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Ruthenia

Ruthenia[a] is an exonym, originally used in Medieval Latin to refer to the land of the Kyivan Rus',[1] later corresponding just to what is now known as Belarus and Ukraine.

Inclusion of Ruthenia in a title was first practiced by the king of Galicia-Volhynia (a predecessor of modern-day Ukraine) in the last period of the Rus confederation, when Roman of Halych was also Prince of Kyiv, and throughout the succession crisis after his death. It continued to be used by leaders of Galicia-Volhynia who, for geographic and personal reasons, considered themselves to be the closest to Kyiv of all pretenders. This changed a few decades later, when Kyiv was seized by the Mongols, and the boyars of Galicia-Volhynia also found themselves without a suitable heir and chose a Lithuanian duke, with him also taking on the title of the ruler of Ruthenia. With the dynasty's final expiration in the 1300s, a war of succession left the title to the Polish king Casimir the Great. With time, Ruthenia took on a more nuanced meaning. Contrasting with easterly Muscovy (modern-day Russia) which continued its predecessors' rivalry with westerly Ruthenian principalities (such as Galicia-Volhynia earlier), the definition narrowed to stand for the primarily East Slavic and Orthodox eastern regions of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, later the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In short, the Ruthenian land came to correspond to land between Poland-proper and Muscovy, i.e. what is now Belarus and Ukraine.[2][3][4][5]

The Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria (1772–1918), corresponding to parts of Eastern Poland and Western Ukraine, was referred to as Ruthenia and its people as Ruthenians.[4] As a result of a Ukrainian national identity gradually dominating over much of present-day Ukraine in the 20th century, the endonym Rusyn is now mostly used among a minority of peoples on the territory of the Carpathian Mountains, including Carpathian Ruthenia.[6]

Etymology edit

The word Ruthenia originated as a Latin designation of the region its people called Rus'. During the Middle Ages, writers in English and other Western European languages applied the term to lands inhabited by Eastern Slavs.[7][8] Russia itself was called Great Ruthenia or White Ruthenia until the end of the 17th century.[9] "Rusia or Ruthenia" appears in the 1520 Latin treatise Mores, leges et ritus omnium gentium, per Ioannem Boëmum, Aubanum, Teutonicum ex multis clarissimis rerum scriptoribus collecti by Johann Boemus. In the chapter De Rusia sive Ruthenia, et recentibus Rusianorum moribus ("About Rus', or Ruthenia, and modern customs of the Rus'"), Boemus tells of a country extending from the Baltic Sea to the Caspian Sea and from the Don River to the northern ocean. It is a source of beeswax, its forests harbor many animals with valuable fur, and the capital city Moscow (Moscovia), named after the Moskva River (Moscum amnem), is 14 miles in circumference.[10][11] Danish diplomat Jacob Ulfeldt, who traveled to Russia in 1578 to meet with Tsar Ivan IV, titled his posthumously (1608) published memoir Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum[12] ("Voyage to Ruthenia").[13]

Early Middle Ages edit

 
Ruthenian lion, which was used as a representative Coat of arms of Ruthenia during the Council of Constance in the 15th century

European manuscripts dating from the 11th century used the name Ruthenia to describe Rus',[citation needed] the wider area occupied by the early Rus' (commonly referred to as Kievan Rus'). This term was also used to refer to the Slavs of the island of Rügen[14] or to other Baltic Slavs, whom 12th-century chroniclers portrayed as fierce pirate pagans—even though Kievan Rus' had converted to Christianity by the 10th century:[15][need quotation to verify] Eupraxia, the daughter of Rutenorum rex Vsevolod I of Kiev, had married the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV in 1089.[16] After the devastating Mongolian occupation of the main part of Ruthenia which began in the 13th century, western Ruthenian principalities became incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, after which the state became called the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Ruthenia.[17][18] The Polish Kingdom also took the title King of Ruthenia[19] when it annexed Galicia. These titles were merged when the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was formed. A small part of Rus' (Transcarpathia, now mainly a part of Zakarpattia Oblast in present-day Ukraine), became subordinated to the Kingdom of Hungary in the 11th century.[20] The Kings of Hungary continued using the title "King of Galicia and Lodomeria" until 1918.[21]

Late Middle Ages edit

By the 15th century, the Moscow principality had established its sovereignty over a large portion of Ruthenian territory and began to fight with Lithuania over the remaining Ruthenian lands.[22][23] In 1547, the Moscow principality adopted the title of The Great Principat of Moscow and Tsardom of the Whole Rus and claimed sovereignty over "all the Rus'" — acts not recognized by its neighbour Poland.[24] The Muscovy population was Eastern Orthodox and preferred to use the Greek transliteration Rossiya (Ῥωσία)[25] rather than the Latin "Ruthenia".

In the 14th century, the southern territories of Rus', including the principalities of Galicia–Volhynia and Kiev, became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, which in 1384 united with Catholic Poland in a union which became the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1569. Due to their usage of the Latin script rather than the Cyrillic script, they were usually denoted by the Latin name Ruthenia. Other spellings were also used in Latin, English, and other languages during this period.[citation needed] Contemporaneously, the Ruthenian Voivodeship was established in the territory of Galicia-Volhynia and existed until the 18th century.

These southern territories include:

The Russian Tsardom was officially called Velikoye Knyazhestvo Moskovskoye (Великое Княжество Московское), the Grand Duchy of Moscow, until 1547, although Ivan III (1440–1505, r. 1462–1505) had earlier borne the title "Great Tsar of All Russia".[26]

Early modern period edit

During the early modern period, the term Ruthenia started to be mostly associated with the Ruthenian lands of the Polish Crown and the Cossack Hetmanate. Bohdan Khmelnytsky declared himself the ruler of the Ruthenian state to the Polish representative Adam Kysil in February 1649.[27][failed verification]

The Grand Principality of Ruthenia was the project name of the Cossack Hetmanate integrated into the Polish–Lithuanian–Ruthenian Commonwealth.[citation needed]

Modern period edit

Ukraine edit

The use of the term Rus/Russia in the lands of Rus' survived longer as a name used by Ukrainians for Ukraine.[citation needed] When the Austrian monarchy made the vassal state of Galicia–Lodomeria into a province in 1772, Habsburg officials realized that the local East Slavic people were distinct from both Poles and Russians and still called themselves Rus. This was true until the empire fell in 1918.[28]

In the 1880s through the first decade of the 20th century, the popularity of the ethnonym Ukrainian spread, and the term Ukraine became a substitute for Malaya Rus' among the Ukrainian population of the empire. In the course of time, the term Rus became restricted to western parts of present-day Ukraine (Galicia/Halych, Carpathian Ruthenia), an area where Ukrainian nationalism competed with Galician Russophilia.[29] By the early 20th century, the term Ukraine had mostly replaced Malorussia in those lands, and by the mid-1920s in the Ukrainian diaspora in North America as well.[citation needed]

Rusyn (the Ruthenian) has been an official self-identification of the Rus' population in Poland (and also in Czechoslovakia). Until 1939, for many Ruthenians and Poles, the word Ukrainiec (Ukrainian) meant a person involved in or friendly to a nationalist movement.[30]

Modern Ruthenia edit

 
Map of the areas claimed and controlled by the Carpathian Ruthenia, the Lemko Republic and the West Ukrainian People's Republic in 1918
 
Autonomous Subcarpathian Ruthenia and independent Carpatho-Ukraine 1938–1939.

After 1918, the name Ruthenia became narrowed to the area south of the Carpathian Mountains in the Kingdom of Hungary, also called Carpathian Ruthenia (Ukrainian: карпатська Русь, romanizedkarpatska Rus, including the cities of Mukachevo, Uzhhorod, and Prešov) and populated by Carpatho-Ruthenians, a group of East Slavic highlanders. While Galician Ruthenians considered themselves Ukrainians, the Carpatho-Ruthenians were the last East Slavic people who kept the historical name (Ruthen is a Latin form of the Slavic rusyn). Today, the term Rusyn is used to describe the ethnicity and language of Ruthenians, who are not compelled to adopt the Ukrainian national identity.

Carpathian Ruthenia (Hungarian: Kárpátalja, Ukrainian: Закарпаття, romanizedZakarpattia) became part of the newly founded Hungarian Kingdom in 1000. In May 1919, it was incorporated with nominal autonomy into the provisional Czechoslovak state as Subcarpathian Rus'. Since then, Ruthenian people have been divided into three orientations: Russophiles, who saw Ruthenians as part of the Russian nation; Ukrainophiles, who like their Galician counterparts across the Carpathian Mountains considered Ruthenians part of the Ukrainian nation; and Ruthenophiles, who claimed that Carpatho-Ruthenians were a separate nation and who wanted to develop a native Rusyn language and culture.[31][verification needed]

In 1938, under the Nazi regime in Germany, there were calls in the German press for the independence of a greater Ukraine, which would include Ruthenia, parts of Hungary, the Polish Southeast including Lviv, the Crimea, and Ukraine, including Kyiv and Kharkiv. (These calls were described in the French and Spanish press as "troublemaking".)[32]

On 15 March 1939, the Ukrainophile president of Carpatho-Ruthenia, Avhustyn Voloshyn, declared its independence as Carpatho-Ukraine. On the same day, regular troops of the Royal Hungarian Army occupied and annexed the region. In 1944 the Soviet Army occupied the territory, and in 1945 it was annexed to the Ukrainian SSR. Rusyns were not an officially recognized ethnic group in the USSR, as the Soviet government considered them to be Ukrainian.

A Rusyn minority remained, after World War II, in eastern Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia). According to critics, the Ruthenians rapidly became Slovakized.[33] In 1995 the Ruthenian written language became standardized.[34]

Following Ukrainian independence and dissolution of the Soviet Union (1990–91), the official position of the government and some Ukrainian politicians has been that the Rusyns are an integral part of the Ukrainian nation. Some of the population of Zakarpattia Oblast of Ukraine have identified as Rusyn (or Boyko, Hutsul, Lemko etc) first and foremost; a subset of this second group has, nevertheless, considered Rusyns to be part of a broader Ukrainian national identity.

Ruthenium edit

The Baltic German naturalist and chemist Karl Ernst Claus, member of the Russian Academy of Science, was born in 1796 in Dorpat (Tartu), then in the Governorate of Livonia of the Russian Empire, now in Estonia. In 1844, he isolated the element ruthenium from platinum ore found in the Ural Mountains and named it after Ruthenia, which was meant to be the Latin name for Russia.[35]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ /rˈθniə/; Latin: Ruthenia or Rutenia, Ukrainian: Рутенія, romanizedRutenia or Русь, Rus, Polish: Ruś, Belarusian: Рутэнія, Русь, Russian: Рутения, Русь

References edit

  1. ^ Mägi, Marika (2018). In Austrvegr: the role of the Eastern Baltic in Viking Age communication across the Baltic Sea. Leiden: Brill. p. 166. ISBN 9789004363816.
  2. ^ Gasparov, Boris; Raevsky-Hughes, Olga (July 2021). California Slavic Studies, Volume XVI: Slavic Culture in the Middle Ages. Univ of California Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-0-520-30918-0.
  3. ^ Nazarenko, Aleksandr Vasilevich (2001). [The name Rus' in the old tradition of Western European language (XI-XII centuries)]. Древняя Русь на международных путях: междисциплинарные очерки культурных, торговых, политических связей IX-XII веков [Old Rus' on international routes: Interdisciplinary Essays on cultural, trade, and political ties in the 9th-12th centuries] (DJVU) (in Russian). Languages of the Rus' culture. pp. 40, 42–45, 49–50. ISBN 978-5-7859-0085-1. Archived from the original on 14 August 2011.
  4. ^ a b Magocsi, Paul R. (2010). A History of Ukraine: The Land and Its Peoples. University of Toronto Press. p. 73. ISBN 978-1-4426-1021-7. Retrieved 14 February 2017. Besides the Greco-Byzantine term Rosia to describe Rus', Latin documents used several related terms – Ruscia, Russia, Ruzzia – for Kievan Rus' as a whole. Subsequently, the terms Ruteni and Rutheni were used to describe Ukrainian and Belarusan Eastern Christians (especially members of the Uniate, later Greek Catholic, Church) residing in the old Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The German, French, and English versions of those terms – Ruthenen, Ruthène, Ruthenian – generally were applied only to the inhabitants of Austrian Galicia and Bukovina of Hungarian Transcarpathia.
  5. ^ Handbook of language and ethnic identity. Vol. 2: The success-failure continuum in language and ethnic identity efforts, volume 2. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press. 2011. p. 384. ISBN 978-0195392456.
  6. ^ Magocsi, Paul Robert (2015). With their backs to the mountains: a history of Carpathian Rus' and Carpatho-Rusyns. Budapest: Central European University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-6155053399.
  7. ^ Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2011. Rvcia hatte Rutenia and is a prouynce of Messia (J. Trevisa, 1398).
  8. ^ Armstrong, John Alexander (1982). Nations Before Nationalism. University of North Carolina Press (published 2017). p. 228. ISBN 9781469620725. Retrieved 7 July 2019. From the linguistic standpoint, the results of this catastrophe [the Mongol invasion] somewhat resemble the collapse of the Roman empire for the latin-speaking peoples. Like the great 'Romania' of the Western Middle Ages, there was a great 'Ruthenia' in which common linguistic origin and some measure of mutual comprehensibility was assumed.
  9. ^ Флоря, Борис (2017). "О некоторых особенностях развития этнического самосознания восточных славян в эпоху средневековья – раннего Нового времени". In Флоря, Борис; Миллер, Алексей; Репринцев, В. (eds.). Russia – Ukraine: a history of mutual relations (collection) Россия – Украина. История взаимоотношений (сборник) [Rossiya – Ukraina. Istoriya vzaimootnosheniy (sbornik)] (in Russian). Moscow: Shkola YAzyki russkoi kultury. pp. 9–28. ISBN 9785457502383. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  10. ^ Мыльников, Александр (1999). Картина славянского мира: взгляд из Восточной Европы: Представления об этнической номинации и этничности XVI-начала XVIII века. Saint Petersburg: Петербургское востоковедение. pp. 129–130. ISBN 5-85803-117-X.
  11. ^ Сынкова, Ірына (2007). "Ёган Баэмус і яго кніга "Норавы, законы і звычаі ўсіх народаў"". Беларускі Гістарычны Агляд. 14 (1–2).
  12. ^ Ulfeldt, Jacob (1608). Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum, in quo de Moscovitarum Regione, Moribus, Religione, gubernatione, & Aula Imperatoria quo potuit compendio & eleganter exequitur [...] (in Latin) (1 ed.). Frankfurt. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  13. ^ Kasinec, Edward; Davis, Robert H. (2006). "The Imagery of Early Anglo-Russian Relations". In Dmitrieva, Ol'ga; Abramova, Natalya (eds.). Britannia & Muscovy: English Silver at the Court of the Tsars. Yale University Press. p. 261. ISBN 9780300116786. Retrieved 7 July 2019. [...] [Jacob Ulfeldt's] Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum ['Ruthenian Journey'] (Frankfurt, 1608 [...]) [...].
  14. ^ "The Life of Otto, Apostle of Pomerania, 1060-1139". Society for promoting Christian knowledge. 28 July 1920 – via Google Books.
  15. ^ Paul, Andrew (2015). "The Roxolani from Rügen: Nikolaus Marshalk's chronicle as an example of medieval tradition to associate the Rügen's Slavs with the Slavic Rus". The Historical Format. 1: 5–30.
  16. ^ Annales Augustani. 1839. p. 133.
  17. ^ Parker, William Henry (28 July 1969). "An Historical Geography of Russia". Aldine Publishing Company – via Google Books.
  18. ^ Kunitz, Joshua (28 July 1947). "Russia, the Giant that Came Last". Dodd, Mead – via Google Books.
  19. ^ . POZNANIAE. SUMPTIBUS BIBLIOTHECAE KORNICENSIS. TYPIS J. I. KRASZEWSKI (Dr. W. ŁEBIŃSKI). 1879.
  20. ^ Magocsi 1996, p. 385.
  21. ^ Francis Dvornik (1962). The Slavs in European History and Civilization. Rutgers University Press. p. 214. ISBN 9780813507996.
  22. ^ Grand Principality of Moscow Britannica
  23. ^ Ivan III Britannica
  24. ^ Dariusz Kupisz, Psków 1581–1582, Warszawa 2006, s. 55–201.
  25. ^ T. Kamusella (16 December 2008). The Politics of Language and Nationalism in Modern Central Europe. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 164–165. ISBN 978-0-230-58347-4.
  26. ^ Trepanier, Lee (2010). Political Symbols in Russian History: Church, State, and the Quest for Order and Justice. Lexington Books. pp. 38–39, 60. ISBN 9780739117897.
  27. ^ "Khmelnychyna". Izbornyk - History of Ukraine IX-XVIII centuries. Sources and Interpretations (in Ukrainian). Encyclopedia of Ukrainian Studies. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
  28. ^ Vernadsky, George. A History of Russia (1943–69). Pp. xix, 413. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-00247-5.
  29. ^ Magocsi 1996, p. 408-409,444:"Throughout 1848, the Austrian government gave its support to the Ukrainians, both to their efforts to obtain recognition as a nationality and to their attempts to achieve political and cultural rights. In return, the Ukrainian leadership turned a blind eye to the political reaction and repressive measures that at the same time were being carried out by Habsburg authorities against certain other peoples in the empire" (pp. 408–409) ... "Most important from the standpoint of the debate as to the proper national orientation was the Austrian government's decision in 1893 to recognize the vernacular Ukrainian (Rusyn) language as the standard for instructional purposes. As a result of this decision, the Old Ruthenian and Russophile orientations were effectively eliminated from the all-important educational system" (pp. 444)
  30. ^ Robert Potocki, Polityka państwa polskiego wobec zagadnienia ukraińskiego w latach 1930–1939, Lublin 2003, wyd. Instytut Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej, ISBN 83-917615-4-1, s. 45.
  31. ^ Gabor, Madame (Autumn 1938). "Ruthenia". The Ashridge Journal. 35: 27–39.
  32. ^ Fabra (18 December 1938). "ALEMANIA ESTA CREANDO UN NUEVOFOCO DE PERTURBACIONES EN UCRAINA". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). p. 7. Retrieved 1 April 2022. «Le Figaro» [...] la creación de una Ucraina independiente [...] un mapa de los territorios de raza ucrainiana en que se incluye a la Rutenia, una parte de Hungría, el sureste de Polonia con la ciudad de Lwow, y toda la Ucraina soviética, con Crimea y las ciudades de Kiev y Jarkov
  33. ^ "The Rusyn Homeland Fund". carpatho-rusyn.org. 1998. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  34. ^ Paul Robert Magocsi: A new Slavic language is born, in: Revue des études slaves, Tome 67, fascicule 1, 1995, pp. 238–240.
  35. ^ Pitchkov, V. N. (1996). "The Discovery of Ruthenium". Platinum Metals Review. 40 (4): 181–188.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Ruthenians" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Why is the "Russia" White? - a book review of Ales Biely's Chronicle of Ruthenia Alba

ruthenia, other, uses, disambiguation, exonym, originally, used, medieval, latin, refer, land, kyivan, later, corresponding, just, what, known, belarus, ukraine, inclusion, title, first, practiced, king, galicia, volhynia, predecessor, modern, ukraine, last, p. For other uses see Ruthenia disambiguation Ruthenia a is an exonym originally used in Medieval Latin to refer to the land of the Kyivan Rus 1 later corresponding just to what is now known as Belarus and Ukraine Inclusion of Ruthenia in a title was first practiced by the king of Galicia Volhynia a predecessor of modern day Ukraine in the last period of the Rus confederation when Roman of Halych was also Prince of Kyiv and throughout the succession crisis after his death It continued to be used by leaders of Galicia Volhynia who for geographic and personal reasons considered themselves to be the closest to Kyiv of all pretenders This changed a few decades later when Kyiv was seized by the Mongols and the boyars of Galicia Volhynia also found themselves without a suitable heir and chose a Lithuanian duke with him also taking on the title of the ruler of Ruthenia With the dynasty s final expiration in the 1300s a war of succession left the title to the Polish king Casimir the Great With time Ruthenia took on a more nuanced meaning Contrasting with easterly Muscovy modern day Russia which continued its predecessors rivalry with westerly Ruthenian principalities such as Galicia Volhynia earlier the definition narrowed to stand for the primarily East Slavic and Orthodox eastern regions of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania later the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth In short the Ruthenian land came to correspond to land between Poland proper and Muscovy i e what is now Belarus and Ukraine 2 3 4 5 The Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria 1772 1918 corresponding to parts of Eastern Poland and Western Ukraine was referred to as Ruthenia and its people as Ruthenians 4 As a result of a Ukrainian national identity gradually dominating over much of present day Ukraine in the 20th century the endonym Rusyn is now mostly used among a minority of peoples on the territory of the Carpathian Mountains including Carpathian Ruthenia 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Early Middle Ages 3 Late Middle Ages 4 Early modern period 5 Modern period 5 1 Ukraine 5 2 Modern Ruthenia 6 Ruthenium 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Sources 11 External linksEtymology editFurther information Names of Rusʹ Russia and Ruthenia The word Ruthenia originated as a Latin designation of the region its people called Rus During the Middle Ages writers in English and other Western European languages applied the term to lands inhabited by Eastern Slavs 7 8 Russia itself was called Great Ruthenia or White Ruthenia until the end of the 17th century 9 Rusia or Ruthenia appears in the 1520 Latin treatise Mores leges et ritus omnium gentium per Ioannem Boemum Aubanum Teutonicum ex multis clarissimis rerum scriptoribus collecti by Johann Boemus In the chapter De Rusia sive Ruthenia et recentibus Rusianorum moribus About Rus or Ruthenia and modern customs of the Rus Boemus tells of a country extending from the Baltic Sea to the Caspian Sea and from the Don River to the northern ocean It is a source of beeswax its forests harbor many animals with valuable fur and the capital city Moscow Moscovia named after the Moskva River Moscum amnem is 14 miles in circumference 10 11 Danish diplomat Jacob Ulfeldt who traveled to Russia in 1578 to meet with Tsar Ivan IV titled his posthumously 1608 published memoir Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum 12 Voyage to Ruthenia 13 Early Middle Ages edit nbsp Ruthenian lion which was used as a representative Coat of arms of Ruthenia during the Council of Constance in the 15th centuryEuropean manuscripts dating from the 11th century used the name Ruthenia to describe Rus citation needed the wider area occupied by the early Rus commonly referred to as Kievan Rus This term was also used to refer to the Slavs of the island of Rugen 14 or to other Baltic Slavs whom 12th century chroniclers portrayed as fierce pirate pagans even though Kievan Rus had converted to Christianity by the 10th century 15 need quotation to verify Eupraxia the daughter of Rutenorum rex Vsevolod I of Kiev had married the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV in 1089 16 After the devastating Mongolian occupation of the main part of Ruthenia which began in the 13th century western Ruthenian principalities became incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania after which the state became called the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Ruthenia 17 18 The Polish Kingdom also took the title King of Ruthenia 19 when it annexed Galicia These titles were merged when the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was formed A small part of Rus Transcarpathia now mainly a part of Zakarpattia Oblast in present day Ukraine became subordinated to the Kingdom of Hungary in the 11th century 20 The Kings of Hungary continued using the title King of Galicia and Lodomeria until 1918 21 Late Middle Ages editBy the 15th century the Moscow principality had established its sovereignty over a large portion of Ruthenian territory and began to fight with Lithuania over the remaining Ruthenian lands 22 23 In 1547 the Moscow principality adopted the title of The Great Principat of Moscow and Tsardom of the Whole Rus and claimed sovereignty over all the Rus acts not recognized by its neighbour Poland 24 The Muscovy population was Eastern Orthodox and preferred to use the Greek transliteration Rossiya Ῥwsia 25 rather than the Latin Ruthenia In the 14th century the southern territories of Rus including the principalities of Galicia Volhynia and Kiev became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania which in 1384 united with Catholic Poland in a union which became the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1569 Due to their usage of the Latin script rather than the Cyrillic script they were usually denoted by the Latin name Ruthenia Other spellings were also used in Latin English and other languages during this period citation needed Contemporaneously the Ruthenian Voivodeship was established in the territory of Galicia Volhynia and existed until the 18th century These southern territories include Galicia Volhynia or the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia Ukrainian Galich Volin romanized Halych Volyn or Galicko Volinske korolivstvo Halytsko Volynske korolivstvo Polish Rus Halicko Wolynska or Ksiestwo halicko wolynskie Galicia Ukrainian Galich romanized Halych or Galicko Volinska Rus Halytsko Volynska Rus Polish Rus Halicka White Ruthenia eastern part of modern Belarus Belarusian Belaya Rus romanized Belaia Rus Polish Rus Biala Black Ruthenia a western part of modern Belarus Belarusian Chornaya Rus romanized Chornaia Rus Polish Rus Czarna Galicia or Red Ruthenia western Ukraine and southeast Poland Ukrainian Chervona Rus romanized Chervona Rus Polish Rus Czerwona Carpathian Ruthenia Ukrainian Karpatska Rus romanized Karpatska Rus Polish Rus Podkarpacka lit Subcarpathian Ruthenia The Russian Tsardom was officially called Velikoye Knyazhestvo Moskovskoye Velikoe Knyazhestvo Moskovskoe the Grand Duchy of Moscow until 1547 although Ivan III 1440 1505 r 1462 1505 had earlier borne the title Great Tsar of All Russia 26 Early modern period editDuring the early modern period the term Ruthenia started to be mostly associated with the Ruthenian lands of the Polish Crown and the Cossack Hetmanate Bohdan Khmelnytsky declared himself the ruler of the Ruthenian state to the Polish representative Adam Kysil in February 1649 27 failed verification The Grand Principality of Ruthenia was the project name of the Cossack Hetmanate integrated into the Polish Lithuanian Ruthenian Commonwealth citation needed Modern period editUkraine edit The use of the term Rus Russia in the lands of Rus survived longer as a name used by Ukrainians for Ukraine citation needed When the Austrian monarchy made the vassal state of Galicia Lodomeria into a province in 1772 Habsburg officials realized that the local East Slavic people were distinct from both Poles and Russians and still called themselves Rus This was true until the empire fell in 1918 28 In the 1880s through the first decade of the 20th century the popularity of the ethnonym Ukrainian spread and the term Ukraine became a substitute for Malaya Rus among the Ukrainian population of the empire In the course of time the term Rus became restricted to western parts of present day Ukraine Galicia Halych Carpathian Ruthenia an area where Ukrainian nationalism competed with Galician Russophilia 29 By the early 20th century the term Ukraine had mostly replaced Malorussia in those lands and by the mid 1920s in the Ukrainian diaspora in North America as well citation needed Rusyn the Ruthenian has been an official self identification of the Rus population in Poland and also in Czechoslovakia Until 1939 for many Ruthenians and Poles the word Ukrainiec Ukrainian meant a person involved in or friendly to a nationalist movement 30 Modern Ruthenia edit Further information Rusyns nbsp Map of the areas claimed and controlled by the Carpathian Ruthenia the Lemko Republic and the West Ukrainian People s Republic in 1918 nbsp Autonomous Subcarpathian Ruthenia and independent Carpatho Ukraine 1938 1939 After 1918 the name Ruthenia became narrowed to the area south of the Carpathian Mountains in the Kingdom of Hungary also called Carpathian Ruthenia Ukrainian karpatska Rus romanized karpatska Rus including the cities of Mukachevo Uzhhorod and Presov and populated by Carpatho Ruthenians a group of East Slavic highlanders While Galician Ruthenians considered themselves Ukrainians the Carpatho Ruthenians were the last East Slavic people who kept the historical name Ruthen is a Latin form of the Slavic rusyn Today the term Rusyn is used to describe the ethnicity and language of Ruthenians who are not compelled to adopt the Ukrainian national identity Carpathian Ruthenia Hungarian Karpatalja Ukrainian Zakarpattya romanized Zakarpattia became part of the newly founded Hungarian Kingdom in 1000 In May 1919 it was incorporated with nominal autonomy into the provisional Czechoslovak state as Subcarpathian Rus Since then Ruthenian people have been divided into three orientations Russophiles who saw Ruthenians as part of the Russian nation Ukrainophiles who like their Galician counterparts across the Carpathian Mountains considered Ruthenians part of the Ukrainian nation and Ruthenophiles who claimed that Carpatho Ruthenians were a separate nation and who wanted to develop a native Rusyn language and culture 31 verification needed In 1938 under the Nazi regime in Germany there were calls in the German press for the independence of a greater Ukraine which would include Ruthenia parts of Hungary the Polish Southeast including Lviv the Crimea and Ukraine including Kyiv and Kharkiv These calls were described in the French and Spanish press as troublemaking 32 On 15 March 1939 the Ukrainophile president of Carpatho Ruthenia Avhustyn Voloshyn declared its independence as Carpatho Ukraine On the same day regular troops of the Royal Hungarian Army occupied and annexed the region In 1944 the Soviet Army occupied the territory and in 1945 it was annexed to the Ukrainian SSR Rusyns were not an officially recognized ethnic group in the USSR as the Soviet government considered them to be Ukrainian A Rusyn minority remained after World War II in eastern Czechoslovakia now Slovakia According to critics the Ruthenians rapidly became Slovakized 33 In 1995 the Ruthenian written language became standardized 34 Following Ukrainian independence and dissolution of the Soviet Union 1990 91 the official position of the government and some Ukrainian politicians has been that the Rusyns are an integral part of the Ukrainian nation Some of the population of Zakarpattia Oblast of Ukraine have identified as Rusyn or Boyko Hutsul Lemko etc first and foremost a subset of this second group has nevertheless considered Rusyns to be part of a broader Ukrainian national identity Ruthenium editThe Baltic German naturalist and chemist Karl Ernst Claus member of the Russian Academy of Science was born in 1796 in Dorpat Tartu then in the Governorate of Livonia of the Russian Empire now in Estonia In 1844 he isolated the element ruthenium from platinum ore found in the Ural Mountains and named it after Ruthenia which was meant to be the Latin name for Russia 35 Gallery edit nbsp Principalities of Kievan Rus 1054 1132 nbsp Kingdom of Ruthenia 13th 14th century nbsp Ruthenian Voivoideship 14th 18th century nbsp Grand Principality of Ruthenia shown in dark yellow 1658 project nbsp ruthenian languages and people mentioned in the linguistic and political map of Eastern Europe by Casimir Delamarre 1868 nbsp 1911 map of Austro Hungary showing ethnic Ruthenians in light green in eastern GaliciaSee also editGrand Principality of Ruthenia Ruthenian Voivodeship Names of Rusʹ Russia and Ruthenia Polish Lithuanian Ruthenian Commonwealth Kingdom of Ruthenia Ruthenian disambiguation Ruthenian nobility Polish National Government January Uprising LemkosNotes edit r uː ˈ 8 iː n i e Latin Ruthenia or Rutenia Ukrainian Ruteniya romanized Rutenia or Rus Rus Polish Rus Belarusian Ruteniya Rus Russian Ruteniya RusReferences edit Magi Marika 2018 In Austrvegr the role of the Eastern Baltic in Viking Age communication across the Baltic Sea Leiden Brill p 166 ISBN 9789004363816 Gasparov Boris Raevsky Hughes Olga July 2021 California Slavic Studies Volume XVI Slavic Culture in the Middle Ages Univ of California Press p 198 ISBN 978 0 520 30918 0 Nazarenko Aleksandr Vasilevich 2001 1 Imya Rus v drevnejshej zapadnoevropejskoj yazykovoj tradicii XI XII veka The name Rus in the old tradition of Western European language XI XII centuries Drevnyaya Rus na mezhdunarodnyh putyah mezhdisciplinarnye ocherki kulturnyh torgovyh politicheskih svyazej IX XII vekov Old Rus on international routes Interdisciplinary Essays on cultural trade and political ties in the 9th 12th centuries DJVU in Russian Languages of the Rus culture pp 40 42 45 49 50 ISBN 978 5 7859 0085 1 Archived from the original on 14 August 2011 a b Magocsi Paul R 2010 A History of Ukraine The Land and Its Peoples University of Toronto Press p 73 ISBN 978 1 4426 1021 7 Retrieved 14 February 2017 Besides the Greco Byzantine term Rosia to describe Rus Latin documents used several related terms Ruscia Russia Ruzzia for Kievan Rus as a whole Subsequently the terms Ruteni and Rutheni were used to describe Ukrainian and Belarusan Eastern Christians especially members of the Uniate later Greek Catholic Church residing in the old Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The German French and English versions of those terms Ruthenen Ruthene Ruthenian generally were applied only to the inhabitants of Austrian Galicia and Bukovina of Hungarian Transcarpathia Handbook of language and ethnic identity Vol 2 The success failure continuum in language and ethnic identity efforts volume 2 Oxford Oxford Univ Press 2011 p 384 ISBN 978 0195392456 Magocsi Paul Robert 2015 With their backs to the mountains a history of Carpathian Rus and Carpatho Rusyns Budapest Central European University Press p 3 ISBN 978 6155053399 Oxford English Dictionary Oxford University Press 2011 Rvcia hatte Rutenia and is a prouynce of Messia J Trevisa 1398 Armstrong John Alexander 1982 Nations Before Nationalism University of North Carolina Press published 2017 p 228 ISBN 9781469620725 Retrieved 7 July 2019 From the linguistic standpoint the results of this catastrophe the Mongol invasion somewhat resemble the collapse of the Roman empire for the latin speaking peoples Like the great Romania of the Western Middle Ages there was a great Ruthenia in which common linguistic origin and some measure of mutual comprehensibility was assumed Florya Boris 2017 O nekotoryh osobennostyah razvitiya etnicheskogo samosoznaniya vostochnyh slavyan v epohu srednevekovya rannego Novogo vremeni In Florya Boris Miller Aleksej Reprincev V eds Russia Ukraine a history of mutual relations collection Rossiya Ukraina Istoriya vzaimootnoshenij sbornik Rossiya Ukraina Istoriya vzaimootnosheniy sbornik in Russian Moscow Shkola YAzyki russkoi kultury pp 9 28 ISBN 9785457502383 Retrieved 23 October 2019 Mylnikov Aleksandr 1999 Kartina slavyanskogo mira vzglyad iz Vostochnoj Evropy Predstavleniya ob etnicheskoj nominacii i etnichnosti XVI nachala XVIII veka Saint Petersburg Peterburgskoe vostokovedenie pp 129 130 ISBN 5 85803 117 X Synkova Iryna 2007 Yogan Baemus i yago kniga Noravy zakony i zvychai ysih naroday Belaruski Gistarychny Aglyad 14 1 2 Ulfeldt Jacob 1608 Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum in quo de Moscovitarum Regione Moribus Religione gubernatione amp Aula Imperatoria quo potuit compendio amp eleganter exequitur in Latin 1 ed Frankfurt Retrieved 7 July 2019 Kasinec Edward Davis Robert H 2006 The Imagery of Early Anglo Russian Relations In Dmitrieva Ol ga Abramova Natalya eds Britannia amp Muscovy English Silver at the Court of the Tsars Yale University Press p 261 ISBN 9780300116786 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Jacob Ulfeldt s Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum Ruthenian Journey Frankfurt 1608 The Life of Otto Apostle of Pomerania 1060 1139 Society for promoting Christian knowledge 28 July 1920 via Google Books Paul Andrew 2015 The Roxolani from Rugen Nikolaus Marshalk s chronicle as an example of medieval tradition to associate the Rugen s Slavs with the Slavic Rus The Historical Format 1 5 30 Annales Augustani 1839 p 133 Parker William Henry 28 July 1969 An Historical Geography of Russia Aldine Publishing Company via Google Books Kunitz Joshua 28 July 1947 Russia the Giant that Came Last Dodd Mead via Google Books Document Nr 1340 CODEX DIPLOMATICUS MAIORIS POLONIA POZNANIAE SUMPTIBUS BIBLIOTHECAE KORNICENSIS TYPIS J I KRASZEWSKI Dr W LEBINSKI 1879 Magocsi 1996 p 385 Francis Dvornik 1962 The Slavs in European History and Civilization Rutgers University Press p 214 ISBN 9780813507996 Grand Principality of Moscow Britannica Ivan III Britannica Dariusz Kupisz Pskow 1581 1582 Warszawa 2006 s 55 201 T Kamusella 16 December 2008 The Politics of Language and Nationalism in Modern Central Europe Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 164 165 ISBN 978 0 230 58347 4 Trepanier Lee 2010 Political Symbols in Russian History Church State and the Quest for Order and Justice Lexington Books pp 38 39 60 ISBN 9780739117897 Khmelnychyna Izbornyk History of Ukraine IX XVIII centuries Sources and Interpretations in Ukrainian Encyclopedia of Ukrainian Studies Retrieved 25 January 2015 Vernadsky George A History of Russia 1943 69 Pp xix 413 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 00247 5 Magocsi 1996 p 408 409 444 Throughout 1848 the Austrian government gave its support to the Ukrainians both to their efforts to obtain recognition as a nationality and to their attempts to achieve political and cultural rights In return the Ukrainian leadership turned a blind eye to the political reaction and repressive measures that at the same time were being carried out by Habsburg authorities against certain other peoples in the empire pp 408 409 Most important from the standpoint of the debate as to the proper national orientation was the Austrian government s decision in 1893 to recognize the vernacular Ukrainian Rusyn language as the standard for instructional purposes As a result of this decision the Old Ruthenian and Russophile orientations were effectively eliminated from the all important educational system pp 444 Robert Potocki Polityka panstwa polskiego wobec zagadnienia ukrainskiego w latach 1930 1939 Lublin 2003 wyd Instytut Europy Srodkowo Wschodniej ISBN 83 917615 4 1 s 45 Gabor Madame Autumn 1938 Ruthenia The Ashridge Journal 35 27 39 Fabra 18 December 1938 ALEMANIA ESTA CREANDO UN NUEVOFOCO DE PERTURBACIONES EN UCRAINA La Vanguardia in Spanish p 7 Retrieved 1 April 2022 Le Figaro la creacion de una Ucraina independiente un mapa de los territorios de raza ucrainiana en que se incluye a la Rutenia una parte de Hungria el sureste de Polonia con la ciudad de Lwow y toda la Ucraina sovietica con Crimea y las ciudades de Kiev y Jarkov The Rusyn Homeland Fund carpatho rusyn org 1998 Retrieved 13 February 2017 Paul Robert Magocsi A new Slavic language is born in Revue des etudes slaves Tome 67 fascicule 1 1995 pp 238 240 Pitchkov V N 1996 The Discovery of Ruthenium Platinum Metals Review 40 4 181 188 Sources edit Norman Davies Europe A History New York Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0 06 097468 0 Magocsi Paul Robert 1995 The Rusyn Question Political Thought Magocsi Paul Robert 1996 A History of Ukraine Toronto University of Toronto Press p 385 ISBN 0 8020 0830 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ruthenia Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Ruthenians Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Why is the Russia White a book review of Ales Biely s Chronicle of Ruthenia Alba Ruthenia Spearhead Toward the West by Senator Charles J Hokky Former Member of the Czechoslovakian Parliament Book representing a Hungarian nationalist position Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruthenia amp oldid 1188647768, 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