This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bandurist (talk | contribs) at 11:36, 23 March 2010 (Undid revision 350179096 by 195.225.130.130 (talk)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 11:36, 23 March 2010 by Bandurist (talk | contribs) (Undid revision 350179096 by 195.225.130.130 (talk))(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) For the modern subdivision of Ukraine, see Administrative divisions of Ukraine. For a modern political party in Ukraine and its parliamentory faction called "Regions of Ukraine", see Party of Regions.A list of the various regions of Ukraine and/or inhabited by Ukrainians and their ancestors throughout history.
Traditional regions
The traditional names of the regions of Ukraine are important geographic, historical, and ethnographic identifiers.
- Volhynia (Volyn’)
- Galicia (Halychyna)
- Podolia (Podillya)
- Sloboda Ukraine (Slobozhanshchyna, "free land")
- Zaporizhzhia ("beyond the rapids" of the Dnieper)
- Donbass ("Donets Basin")
- Black Sea Lands
- Crimea (Krym)
In the Carpathian Mountains (see also Ruthenia, Rusyns):
- Lemko region (Lemkivshchyna)
- Boiko region (Boikivshchyna)
- Hutsul region (Hutsul’shchyna)
- Transcarpathia (Zakarpattia)
Regions historically inhabited by Ukrainians (mostly with other nations), which are partly or wholly outside modern Ukraine:
- San River region
- Chełm (Kholm) region
- Podlachia (Podlasie)
- Polesie (Polissia)
- Bukovina (Bukovyna)
- Southern Basarabia (Budjak/Southern Bessarabia)
- Kuban
Other historic regions and names
- Little Russia (Template:Lang-ru), the name applied to Ukraine under the Russian Empire. Also, for historic reasons (note: left-bank and right bank refer to the bank of the river when facing downstream):
- Right-bank Ukraine (Pravoberezhna Ukrayina or Pravoberezhzhia), west of the Dnieper river
- Left-bank Ukraine (Livoberezhna Ukrayina or Livoberezhzhia), east of the Dnieper.
- New Russia (Template:Lang-ru), colony of the Russian Empire in the depopulated steppes, in the south-east of modern-day Ukraine (Dikoye Pole, "the wild field")
Historical Ukrainian states
Main article: History of Ukraine- Kievan Rus' (a state of Early East Slavs, c. 880–thirteenth century);
- Galicia-Volhynia (Halych-Volyn’, 13th–fourteenth centuries)
- Zaporozhian Host (1555–1654)
- Cossack Hetmanate (1654–1783)
- Army of Lower Zaporozhia (Old Sich, 1654–1709)
- Free Lands of the Zaporozhian Host (New Sich, 1734–1775)
- Central Rada of the Ukrainian People's Republic (1917–1918)
- Hetmanate of the Ukrainian State (1918)
- West Ukrainian People's Republic (1918–1919)
- Directorate of the Ukrainian People's Republic (1918–1920)
- Galician Soviet Socialist Republic (1920
- Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1919–1991)
- Carpatho-Ukraine (1939)
References
- Paul Robert Magosci, Ukraine: A Historical Atlas, 1985. University of Toronto Press, Toronto. ISBN 0-8020-3428-4
Historical regions in present-day Ukraine | |
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Geographical regions | |
States and tribes of classical antiquity and the Early Middle Ages | |
Principalities of Kyivan Rus' | |
Post-Mongol era regions | |
Polish–Lithuanian regions | |
Ottoman provinces | |
Cossack regions | |
Imperial Russian regions |
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Austro-Hungarian provinces | |
20th-century regions and states |
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Ethno-Ukrainian regions abroad |