ISBN B0008C9LY6
  • Nemec, Frantisek, and Vladimir Moudry (2nd edition, 1980). The Soviet Seizure of Subcarpathian Ruthenia, Hyperion Press. ISBN 0-8305-0085-5
  • (in German) Ganzer, Christian (2001). Die Karpato-Ukraine 1938/39: Spielball im internationalen Interessenkonflikt am Vorabend des Zweiten Weltkrieges. Hamburg (Die Ostreihe – Neue Folge, Heft 12).
  • (in German) Kotowski, Albert S. (2001). "Ukrainisches Piemont"? Die Karpartenukraine am Vorabend des Zweiten Weltkrieges, in Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 49, Heft 1. S. 67–95.
  • Krofta, Kamil (1934). Carpathian Ruthenia and the Czechoslovak Republic. ISBN B0007JY0OG
  • Magocsi, Paul R. (1973). (PDF). Austrian History Yearbook. 9: 201–265. doi:10.1017/S006723780001910X. S2CID 144778333. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-12-05. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  • Magocsi, Paul R. (1975). (PDF). Slavic Review. 34 (2): 360–381. doi:10.2307/2495193. JSTOR 2495193. S2CID 155615547. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-04-28. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  • Magocsi, Paul R. (1978). The Shaping of a National Identity: Subcarpathian Rus', 1848–1948. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674805798.
  • Magocsi, Paul R. (1983). Galicia: A Historical Survey and Bibliographic Guide. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802024824.
  • Magocsi, Paul R. (1988). Carpatho-Rusyn Studies: An Annotated Bibliography. Vol. 1. New York: Garland. ISBN 9780824012144.
  • Magocsi, Paul R. The Rusyn-Ukrainians Of Czechoslovakia
  • Magocsi, Paul R. – Pop, Ivan. Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture, Univ. of Toronto Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8020-3566-3
  • (in Czech) Pop, Ivan. Dějiny Podkarpatské Rusi v datech. Libri, Praha 2005. ISBN 80-7277-237-6
  • (in Ukrainian) Rosokha, Stepan (1949). Parliament of Carpatho-Ukraine (Coйм Карпатськoї України), Ukrainian National Publishing Co., Ltd. for Culture and Knowledge (Культура й ocвiтa).
  • Shandor, Vincent (1997). Carpatho-Ukraine in the Twentieth Century: A Political and Legal History. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press for the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. ISBN 0-916458-86-5.
  • Stercho, Peter (1959). Carpatho-Ukraine in International Affairs: 1938–1939, Notre Dame.
  • Subtelny, Orest (3rd edition, 2000). Ukraine: A History, University of Toronto Press ISBN 0-8020-8390-0
  • Wilson, Andrew (2nd edition, 2002). The Ukrainians: Unexpected Nation, Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09309-8.
  • Winch, Michael (1973). Republic for a day: An eye-witness account of the Carpatho-Ukraine incident, University Microfilms. ISBN B0006W7NUW
  • Nykolaj Beskyd. "Who Was Aleksander Duchnovyc?" Narodny Novynky. Prešov, Slovakia. No. 17. April 28, 1993. Translated by John E. Timo.
  • Paul Robert Magocsi (1995) The Carpatho-Rusyns.
  • "Nation Building or Nation Destroying? Lemkos, Poles and Ukrainians in Contemporary Poland." Polish Review. XXXV 3/4. New York 1990.
  • John Slivka. The History of the Greek Rite Gatholics in Pannonia, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Podkarpatska Rus 863–1949. 1974.
  • Ivan Panjkevic (1938) Українськi Говори Пiдкарпатської Руси i Сумeжних Областeй: Prague.
  • Aleksej L. Petrov (1998) Medieval Carpathian Rus, New York.

External links

  • The Carpatho-Rusyn knowledge base
  • Paul R. Magocsi, Carpatho-Rusyns, brochure published by The Carpatho-Rusyn Research Center, 1995
  • Carpatho-Ukraine (Encyclopedia of Ukraine)
  • Diet of Carpatho-Ukraine (Encyclopedia of Ukraine)
  • (the web library of historical documents & publicism about Malorussia/Ukraine)
  • (in Russian and Ukrainian) Mykola Vehesh, The greatness and the tragedy of Carpathian Ukraine, Zerkalo Nedeli, 10(485), 13–19 March 2004 and in Ukrainian[permanent dead link]
  • Zakarpattia.ru (in Ukrainian)
  • (in Hungarian)
  • – photographs and information

Coordinates: 48°20′N 23°14′E / 48.333°N 23.233°E / 48.333; 23.233

carpathian, ruthenia, this, article, about, historical, region, autonomous, state, that, existed, from, 1938, carpatho, ukraine, modern, ukrainian, region, zakarpattia, oblast, geographical, area, ukrainian, carpathians, other, uses, disambiguation, this, arti. This article is about the historical region For the autonomous state that existed from 1938 39 see Carpatho Ukraine For the modern Ukrainian region see Zakarpattia Oblast For the geographical area see Ukrainian Carpathians For other uses see Carpathian Ruthenia disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carpathian Ruthenia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may not adequately summarize its contents To comply with Wikipedia s lead section guidelines please consider modifying the lead to provide an accessible overview of the article s key points in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article May 2020 This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Carpathian Ruthenia a Rusyn Karpatska Rus romanized Karpat ska Rus b is a historical region on the border between Central and Eastern Europe mostly located in western Ukraine s Zakarpattia Oblast with smaller parts in eastern Slovakia largely in Presov Region and Kosice Region and the Lemko Region in Poland Coat of arms of Carpathian Ukraine now used by Zakarpattia Oblast The flag of the Ruhenian Ethnic Minority Council 1 Carpatho Rusyn sub groups Presov area Lemkos left side and Przemysl area Ukrainians in folk costumes Photo Village Mokre near Sanok 2007 From the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin in the 10th century to the end of World War I Treaty of Trianon in 1920 most of this region was part of the Kingdom of Hungary In the interwar period it was part of the First and Second Czechoslovak Republic Before World War II the region was annexed by the Kingdom of Hungary once again After the war it was annexed by the Soviet Union and became part of Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic It is an ethnically diverse region inhabited mostly by people who regard themselves as ethnic Ukrainians Rusyns Lemkos Boykos Hutsuls Hungarians Romanians Slovaks and Poles It also has small Jewish and Romani minorities The most commonly spoken languages are Rusyn Ukrainian Hungarian Romanian Slovak and Polish Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Prehistoric cultures 3 2 Slavic settlement 3 3 Hungarian arrival 3 4 Part of Hungary and Transylvania 3 5 Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen 3 6 Transitional period 1918 1919 3 6 1 Rus ka Krajina 3 6 2 Fall of Soviet Hungary 3 7 Part of Czechoslovakia 1920 1938 3 8 Subcarpathian Rus 1928 1938 3 9 Carpathian Ukraine 1938 1939 3 10 Governorate of Subcarpathia 1939 1945 3 11 Transition to Soviet takeover and control 1944 1945 3 12 Transcarpathian Ukraine Soviet Union 1945 1991 3 13 Transition to independent Ukraine 1991 4 Demographics 4 1 Ethnic groups 4 2 Religion 4 3 Issue with self identity Ukrainians or Rusyns 4 4 Hungarians 4 5 Jews 4 6 Germans 4 7 Czechs 4 8 Romani 4 9 Romanians 4 10 Greeks 5 Western views 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEtymology Edit Former Hungarian counties in Zakarpattia Oblast Ung Bereg Ugocsa Northern Maramureș The name Carpathian Ruthenia is sometimes used for the contiguous cross border area of Ukraine Slovakia and Poland inhabited by Ruthenians The local Ruthenian population self identifies in different ways some consider themselves to be Ukrainians some consider themselves to be Russians and some consider themselves to be a separate and unique Slavic group of Rusyns To describe their home region most Rusyns use the term Zakarpattia Trans Carpathia literally beyond the Carpathian mountains citation needed This is contrasted implicitly with Prykarpattia Ciscarpathia Near Carpathia an unofficial region in Ukraine to the immediate north east of the central area of the Carpathian Range and potentially including its foothills the Subcarpathian basin and part of the surrounding plains citation needed From a Hungarian and to an extent Slovak and Czech perspectives the region is usually described as Subcarpathia literally below the Carpathians although technically this name refers only to a long narrow basin that flanks the northern side of the mountains citation needed During the period in which the region was administered by the Hungarian states it was officially referred to in Hungarian as Karpatalja literally the base of the Carpathians or the north eastern regions of medieval Upper Hungary which in the 16th century was contested between the Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire citation needed The Romanian name of the region is Maramureș which is geographically located in the eastern and south eastern portions of the region citation needed During the period of Czechoslovak administration in the first half of the 20th century the region was referred to for a while as Rusinsko Ruthenia or Karpatske Rusinsko and later as Subcarpathian Rus Czech and Slovak Podkarpatska Rus or Subcarpathian Ukraine Czech and Slovak Podkarpatska Ukrajina and from 1928 as Subcarpathian Ruthenian Land 2 Czech Zeme podkarpatoruska Slovak Krajina podkarpatoruska Alternative unofficial names used in Czechoslovakia before World War II included Subcarpathia Czech and Slovak Podkarpatsko Transcarpathia Czech and Slovak Zakarpatsko Transcarpathian Ukraine Czech and Slovak Zakarpatska Ukrajina Carpathian Rus Ruthenia Czech and Slovak Karpatska Rus and occasionally Hungarian Rus Ruthenia Czech Uherska Rus Slovak Uhorska Rus citation needed The region declared its independence as Carpatho Ukraine on March 15 1939 but was occupied and annexed by Hungary on the same day and remained under Hungarian control until the end of the World War II During this period the region continued to possess a special administration and the term Karpatalja was locally used 3 4 In 1944 1946 the region was occupied by the Soviet Army and was a separate political formation known as Transcarpathian Ukraine or Subcarpathian Ruthenia During this period the region possessed some form of quasi autonomy with its own legislature while remaining under the governance of the Communist Party of Transcarpathian Ukraine After the signing of a treaty between Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union as well as the decision of the regional council Transcarpathia joined the Ukrainian SSR as the Zakarpattia Oblast 5 The region has subsequently been referred to as Zakarpattia Ukrainian Zakarpattya or Transcarpathia and on occasions as Carpathian Rus Ukrainian Karpatska Rus romanized Karpatska Rus Transcarpathian Rus Ukrainian Zakarpatska Rus romanized Zakarpatska Rus or Subcarpathian Rus Ukrainian Pidkarpatska Rus romanized Pidkarpatska Rus citation needed Geography EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message August 2006 view from Kamianka Buzka Skole Volovets railroad Carpathian Ruthenia rests on the southern slopes of the eastern Carpathian Mountains bordered to the east and south by the Tisza River and to the west by the Hornad and Poprad Rivers The region borders Poland Slovakia Hungary and Romania and makes up part of the Pannonian Plain The region is predominantly rural and infrastructurally underdeveloped The landscape is mostly mountainous it is geographically separated from Ukraine Slovakia and Romania by mountains and from Hungary by the Tisza river The two major cities are Uzhhorod and Mukachevo both with populations around 100 000 The population of the other five cities including Khust and Berehovo varies between 10 000 and 30 000 Other urban and rural populated places have a population of less than 10 000 History Edit Kievan Rus 11th century This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Prehistoric cultures Edit During the Late Bronze Age in the 2nd millennium BCE the region was characterized by Stanove culture 6 however it only gained more advanced metalworking skills with the arrival of Thracians from the South with Kushtanovytsia culture in the 6th 3rd century BCE In the 5th 3rd century BCE Celts arrived from the West bringing iron melting skills and La Tene culture A Thracian Celtic symbiosis existed for a time in the region after which appeared the Bastarnae 7 At that time the Iranian speaking Scythians and later a Sarmatian tribe called the Iazyges were present in the region Proto Slavic settlement began between the 2nd century BCE and 2nd century CE 8 9 and during the Migration Period the region was traversed by Huns and Gepids 4th century and Pannonian Avars 6th century Slavic settlement Edit By the 8th and 9th century the valleys of the Northern and Southern slopes of the Carpathian Mountains were densely settled by Slavic tribe of White Croats 9 10 11 12 who were closely related to East Slavic tribes who inhabited Prykarpattia Volhynia Transnistria and Dnieper Ukraine 7 Whereas some White Croats remained behind in Carpathian Ruthenia others moved southward into the Balkans in the 7th century Those who remained were conquered by Kievan Rus in the late 10th century 9 Hungarian arrival Edit In 896 the Hungarians crossed the Carpathian Range and migrated into the Pannonian Basin 9 Nestor s Chronicle wrote that Hungarian tribes had to fight against the Volochi and settled among Slavs when on their way to Pannonia Prince Laborec fell from power under the efforts of the Hungarians and the Kievan forces 13 14 15 According to Gesta Hungarorum the Hungarians defeated a united Bulgarian and Byzantine army led by Salan in the early 10th century on the plains of Alpar who ruled over territory that was finally conquered by Hungarians During the tenth and for most of the eleventh century the territory remained a borderland between the Kingdom of Hungary to the south and the Kievan Rus Principality of Halych to the north 16 Slavs from the north Galicia and east who actually arrived from Podolia via the mountain passes of Transylvania continued to settle in small numbers in various parts of the Carpathian borderland which the Hungarians and other medieval writers referred to as the Marchia Ruthenorum the Rus March These new immigrants from the north and east like the Slavs already living in Carpathian Ruthenia had by the eleventh century come to be known as the people of Rus or Rusyns Local Slavic nobility often intermarried with the Hungarian nobles to the south Prince Rostislav a Ruthenian noble unable to continue his family s rule of Kiev governed a great deal of Transcarpathia from 1243 to 1261 for his father in law Bela IV of Hungary 17 The territory s ethnic diversity increased with the influx of some 40 000 Cuman settlers who came to the Pannonian Basin after their defeat by Vladimir II Monomakh in the 12th century and their ultimate defeat at the hands of the Mongols in 1238 18 During the early period of Hungarian administration part of the area was included into the Gyepu border region while the other part was under county authority and was included into the counties of Ung Borsova and Szatmar Later the county administrative system was expanded to the whole of Transcarpathia and the area was divided between the counties of Ung Bereg Ugocsa and Maramaros At the end of the 13th and beginning of the 14th century during the collapse of the central power in the Kingdom of Hungary the region was part of the domains of semi independent oligarchs Amadeus Aba and Nicholas Pok From 1280 to 1320 the north western part of Carpathian Ruthenia was part of the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia 19 Between the 12th and 15th centuries the area was probably colonized by Eastern Orthodox groups of Vlach highlanders with accompanying Ruthenian populations All the groups including local Slavic population blended together creating a distinctive culture from the main Ruthenian speaking areas Over time because of geographical and political isolation from the main Ruthenian speaking territory the inhabitants developed distinctive features citation needed Part of Hungary and Transylvania Edit 1885 ethnographic map of the Hungarian Crown Ruthenians 1904 Central Europe national and linguistic regions Russen u Ruthenen in green Russniaken 1910 ethnographic map of Austria Hungary Ukrainians In 1526 the region was divided between the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary and the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom Beginning in 1570 the latter transformed to the Principality of Transylvania which soon fell under Ottoman suzerainty The part of Transcarpathia under Habsburg administration was included into the Captaincy of Upper Hungary which was one of the administrative units of the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary During this period an important factor in the Ruthenian cultural identity namely religion came to the forefront The Unions of Brest Lytovsk 1595 and Ungvar Uzhorod 1646 were instituted causing the Byzantine Orthodox Churches of Carpathian and Transcarpathian Rus to come under the jurisdiction of Rome thus establishing the so called Unia of Eastern Catholic churches the Ruthenian Catholic Church and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church In the 17th century until 1648 the entire region was part of the Principality of Transylvania and between 1682 and 1685 its north western part was administered by the Ottoman vassal state of Upper Hungary while the south eastern parts remained under the administration of Transylvania From 1699 the entire region eventually became part of the Habsburg monarchy divided between the Kingdom of Hungary and the Principality of Transylvania Later the entire region was included into the Kingdom of Hungary Between 1850 and 1860 the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary was divided into five military districts and the region was part of the Military District of Kaschau Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen Edit After 1867 the region was administratively included into Transleithania or the Hungarian part of Austria Hungary In the 19th and 20th centuries many nationalist groups vied for unification or alignment with many different possible nationalities all arguing that the Rus people would be better off uniting with that nation for security or staying within the nation of Hungary Many of these groups utilized the ethnic makeup of the region with ideas such as the Lemko Boiko Hutsul schema looking to prove the Slavic nature of the Rus and therefore justifying union with Russia or later a Ukrainian state under the claim that the Rus were part of that Slavic cultural sphere These Rus or Ruthenians would argue this point until the early 1900 s when action would be taken 20 In 1910 the population of Transcarpathia was 605 942 of which 330 010 54 5 were speakers of Ruthenian 185 433 30 6 were speakers of Hungarian 64 257 10 6 were speakers of German 11 668 1 9 were speakers of Romanian 6 346 1 were speakers of Slovak or Czech and 8 228 1 4 were speakers of other languages Ung County Ungvar Uzhhorod Bereg County Beregszasz Berehove Ugocsa County Nagyszollos Vynohradiv Maramaros County only the northern part Maramarossziget Sighetu Marmației Transitional period 1918 1919 Edit West Ukrainian People s Republic 1918 incorporating Carpathian Ruthenia The vast majority of people were peasant farmers Gregory Zatkovich signing the Declaration of Common Aims at Independence Hall Philadelphia 10 26 1918 After World War I the Austro Hungarian monarchy collapsed and the region was briefly in 1918 and 1919 claimed as part of the independent West Ukraine Republic dubious discuss However for most of this period the region was controlled by the newly formed independent Hungarian Democratic Republic with a short period of West Ukrainian control On November 8 1918 the first National Council the Lubovna Council which later reconvened as the Presov Council was held in western Ruthenia The first of many councils it simply stated the desire of its members to separate from the newly formed Hungarian state but did not specify a particular alternative only that it must involve the right to self determination 21 Other councils such as the Carpatho Ruthenian National Council meetings in Huszt Khust November 1918 called for unification with the West Ukrainian People s Republic Only in early January 1919 were the first calls heard in Ruthenia for union with Czechoslovakia 21 Rus ka Krajina Edit Throughout November and the following few months councils met every few weeks calling for various solutions Some wanted to remain part of the Hungarian Democratic Republic but with greater autonomy the most notable of these the Uzhhorod Council November 9 1918 declared itself the representative of the Rusyn people and began negotiations with Hungarian authorities These negotiations ultimately resulted in the passage of Law no 10 21 by the Hungarian government on December 21 1918 thereby establishing the autonymous Rusyn province of Rus ka Krajina from the Rusyn inhabited parts of four eastern counties Maramorosh County Ugocha County Bereg County Ung County 22 On February 5 1919 a provisional government for Rus ka Krajina was established The Rus ka rada or Rusyn Council was made up of 42 representatives from the four constituent counties and headed by a chairman Orest Sabov and vice chairman Avhustyn Shtefan The following month on March 4th elections were held for a formal diet of 36 deputies Upon election the new diet requested the Hungarian government define the borders of the autonomous region which had not yet been elaborated without an established territory the deputies argued that the diet was useless 22 On March 21 1919 the Democratic Republic of Hungary was replaced by the Hungarian Soviet Republic which then announced the existence of a Soviet Rus ka Krajina Elections organized by the new Hungarian government of a people s soviet council on April 6 and 7 1919 led to Rus ka Krajina then had two councils the original diet and the newly elected soviet Representatives from both councils then decided to join forming the Uriadova rada Governing Council of Rus ka Krajina 22 Fall of Soviet Hungary Edit Prior to this in July 1918 Rusyn immigrants in the United States had convened and called for complete independence Failing that they would try to unite with Galicia and Bukovina and failing that they would demand autonomy though they did not specify under which state They approached the American government and were told that the only viable option was unification with Czechoslovakia Their leader Gregory Zatkovich then signed the Philadelphia Agreement with Czechoslovak President Tomas Garrigue Masaryk guaranteeing Rusyn autonomy upon unification with Czechoslovakia on 25 October 1918 23 A referendum was held among American Rusyn parishes in November 1918 with a resulting 67 in favor Another 28 voted for union with Ukraine and less than one percent each for Galicia Hungary and Russia Less than 2 desired complete independence In April 1919 Czechoslovak control on the ground was established when Czechoslovak Army troops acting in coordination with Royal Romanian Army forces arriving from the east both acting under French auspices entered the area In a series of battles they defeated and crushed the local militias of the newly formed Hungarian Soviet Republic which had created the Slovak Soviet Republic and whose proclaimed aim was to unite the Hungarian Rusyn and Jewish toilers against the exploiters of the same nationalities Communist sympathizers accused the Czechoslovaks and Romanians of atrocities such as public hangings and the clubbing to death of wounded prisoners 24 This fighting prevented the arrival of Soviet aid for which the Hungarian Communists hoped in vain the Bolsheviks were also too preoccupied with their own civil war to assist Transcarpathia as well as a broader region was occupied by Romania from April 1919 until July or August 1919 and then was again occupied by the Hungarian state In May 1919 a Central National Council convened in the United States under Zatkovich and voted unanimously to accept the admission of Carpathian Ruthenia to Czechoslovakia Back in Ruthenia on May 8 1919 a general meeting of representatives from all the previous councils was held and declared that The Central Russian National Council completely endorse the decision of the American Uhro Rusin Council to unite with the Czech Slovak nation on the basis of full national autonomy Note that the Central Russian National Council was an offshoot of the Central Ruthenian National Council and represented a Carpathian branch of the Russophiles movement that existed in the Austrian Galicia c The Hungarian left wing writer Bela Illes claimed that the meeting was little more than a farce with various notables fetched from their homes by police formed into a National Assembly without any semblance of a democratic process and effectively ordered to endorse incorporation into Czechoslovakia He further asserts that Clemenceau had personally instructed the French general on the spot to get the area incorporated into Czechoslovakia at all costs so as to create a buffer separating Soviet Ukraine from Hungary as part of the French anti Communist Cordon sanitaire policy and that it was the French rather than the Czechoslovaks who made the effective decisions 26 Part of Czechoslovakia 1920 1938 Edit The Article 53 Treaty of St Germain September 10 1919 granted the Carpathian Ruthenians autonomy 27 which was later upheld to some extent by the Czechoslovak constitution Some rights were however withheld by Prague which justified its actions by claiming that the process was to be a gradual one and Ruthenians representation in the national sphere was less than that hoped for Carpathian Ruthenia included former Hungarian territories of Ung County Bereg County Ugocsa County and Maramaros County After the Paris Peace Conference Transcarpathia became part of Czechoslovakia Whether this was widely popular among the mainly peasant population is debatable clearly however what mattered most to Ruthenians was not which country they would join but that they be granted autonomy within it After their experience of Magyarization few Carpathian Rusyns were eager to remain under Hungarian rule and they desired to ensure self determination 28 According to the Czechoslovak Constitution of 1920 the former region of the Kingdom of Hungary Ruthenian Land Ruszka Krajna was officially renamed to Subcarpathian Ruthenia Podkarpatska Rus In 1920 the area was used as a conduit for arms and ammunition for the anti Soviet Poles fighting in the Polish Soviet War directly to the north while local Communists sabotaged the trains and tried to help the Soviet side 29 During and after the war many Ukrainian nationalists in East Galicia who opposed both Polish and Soviet rule fled to Carpathian Ruthenia 30 Gregory Zatkovich was appointed governor of the province by Masaryk on April 20 1920 and resigned almost a year later on April 17 1921 to return to his law practice in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA The reason for his resignation was dissatisfaction with the borders with Slovakia 31 His tenure is a historical anomaly as the only American citizen ever acting as governor of a province that later became a part of the USSR Subcarpathian Rus 1928 1938 Edit Subcarpathian Rus Podkarpatska RusRegion of Czechoslovakia1928 1939 Flag of Czechoslovakia Coat of arms Subcarpathian Rus within Czechoslovakia 1928 CapitalUzhorod 1928 1938 Chust 1938 1939 Area 192112 097 km2 4 671 sq mi Population 1921592044HistoryHistorical eraInterwar period Region established1928 First Vienna Award2 November 1938 Autonomy22 November 1938 Name changed to Carpathian Ukraine30 November 1938 Proclamation of independence as Carpatho Ukraine15 March 1939Preceded by Succeeded by First Czechoslovak Republic Carpatho Ukraine Today part of Ukraine Linguistic map of Czechoslovakia in 1930 Ukrainian Rusyn In 1928 Czechoslovakia was divided into four provinces Bohemia Moravia Silesia Slovakia and the Subcarpathian Rus In the period 1918 1938 the Czechoslovak government attempted to bring the Subcarpathian Rus with 70 of the population illiterate no industry and a herdsman way of life 32 up to the level of the rest of Czechoslovakia Thousands of Czech teachers policemen clerks and businessmen went to the region The Czechoslovak government built thousands of kilometers of railways roads airports and hundreds of schools and residential buildings 32 The Rusyn people decided to join the new state of Czechoslovakia a decision that happened parallel to other events that affected these proceedings At the Paris Peace Conference several other countries including Hungary Ukraine and Russia laid claim to Carpathian Rus The Allies however had few alternatives to choosing Czechoslovakia Hungary had lost the war and therefore gave up its claims Ukraine was seen as politically unviable and Russia was in the midst of a civil war Thus the only importance of Rusyns decision to become part of Czechoslovakia was in creating at least initially good relations between the leaders of Carpathian Rus and Czechoslovakia The Ukrainian language was not actively persecuted in Czechoslovakia during the interwar period unlike in Poland and Romania 33 73 percent of local parents voted against Ukrainian language education for their children in a referendum conducted in Subcarpathian Rus in 1937 34 Carpathian Ukraine 1938 1939 Edit Carpatho Ukraine in 1939 Main article Carpathian Ukraine In November 1938 under the First Vienna Award a result of the Munich Agreement Czechoslovakia ceded southern Carpathian Rus to Hungary The remainder of Subcarpathian Rus received autonomy with Andrej Brody as prime minister of the autonomous government After the resignation of the government following a local political crisis Avhustyn Voloshyn became prime minister of the new government In December 1938 Subcarpathian Rus was renamed to Carpathian Ukraine Following the Slovak proclamation of independence on March 14 1939 and the Nazis seizure of the Czech lands on March 15 Carpathian Ukraine declared its independence as the Republic of Carpatho Ukraine withAvhustyn Voloshyn as head of state and was immediately occupied and annexed by Hungary restoring provisionally the former counties of Ung Bereg and partially Maramaros 35 Governorate of Subcarpathia 1939 1945 Edit Carpathian Ruthenian Jews arrive at Auschwitz Birkenau May 1944 Without being registered to the camp system most were killed in gas chambers hours after arriving Main articles Carpathian Ruthenia during World War II and The Holocaust in Hungary On March 23 1939 Hungary annexed further territories disputed with Slovakia bordering with the west of the former Carpatho Rus The Hungarian invasion was followed by a few weeks of terror in which more than 27 000 people were shot dead without trial and investigation 35 Over 75 000 Ukrainians decided to seek asylum in the Soviet Union of those almost 60 000 of them died in Gulag prison camps 35 Others joined the remaining Czech troops from the Czechoslovak army in exile 35 Upon liquidation of Carpatho Ukraine in the territory annexed the Governorate of Subcarpathia was installed and divided into three the administrative branch offices of Ung Hungarian Ungi kozigazgatasi kirendeltseg Bereg Hungarian Beregi kozigazgatasi kirendeltseg and Maramaros Hungarian Maramarosi kozigazgatasi kirendeltseg governed from Ungvar Munkacs and Huszt respectively having Hungarian and Rusyn language as official languages Memoirs and historical studies provide much evidence that in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Rusyn Jewish relations were generally peaceful Citation needed In 1939 census records showed that 80 000 Jews lived in the autonomous province of Ruthenia Jews made up approximately 14 of the prewar population however this population was concentrated in the larger towns especially Mukachevo where they constituted 43 of the prewar population After the German occupation of Hungary 19th March 1944 the pro Nazi policies of the Hungarian government resulted in emigration and deportation of Hungarian speaking Jews and other groups living in the territory were decimated by war During the Holocaust 17 main ghettos were set up in cities in Carpathian Ruthenia from which all Jews were taken to Auschwitz for extermination Ruthenian ghettos were set up in May 1944 and liquidated by June 1944 Most of the Jews of Transcarpathia were killed though a number survived either because they were hidden by their neighbours or were forced into labour battalions which often guaranteed food and shelter The end of the war had a significant impact on the ethnic Hungarian population of the area 10 000 fled before the arrival of Soviet forces Many of the remaining adult men 25 000 were deported to the Soviet Union about 30 of them died in Soviet labor camps As a result of this development since 1938 the Hungarian and Hungarian speaking population of Transcarpathia was recorded differently in various censuses and estimations from that time 1930 census recorded 116 548 ethnic Hungarians while the contested Hungarian census from 1941 shows as much as 233 840 speakers of Hungarian language in the region Subsequent estimations are showing 66 000 ethnic Hungarians in 1946 and 139 700 in 1950 while the Soviet census from 1959 recorded 146 247 Hungarians Transition to Soviet takeover and control 1944 1945 Edit Front page of the Zakarpattia Ukraine newspaper 1944 with manifest of unification with Soviet Ukraine The Soviet takeover of the region started with the East Carpathian Strategic Offensive in the fall of 1944 This offensive consisted of two parts the Battle of the Dukla Pass in effort to support the Slovak National Uprising and the Battle of Uzhgorod to break through to the Hungarian plains and encircle German troops in Transylvania On 28 October 1944 upon conclusion of the offensive campaign most of Subcarpathian Ruthenia was secured by the Workers Peasants Red Army RKKA The Czechoslovak government delegation led by minister Frantisek Nemec arrived in Khust to establish the provisional Czechoslovak administration 36 according to the treaties between the Soviet and Czechoslovak governments on 8 May 1944 36 According to the Soviet Czechoslovak treaty it was agreed that once any liberated territory of Czechoslovakia ceased to be a combat zone of the Red Army those lands would be transferred to full control of the Czechoslovak state 36 However after a few weeks the Red Army and NKVD started to obstruct the Czechoslovak delegation s work Communications between Khust and the government center in exile in London were obstructed and the Czechoslovak officials were forced to use underground radio 36 On 14 November 1944 the underground radio Vladislav transmitted the following message from Khust to London The Red Army is subjugating everything to it We are requesting information whether it is discussed with the government Our situation is critical An open campaign is ongoing for uniting Subcarpathian Ukraine with the Soviet Union Forced recruitment to the ranks of the Red Army People are uneducated Awaiting your recommendations We urgently need instructions from the government 36 On 5 November 1944 in anticipation of Soviet rule the Uzhgorod city council introduced Moscow time 2 hours ahead of Central European Time According to Magdalena Lavrincova this was perceived by many as a sign of the totalitarianism to come 37 In November 1944 in Mukachevo there was a meeting of representatives of Communist Party organization from local districts who created an organization committee to call for a party conference 38 On 19 November 1944 at the conference in Mukachevo the Communist Party of Zakarpattia Ukraine was established 38 The conference also decided to unite Carpathian Ruthenia with the Ukrainian SSR to strengthen People s committees as organs of revolutionary authority and to organize help for the Red Army 38 The conference also elected its central committee and its first secretary Ivan Turyanytsia and agreed to hold a congress of the People s committees on 26 November 1944 38 The National Council of Transcarpatho Ukraine was set up in Mukachevo under the protection of the Red Army On November 26 this committee led by Ivan Turyanitsa a Rusyn who deserted from the Czechoslovak army proclaimed the will of Ukrainian people to separate from Czechoslovakia and join Soviet Ukraine After two months of conflicts and negotiations the Czechoslovak government delegation departed from Khust on February 1 1945 leaving Carpathian Ukraine under Soviet control Transcarpathian Ukraine Soviet Union 1945 1991 Edit On 29 June 1945 Czechoslovakia signed a treaty with the Soviet Union officially ceding the region 39 40 Between 1945 and 1947 the new Soviet authorities fortified the new borders and in July 1947 declared Transcarpathia as a restricted zone of the highest level with checkpoints on the mountain passes connecting the region to mainland Ukraine 37 In December 1944 the National Council of Transcarpatho Ukraine set up a special people s tribunal in Uzhgorod to try and condemn all collaborationists with the previous regimes both Hungary and Carpatho Ukraine The court was allowed to hand down either 10 years of forced labour or the death penalty Several Ruthenian leaders including Andrej Brody and Shtefan Fentsyk were condemned and executed in May 1946 Avgustyn Voloshyn also died in prison The extent of the repression showed to many Carpatho Ruthenian activists how it would not have been possible to find an accommodation with the coming Soviet regime as it had been with all previous ones 37 After breaking the Greek Catholic Church in Eastern Galicia in 1946 Soviet authorities pushed for the return to Orthodoxy of Greek Catholic parishes in Transcarpathia too including by engineering an accident leading to the death of recalcitrant bishop Theodore Romzha on 1 November 1947 In January 1949 the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo was declared illegal remaining priests and nuns were arrested and church properties were nationalised and parcelled for public use or lent to the Russian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate the only accepted religious authority in the region 37 Cultural institutions were also forbidden including the Russophile Dukhnovych Society the Ukrainophile Prosvita and the Subcarpathian Scholarly Society New books and publications were circulated including the Zakarpatsk a Pravda 130 000 copies The Uzhhorod National University was opened in 1945 and over 816 cinematographs were open by 1967 The Ukrainian language was the first language of instruction in schools throughout the region followed by Russian which was used in academia citation needed Most new generations had a passive knowledge of Rusyn language but no knowledge about local culture XIX century Rusyn intellectuals were labelled as members of the reactionary class and instruments of Vatican obscurantism The Rusyn anthem and hymn were banned from public performance Carpatho Rusyn folk culture and songs which were promoted were presented as part of Transcarpathian regional culture as a local variant of Ukrainian culture 37 41 In 1924 the Comintern declared all East Slavic inhabitants of Czechoslovakia Rusyns Carpatho Russians Rusnaks to be Ukrainians Starting with the 1946 census all Rusyns were recorded as Ukrainians anyone clinging to the old label was considered a separatist and a potential counter revolutionary In February 1945 the National Council confiscated 53 000 hectares of land from large landowners and redistribute it to 54 000 peasant households 37 of the population Collectivisation of land started in 1946 around 2 000 peasants were arrested during protests in 1948 49 and sent for forced labour in the gulags Collectivisation including of mountain shepherds was completed by May 1950 Central planning decisions set Transcarpatia to become a land of orchards and vineyards between 1955 and 1965 planting 98 000 hectares with little results Attempt to cultivate tea and citrus also failed due to the climate Most vineyards were uprooted twenty years later during Gorbachev s anti alcohol campaign in 1985 87 37 The Soviet period also meant the upscaling of industrialization in Transcarpathia State owned lumber mills chemical and food processing plants widened with Mukachevo s tobacco factory and Solotvyno s salt works as the biggest ones providing steady employment to the residents of the region beyond the traditional subsistence agriculture And while traditional labour migration routes to the fields of Hungary or the factories of the United States were now closed Carpathian Ruthens and Romanians could now move for seasonal work in Russia s North and East 37 The inhabitants of the region grew steadily in the Soviet period from 776 000 in 1946 to over 1 2 million in 1989 Uzhgorod s population increased five fold from 26 000 to 117 000 and Mukachevo likewise from 26 600 to 84 000 This population increase also reflected demographic changes The arrival of the Red Army meant the departure of 5 100 Magyars and 2 500 Germans while 15 20 000 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust also decided to move out before the borders were sealed By 1945 around 30 000 Hungarians and Germans had been interned and sent for labour camps in Eastern Ukraine and Siberia while amnestied in 1955 around 5 000 did not come back In January 1946 2 000 more Germans were deported In return a large number of Ukrainians and Russians moved to Transcarpathia were they found jobs in the industry the military or the civilian administration By 1989 around 170 000 Ukrainians mainly from nearby Galizia and 49 000 Russians were living in Transcarpatia mainly in new residential blocks in the main towns of Uzhgorod and Mukachevo where the dominant language had soon turned from Hungarian and Yiddish to Russian They kept being considered newcomers novoprybuli due to their disconnect from the Rusyn and Hungarian speaking countryside 37 Transition to independent Ukraine 1991 Edit See also Zakarpattia Oblast and 1991 Transcarpathian general regional referendum In July 1991 the Ukrainian SSR adopted a law about referendums that lasted until 2012 Soon after the August coup in Moscow 19 22 on 24 August 1991 the Verkhovna Rada Ukrainian parliament of the Ukrainian SSR proclaimed declaration about its independence and also prohibited the Communist Party in the republic 42 The local nomenklatura remained in confusion for several days following those events 42 The local People s Movement of Ukraine Rukh and other activists were organizing protests across the whole oblast region 42 The local council of Uzhhorod city renamed the Lenin Square to People s Square 42 On 30 August 1991 during a protest in Uzhhorod a monument of Lenin was removed 42 Monuments of Lenin were also removed in other settlements however this decision was not universally accepted and faced resistance in some instances 42 In Tiachiv a municipality which also adopted the decision to remove the monument faced resistance from local supporters of Lenin of Roma ethnicity who clashed with Rukh activists 42 Due to support of the Zakarpattia regional council of the putsch organizers in Moscow GKChP the local democratic forces were requesting for the council to announce its dissolution 42 Among those democratic forces were members of the Uzhhorod city council deputies of Democratic platform in the regional council National Movement of Ukraine Ukrainian Republican Party Democratic Party of Ukraine Hungarian Cultural Federation in Transcarpathia KMKSZ Shevchenko Association of Ukrainian Language and the regional branch of Prosvita 42 Because of the situation in the region on 26 August 1991 the deputy chairman of the regional council Yuriy Vorobets signed an order to hold an extraordinary session of the council on 30 August but on 29 August the head of the council Mykhailo Voloshchuk formerly the 1st secretary of the Zakarpattia regional communist party committee postponed it by a separate order 42 On 28 August 1991 the demand for the extraordinary session was supported by the Zakarpattia Democratic League of Youth that previously was part of the Komsomol of Ukraine LKSMU 42 To relieve the pressure Voloshchuk approved a composition of provisional deputy commission for inspection of activity of officials during the putsch that consisted of 17 members mostly of the recently dissolved Communist Party and couple of Rukh members Mykhailo Tyvodar and Lyubov Karavanska 42 At the same time Voloshchuk was urgently seeking for other managing positions for other party officials who lost their job with recent liquidation of the party 42 Concurrently the regional ispolkom executive committee suddenly registered 208 religious communities and transferred property ownership of 83 church buildings to them 42 The government of Zakarpattia decided to bet on separatist actions 42 On 27 August 1991 the Mukachevo city council decided to ask the Zakarpattia regional council to adopt a decision about proclamation of the region as the Zakarpattia autonomous land of Ukraine 42 In two days the Mukachevo Raion council has decided to ask the regional council to petition before the Verkhovna Rada Ukrainian parliament to grant the Zakarpattia Oblast status of autonomous republic 42 The latter decision was supported by the Berehove Raion council Uzhhorod city council and Svalyava Raion council 42 On 1 September 1991 in Mukachevo the Association of Carpatho Rusyns organized a picket with anti Ukrainian slogans and accusations in forceful Ukrainization of Rusyns 42 At the gathering were adopted statement with demand for autonomy and carrying out a regional referendum on the issue 42 On 15 September 1991 the same demand were put forward by KMKSZ 42 Those Rusyns questioned legality of Zakarpattia unification with the Ukrainian SSR in 1945 42 By the end of September 1991 in Zakarpattia Oblast has formed two opposing political camps 42 One camp pro Ukrainian has united around the National Movement of Ukraine also included URP DemPU Party of Greens Shevchenko Association of Ukrainian Language regional branches of Prosvita Memorial and others 42 The camp also supported by students of the Uzhhorod State University several members of the Uzhhorod city council Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo and small faction of deputies in the regional council 42 The pro Ukrainian camp was seeking to reelect the regional council 42 The other camp consisted of sympathizers of the regional nomenklatura officials and formerly communist who were supported by Association of Carpatho Rusyns later it was joined by KMKSZ Association of Hungarian Culture of Zakarpattia 42 The latter camp also was supported by the Zakarpattia eparchy of Russian Orthodox Church selected members of the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo as well as by the majority of the regional council 42 The camp was aimed to prevent reelection of the regional council and obtain autonomous status for the region 42 On 27 September 1991 it was finally announced about the extraordinary session of the regional council 42 The leadership of the council planned to end its work the same day but the session stretched until 31 October 1991 and the center of political life in Zakarpattia Oblast had relocated to the regional council and the People s Square in front of the council s building 42 In December 1991 Zakarpattia became a part of independent Ukraine A majority 92 59 of voters of Zakarpattia oblast approved the Declaration of Independence of Ukraine 43 On the same day in Zakarpattia oblast a regional referendum also took place 78 percent of voters voted for autonomy within Ukraine which was not granted 44 Demographics EditEthnic groups Edit census Ruthenians Ukrainians and Rusyns Czechoslovaks Czechs and Slovaks Germans Hungarians Jews Romanians others Total population1880 244 742 59 84 8 611 2 11 31 745 7 76 105 343 25 76 not a census option 16 713 4 09 1 817 0 44 408 971 100 1921 45 372 884 62 98 19 737 3 33 10 460 1 77 102 144 17 25 80 059 13 52 with others 6 760 1 14 592 044 100 1930 46 450 925 62 17 34 511 4 76 13 804 1 90 115 805 15 97 95 008 13 10 12 777 1 76 2 527 0 35 725 357 100 1959 47 686 464 74 6 Slovaks12 289 1 3 Czechs964 0 1 3 504 0 4 146 247 15 9 12 169 1 3 18 346 2 Russians29 599 3 2 920 173 100 1970 48 808 131 76 5 Slovaks9 573 0 9 Czechs721 0 1 4 230 0 4 151 949 14 4 10 856 1 23 454 2 2 Russians35 189 3 3 1 056 799 100 1979 49 898 606 77 8 Slovaks8 245 0 7 Czechs669 0 1 3 746 0 3 158 446 13 7 3 848 0 3 27 155 2 3 Russians41 713 3 6 1 155 759 100 1989 50 976 749 78 4 Slovaks7 329 0 6 3 478 0 3 155 711 12 5 2 639 0 2 29 485 2 4 Russians49 456 4 0 Romani 1 0 1 245 618 100 2001 51 Ukrainians including Rusyns 1 010 100 80 5 Slovaks5 600 0 5 3 500 0 3 151 500 12 1 no data 32 100 2 6 Russians31 000 2 5 Roma14 000 1 1 Others 0 4 100 Religion Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Religion in Zakarpattia Oblast 2015 52 failed verification Eastern Orthodoxy 68 Eastern Catholicism 19 Roman Catholicism 7 Unaffiliated Christian 3 Protestantism 1 No religion 1 Undecided 1 According to a 2015 survey 68 of the population of Zakarpattia Oblast adheres to Eastern Orthodoxy while 19 are followers of the Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church and 7 are Roman Catholics Protestants and unaffiliated generic Christians make up 1 and 3 of the population respectively Only one percent of the population does not follow any religion 52 failed verification The Orthodox community of Zakarpattia is divided as follows Ukrainian Orthodox Church Kyiv Patriarchate 42 citation needed Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate 33 Non denominational 25 Issue with self identity Ukrainians or Rusyns Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also 1991 Transcarpathian general regional referendum Hutsuls and their habitations Carpathian Mountains c 1872 Carpathian Ruthenia is inhabited mainly by people who self identify as Ukrainians many of whom may refer to themselves as Rusyns Rusnak or Lemko Places inhabited by Rusyns also span adjacent regions of the Carpathian Mountains including regions of present day Poland Slovakia Hungary and Romania Ruthenian settlements exist in the Balkans as well In the 19th century and the first part of the 20th the inhabitants of Transcarpathia continued to call themselves Ruthenians Rusyny After Soviet annexation the ethnonym Ukrainian which had replaced Ruthenian in eastern Ukraine at the turn of the century was also applied to Ruthenians Rusyns of Transcarpathia Most present day inhabitants consider themselves ethnically Ukrainians although in the most recent census 10 100 people 0 8 of Zakarpattia Oblast s 1 26 million identified themselves as ethnically Rusyn Hungarians Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Percentage of Hungarian native speakers in Zakarpattia oblast according to 2001 census The following data is according to the Ukrainian census of 2001 Main article Hungarians in Ukraine The 1910 Austro Hungarian census showed 185 433 speakers of the Hungarian language while the Czechoslovak census of 1921 showed 111 052 ethnic Hungarians and 80 132 ethnic Jews many of whom were speakers of the Hungarian language Much of the difference in these censuses reflects differences in methodology and definitions rather than a decline in the region s ethnic Hungarian Magyar or Hungarian speaking population According to the 1921 census Hungarians constituted about 17 9 of the region s total population The end of World War II had a significant impact on the ethnic Hungarian population of the area 10 000 fled before the arrival of Soviet forces Many of the remaining adult men 25 000 were deported to the Soviet Union about 30 of them died in Soviet labor camps As a result of this development since 1938 the Hungarian and Hungarian speaking population of Transcarpathia was recorded differently in various censuses and estimations from that time 1930 census recorded 116 548 ethnic Hungarians while the contested Hungarian census from 1941 shows as much as 233 840 speakers of Hungarian language in the region Subsequent estimations are showing 66 000 ethnic Hungarians in 1946 and 139 700 in 1950 while the Soviet census from 1959 recorded 146 247 Hungarians As of 2004 update about 170 000 12 13 inhabitants of Transcarpathia declare Hungarian as their mother tongue Homeland Hungarians refer to Hungarians in Ukraine as karpataljaiak Jews Edit Main article History of the Jews in Carpathian Ruthenia This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jews from Galicia left and Mukachevo right 1821 Memoirs and historical studies provide much evidence that in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Rusyn Jewish relations were generally peaceful In 1939 census records showed that 80 000 Jews lived in the autonomous province of Ruthenia Jews made up approximately 14 of the prewar population however this population was concentrated in the larger towns especially Mukachevo where they constituted 43 of the prewar population Most of them perished during the Holocaust Germans Edit Main article Carpathian Germans This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2014 See Carpathian Germans for more information mainly Germans from Bohemia Moravia and the territories from present day central and eastern Germany about their settlement in the 16th to 18th centuries Czechs Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2014 Czechs in Carpathian Ruthenia are ethnoculturally distinct from other West Slavic groups like the Slovaks as they originated from Czech speaking groups from Bohemia and Moravia instead of Slovakia Romani Edit There are approximately 25 000 ethnic Romani in present day Transcarpathia Some estimates point to a number as high as 50 000 but a true count is hard to obtain as many Roma cannot afford ID documents for themselves and their children 53 Additionally many Romani will claim to be Hungarian or Romanian when interviewed by Ukrainian authorities citation needed They are by far the poorest and least represented ethnic group in the region and face intense prejudice The years since the fall of the Soviet Union have not been kind to the Romani of the region as they have been particularly hard hit by the economic problems faced by peoples all over the former USSR Some Romani in western Ukraine live in major cities such as Uzhhorod and Mukachevo but most live in ghettos on the outskirts of cities These ghettos are known as taberi and can house up to 300 families These encampments tend to be fairly primitive with no running water or electricity 54 Romanians Edit Stylized traditional folk costume of Romanians of Zakarpattia Today some 30 000 Romanians live in this region mostly in northern Maramureș around the southern towns of Rahău Rakhiv and Teceu Mare Tiachiv and close to the border with Romania However there also are Romanians in Carpathian Ruthenia living outside Maramureș mostly in the village of Poroshkovo They are usually called volohi in Romanian and live closer to Poland and Slovakia than Romania 55 Greeks Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2022 There are a few Greeks in Carpathian Ruthenia They are also known as Carpatho Greeks and Greek Carpathians citation needed Western views EditFor urban European readers in the 19th century Ruthenia was one origin of the 19th century s imaginary Ruritania the most rural most rustic and deeply provincial tiny province lost in forested mountains that could be imagined citation needed Conceived sometimes as a kingdom of central Europe Ruritania was the setting of several novels by Anthony Hope especially The Prisoner of Zenda 1894 citation needed Recently a writer named Vesna Goldsworthy in Inventing Ruritania the imperialism of the imagination 1998 has theorized on the origins of the ideas that underpin Western perceptions of the Wild East of Europe especially of Ruthenian and other rural Slavs in the upper Balkans The ideas are supposed by this writer to be highly applicable to Transcarpathia who describes an innocent process a cultural great power seizes and exploits the resources of an area while imposing new frontiers on its mind map and creating ideas which reflected back have the ability to reshape reality The viewpoint does not have wide academic support citation needed See also EditBlack Ruthenia Red Ruthenia White Ruthenia Military history of Carpathian Ruthenia during World War II Ruthenians and Ukrainians in Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 Eparchy of Mukacevo and Presov Alexander Dukhnovych Avgustyn Voloshyn Ukrainian dialects Karpatalja football team MagyaronNotes Edit Also Transcarpathian Ruthenia Transcarpathian Ukraine Rusinko Subcarpathian Rus Subcarpathia Additionally Ukrainian Zakarpattya romanized Zakarpattia Slovak Podkarpatska Rus Hungarian Karpatalja Romanian Transcarpatia Polish Zakarpacie Russian Karpatskaya Rus romanized Karpatskaya Rus Czech Podkarpatska Rus German Karpatenukraine Similarly as in Galicia Subcarpathian Ruthenia also had two main movements for self determination Ukrainophile and Russophile 25 References Edit Ruthenians Ukraine www crwflags com Retrieved 2022 10 28 Subcarpathian Rus Podkarpats ka Rus Archived from the original on 2008 07 24 Retrieved 2007 06 10 Shandor 1997 pp 257 258 Markus Vasyl 1954 Carpatho Ukraine under Hungarian Occupation The Ukrainian Quarterly 10 3 252ff Transcarpathian Ukraine The Great Soviet Encyclopedia third 1970 1979 ed via The Free Dictionary Stanove culture Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 5 University of Toronto Press 2001 1993 ISBN 9780802030108 a b Vidnyanskij S V 2005 ZAKARPATSKA UKRAYiNA ZAKARPATTYa Encyclopedia of Ukrainian History in Ukrainian Vol 3 Naukova Dumka NASU Institute of History of Ukraine ISBN 966 00 0610 1 Tut znajdeno chimalo predmetiv chasiv midnogo viku bronzovogo viku ta zaliznogo viku Pomirno kontinentalnij klimat i prirodni bagatstva Zakarpattya roblyat cyu miscevist privablivoyu dlya prozhivannya Tut svogo chasu osili frakijski plemena yaki zalishili pislya sebe pam yatki kushtanovickoyi kulturi ta kelti reprezentovani pam yatkami latenskoyi k ri div Latenski pam yatki Vcheni vvazhayut sho v Zakarpatti v 3 1 st do n e sklalasya zmishana kelto frakijska k ra na osnovi yakoyi utvorivsya dosit stijkij simbioz plemen sho proisnuvav bl 200 rokiv i spriyav poshirennyu civilizacijnih dosyagnen iz zh na ukr ter Piznishe na Zakarpatti z yavilisya bastarni yihnya etnichna prinalezhnist ne z yasovana V 2 st n e ch Zakarpattya bula priyednana do rim provinciyi Dakiya V chasi Velikogo pereselennya narodiv cherez Zakarpattya prohodili guni j avari Na Zakarpatti pobuvali germ plemena v t ch gepidi Z pershih stolit n e pochalosya rozselennya slov yan Za arheol danimi z 2 st n e tut micno osilo hliborobske slov yan nas bili horvati div Horvati materialna j duhovna k ra yakih bula tisno pov yazana z k royu shidnoslov yan plemen sho naselyali Prikarpattya Volin Pridnistrov ya i Pridniprov ya V 9 10 st Zakarpattya vhodilo do skladu Bolg d vi a z 2 yi pol 10 st perebuvalo u sferi vplivu Kiyivskoyi Rusi pro sho svidchit zokrema migraciya syudi nas iz Prikarpattya V Povisti vremennih lit ye zgadki pro uchast bilih horvativ u vijnah kiyiv knyaziv proti Vizantiyi ta pro pohid vel kn kiyiv Volodimira Svyatoslavicha na bilih horvativ 992 Z togo chasu za Zakarpattyam zakriplyuyetsya nazva Rus Pislya smerti vel kn kiyiv Volodimira Svyatoslavicha 1015 Zakarpattya pochav zavojovuvati ugor korol Stefan I jogo sin Emerih mav titul knyaz rusiniv Na poch 13 st vsi zemli Zakarpattya opinilisya pid vladoyu Ugorshini Do poch 20 st Zakarpattya perebuvayuchi v skladi Ugorshini Avstriyi ta Avstro Ugorshini malo nazvu Ugorska Rus Volodymyr Mezentsev 2001 1988 Iron Age Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 2 University of Toronto Press ISBN 9780802034441 In Transcarpathia descendants of the Thracian Hallstatt culture constituted the Kushtanovytsia culture in the 6th to 3rd centuries BC In the course of the 2nd and 1st centuries BC the indigenous Thracian and proto Slavic population of Transcarpathia western Podilia Bukovyna Galicia and Volhynia intermingled with the Celtic tribes of the La Taene culture that spread there from central Europe a b c d Volodymyr Kubijovyc Vasyl Markus Ivan L Rudnytsky Ihor Stebelsky 2005 1993 Transcarpathia Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 5 University of Toronto Press ISBN 9780802030108 In the Bronze Age ca 1800 BC Transcarpathia maintained continuity in its painted pottery style of the Stanove culture but gained metalworking skills swords knives sickles axes as a result of the arrival of Thracian tribes from Transylvania Subsequently Transcarpathia came under the control of the Celts who arrived from the west and brought with them iron smelting ca 400 200 bc the first local coins were minted in the 3rd century BC Of the eastern nomadic peoples the earliest to influence Transcarpathia were the Iranian speaking Scythians expressed locally from the 6th century BC in the Kushtanovytsia culture and then the Iazyges a Sarmatian tribe confronting the Romans in Dacia 50 AD their influence was followed by the invasions of the Turkic speaking Huns 380 AD the Avars 558 AD and finally the Ugro Finnic Magyars 896 AD In the 2nd century AD neighboring Dacia Transylvania became a Roman province and Roman merchants visited Transcarpathia In the early Middle Ages Transcarpathia was traversed by Germanic tribes Remnants of the Ostrogoths the Gepidae remained in neighboring Transylvania until the 10th century The Slavic colonization of Transcarpathia began in the 2nd century with migration from the north across the mountain passes By the 8th and 9th centuries the lowlands of Transcarpathia were fairly densely peopled by White Croatians at the time inhabiting both the north and the south side of the Carpathians The Slavs in the upper Tysa River and in Transylvania were subject to the Avars 6th 8th centuries and later to the Bulgarian kingdom 9th 10th centuries With the collapse of Bulgaria in the second half of the 10th century Transcarpathia came under the sphere of influence of the Kievan Rus The Kievan chroniclers noted the participation of the White Croatians in the campaigns on Byzantium Following the incorporation of the White Croatians by Prince Volodymyr the Great into his realm the name Rus or Ruthenia became entrenched in Transcarpathia Magocsi Paul Robert 1995 The Carpatho Rusyns Carpatho Rusyn American Carpatho Rusyn Research Center XVIII 4 Magocsi Paul Robert 2002 The Roots of Ukrainian Nationalism Galicia as Ukraine s Piedmont University of Toronto Press pp 2 4 ISBN 9780802047380 Sedov Valentin Vasilyevich 2013 1995 Slavyane v rannem Srednevekove Sloveni u ranom srednjem veku Slavs in Early Middle Ages Novi Sad Akademska knjiga pp 168 444 451 ISBN 978 86 6263 026 1 Uzhgorod and Mukachevo a guide Dmitriĭ Ivanovich Pop Ivan Ivanovich Pop Raduga Publishers 1987 page 14 Magocsi Paul R 30 July 2005 Our people Carpatho Rusyns and their descendants in North America Bolchazy Carducci Publishers ISBN 9780865166110 via Google Books Forward Jean S 22 June 2018 Endangered Peoples of Europe Struggles to Survive and Thrive Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313310065 via Google Books Magocsi Paul Historical Atlas of East Central Europe 1st ed University of Washington Press p 14 ISBN 9780295972480 Dimnik Martin 2003 The Dynasty of Chernigov 1146 1246 Cambridge University Press Retrieved 26 November 2022 Kincses Nagy Eva 2013 A Disappeared People and a Disappeared Language The Cumans and the Cuman language of Hungary a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Images JPG www conflicts rem33 com Magocsi Paul 2015 With Their Backs to the Mountains A History of Carpathian Rus and Carpatho Rusyns New York New York Central European University Press p 5 Retrieved 26 November 2022 a b c Preclik Vratislav Masaryk a legie Masaryk and legions vaz kniha 219 pages first issue vydalo nakladatelstvi Paris Karvina Zizkova 2379 734 01 Karvina Czech Republic ve spolupraci s Masarykovym demokratickym hnutim Masaryk Democratic Movement Prague 2019 ISBN 978 80 87173 47 3 pages 35 53 106 107 111 112 124 125 128 129 132 140 148 184 199 a b c Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture Paul R Magocsi Ivan Pop Toronto Ont University of Toronto Press 2002 ISBN 978 1 4426 7443 1 OCLC 244768154 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link PRECLIK Vratislav Masaryk a legie Masaryk and legions vaz kniha 219 str vydalo nakladatelstvi Paris Karvina Zizkova 2379 734 01 Karvina Czech Republic ve spolupraci s Masarykovym demokratickym hnutim Masaryk Democratic Movement Prague 2019 ISBN 978 80 87173 47 3 pp 87 89 110 112 124 128 140 148 184 190 Quoted extensively in Bela Illes A Carpathian Raphosody 1939 Shevchenko K How Subcarpathian Ruthenian became Carpathian Ukraine Kak Podkarpatskaya Rus stala Karpatskoj Ukrainoj Zapadnaya Rus 4 April 2011 Illes op cit Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and Austria Protocol Declaration and Special Declaration 1920 ATS 3 www austlii edu au www hungarian history hu PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2014 01 07 Illes op cit refers to local Communists lighting fires on Carpathian peaks which they hoped would show the way to Budyonny s Red Cavalry Steiner Zara 2005 The lights that failed European international history 1919 1933 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 151881 2 OCLC 86068902 www hungarian history hu PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2014 01 07 p 223 a b Subcarpathian Rus Podkarpatska Rus Archived from the original on 2015 02 19 Retrieved 2009 08 02 Serhy Yekelchyk Ukraine Birth of a Modern Nation Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 530546 3 page 128 130 Paul R Magocsi Ivan Ivanovich Pop Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture University of Toronto Press 2002 p 512 a b c d in Ukrainian Today is the 80th anniversary of the proclamation of the Carpathian Ukraine Ukrinform 15 March 2019 a b c d e Bryzh Yevhen 365 days Our history 26 November How Transcarpathia voluntarily and decisively became Ukraine 365 dniv Nasha istoriya 26 listopada Yak Zakarpattya dobrovilno i ostatochno stalo Ukrayinoyu Poltava 365 26 November 2018 a b c d e f g h With Their Backs to the Mountains A History of Carpathian Rus and Carpatho Rusyns by Paul Robert Magocsi Central European University Press 2015 a b c d Hranchak I Communist Party of Zakarpattia Ukraine KOMUNISTIChNA PARTIYa ZAKARPATSKOYi UKRAYiNI Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia On this Day in 1945 Carpathian Ruthenia was annexed by the Soviet Union Kafkadesk 29 June 1992 Archived from the original on 26 July 2021 For a discussion of the treaty see O Connell Daniel P 1967 State Succession in Municipal Law and International Law Internal relations Vol 1 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 213 ISBN 978 0 521 05858 2 for a copy of the treaty see British and Foreign State Papers volume cxlv page 1096 1 Voskreseniye narod Resurrection Of A Nation John and Helen Timo Foundation 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Pipash Volodymyr Political confrontations in Zakarpattia in the fall of 1991 To the 20th Anniversary of Ukrainian Independence Part 4 Politichne protistoyannya na Zakarpatti voseni 1991 r Do dvadcyatirichchya Nezalezhnosti Ukrayini Ch 4 Zakarpattia online 22 September 2011 Do 15 yi richnici Vseukrayinskogo referendumu archives gov ua CDAVO Ukrayini Archived from the original on 14 October 2019 Retrieved 11 February 2020 Novyny Zakarpattya the newspaper of the Regional Council of People s Deputies No 231 Slovensky naucny slovnik I zvazok Bratislava Cesky Tesin 1932 Nikolaus G Kozauer Die Karpaten Ukraine zwischen den beiden Weltkriegen Esslingen am Neckar 1979 p 136 Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1959 goda Raspredelenie gorodskogo i selskogo naseleniya oblastej respublik SSSR po polu i nacionalnosti www demoscope ru Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej Retrieved 11 February 2020 Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1970 goda Raspredelenie gorodskogo i selskogo naseleniya oblastej respublik SSSR po polu i nacionalnosti www demoscope ru Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej Retrieved 11 February 2020 Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1979 goda Gorodskoe i selskoe naselenie oblastej respublik SSSR krome RSFSR po polu i nacionalnosti www demoscope ru Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej Retrieved 11 February 2020 Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1989 goda Raspredelenie gorodskogo i selskogo naseleniya oblastej respublik SSSR po polu i nacionalnosti www demoscope ru Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej Retrieved 11 February 2020 Pro kilkist ta sklad naselennya Zakarpatskoyi oblasti za pidsumkami Vseukrayinskogo perepisu naselennya 2001 roku About the number and composition of the Transcarpathian oblast according to the results of the National Census of 2001 in Ukrainian Archived from the original on 30 April 2009 a b Religijni vpodobannya naselennya Ukrayini 26 May 2015 Nikolay Polischuk May 12 2016 Stay Where There Are Songs How Thousands of Roma People Survive in Transcarpathia Bird in Flight Retrieved June 1 2022 Romani Yag Roma Public News Interukrainian Biweekly Archived from the original on 2007 03 14 Retrieved 2008 12 26 Peiu Petrisor 2 February 2020 Și ei sunt romani Și ei sunt ai noștri Și ei au nevoie de Romania Ziare com in Romanian Sources EditBaerlein Henri 1938 In Czechoslovakia s Hinterland Hutchinson ISBN B00085K1BA Boysak Basil 1963 The Fate of the Holy Union in Carpatho Ukraine Toronto New York in Russian Fentsik Stefan A 1935 Greetings from the Old Country to all of the American Russian people Pozdravlenije iz staroho Kraja vsemu Amerikanskomu Karpatorusskomu Narodu ISBN B0008C9LY6 Nemec Frantisek and Vladimir Moudry 2nd edition 1980 The Soviet Seizure of Subcarpathian Ruthenia Hyperion Press ISBN 0 8305 0085 5 in German Ganzer Christian 2001 Die Karpato Ukraine 1938 39 Spielball im internationalen Interessenkonflikt am Vorabend des Zweiten Weltkrieges Hamburg Die Ostreihe Neue Folge Heft 12 in German Kotowski Albert S 2001 Ukrainisches Piemont Die Karpartenukraine am Vorabend des Zweiten Weltkrieges in Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas 49 Heft 1 S 67 95 Krofta Kamil 1934 Carpathian Ruthenia and the Czechoslovak Republic ISBN B0007JY0OG Magocsi Paul R 1973 An Historiographical Guide to Subcarpathian Rus PDF Austrian History Yearbook 9 201 265 doi 10 1017 S006723780001910X S2CID 144778333 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 12 05 Retrieved 2019 03 19 Magocsi Paul R 1975 The Ruthenian Decision to Unite with Czechoslovakia PDF Slavic Review 34 2 360 381 doi 10 2307 2495193 JSTOR 2495193 S2CID 155615547 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 04 28 Retrieved 2019 03 19 Magocsi Paul R 1978 The Shaping of a National Identity Subcarpathian Rus 1848 1948 Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674805798 Magocsi Paul R 1983 Galicia A Historical Survey and Bibliographic Guide Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 9780802024824 Magocsi Paul R 1988 Carpatho Rusyn Studies An Annotated Bibliography Vol 1 New York Garland ISBN 9780824012144 Magocsi Paul R The Rusyn Ukrainians Of Czechoslovakia Magocsi Paul R Pop Ivan Encyclopedia of Rusyn history and culture Univ of Toronto Press 2005 ISBN 0 8020 3566 3 in Czech Pop Ivan Dejiny Podkarpatske Rusi v datech Libri Praha 2005 ISBN 80 7277 237 6 in Ukrainian Rosokha Stepan 1949 Parliament of Carpatho Ukraine Cojm Karpatskoyi Ukrayini Ukrainian National Publishing Co Ltd for Culture and Knowledge Kultura j ocvita Shandor Vincent 1997 Carpatho Ukraine in the Twentieth Century A Political and Legal History Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press for the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute ISBN 0 916458 86 5 Stercho Peter 1959 Carpatho Ukraine in International Affairs 1938 1939 Notre Dame Subtelny Orest 3rd edition 2000 Ukraine A History University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 8390 0 Wilson Andrew 2nd edition 2002 The Ukrainians Unexpected Nation Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09309 8 Winch Michael 1973 Republic for a day An eye witness account of the Carpatho Ukraine incident University Microfilms ISBN B0006W7NUW Nykolaj Beskyd Who Was Aleksander Duchnovyc Narodny Novynky Presov Slovakia No 17 April 28 1993 Translated by John E Timo Paul Robert Magocsi 1995 The Carpatho Rusyns Nation Building or Nation Destroying Lemkos Poles and Ukrainians in Contemporary Poland Polish Review XXXV 3 4 New York 1990 John Slivka The History of the Greek Rite Gatholics in Pannonia Hungary Czechoslovakia and Podkarpatska Rus 863 1949 1974 Ivan Panjkevic 1938 Ukrayinski Govori Pidkarpatskoyi Rusi i Sumezhnih Oblastej Prague Aleksej L Petrov 1998 Medieval Carpathian Rus New York External links EditThe Carpatho Rusyn knowledge base Paul R Magocsi Carpatho Rusyns brochure published by The Carpatho Rusyn Research Center 1995 Carpatho Ukraine Encyclopedia of Ukraine Diet of Carpatho Ukraine Encyclopedia of Ukraine Trans Carpathia in UkrStor com the web library of historical documents amp publicism about Malorussia Ukraine Ethnic structure of the population on the present territory of Transcarpathia 1880 1989 in Russian and Ukrainian Mykola Vehesh The greatness and the tragedy of Carpathian Ukraine Zerkalo Nedeli 10 485 13 19 March 2004 in Russian and in Ukrainian permanent dead link Zakarpattia ru in Ukrainian in Hungarian Karpatinfo Carpathian Ruthenia photographs and information Ruthenia Spearhead Toward the West by Senator Charles J Hokky Former Member of the Czechoslovakian Parliament Coordinates 48 20 N 23 14 E 48 333 N 23 233 E 48 333 23 233 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carpathian Ruthenia amp oldid 1134280383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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