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Topic: Ivan Vyhovsky


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
  Vyhovsky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Vyhovsky (d 1663) was vicegerent of the Kyiv fortress under the
Illia and Yurii Vyhovsky were exiled to Siberia in 1659.
In the early 20th century descendants of the Vyhovsky line lived in
www.encyclopediaofukraine.com /pages/V/Y/Vyhovsky.htm   (63 words)

  
 Ivan Vyhovsky - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ivan Vyhovsky (Ukrainian: Іван Виговський)(reigned 1657-1659) was a hetman (or otoman) of the Ukrainian Cossacks, and the successor to the famous hetman and rebel leader Bohdan Khmelnytsky (see Hetmans of Ukrainian Cossacks).
Vyhovsky, son of Ostap Vyhovsky (vicegerent of Kyiv fortress under voivode Adam Kysil), was an Orthodox nobleman from the Kyiv region.
However, Vyhovsky was not able to capitalize on this victory, as the Muscovite garrisons in several Ukrainian towns continued to hold out and his Tatar allies were forced to return to the Crimea when it was attacked by independent Cossacks.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ivan_Vyhovsky   (534 words)

  
 Welcome to Ukraine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
It is believed that Ivan Vyhovsky, Hetman of Ukraine in 1657–1659, is buried in Manyavsky Skyt, though the exact location of the grave remains undiscovered.
Vyhovsky, a Ukrainian of noble birth, was educated at the Kyiv Mohyla Academy in Kyiv, and when in the mid-seventeenth century the war of independence broke out, he joined the forces of Bohdan Khmelnytsky, the then Hetman of Ukraine and leader of the independence movement.
In July 1659, Vyhovsky inflicted a crushing defeat upon the Russians in the vicinity of Konotop.
www.wumag.kiev.ua /index2.php?param=pgs20041/74   (1729 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Ivan Vyhovsky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Ivan Vyhovsky (Іван Виговський)(reigned 1657-1659) was a hetman (or otoman) of the Ukrainian Cossacks, and the successor to the famous hetman and rebel leader Bohdan Khmelnytsky (see Hetmans of Ukrainian Cossacks).
Vyhovsky, son of Ostap Vyhovsky (the viceregent of Kyiv), was an Orthodox nobleman from the Kyiv region.
A boyar (also spelt bojar; Romanian: boier) was a member of the highest rank of the feudal Ruthenian (Russian) and Romanian aristocracy, second only to the ruling princes, from the 10th through the 17th century.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Ivan-Vyhovsky   (1167 words)

  
 RUSSIA
Sometimes Ivan is already regarded as the first Tsar, but the use of this title seems to come on gradually.
When Ivan III marries a granddaughter of one of the last of the Palaeologi Emperors, he is in a position to claim the Throne of Constantinople --the city just having fallen to the Ottomans.
Ivan also killed his own eldest son, and this murder now symbolically coincides with the last days of the Dynasty of Rus, the direct descent from Rurik of Novgorod.
www.friesian.com /russia.htm   (8207 words)

  
 Culture Gallery
Vyhovsky reached Kyiv ahead of the Moscow cortege and immediately sought an audience with Metropolitan Sylvester Kosiv.
The new Hetman Ivan Vyhovsky, however, insisted that the Kyiv Metropolitan be elected in keeping with the old rules, not as decreed by the tsar.
The formal act of joining it to the Moscow Church was the approval of the next Kyiv Metropolitan, Bishop Gideon of Lutsk, Prince of Sviatopolk- Severensky, by the Moscow Patriarch, not by the Patriarch of Constantinople, as had been practiced since the baptism of Rus'.
www.artukraine.com /historical/together_forev.htm   (2276 words)

  
 Reverend Prof. Yurii Mytsyk
Among these was a microfilm collection at CIUS containing the war diary of Prince Janusz Radziwill for 1649-52, which described events associated with the Cossack-Polish Wars in the Siverian region of Ukraine.
In the consistory archive of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada in Winnipeg, Dr. Mytsyk was able to work in the archives of Metropolitan Ilarion (Ivan Ohiienko), where he examined some of Ilarion's correspondence with Ukrainian historians, writers and poets.
In the Oseredok archive in Winnipeg, he came across the diary of Ivan Bobersky, in which he described the Ukrainian-Polish War of 1918-19.
www.ualberta.ca /~cius/announce/media/Media2000/2000-05-25.htm   (397 words)

  
 Turning the pages back... October 11, 1665 (10/11/98)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
As Ukraine descended into the period of ruin after the death of Hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky and the ouster of his successor, Ivan Vyhovsky, the country was sundered by two major factions (although there were many others).
Right-Bank Ukraine, west of the Dnipro River, was largely under the control of Pavlo Teteria; the Left Bank - under Ivan Briukhovetsky.
On June 18, 1668, in the village of Budyschi, in the Poltava region, he was killed by an angry Kozak mob.
www.ukrweekly.com /Archive/1998/419814.shtml   (416 words)

  
 Welcome to Ukraine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
At the same time, it is evident from the text of the 1654 treaty and the events that followed, that Khmelnytsky did not intend to remain faithful to it and wanted to abrogate it as soon as he could.
Khmelnytsky’s principle blunder was not the oath taken and not the signing of the treaty, doctored by the Russians, but it was the very fact of his entering negotiations with Russia in the first place.
Faced with mounting opposition, Vyhovsky resigned the hetmancy and fled to Poland.
www.iprinet.kiev.ua /wumag/index2.php?param=pgs20041/52   (3086 words)

  
 Lviv Ukraine tourist guide - Bohdan Khmelnytsky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Khmelnytsky's daughter Kateryna (Olena) was married to Danylo Vyhovsky, and after his death in Muscovite captivity she married Hetman Pavlo Teteria.
According to historians such as Ivan Krypiakevych, Nataliia Polonska-Vasylenko, and Lev Okinshevych, a Ukrainian Cossack state—the Zaporozhian Sich—was established as early as the 16th century.
General Chancellor Ivan Vyhovsky described Khmelnytsky to a Transylvanian envoy in 1657 thus: ‘As the tsar is a tsar in his realm, so the hetman is a prince or king in his domain.’ Ukraine's status as a sovereign state received international recognition.
lviv.biz /people/bohdan-khmelnytsky   (2164 words)

  
 [No title]
Ivan III (also his son Vasili III) never adopted the title of „grand duke of White Russia” and never used the term of „White Russia” for the Russian state.
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the term remained totally unknown to most of the inhabitants of Moscow, with the exception of a small group of the most educated ones, who were acquainted with the writings of western authors.
New Cossack hetman, Ivan Vyhovsky concluded a union with the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
kamunikat.fontel.net /www/czasopisy/annus/05/03.htm   (12550 words)

  
 What is Russia's historical right regarding Crimea?
It was also the mainstay of the policy of his successors, among whom was Hetman Ivan Vyhovsky, who, in a treaty with Poland in 1658 had it specifically stipulated under Article 17 that Ukraine's right "to maintain a friendly relationship with the Crimean Khan" is guaranteed by the treaty.
Both the Zaporizhians and the Turks understood that they were pawns in the hands of their respective imperial centers.
For their part, the Ukrainian Hetmany [7] (Pylyp Orlyk, Ivan Skoropadsky, Pavlo Polubotok, Petro Doroshenko) were constantly attempting during their successive leaderships to gain autonomy for Ukraine, to unite with the Sich for this purpose and establish good relations with the Crimean Khanate.
www.infoukes.com /history/crimea/page-03.html   (1055 words)

  
 Russia and China in the eighteenth century - Page 3 - AlternateHistory.com Discussion Board   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The Treaty of Hadiach (Polish: ugoda hadziacka) was a treaty signed on September 16, 1658, in Hadiach (Hadziacz, Hadiacz,) between representatives of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (represented by S. Bieniewski and K. Jewłaszewski) and Cossacks (represented by ataman Ivan Vyhovsky and starshyna (sztarszna, the elders) Yurii Nemyrych, architect of the treaty, and Pavlo Teteria).
Ataman Vyhovsky supported the negotiations with the Commonwealth, especially after he suppressed a revolt led by the colonel of Poltava, Martyn Pushkar, and severed relations with Muscovy for its violations of the Treaty of Pereyaslav of 1654.
Vyhovsky's early success at the battle of Konotop in June 1659 was not descisive enough, and was followed by a series of defeats.
www.alternatehistory.com /Discussion/showthread.php?goto=newpost&t=16252   (3723 words)

  
 Ukraine, cities, Kiev, Kyiv, dining, going out, clubs, cinemas, theatres, restaurants, business services, translators, ...
Excursion to Lychakivskiy cemetery (where famous Ukrainian and Polish public figures are buried, such as Ivan Franko, Solomiya Krushelnytska, Volodymyr Ivasyuk).Departure from Lviv.Lunch at the Ukrainian restaurant "Kolyba", en route Arrival in Ivano-Frankivsk.
Bus trip to the Architectural Museum in "Maniava Skit" (where Ivan Vyhovsky, the hetman of Ukraine, and his spouse were buried.
The most precious things in the exposition are as follows: the icon-cases of the 17th century, the part of the tsar gate, and the icon "Three Saints").Visiting the unique Holy Place with the salutary source and the blessed stone.Dinner at the restaurant located in the forest.Departure from Maniava.
www.eastwesttour.com /html/globals/ukraine/thnographic.htm   (440 words)

  
 Current Events
The idea of an exhibit dedicated to Ivan Mazepa was conceived two years ago, when shooting A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa.
In a word, the two joined forces and, aided by over twenty museums all over Ukraine, are finishing work on the project, so that the residents and guests of Lviv will see the display this summer (scheduled to open by August 24).
Needless to say, illustrating Ivan Mazepa and his epoch required government support, as pertinent materials were to be found both within and outside Ukraine (in Sweden, France, Poland, Egypt, Russia, to mention but a few).
www.artukraine.com /events/ukr_rep64.htm   (4437 words)

  
 Cosaques Zaporogue
Le successeur de Khmelnytsky, Ivan Vyhovsky tenta de poursuivre sa politique, mais la Suède, attaquée par le Danemark, interrompit sa campagne en Europe de l’Est.
Vyhovsky n’eut d’autre choix que d’accepter le nouveau traité proposé par le Royaume de Pologne : Un état ukrainien, nommé « Grand Duché de Ruthénie », autonome au sein de la confédération Polono-Lituanienne.
Celle-ci s’arrêta à Konotop, où elle fut écrasée en juin 1659 par les Cosaques de Vyhovsky, aidés de nombreux mercenaires et soutenues par les tatars.
perso.wanadoo.fr /pyzh/kozaky/histoire/17part3.html   (706 words)

  
 Consistency List - PERSONAL NAMES (R-Z) (Soloviev)
Sheremetev, Ivan Petrovich, governor of Kostroma 15 1606-10
Sylvester, archpriest of Annunciation cathedral, adviser to Ivan IV 14 1598-1606
Vygovsky, Ivan Astafievich, Vyhovsky, Ivan Asatafyevich (Ukr) 20 17c
www.ai-press.com /SolclPNR-Z.html   (3132 words)

  
 The Russian Terrorist Regime & the Aritificle Famine in Ukraine (1932-33) by A. Mykulyn from The Ukraianian Review ...
Since they were aware of the aims of the Muscovite policy in Ukraine, they opposed this policy and wished to declare the Treaty of Pereyaslav null and void.
Hetman Ivan Vyhovsky, in particular, tried to accelerate this declaration.
He waged war against Moscow and inflicted such a heavy defeat on the Muscovite armies near Konotop in 1659 that the Tsar, in alarm, prepared to leave Moscow.
colley.co.uk /garethjones/soviet_articles/ukrainian_review.htm   (5320 words)

  
 FACES AND PLACES: Free at last! Free at last! (12/08/91)
Remember also the grandeur and perspicacity of Volodymyr the Great and Yaroslav the Wise.
The heroic struggles of Bohdan Khmelnytsky, Ivan Vyhovsky, and Ivan Mazepa.
The literary excellence and patriotism of Taras Shevchenko, Ivan Franko, and Lesia Ukrainka.
www.ukrweekly.com /Archive/1991/499115.shtml   (816 words)

  
 archive: June 2001 Archives   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Yeltsov told the Post at the time that the threat was probably related to an article that appeared on the Russian Internet site Federal Investigation Bureau under the name Ivan Stepanov.
The case against Lyashko was originally filed in 1997 and wound up in Kyiv’s Pechersk District Court in 1998.
The court eventually acquitted Lyashko of defaming Ukraine’s former Acting Prime Minister, Vasyl Durdynets, and the Odessa Interior Ministry chief, Ivan Hryhorenko, in December 1999.
www.s95451559.onlinehome.us /test2/archives/2001_06.php   (3651 words)

  
 Ukrainian Store www.KOLOS.com
Use keywords to find the product you are looking for.
Special research of the biography of Ukrainian hetman Ivan Vyhovsky (1616 — 1664) was done from many archive sources, including Ukrainian, Polish and Russian.
A new look on his military, political and diplomatic career and activities is presented with an overview of the old known analysis of his political biography.
kolos.com /store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=230&...   (81 words)

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