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June 11, 2024
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№ 3. Ukraine. Ecological situation in Ukraine. My native town (village). Perfect Tenses. Participle II.

 

Ukraine is a sovereign state; its independence was proclaimed in 1991. Ukraine is situated in the east of Europe. The territory of Ukraine is 603 700 square kilometres. Ukraine borders on Russia, Belarus, Poland, Moldova, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania. It’s washed by the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov and has very important ports. Ukraine is larger than France and Great Britain but considerably smaller than Russia. 5% of Ukraine’s territory is mountainous; the rest part of the Ukrainian area is flat. Ukraine has the Carpathians and the Crimean Mountains. The Carpathians is the natural mountainous boundary of Ukraine. They are covered with mixed forests of pine, fir, beech and oak trees. There are the thickest forests in Volyn, which are part of the famous Byelovezhskaya Puscha.

The Dnieper is the main river of the country; moreover, it’s the third longest river in Europe. Such rivers as the Dniester, the Danube, the Southern Bug and the Seversky Donets are also important.

The population of our country is about 46 million people. Besides Ukrainians the representatives of many other nationalities live there: Russians, Jews, Belarusians, Moldavians, Romanians, Greeks, Tatars, Poles, Armenians, Germans, Gypsies and other ethnic minorities. They contributed to Ukraine’s culture and history.

The biggest cities of Ukraine are Kyiv, Kharkiv, Lviv, Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhya, Donetsk, Odessa, Mykolaiv and others.

Ukraine is developed industrial and agricultural country. It’s rich in iron ore, coal, natural gas, oil, salt and other mineral resources. Ukraine has such branches of industry as metallurgy, machine-building, power industry, chemical industry and agriculture. Scientists of Ukraine make their contributions of important discoveries and inventions to the world science.

Ukraine has a rich historical and cultural heritage. There are many higher educational establishments, theatres, libraries, museums, art galleries in Ukraine. It’s also famous for many outstanding writers, poets and musicians.

Ukraine is a member of the United Nation Organization and takes part in the work of many international organizations.

Ukraine is one of the largest countries of Eastern Europe. It occupies an area of 603 700 km2. Its territory stretches for 893 kilometres from north to south and for 1316 kilometres from east to west. It has state borders with Russia, Belarus and Moldova. It also borders on Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania.

In the south it is washed by the Black and the Azov Seas. The major rivers are the Dnieper, the Dniester, the Donets and others.

The major part of Ukraine is flat and only 5% of it is mountainous. The two mountainous areas in Ukraine are the Carpathians and the Crimean Mountains.

The geographical position of Ukraine is very favourable because the country lies on the crossroads of the ways from Asia to Europe.

Ukraine has deposits of iron, manganese, coal, natural gas, oil and other mineral resources.

The main branches of industry are: coal and ore mining, iron and steel engineering, machine and ship building. Besides, Ukraine has always been an agrarian country. Traditionally crop-growing and cattlebreeding are being developed.

The population of Ukraine is about 50 million people. The biggest cities are Kyiv, Kharkiv, Zaporizhia, Dnipropetrovsk, Odesa, Lviv, Mykolaiv and others.

Ukraine has an ancient history. It has its own original culture and arts.

The country is one of the members of the United Nations Organization (UNO) and participates in the work of many international organizations.

Ukraine is a rich agricultural, industrial and mining region in south-eastern Europe. It is an independent democratic state. Its population is about 52 mln people. The capital of Ukraine is Kiev. Ukraine has its own armed forces, and maintains its own diplomatic relations with foreign countries. Ukraine covers about 603.700 sq. km being larger than any country in Western Europe. From east to west Ukraine stretches for more than 1300 km and from north to south for almost 900 km. It borders with Belarus and Russia on the north and on the east. In the south it is bounded by the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. In the west Ukraine is bounded by Moldova, Rumania, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland. Ukraine is located in ideal geographical position for the development of its resources, lying between 440 and 520 latitude north, on the same latitude as the USA or Britain. The climate is mild and warm, with a long summer and a short winter. Together with its fertile black soil, this makes it ideal for the development of intensive agriculture. The main part of Ukraine is located in the watershed of the Dnieper-River, which divides Ukraine into two parts: Right-Bank and Left-Bank Ukraine. Ukraine’s proximity to the Black Sea and the presence of large navigable rivers running through its territory has promoted the development of trade and culture. The Black Sea is not only a means of communication with Transcaucasia and Turkey but also with the rest of the world through the Mediterranean Sea. Ukraine also lies on the Danube, and this gives it access to European countries. Through the Siversky Donets it has access to the Don. The territory of Ukraine is criss-crossed by railroads and highways, oil and gas pipelines and high-voltage transmission lines – all of which ensure close economic ties with Eastern and Western Europe. Ukraine is a highly industrialised country, whose economic potential is great.

The geographical position of Ukraine

Ukraine’s area is 233,088 square miles (603,700 sq. km). It’s slightly larger than France. Ukraine is mainly a vast plain with no natural boundaries except the Carpathian Mountains in the south-west and the Black Sea in the south. The Dnipro River with its many tributaries unifies central Ukraine economically, connecting the Baltic coast countries with the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. The mouth of the Danube River provides an outlet for Ukrainian trade with the Balkans, Austria and Germany.

Central and southern Ukraine is primarily steppe (prairie), with fertile black soil exceptionally well suited for grain farming. In the east there is the industrial heartland containing large reserves of mineral deposits known as the Greater Donbas or Donetsk Basin.

Northern and western Ukraine are hilly, forested areas with many picturesque mountain resorts. There are two mountain ranges, the Carpathian on its western border where winter sports are very popular; and the Crimean range, which divides the Crimean peninsular. The Crimea is a favourite destinatioot only for Ukrainian tourists, but also for citizens of other states of the former Soviet Union, as well as eastern and western Europe.

National symbols

The Constitution states that the national symbols of Ukraine shall be the National Flag, the National Emblem and the National Anthem.

The Ukrainian flag consists of two horizontal stripes of equal width. The top is blue, the bottom – yellow. Blue and yellow, the colors of the sky, mountains, streams, and golden fields had symbolized Kyivan Rus’ long before the introduction of Christianity. With the acceptance of Christianity, blue and gold were incorporated into church symbolism. After the Mongol- Tatar invasion in the 1200’s the use of blue/gold was interrupted, to be revived again in church ornaments and city chrests some time later. The emblem of the city of Myrhorod, for example, was a gold triden tover a blue background. Another city, Pryluky, used the head of an ox in gold over a blue background as its insignia. And in Lubny, the city emblem pictured a hand holding a golden mace over a blue background. The banners of the Cossacks (17th Century) were blue with gold stars, a gold cross, or with pictures of saints rendered in gold.

The National Emblem is a trident. The first image of a trident appeared in the 1st century AD. When Ihor, Prince of Kyivan Rus’ from 912 to 945AD, sent ambassadors to sign a treaty with the Byzantine emperor, they sealed the document with a trident. As the official emblem of the Kyivan princes, the trident was stamped on coins, seals; it was depicted on porcelain and in frescoes. It is thought that the trident represented the division of the world into three spheres: the earthly, the celestial, and the spiritual as well as the union of the three natural elements of air, water and earth. The trident was endorsed as the official emblem of Ukraine; the blue and yellow flag as the national flag of Ukraine by the Supreme Rada in 1992.

The lyrics to the anthem of Ukraine were written hy Pavlo Chubynsky – a scientist and poet – in 1862. The music was composed by M. Verbytsky.

Language

The Ukrainian language is classified, along with Russian and Belorussian, as a Slavic language. Several hypotheses exist about the origins of the Ukrainian language. .

Phonetic, grammatical and lexical characteristics of the Ukrainian language are already apparent in literature from the XII century. The evolution of the language can be traced from the early texts, such as the Gospel of Kamieniets – Strumilov (1411), written in Old Ukrainian, through the

Peresopnytskyi Gospel (1556-1561), where a more developed, lively language was used (Middle Ukrainian), to Modern Ukrainian, first used in literature by Ivan Kotliarevskyi in the 1700’s.

Due to historical conditions it was difficult for the Ukrainian language to develop. Ukraine was the target of invasions from neighbouring states for ages. From 1362 Ukraine was under Lithuania; later under Poland, Austria-Hungary, and most recently, under Russia for over 300 years. Language and culture were stifled; the population little by little denationalized.

Now that Ukraine is independent, Ukrainian language, traditions and culture are being revived. Ukrainian is the official state language; it is being studied and is the subject of academic research.

Kyiv – the capital of Ukraine

Kiev (Kyiv, in Ukrainian), the capital of Ukraine, has the population of nearly 3 million inhabitants and covers over 43 km from east to west and 42 km from north to south.

According to historical literature, Kyiv was founded by three brothers Kyi, Shchek and Khoryv, and their sister Lybid. The city was named after Kyi, the eldest brother. The monument erected in their honor, stands on the bank of the River Dnipro.

In the late 6th and early 7th century the first fortification appeared in the northern section of Old Kyiv Hill. While the court of the princes was located on the hills of Kyiv, the lower part of the city, known as Podil, developed into a busy trading district.

With the establishment of Kyivan Rus (the 9th century), Kyiv became its capital.

Prince Volodymyr the Great (980-1015) expanded the city, Kyivan Rus was at its zenith under the rule of Prince Iaroslav the Wise (1036-54). Monasteries were established and developed into centers of education. Close to 400 churches were built, the most famous of which, St. Sofia Cathedral (1037) has survived to this day. The first library was founded on the grounds of the cathedral.

Today, Kyiv is one of the great, ancient European cities, rich with historic monuments of art and architecture. It is a political, scientific, cultural, sports and industrial center of modern Ukraine.

Kyiv is a major industrial center that includes companies specializing in electronics, engineering, aviation, food and chemical production, etc. Kyiv’s economic development has been enriched by its advantageous location along the Dnipro River, which links Kyiv to the Black Sea.

It has many hotels, cafes and restaurants with Ukrainian, European, American and Eastern cuisine to accommodate tourists and business persons. Modern stadiums, tennis courts swimming pools and gyms are available. If you visit Kyiv in late May, you will witness a beautiful festival – “The Days of Kyiv”.

The constitution is the main law of Ukraine

The constitutions take a special place in the world civilization and play an important role in the political history of every country. The constitution of the young independent state of Ukraine is not the exception.

The principles forming the basis of our Constitution conform to the modern democratic norms operating in all developed countries. But we can say with pride that the legal traditions of the Ukrainian people are deeply rooted in the past.

The first constitutions were adopted at the end of the eighteenth century. The Constitution of the USA was adopted in 1787. In 1791 the Constitutions of France and Poland were adopted.

But long before in 1710 in Bendery city Kozak Rada and Pylyp Orlyk, Getman of Ukraine in expulsion, adopted the document which was the first prototype of modern constitutions. It was called “Pacts and Constitutions of Laws and Freedoms of Zaporozhsky Troops”.

This Constitution included the preamble and 16 paragraphs. The main principles of construction of the Ukrainian state were formulated there: the role of orthodoxy in state and society, the independence of Ukraine from Poland and Moscow. But the most important achievement of this Constitution was the idea of separation of legislative, executive and judicial powers. This idea reflected the most progressive views of that time on the state building.

Nevertheless all the attempts to create the independent Ukrainian state failed. 150 years later, in 1917-1920 the Central Rada and Getman Skoropadsky, made one more unsuccessful attempt. Only at the end of the 20th century Ukraine became both the independent state and the full member of the European Community.

Due to this it was necessary to bring the Ukrainian legislation into accord with Europeaorms. And during the 5th session of the Supreme Rada, after the intensive and dramatic debates, which did not stop even at night, the Main Law of Ukraine was adopted. It happened on the 28th of June, 1996 at 9.20 a. m.

The Constitution of Ukraine includes the preamble and 102 clauses. They reflect the main principles of the state system of Ukraine, the rights and duties of its citizens.

The main law of our state exists not only on paper. Despite the definite difficulties, the Constitution has already come in force. For example, the national monetary unit – Hryvnia has been put into operation, the Cabinet of Ministers and the Constitutional Court have been formed.

Every citizen of Ukraine should realize the importance of the Constitution in the process of the formation of the legal democratic state. The pupils and students should study the Constitution. This is mentioned in the decrees of the Ministry of Education and President of Ukraine. Because, as Leonid Kuchma, President of Ukraine, said: “If we don’t respect the Constitution, there won’t be any respect to us, to Ukraine and its people”.

Hryvnia – the official currency of Ukraine

Hryvnia was introduced on September 2, 1996 right after the сelebration of Ukraine Independence Day. It replaced the old “Coupon” (or “Karbovanets”) which was a temporary bill in Ukraine for the period it was leaving the rouble zone. Old coupons were changedat fixed rate 100.000 coupons for 1 Hryvnia since September 15 and now it is the only legal tender in Ukraine.

There are bills for 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 Hryvnias. There are also coins called “kopiyka” for 1, 2, 5, 10, 25, and 50 kopiykas. (1 kopiyka is equal to 1/100 of Hryvnia.)

Bills of 1, 2, 5, 10 and 20 Hryvnias marked with year 1992 where designed and printed in Canada’. Bills of 1 Hryvnia (alternative design), 50 and 100 Hryvnias were designed and printed already in Ukraine in 1994.

Hryvnia can be freely converted to hard currency in any authorised bank or exchange point.

During the last period it proved to be a stable and reliable currency.

There are several protection layers in Hryvnia bills. In addition bills of 50 and 100 Hryvnias and partially 1 Hryvnia (alternative design) have additional protection levels to ensure their safety.

In August 1997 the National Bank of Ukraine announced that starting from September 1, 1997 the new design of 2, 5, 10 and 20 Hryvnia bills will be released to increase their protection from falsification. New bills will slowly replace old ones while those will still be valid.

Education

In Ukraine, all citizens are guaranteed an equal opportunity to get free education. Nearly 22,300 general-education schools, mainly state-run, operate in Ukraine. Approximately 7,000,000 pupils attend these schools. More than half of these pupils (57%) are educated in the Ukrainian language; the rest of the schools teach Ukrainian as a separate subject. There are schools where the language of instruction is Russian Moldovian, Hungarian, Romanian, Polish, Crimean Tatar, etc.

Ukraine has 232 institutions of higher learning of the 3rd-4th level of accreditation and 778 institutions of higher learning of the lst-2nd levels of accreditation. Above 888,500 and 645,000 students study at those institutions.

New types of educational institutions, including private schools and colleges are being established.

Climate and population of Ukraine

The climate in Ukraine is similar to the wheat-producing regions of Canada and is characterised by abundant precipitation and cloudy skies, especially in fall and winter. The mean temperature in summer is 67°F (19°C) and in winter 21°F (~6°C). Although summers tend to be short, the temperature can rise to the 90°F (30°C) making it uncomfortable, since most buildings have no central cooling systems. Winters are long and cold, with cloudy skies as a norm.

The population of Ukraine is approximately 48 million. 68% of the population is urban; 32% is rural.

The major cities: Kyiv – 2.6 million, Kharkiv -1.6 million, Dnipropetrovsk – 1.2 million, Donetsk – 1.1 million, Odessa – 1.1 million, Lviv – 1 million. Population density is 85.7 persons per sq. km.

Ukraine is inhabited by representatives of more than 110 nationalities. Ukrainians comprise 72.7% of the population, Russians – 22.1%, Jews, Belorussians, Moldovans, Bulgarians, Poles, Hungarians, Romanians, Greeks, Tatars, Armenians, Gypsies, and Germans – 5.2%.

The official language in Ukraine is the Ukrainian language. The Constitution of Ukraine guarantees and defends the rights of ethnic minorities.

6.8 million Ukrainians live in the countries of the former Soviet Union including some 4.4 million in Russia, 0.9 million in Kazakhstan, 0.6 million in Uzbekistan and 0.1 million in Kirghizstan.

Approximately 5 million Ukrainians live in Europe, North and South America and Australia. The majority of these live in Canada, the USA, Argentina, Brazil, Germany, Great Britain and Austria.

The environmental situation

The high level of industrial and agricultural concentration and ecologically unjustified economic activities of the managerial structures of the former USSR are responsible for a rather complicated ecological situation that has taken shape in Ukraine. The most unfavourable is the Donetsk-Trans- Dnieper region where a lot of mining metallurgical and chemical enterprises are operating.

As a result of the Chornobyl nuclear power plant disaster of 1986, the environmental situation has become much worse. Apropos of this Ukraine appealed to the UN requesting help to overcome the disaster aftermath.

The Environmental Protection Law well in compliance with international standards in this field has been in force since 1991.

The economic mechanism of conservation is being introduced. Environmental safeguards of conservation bodies have become more stringent. Ecological monitoring has covered Ukraine’s whole area and the Extraordinary Governmental Commission on the Problems of the Dnieper and Upgrading the Quality of Drinking Water has been set up. Ukraine has actively joined international cooperation in the field of environmental protection. Agreements have been signed with conservation bodies of the USA, Poland, Czechia, Slovakia, Germany and Latvia. The Ukrainian delegation took part in the UN Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro.

Ukraine enters a new phase of its history with intentions to create a democratically minded, law-based, independent society. Ukraine is looking for its place in European House, in the civilized world going to its aim unswervingly.

Religion

The most widespread religion in Ukraine is Christianity. Most of the faithful belong to the Orthodox Church. Christianity was adopted as the state religion by Prince Volodymyr in 988.

In 1596 a split occurred in the church, creating two churches: the Orthodox and the Uniate (Greek Catholic) church.

Today, much of the population of western Ukraine belongs to the Greek Catholic Church.

In modern times, the Greek Catholic Church experienced persecution, as did the Orthodox Church. The rebirth of the Ukrainian state in 1917-18 gave impetus to the movement within the Orthodox Church to break away from the Russian church.

From 1930 to 1980 religious life was stifled; most churches and cathedrals were closed; members of the clergy were persecuted. Since Ukraine’s independence, the number of the faithful has increased dramatically. There has been a rebirth in religious activity: Sunday schools, religious publications abound. Religious schools have been opened. Since 1994, 138 religious buildings have been returned to their rightful owners, 261 new churches have been constructed, and 1,739 more are being built.

Today, the leading churches of Ukraine are:

Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchy, headed by the Metropolitan Vladimir);

Ukrainian Greek Roman (Catholic) Church (headed by Cardinal Myroslav Ivan Lobachivskyi);

Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Kyiv (headed by Patriarch Filaret).

Music

The Ukrainiaation is famous for its musicality. One could see the first old Russian musicians in the frescos of Saint Sofia Cathedral. Archeological researches stated that first musical instruments were made of mammoth ivory.

The most widespread musical instrument of the Old Rus was psaltery. The psaltery was used to accompany songs that were narrating about brave princes and bodyguards. The psalterymen were welcomed for the family holidays.

During the Mongol-Tatar invasion the development of Ukrainian musical culture was stopped.

The Ukrainian folk songs inspired famous composers in their work. One can hear the spiritual music of Ukrainian composers in different churches of the world (D. Bortnyansky, M. Berezovsky, A. Vedel).

In S. Hulak-Artemovsky’s and M. Lysenko’s operas Ukrainian character and spirit, tender lyrical themes and patriotism were presented. The Ukrainian songs worked up by M. Leontovych, M. Lysenko, K. Stetsenko are very popular.

The most famous among the Ukrainian musical companies are State Academical cappella “Dumka” and State Academical National Choir of G. Veryovka, State Academical Ensemble of folk dance of P. Virsky.

The Ukrainian folk songs are a symbol of love and they are widespread in the world. Let us remember the P.i Mayboroda’s “Puisnya pro rushnyk” that has been famous for 30 years.

Science

In Old Rus the first venues of sciences were monasteries. “Code of Laws”, drawn up in the 10th-12th cc., laid the foundation of what would become Ukrainian, Russian, Belorussian and Lithuanian feudal law.

The 15th-17th cc. saw the peak of creative talent of physician Y. Drohobych and linguist M. Smotrytsky.

“Slavic Grammar” of M. Smotrytsky (17th c.) was the grammatical basis of many Slavic languages.

A major venue of sciences in the 18th c. was the Kyiv- Mohyla Academy. Among its graduates were such celebrated scientists as N. Maksymovych and O. Shumlyansky.

Much contribution to the development of Ukrainian science was made by M.Ostrogradsky (mathematics), O.Bodyansky (linguistics), V.Filatov (medicine).

In the XIX and early XX cc., the centres of scientific activity in Ukraine were Universities and Lyceums.

In October of 1918 the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences became a scientific centre. This Academy was founded by

getman P. Skoropadskiy. The first Academy president was the academician V. Vernadskiy. In the 20s of the XX century there were three departments in the Academy.

The Ukrainian Academy of Sciences was and still is the prominent scientific institution in the Ukrainian state. There are about 160 000 research workers, 12 000 candidates and doctors of science. There are 203 academicians, 280 corespondent-members and 80 foreign members.

Ukraine has made its contribution to the world space science. At the Southern Machine-Building plant about 400 artificial Earth satellites have been made.

During 1946-1951 the first electronic computing machine in Europe was designed by the academician S. Lebedev at the Institute of Electrical Equipment.

Tourism

Tourism, as an important factor in inter-branch cooperation and improvement of market relations, is directly linked to the intellectual, cultural and economic potential of Ukraine.

Ukraine has great potential for developing tourism: excellent geographic and climatic conditions, historical and cultural resources. Over 125 thousand archaeological, architectural, and historical monuments, some dating from the l0th-11th centuries, and hundreds of museums reflect the remarkable history of the Ukrainian people, who have made worthy contribution to world culture.

The most important and valuable historical, architectural and cultural monuments are concentrated in the regions around Kyiv, Chernyhiv, Sumy, Poltava, Cherkasy and in the lands of Halychyna and Podillia. The beauty and significance of these monuments and of objects of art and frescoes found in this area, have been the motivating factor in creating a system of tourist itineraries named “The Necklace of Slavutych” (Slavutych is the ancient Slavic name of the Dnipro River).

In recent years tourism has undergone considerable changes. Excellent conditions exist for good and inexpensive vacations. At the request of foreign tourist companies, a number of tourist itineraries are being explored.

Dozens of Ukrainian tourist companies participated in international tourist fairs, exchanges and other meetings held in Berlin, Warsaw, London, Milan and Budapest. Working relations have been established with the World Tourist Organization. Kyiv hosted three international tourist fairs. At the third fair held in October 1996, 362 travel companies from 35 countries took part. Approximately 900 contracts were signed.

Ukraine welcomes guests from all over the world to visit Ukraine and to travel throughout its hospitable land.

Sports

Since ancient times, Ukrainians were skilful archers, horsemen and wrestlers. In the late XIX century European sports and games were introduced; football and wrestling became the most popular.

Kyiv’s famous soccer team “Dynamo” won the European Cup Holder’s Cup twice, in 1975 and 1985. Oleg Blokhin and Igor Byelanov were named Europe’s best soccer players.

The “Spartaks” handball team from Kyiv, led by Senior Coach Ihor Turchyn has won 13 European Champion’s Cups. Zinaida Turchyna and Larysa Karlova were named best players in the World and European Championships several times.

The Ukrainian school of gymnastics is recognized the world over. Its representatives Iryna Deriuhina, Oleksandra Tymoshenko, Oksana Skaldina (and others) have won world and European championships. Larysa Latynina has the longest history of records in the Olympic Games: 18 medals, including 9 gold, 5 silver and 3 bronze.

Valeriy Borzov, the famous sprinter, won 2 gold, 1 silver and 2 bronze medals at the 20th and 21st Olympic Games. Serhiy Bubka, eight times world champion in the pole vault and Olympic champion holds 35 world records. He has beeamed World’s Best Athlete.

Having just proclaimed its independence, Ukraine sent the national team to the 1994 Olympics. At the XVII Winter Games in Norway, young figure skater Oksana Baiul won the first gold medal for independent Ukraine.

At the 26th Olympic Games in Atlanta, Ukrainian a thletes won 9 gold medals, plus a score of silver and bronze.

The names of the winners have become known the world over: all around Olympic champion in gymnastics Lilia Podkopaieva; Olympic champion in women’s free-style gymnastics Katia Serebrianska; Olympic champion in Greco-Roman wrestling Viacheslav Olinyk; Olympic champion in weightlifting Tymur Taimazov; Olympic champion in boxing Volodymyr Kliuchko; Olympic champions yachtsmen Evhen Braslavets and Ihor Matvienko; Olympic champion track-and- field athlete Inessa Kravets, and others.

Life of youth in Ukraine

Life of youth in Ukraine is determined by the economic, social and political life of the country. The economic crisis in Ukraine has led to unemployment of many people and especially youth. As a result of it the criminal situation has immensely changed for the worse. That’s why Ukrainian government took special measures for the foundation of youth organizations in Ukraine. And such organizations have been found. They are “The Students’ League”, “Young Socialists”, “Green Peace”, and various youth clubs which unite young people according to their interests.

“The Students’ League” is aimed at solving various students’ problems, including economic ones. The members of this league organize youth forums, festivals and group meetings. This organization also maintains friendly ties with the universities and colleges of such countries as the USA, Great Britain, France, Germany and Holland. These ties include students’ exchanges on educational and cultural programmes.

“Young Socialists” is the organization of young people who share the views of socialism. They participate in the movement of socialist organizations abroad and support the policy pursued by the Socialist Party of Ukraine.

A lot of young people in Ukraine are active in the movement of “the greens”. They organize various actions of protest against the pollution of environment. The members of the “Green Peace” organization stand for preserving safe environment. They fight against the destruction of flora and fauna on the Earth.

Youth clubs of different interests have come into being these days. They unite music fans, sports fans, theatregoers, amateur performance groups and others. Besides, there is the “All-Ukrainian Association of Young Businessmen”, who try to find their own way of raising the country out of the economic crisis.

 

Problems of youth in Ukraine

What is modern Ukrainian youth? What do the young Ukrainians want, what problems do they face with and how do they solve them?

Here are the main results of the sociological surveys. The main problems are not new and have been known long ago. They are: unhealthy way of life, alcohol and drug addiction. Unemployment, migration and low level of education are also present.

Health of modern young people is getting worth from year to year, and death is becoming more frequent. Bad habits are very popular among youth. Many girls and boys start smoking in early age. About 30% before 14 years old, 36% – before 16 year old.

Sedentary lifestyle threatens health of young people as well. More than third of Ukrainians suffer obesity by age 30-35. Only 18% of young people do sport regularly. The rest of Ukrainian youth either do not do it at all or do it irregularly. As a result Ukrainian schoolchildren suffer vegetative-vascular dystonia and postural disorder.

Young Ukrainians do not hurry to marry and to have children. The majority of young people plan to make families only after graduation and employment. That tendency is influenced mainly by housing problems, which is still the biggest problem for youth in Ukraine and for the country in general. There are no efficient mechanisms for gaining new/rented living spaces for young people. More than half of young families live with their parents, and only 4% do it of their own free will. The rest simply do not have where to live have to rent the flat or to live in dormitories or to live with parents or other relatives.

After the graduation from the university only 48% of young specialists find the job by profession.

The lack of affordable housing, unemployment and low salaries force young Ukrainians to migrate. The cream of the Ukrainian society leave the country at the age of 24- 27.

Literature of Ukraine

The literature of Ukraine has a 1,000-year history. Of great importance for the growth of literature was the establishment in Lviv of the first printing press by Ivan Fedorov in 1574.

In the late 1700’s, Ivan Kotliarevsky wrote the famous epic poem “Eneida”.

Full of Ukrainian folk witticisms, realistic portraits and aphoristic characters, it was hugely successful. Kotliarevsky had an ear for idiomatic language, and an eye for details.

The appearance of Taras Shevchenko’s Kobzar (1840) ushered in an epoch of romanticism and national consciousness. Taras Shevchenko reflected the hopes and aspirations of the nation in the best folk poetic tradition.

Realism flourished in the nineteenth century. I. Nechui- Levytskyi and P. Myrny were masters of realistic prose. The end of the nineteenth century produced literary giants such as Ivan Franko and Lesia Ukrainka, who with their fighting spirit spurred Ukrainians on in their struggle for self-realization. At the close of the century, modernism took the place of realism. M. Kotsiubynskyi, with his impressionistic style of Writing, illustrates the transition from realism to the exploration of the psyche.

The twentieth century began with Renaissance in literature (192CTs). Many literary groups and organizations formed; new, young writers’ works were published; fresh magazines appeared. Some prominent names from this period: M. Kulish, M. Khvylovyi, M. Zerov, V. Sosiura. By the 1930’s the great terror began, with its purges, show trials and repression. Most of the writers were either killed or driven to suicide. It is estimated that over 250 writers perished during this period. Those who survived (V. Sosiura, P. Tychyna, M. Rylsky) were forced to renounce their former work and to write on themes suitable for the Communist Party. Despite the violent deaths of so many writers, Ukrainian literature gave the world such well-knowames as O. Honchar and a writer and a film director O. Dovzhenko.

A group of writers from the 1960’s, known as the “Shestydesiatnyky” (“The Sixtiers”) took advantage of a political thaw initiated by Khrushchev after the death of Stalin, and revitalized Ukrainian literature. Prominent among these are: L. Kostenko, V. Symonenko, H. Tiutiunnyk, D. Pavlychko, I, Drach, I. Dziuba, V. Stus, I. Svitlychnyi, Ie. Sverstiuk, V. Shevchuk.

Today, Ukrainian literature is continuing to develop.

Art in Ukraine

Ukrainian painters, singers, actors and composers are knowot only in Ukraine but also in the world. Ukrainians are known to be musical people. Ukrainian music has a long history. In Ukraine three kinds of music developed during the Middle Ages. The first was music performed during festivals and banquets at the courts of the princes and boyars. Wandering musicians and actors, called skomorokhy, entertained their listeners with the songs and acrobatic tricks. Church music is the second type of music. It came to Ukraine from Byzantium and Bulgaria. Religious music developed mainly in the center of Ukraine, in Kyiv. The third type of music consists of folk songs. Ukrainian folk songs were connected with calendar changes: the New Year carols, rusalka songs and so on.

Now there are many different types of music in Ukraine : pop music, rock music, jazz and others. Ukrainian ballet companies, choirs, symphony orchestras and solo performers often appear on tours in Europe, Asia and America.

Frescoes and icons are the oldest printings in Ukraine. The first portraits, which were used not for religious purposes appeared in the 17th century. Mainly Cossack hetmans and officers were portrayed. Many Ukrainian painters studied in St. Peterburg. After that many of them stayed in Russia and continued their carrier there. The only exception was T. Shevchenko. He devoted most of his paintings (like his writings) to Ukrainian interests. He is the father of modern Ukrainian painting. T. Shevchenko painted numerous portraits, self-portraits, and landscapes. Besides T. Shevchenko, Ukraine has many famous painters, like I.Repin, I. Kramskoi, M. Pymonenko and others. Nowadays many other paining styles have their representatives in Ukraine

Ukrainian theatre started also with skomorokhy. The European medieval theatre, the Renaissance and classicism influenced its future development. Ukrainian theatre gained its popularity during the 19th century. The first plays in Ukrainian language were staged by Poltava Free Theatre in 1819. Many Ukrainian landlords organized serf theaters at their estates. In their theatres Ukrainian plays were performed. The times of the Soviet rule were not easy for Ukrainian theater. Over the past few years the Ukrainian theatre is on the wave of national revival. Many youth theatres, musical comedies have appeared. Among theatre stars are B. Stupka, A. Rohovtseva and many others.

Holidays in Ukraine

Each country has its own customs, traditions, holidays and important days in its history. Talking of holidays in Ukraine we can’t but tell about everybody’s favourite New Year Holiday. People think that at night on New Year’s eve the old year with all its troubles leaves us forever and the New Year with all our hopes and expectations knocks at our doors. People decorate the Christmas tree, have New Year parties and prepare presents for their relatives and friends.

On the eve of January the 7th, Ukrainians start celebrating Christmas. It’s the day of Jesus Christ’s birthday and it is widely celebrated all over Ukraine. People sing Christmas carols, cook a traditional Ukrainian Christmas dish, named “kutya” and all the family gathers together to eat it. Then people go to church to listen to the Christmas sermon.

Not long ago Ukrainians began to celebrate a new holiday, St. Valentine’s Day. It’s the day of lovers, when we give special cards and presents to our sweethearts. This traditional holiday came into Ukraine from the English-speaking countries.

March the 8th, is Women’s Day. This date was introduced in 1910 by the 2-nd International Conference of women-socialists at the proposal of Clara Tsetkin as a day of the international solidarity of women in their struggle for economic, political and social equality. Nowadays this date has lost its political meaning and became just the day when we congratulate and thank our women for everything they do for us at home and at work, say our good wishes, give them flowers and presents.

Easter Day comes according to the lunar calendar. It’s the Day of Jesus Christ’s Resurrection. People celebrate this Holiday because He died on the Cross for our salvation. They go to churches to listen to sermons, gather at homes to pray and thank Jesus Christ for our salvation from eternal death into eternal life with Him in Heaven.

On May the 9th, we celebrate the anniversary of Victory over Nazi Germany. People go to the Tombs of the Unknown Soldier who died at war defending our country from fascists, put flowers to the monuments, and in the evening everybody goes to see the holiday salute.

On August the 24th, we celebrate the Day of Independence of Ukraine, which was proclaimed in 1991 on the decision of the Supreme Soviet of Ukraine after the military coup in Moscow.

On November the 7th and the 8th, we commemorate the anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution. History isn’t something to be rewritten. Millions of people died in an attempt to realize their own ideas of the best state system. We aren’t to judge anybody, we are just to pray for the peace of their souls.

On the 1st of May we celebrate the holiday of spring, nature awakening and beauty. We also like our holidays because we always have our family reunion on these days.

Ukrainian Cuisine

It is a bit difficult and thankless task to describe a cuisine of any country. It is much more pleasant to taste it once than to talk or to read about it. And the Ukrainian cuisine is really worth tasting. It is considered to be one of the richest national cuisines. The recipes of traditional Ukrainian dishes are very popular and known abroad.

The large number of components is the feature that can characterize the Ukrainian dishes. The basic ingredients are potatos, beets, onions, mushrooms, carrots, cabbages and pepper. For example, borsch – the traditional dish in Ukraine – contains 20 ingredients. The thermal processing of the products of the dishes is also peculiar. Several types of thermal processing are used for food preparing. They are not complicated – frying, boiling, stewing and baking. The number of different fruits and berries, as well as fish, meat and poultry are used in the Ukrainian recipes. Pork is the most common meat product and it is present in large amount in the dishes of first courses.

Borsch is considered to be the national dish of Ukraine. It’s an aromatic and appetizing beet-based soup. A typical Ukrainian borsch contains meat, beetroot, carrot, onion, potato and cabbage. It may contain up to 20 ingredients, depending from the season and region.

Cereals are also very popular: pumpkin, buckwheat, millet etc.

Floury foods take rather important place in Ukrainian recipes: dumplings, grechanyky, curds, pancakes, verguny, puchkenyky and others, Boiled dumplings are varenyky. Usually they are made of boiled dough and filled with meat, mashed potatoes, cabbage, mushrooms , sweetened cottage cheese or berries. Varenyky can be accompanied by sour crиme or butter.

Many Ukrainians prefer cooking in ceramic pots. The food cooked in such pots is very tasteful: potatoes with meat and prunes, roast meat, curbs with sour cream, etc.

Ukrainian cuisine is considered to be a symbol of Ukrainiaation hospitality. It is the honest truth that Ukrainians treat a gust like a member of the family and it is an affair of honor for any housemaster or housewife to receive and feed a guest. Ukrainian cuisine is the cultural heritage of the Ukrainiaation, like their faith, folklore and language.

Places to see in Ukraine

There are many places worth sightseeing on the territory of Ukraine because of its ancient history.

A wide range of interesting things awaits the tourists, beginning with Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, where there exist magnificent historic sights, St. Sophia Cathedral (1017-1031), the Kyiv Cave Monastery (1051) and numerous museums.

A cruise on the Dnipro River offers visitors a fascinating introduction to Ukraine’s history and culture.

One of historic places is Zaporizhzhia where Cossack movement began in the 15th century. Nearby is the famous 700- year-old oak tree- 36 metres high.

Odessa, a regional centre and seaport, has seven theatres, a philharmonic orchestra, choir, the Opera and Ballet Theatre.

The old town of Kaniv is situated on the high right bank of the Dnipro River. This town is World-known for its Tarasova Hora. Taras Shevchenko, the great Ukrainian poet, artist and philosopher is buried here.

Chernihiv is one of the oldest towns in our country. There are five out of twenty-five architectural landmarks of the 11th–12th centuries preserved in Chernihiv. It was one of the most important centres of Kyivan Rus.

Another place in Ukraine, which attracts a lot of visitors, is Uman. It is famous for its dendrologic park-reserve “Sophiyivka”. This park was set up in the period of 1796- 1801 by Count Pototsky for his wife, Sophia, and was called after her name. The park is one of the most outstanding monuments of garden architecture in Ukraine.

Lviv, a beautiful city in the west of Ukraine, was founded by Prince Danylo Halytsky, Historically, it is first mentioned in 1256. Today Lviv has an area of 155 square km. Its core is the city of the 14th-18th centuries. It is densely built up with tall stone buildings, many of them in their original style. The Lychakiv Cemetery contains some famous monuments to well-known Ukrainian and Polish residents of Lviv. The oldest monument in Lviv is the foundation and walls of St. Nicholas’s Church, built by Prince Danylo in the 13th century. The remnants of Vysoky Zamok date back to the 13th century. Lviv is the only city in Ukraine that still has some original Renaissance architecture.

In the south the Crimea lies, with its warm weather, seashore sanatoriums and rest homes, which has much to offer tourists.

Travelling across Ukraine one can have an excellent opportunity to learn its history and culture, to see its ancient monuments and picturesque views Ukraine has always been famous for.

VIDEO

Welcome to Ukraine

  The traditional view (mostly influenced by Russian and Polish historiography) on the etymology of Ukraine is that it came from the old Slavic term ukraina which meant “border region” or “frontier” and thus corresponded to the Western term march. The term can be often found in Eastern Slavic chronicles from 1187 on, but for a long time it referred not solely to the border lands in present-day Ukraine. The plural term ukrainy was used as well in the Grand Duchy of Moscow as in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In the 16th and 17th centuries, this term was applied to the lands across the border to the nomad world (Crimean Khanate). Frequent raids from the steppe made life in such regions a special and dangerous challenge. With the migration of the Great Abatis Belt southwards, the application of the term switched to Sloboda Ukraine and then to Central Ukraine. Over time it gained an ethnic meaning, as applied to the local South Rus’ (Little Russia in the ecclesiasticand the imperial Russian terminology).

Many contemporary Ukrainian historians translate the term “u-kraine” as “in-land”, “home-land” or “our-country”. The accompanying claim that it always had a strictly separate meaning to “borderland” (ukraina vs. okraina) is considered inconsistent with a number of historical sources, often of other than Ukrainian origin. The translation as “borderland” agrees with the traditional Russian-language meaning of “у-” (u-) and “краина” (kraina).

Though the form “the Ukraine” was once the more common term in English, it has become less accepted after the Ukrainian government officially requested that the article be dropped in 1993, shortly after independence. Most sources have since dropped the article in favour of simply “Ukraine”.

Human settlement in Ukraine and its vicinity dates back to 32,000 BCE, with evidence of the Gravettian culture in the Crimean Mountains. By 4,500 BCE, the Neolithic Cucuteni-Trypillian Culture flourished in a wide area that included parts of modern Ukraine including Trypillia and the entire DnieperDniester region. During the Iron Age, the land was inhabited by Cimmerians, Scythians, and Sarmatians. Between 700 BC and 200 BC it was part of the Scythian Kingdom, or Scythia.

Later, colonies of Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, and the Byzantine Empire, such as Tyras, Olbia, and Hermonassa, were founded, beginning in the 6th century BC, on the northeastern shore of the Black Sea, and thrived well into the 6th century AD. The Goths stayed in the area but came under the sway of the Huns from the 370s AD. In the 7th century AD, the territory of eastern Ukraine was the center of Old Great Bulgaria. At the end of the century, the majority of Bulgar tribes migrated in different directions, and the Khazars took over much of the land.

 Kievan Rus’ was founded by the Rus’ people, Varangians who first settled around Ladoga and Novgorod, then gradually moved southward eventually reaching Kiev about 880. Kievan Rus’ included the western part of modern Ukraine, Belarus, with larger part of it situated on the territory of modern Russia. According to the Primary Chronicle the Rus’ elite initially consisted of Varangians from Scandinavia.

During the 10th and 11th centuries, it became the largest and most powerful state in Europe.[32] In the following centuries, it laid the foundation for the national identity of Ukrainians and Russians. Kiev, the capital of modern Ukraine, became the most important city of the Rus’.

Map of the Kievan Rus’ in the 11th century.

The Varangians later assimilated into the local Slavic population and became part of the Rus’ first dynasty, the Rurik Dynasty. Kievan Rus’ was composed of several principalities ruled by the interrelated Rurikid Princes. The seat of Kiev, the most prestigious and influential of all principalities, became the subject of many rivalries among Rurikids as the most valuable prize in their quest for power.

The Golden Age of Kievan Rus’ began with the reign of Vladimir the Great (980–1015), who turned Rus’ toward Byzantine Christianity. During the reign of his son, Yaroslav the Wise (1019–1054), Kievan Rus’ reached the zenith of its cultural development and military power. This was followed by the state’s increasing fragmentation as the relative importance of regional powers rose again. After a final resurgence under the rule of Vladimir Monomakh (1113–1125) and his son Mstislav (1125–1132), Kievan Rus’ finally disintegrated into separate principalities following Mstislav’s death.

In the 11th and 12th centuries, constant incursions by nomadic Turkic tribes, such as the Pechenegs and the Kipchaks, caused a massive migration of Slavic populations to the safer, heavily forested regions of the north. The 13th century Mongol invasion devastated Kievan Rus’. Kiev was totally destroyed in 1240. On today’s Ukrainian territory, the state of Kievan Rus’ was succeeded by the principalities of Halych and Volodymyr-Volynskyi, which were merged into the state of Galicia-Volhynia.

In the centuries following the Mongol invasion, much of Ukraine was controlled by Lithuania (from the 14th century on) and since the Union of Lublin (1569) by Poland

In the mid-14th century and upon death of Bolesław Jerzy II of Mazovia, king Casimir III of Poland started campaigns (1340-1366) for Galicia-Volhynia, while the heartland of Rus’, including Kiev, became the territory of the Grand Dutchy of Lithuania starting with Gediminas and his successors after the Battle on the Irpen’ River. Following the 1386 Union of Krewo, a dynastic union between Poland and Lithuania, much of what became northern Ukraine was ruled by the increasingly Slavicised local Lithuaniaobles as part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and by 1392 so called Galicia–Volhynia Wars ended. Polish colonisation of depopulated lands of northern and central Ukraine begun, numerous new towns were founded and old towns refounded. In 1430 Podolia became incorporated into the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland as Podolian Voivodeship. In 1441, in the southern Ukraine, especially Crimea and surrounding steppes, Genghisid prince Haci I Giray founded the Crimean Khanate.

By 1569, the Union of Lublin formed the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and a significant part of Ukrainian territory was transferred from Duchy of Lithuania to the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, thus becoming Polish territory de jure. Under the demografic, cultural and political pressure of Polonisation begun already in late 14th century, many upper-class people of Polish Ruthenia (another term for the land of Rus) converted to Catholicism and became indistinguishable from the Polish nobility. Thus, the commoners (peasants and town people), deprived of their native protectors among Rus nobility, eventually turned for protection to the emerging Zaporozhian Cossacks, who by 17th century became fiercely Orthodox. The Cossacks tended to turn to violence against those they perceived as enemies, particularly the Polish state and its representatives.

In the mid-17th century, a Cossack military quasi-state, the Zaporozhian Host, was established by the Dnieper Cossacks and the Ruthenian peasants fleeing Polish serfdom. Poland had little real control of this land, yet they found the Cossacks to be a useful fighting force against the Turks and Tatars,[39] and at times the two allied in military campaigns. However, the continued enserfment of peasantry by the Polish nobility, emphasized by the Commonwealth’s fierce exploitation of the workforce, and most importantly, the suppression of the Orthodox Church pushed the allegiances of Cossacks away from Poland.

The Cossacks aspired to have representation in Polish Sejm, recognition of Orthodox traditions and the gradual expansion of the Cossack Registry. These were all vehemently rejected by the Polish nobility, who had power in the Sejm. The Cossacks eventually turned for protection to Orthodox Russia, a decision which would later lead towards the downfall of the Polish–Lithuanian state, and the preservation of the Orthodox Church and in Ukraine.

Bohdan Khmelnytsky, “Hetman of Ukraine”, established an independent Ukraine after the uprising in 1648 against Poland

In 1648, Bohdan Khmelnytsky led the largest of the Cossack uprisings against the Commonwealth and the Polish king John II Casimir. Left-bank Ukraine was eventually integrated into Muscovite Russia as Rada faced the alternatives of subjection to Poland, allegiance to Turkey, or allegiance to Muscovy and chose the latter as the Cossack Hetmanate as recorded in the 1654 Treaty of Pereyaslav. There followed the Russo-Polish War which ended in 1667. After the partitions of Poland at the end of the 18th century by Prussia, Habsburg Austria, and Russia, Western Ukrainian Galicia was taken over by Austria.

The Crimean Khanate was one of the strongest powers in Eastern Europe until the 18th century; at one point it even succeeded, under the Crimean khan Devlet I Giray, to devastate Moscow. The Russian population of the borderlands suffered annual Tatar invasions and tens of thousands of soldiers were required to protect the southern boundaries. From the beginning of the 16th century until the end of 17th century the Crimean Tatar raider bands made almost annual forays into agricultural Slavic lands searching for captives to sell as slaves. According to Orest Subtelny, “from 1450 to 1586, eighty-six Tatar raids were recorded, and from 1600 to 1647, seventy.” In 1688, Tatars captured a record number of 60,000 Ukrainians. This was a heavy burden for the state, and slowed its social and economic development. Since Crimean Tatars did not permit settlement of Russians to southern regions where the soil is better and the season is long enough, Muscovy had to depend on poorer regions and labour-intensive agriculture. Poland-Lithuania, Moldavia and Wallachia were also subjected to extensive slave raiding. The Crimean Khanate was conquered by the Russian Empire in 1778, bringing an end to the last Tatar state.

In 1657–1686 came “The Ruin,” a devastating 30-year war amongst Russia, Poland, Turks and Cossacks for control of Ukraine, which occurred at about the same time as the Deluge of Poland. For three years, Khmelnytsky’s armies controlled present-day western and central Ukraine, but, deserted by his Tatar allies, he suffered a crushing defeat at Berestechko, and turned to the Russian tsar for help.

In 1654, Khmelnytsky signed the Treaty of Pereiaslav, forming a military and political alliance with Russia that acknowledged loyalty to the Czar. The wars escalated in intensity with hundreds of thousands of deaths. Defeat came in 1686 as the “Eternal Peace” between Russia and Poland gave Kiev and the Cossack lands east of the Dnieper over to Russian rule and the Ukrainian lands west of the Dnieper to Poland.

In 1709 Cossack Hetman Ivan Mazepa (1687–1709) sided with Sweden against Russia in the Great Northern War (1700–1721). Mazepa, a member of the Cossack nobility, received an excellent education abroad and proved to be a brilliant political and military leader enjoying good relations with the Romanov dynasty. After Peter the Great became czar, Mazepa as hetman gave him more than twenty years of loyal military and diplomatic service and was well rewarded.

Eventually Peter recognized that in order to consolidate and modernize Russia’s political and economic power it was necessary to do away with the hetmanate and Ukrainian and Cossack aspirations to autonomy. Mazepa accepted Polish invitations to join the Poles and Swedes against Russia. The move was disastrous for the hetmanate, Ukrainian autonomy, and Mazepa. He died in exile after fleeing from the Battle of Poltava (1709), where the Swedes and their Cossack allies suffered a catastrophic defeat at the hands of Peter’s Russian forces.

The hetmanate was abolished in 1764; the Zaporizhska Sich abolished in 1775, as Russia centralized control over its lands. As part of the partitioning of Poland in 1772, 1793, and 1795, the Ukrainian lands west of the Dnieper were divided between Russia and Austria. From 1737 to 1834, expansion into the northern Black Sea littoral and the eastern Danube valley was a cornerstone of Russian foreign policy.

Lithuanians and Poles controlled vast estates in Ukraine, and were a law unto themselves. Judicial rulings from Cracow were routinely flouted, while peasants were heavily taxed and practically tied to the land as serfs. Occasionally the landowners battled each other using armies of Ukrainian peasants. The Poles and Lithuanians were Roman Catholics and tried with some success to convert the Orthodox lesser nobility. In 1596 they set up the “Greek-Catholic” or Uniate Church, under the authority of the Pope but using Eastern rituals; it dominates western Ukraine to this day. Tensions between the Uniates and the Orthodox were never resolved, and the religious differentiation left the Ukrainian Orthodox peasants leaderless, as they were reluctant to follow the Ukrainiaobles.

Cossacks led an uprising, called Koliivshchyna, starting in the Ukrainian borderlands of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1768. Ethnicity as one root cause of this revolt, which included Ukrainian violence that killed tens of thousands of Poles and Jews. Religious warfare also broke out between Ukrainian groups. Increasing conflict between Uniate and Orthodox parishes along the newly reinforced Polish-Russian border on the Dnepr River in the time of Catherine II set the stage for the uprising. As Uniate religious practices had become more Latinized, Orthodoxy in this region drew even closer into dependence on the Russian Orthodox Church. Confessional tensions also reflected opposing Polish and Russian political allegiances.

After the Russians annexed the Crimean Khanate in 1783, the region was settled by Ukrainian and Russian migrants. Despite the promises of Ukrainian autonomy given by the Treaty of Pereyaslav, the Ukrainian elite and the Cossacks never received the freedoms and the autonomy they were expecting from Imperial Russia. However, within the Empire, Ukrainians rose to the highest Russian state and church offices. At a later period, tsarists established a policy of Russification of Ukrainian lands, suppressing the use of the Ukrainian language in print, and in public.

In the 19th century, Ukraine was a rural area largely ignored by Russia and Austria. With growing urbanization and modernization, and a cultural trend toward romantic nationalism, a Ukrainian intelligentsia committed to national rebirth and social justice emerged. The serf-turned-national-poet Taras Shevchenko (1814–1861) and the political theorist Mykhailo Drahomanov (1841–1895) led the growing nationalist movement.

After Ukraine and Crimea became aligned with the Russian Empire Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774), significant German immigration occurred after it was encouraged by Catherine the Great and her immediate successors. Immigration was encouraged into Ukraine and especially the Crimea by Catherine in her proclamation of open migration to the Russian Empire. Immigration was encouraged for Germans and other Europeans to thin the previously dominant Turk population and encourage more complete use of farmland.

Beginning in the 19th century, there was a continuous migration from Ukraine to settle the distant areas of the Russian Empire. According to the 1897 census, there were 223,000 ethnic Ukrainians in Siberia and 102,000 in Central Asia.[51] Between 1896 and 1906, after the construction of the trans-Siberian railway, a total of 1.6 million Ukrainians migrated eastward.

Nationalist and socialist parties developed in the late 19th century. Austrian Galicia, which enjoyed substantial political freedom under the relatively lenient rule of the Habsburgs, became the center of the nationalist movement.

Ukrainians entered World War I on the side of both the Central Powers, under Austria, and the Triple Entente, under Russia. 3.5 million Ukrainians fought with the Imperial Russian Army, while 250,000 fought for the Austro-Hungarian Army. During the war, Austro-Hungarian authorities established the Ukrainian Legion to fight against the Russian Empire. This legion was the foundation of the Ukrainian Galician Army that fought against the Bolsheviks and Poles in the post World War I period (1919–23). Those suspected of Russophile sentiments in Austria were treated harshly. Up to 5,000 supporters of the Russian Empire from Galicia were detained and placed in Austrian internment camps in Talerhof, Styria, and in a fortress at Terezín (now in the Czech Republic).

Mykhailo Hrushevskyi, President of the Ukrainian People’s Republic, was one of the most important figures of the Ukrainiaational revival of the early 20th century.

When World War I ended, several empires collapsed; among them were the Russian and Austrian empires. The Russian Revolution of 1917 ensued, and a Ukrainiaational movement for self-determination reemerged, with heavy Communist/Socialist influence. During 1917–20, several separate Ukrainian states briefly emerged: the Ukrainian People’s Republic, the Hetmanate, the Directorate and the pro-Bolshevik Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (or Soviet Ukraine) successively established territories in the former Russian Empire; while the West Ukrainian People’s Republic and the Hutsul Republic emerged briefly in the former Austro-Hungarian territory. This led to civil war, and an anarchist movement called the Black Army led by Nestor Makhno developed in Southern Ukraine during that war.

However, Poland defeated Western Ukraine in the Polish-Ukrainian War, but failed against the Bolsheviks in an offensive against Kiev. According to the Peace of Riga concluded between the Soviets and Poland, western Ukraine was officially incorporated into Poland, who in turn recognised the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in March 1919. Ukraine became a founding member of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics or the Soviet Union in December 1922.

The war in Ukraine continued for another two years; by 1921, however, most of Ukraine had been taken over by the Soviet Union, while Galicia and Volhynia were incorporated into independent Poland.

A powerful underground Ukrainiaationalist movement rose in Poland in the 1920s and 1930s, led by the Ukrainian Military Organization and the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN). The movement attracted a militant following among students and harassed the Polish authorities. Legal Ukrainian parties, the Ukrainian Catholic Church, an active press, and a business sector also flourished in Poland. Economic conditions improved in the 1920s, but the region suffered from the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Children affected by famine in Soviet-administered southern Ukraine

The civil war that eventually brought the Soviet government to power devastated Ukraine. It left over 1.5 million people dead and hundreds of thousands homeless. In addition, Soviet Ukraine had to face the famine of 1921. Seeing an exhausted Ukraine, the Soviet government remained very flexible during the 1920s. Thus, under the aegis of the Ukrainization policy pursued by the national Communist leadership of Mykola Skrypnyk, Soviet leadership encouraged a national renaissance in literature and the arts. The Ukrainian culture and language enjoyed a revival, as Ukrainisation became a local implementation of the Soviet-wide policy of Korenisation (literally indigenisation) policy. The Bolsheviks were also committed to introducing universal health care, education and social-security benefits, as well as the right to work and housing. Women’s rights were greatly increased through new laws designed to wipe away centuries-old inequalities. Most of these policies were sharply reversed by the early 1930s after Joseph Stalin gradually consolidated power to become the de facto communist party leader.

The communists gave a privileged position to manual labor, the largest class in the cities, where Russians dominated. The typical worker was more attached to class identity than to ethnicity. Although there were incidents of ethnic friction among workers (in addition to Ukrainians and Russians there were significant numbers of Poles, Germans, Jews, and others in the Ukrainian workforce), industrial laborers had already adopted Russian culture and language to a significant extent. Workers whose ethnicity was Ukrainian were not attracted to campaigns of Ukrainianization or de-Russification in meaningful numbers, but remained loyal members of the Soviet working class. There was no significant antagonism between workers identifying themselves as Ukrainian or Russian.

Starting from the late 1920s, Ukraine was involved in the Soviet industrialisation and the republic’s industrial output quadrupled during the 1930s.

The industrialisation had a heavy cost for the peasantry, demographically a backbone of the Ukrainiaation. To satisfy the state’s need for increased food supplies and to finance industrialisation, Stalin instituted a program of collectivisation of agriculture as the state combined the peasants’ lands and animals into collective farms and enforced the policies by the regular troops and secret police. Those who resisted were arrested and deported and the increased production quotas were placed on the peasantry. The collectivisation had a devastating effect on agricultural productivity. As the members of the collective farms were not allowed to receive any grain until sometimes unrealistic quotas were met, starvation in the Soviet Union became more common. In 1932–33, millions starved to death in a famine known as Holodomor or “Great Famine”. Scholars are divided as to whether this famine fits the definition of genocide, but the Ukrainian parliament and other countries recognise it as such.

The famine claimed up to 10 million Ukrainian lives as peasants’ food stocks were forcibly removed by the Soviet government by the NKVD secret police. Some explanations for the causes for the excess deaths in rural areas of Ukraine and Kazakhstan during 1931–34 has been given by dividing the causes into three groups: objective non-policy-related factors, like the drought of 1931 and poor weather in 1932; inadvertent result of policies with other objectives, like rapid industrialization, socialization of livestock, and neglected crop rotation patterns; and deaths caused intentionally by a starvation policy. The Communist leadership perceived famine not as a humanitarian catastrophe but as a means of class struggle and used starvation as a punishment tool to force peasants into collective farms. It was largely the same groups of individuals who were responsible for the mass killing operations during the civil war, collectivisation, and the Great Terror. These groups were associated with Efim Georgievich Evdokimov (1891–1939) and operated in Ukraine during the civil war, in the North Caucasus in the 1920s, and in the Secret Operational Division within General State Political Administration (OGPU) in 1929–31. Evdokimov transferred into Communist Party administration in 1934, when he became Party secretary for North Caucasus Krai. But he appears to have continued advising Joseph Stalin and Nikolai Yezhov on security matters, and the latter relied on Evdokimov’s former colleagues to carry out the mass killing operations that are known as the Great Terror in 1937–38.

With Joseph Stalin’s change of course in the late 1920s, however, Moscow’s toleration of Ukrainiaational identity came to an end. Systematic state terror of the 1930s destroyed Ukraine’s writers, artists, and intellectuals; the Communist Party of Ukraine was purged of its “nationalist deviationists”. Two waves of Stalinist political repression and persecution in the Soviet Union (1929–34 and 1936–38) resulted in the killing of some 681,692 people; this included four-fifths of the Ukrainian cultural elite and three-quarters of all the Red Army‘s higher-ranking officers.

Kiev suffered significant damage during World War II, and was occupied by Nazi Germany from September 19, 1941 until November 6, 1943

Following the Invasion of Poland in September 1939, German and Soviet troops divided the territory of Poland. Thus, Eastern Galicia and Volhynia with their Ukrainian population became reunited with the rest of Ukraine. The unification that Ukraine achieved for the first time in its history was a decisive event in the history of the nation.

In 1940, Romania ceded Bessarabia and northern Bukovina in response to Soviet demands. The Ukrainian SSR incorporated northern and southern districts of Bessarabia, northern Bukovina, and the Hertsa region. But it ceded the western part of the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic to the newly created Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. All these territorial gains were internationally recognised by the Paris peace treaties of 1947.

German armies invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, thereby initiating four straight years of incessant total war. The Axis allies initially advanced against desperate but unsuccessful efforts of the Red Army. In the encirclement battle of Kiev, the city was acclaimed as a “Hero City“, because the resistance by the Red Army and by the local population was fierce. More than 600,000 Soviet soldiers (or one-quarter of the Western Front) were killed or taken captive there.

Although the wide majority of Ukrainians fought alongside the Red Army and Soviet resistance, some elements of the Ukrainiaationalist underground created an anti-Soviet nationalist formation in Galicia, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (1942). At times it allied with the Nazi forces and, after the war, continued to fight the USSR. Using guerrilla war tactics, the insurgents targeted for assassination and terror those who they perceived as representing, or cooperating at any level with, the Soviet state.

Museum of the Great Patriotic War

At the same time, the Ukrainian Liberation Army, another nationalist movement, fought alongside the Nazis.

In total, the number of ethnic Ukrainians who fought in the ranks of the Soviet Army is estimated from 4.5 million to 7 million. The pro-Soviet partisan guerrilla resistance in Ukraine is estimated to number at 47,800 from the start of occupation to 500,000 at its peak in 1944; with about 50 percent being ethnic Ukrainians. Generally, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army’s figures are very undependable, ranging anywhere from 15,000 to as much as 100,000 fighters.

Initially, some western Ukrainians, who had only joined the Soviet Union in 1939 under pressure, hailed the Germans as liberators. But brutal German rule in the occupied territories eventually turned its supporters against them. Nazi administrators of conquered Soviet territories made little attempt to exploit the dissatisfaction of Ukraine with Stalinist political and economic policies. Instead, the Nazis preserved the collective-farm system, systematically carried out genocidal policies against Jews, deported men to work in forced labour camps in Germany, and began a systematic depopulation of Ukraine (along with Poland) to prepare it for German colonisation. They blockaded the transport of food on the Kiev River.

The vast majority of the fighting in World War II took place on the Eastern Front. It has been estimated that 93 percent of all German casualties took place on the Eastern Front. The total losses inflicted upon the Ukrainian population during the war are estimated between five and eight million, including over half a million Jews killed by the Einsatzgruppen, sometimes with the help of local collaborators. Of the estimated 8.7 million Soviet troops who fell in battle against the Nazis, 1.4 million were ethnic Ukrainians. Victory Day is celebrated as one of ten Ukrainiaational holidays.

The republic was heavily damaged by the war, and it required significant efforts to recover. More than 700 cities and towns and 28,000 villages were destroyed. The situation was worsened by a famine in 1946–47, which was caused by a drought and the wartime destruction of infrastructure. The death toll of this famine varies, with even the lowest estimate in the tens of thousands.

In 1945, the Ukrainian SSR became one of the founding members of the United Nations organization. The first Soviet computer, MESM, was built at the Kiev Institute of Electrotechnology and became operational in 1950.

Postwar ethnic cleansing occurred in the newly expanded Soviet Union. As of January 1, 1953, Ukrainians were second only to Russians among adult “special deportees“, comprising 20% of the total. In addition, over 450,000 ethnic Germans from Ukraine and more than 200,000 Crimean Tatars were victims of forced deportations.

Following the death of Stalin in 1953, Nikita Khrushchev became the new leader of the USSR. Having served as First Secretary of the Communist Party of Ukrainian SSR in 1938–49, Khrushchev was intimately familiar with the republic; after taking power union-wide, he began to emphasize the friendship between the Ukrainian and Russiaations. In 1954, the 300th anniversary of the Treaty of Pereyaslav was widely celebrated. Crimea was transferred from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR.

By 1950, the republic had fully surpassed pre-war levels of industry and production. During the 1946–1950 five-year plan, nearly 20% of the Soviet budget was invested in Soviet Ukraine, a 5% increase from prewar plans. As a result, the Ukrainian workforce rose 33.2% from 1940 to 1955 while industrial output grew 2.2 times in that same period.

Soviet Ukraine soon became a European leader in industrial production, and an important center of the Soviet arms industry and high-tech research. Such an important role resulted in a major influence of the local elite. Many members of the Soviet leadership came from Ukraine, most notably Leonid Brezhnev. He later ousted Khrushchev and became the Soviet leader from 1964 to 1982. Many prominent Soviet sports players, scientists, and artists came from Ukraine.

On April 26, 1986, a reactor in the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded, resulting in the Chernobyl disaster, the worst nuclear reactor accident in history. This was the only accident to receive the highest possible rating of 7 by the International Nuclear Event Scale, indicating a “major accident”, until the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in March 2011. At the time of the accident, 7 million people lived in the contaminated territories, including 2.2 million in Ukraine.

After the accident, the new city of Slavutych was built outside the exclusion zone to house and support the employees of the plant, which was decommissioned in 2000. A report prepared by the International Atomic Energy Agency and World Health Organization attributed 56 direct deaths to the accident and estimated that there may have been 4,000 extra cancer deaths.

On July 16, 1990, the new parliament adopted the Declaration of State Sovereignty of Ukraine. The declaration established the principles of the self-determination of the Ukrainiaation, its democracy, political and economic independence, and the priority of Ukrainian law on the Ukrainian territory over Soviet law. A month earlier, a similar declaration was adopted by the parliament of the Russian SFSR. This started a period of confrontation between the central Soviet, and new republican authorities. In August 1991, a conservative faction among the Communist leaders of the Soviet Union attempted a coup to remove Mikhail Gorbachev and to restore the Communist party’s power. After the attempt failed, on August 24, 1991 the Ukrainian parliament adopted the Act of Independence in which the parliament declared Ukraine as an independent democratic state.

A referendum and the first presidential elections took place on December 1, 1991. That day, more than 90 percent of the Ukrainian people expressed their support for the Act of Independence, and they elected the chairman of the parliament, Leonid Kravchuk to serve as the first President of the country. At the meeting in Brest, Belarus on December 8, followed by Alma Ata meeting on December 21, the leaders of Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine, formally dissolved the Soviet Union and formed the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

Although the idea of an independent Ukrainiaation had previously not existed in the 20th century in the minds of international policy makers, Ukraine was initially viewed as a republic with favorable economic conditions in comparison to the other regions of the Soviet Union. However, the country experienced deeper economic slowdown than some of the other former Soviet Republics. During the recession, Ukraine lost 60 percent of its GDP from 1991 to 1999 and suffered five-digit inflation rates. Dissatisfied with the economic conditions, as well as the amounts of crime and corruption in Ukraine, Ukrainians protested and organised strikes.

The Ukrainian economy stabilized by the end of the 1990s. A new currency, the hryvnia, was introduced in 1996. Since 2000, the country has enjoyed steady real economic growth averaging about seven percent annually. A new Constitution of Ukraine was adopted under second President Leonid Kuchma in 1996, which turned Ukraine into a semi-presidential republic and established a stable political system. Kuchma was, however, criticized by opponents for corruption, electoral fraud, discouraging free speech and concentrating too much power in his office. He also repeatedly transferred public property into the hands of loyal oligarchs.

Protesters at Independence Square on the first day of the Orange Revolution

In 2004, Viktor Yanukovych, then Prime Minister, was declared the winner of the presidential elections, which had been largely rigged, as the Supreme Court of Ukraine later ruled. The results caused a public outcry in support of the opposition candidate, Viktor Yushchenko, who challenged the outcome of the elections. This resulted in the peaceful Orange Revolution, bringing Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko to power, while casting Viktor Yanukovych in opposition. Yanukovych returned to a position of power in 2006, when he became Prime Minister in the Alliance of National Unity, until snap elections in September 2007 made Tymoshenko Prime Minister again. Yanukovych was elected President in 2010.

Disputes with Russia over the price of natural gas briefly stopped all gas supplies to Ukraine in 2006 and again in 2009, leading to gas shortages in several other European countries.

With the proclamation of its independence on August 24, 1991, and adoption of a constitution on June 28, 1996, Ukraine became a semi-presidential republic. However, in 2004, deputies introduced changes to the Constitution, which tipped the balance of power in favour parliament. From 2004 to 2010, the legitimacy of the 2004 Constitutional amendments had official sanction, both with the Constitutional Court of Ukraine, and most major political parties. Despite this, on September 30, 2010 the Constitutional Court ruled that the amendments were null and void, forcing a return to the terms of the 1996 Constitution and again making Ukraine’s political system more presidential in character.

The ruling on the 2004 Constitutional amendments has become a major topic of political discourse. Much of the concern has been due to the fact that neither the Constitution of 1996 nor the Constitution of 2004 provides the ability to “undo the Constitution”, as the decision of the Constitutional Court would have it, even though the 2004 constitution arguably has an exhaustive list of possible procedures for constitutional amendments (articles 154–159). In any case, the current Constitution can arguably be modified only by a vote in Parliament.

The session chamber of the Verkhovna Rada, the Parliament of Ukraine

The President is elected by popular vote for a five-year term and is the formal head of state. Ukraine’s legislative branch includes the 450-seat unicameral parliament, the Verkhovna Rada. The parliament is primarily responsible for the formation of the executive branch and the Cabinet of Ministers, which is headed by the Prime Minister. However, the President still retains the authority to nominate the Ministers of the Foreign Affairs and of Defence for parliamentary approval, as well as the power to appoint the Prosecutor General and the head of the Security Service.

Laws, acts of the parliament and the cabinet, presidential decrees, and acts of the Crimean parliament may be abrogated by the Constitutional Court, should they be found to violate the constitution. Other normative acts are subject to judicial review. The Supreme Court is the main body in the system of courts of general jurisdiction. Local self-government is officially guaranteed. Local councils and city mayors are popularly elected and exercise control over local budgets. The heads of regional and district administrations are appointed by the President in accordance with the proposals of the Prime-Minister. This system virtually requires an agreement between the President and the Prime-Minister, and has in the past led to problems, such as when President Yushchenko used a legally controversial ways to evade the law by appointing no actual governors or the local leaders, but so called ‘temporarily acting’ officers, thus evading the need to seek a compromise with the Prime-Minister. This practice was very controversial and required review by the Constitutional Court.

Ukraine has a large number of political parties, many of which have tiny memberships and are unknown to the general public. Small parties often join in multi-party coalitions (electoral blocs) for the purpose of participating in parliamentary elections.

Foreign relations

 

In 1999–2001, Ukraine served as a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council. Historically, Soviet Ukraine joined the United Nations in 1945 as one of the original members following a Western compromise with the Soviet Union, which had asked for seats for all 15 of its union republics. Ukraine has consistently supported peaceful, negotiated settlements to disputes. It has participated in the quadripartite talks on the conflict in Moldova and promoted a peaceful resolution to conflict in the post-Soviet state of Georgia. Ukraine also has made a substantial contribution to UN peacekeeping operations since 1992.

Prime ministerMykola Azarov

 (right) meets with President of Poland Bronisław Komorowski for talks in Warsaw

Ukraine currently considers Euro-Atlantic integration its primary foreign policy objective, but in practice balances its relationship with the European Union and the United States with strong ties to Russia. The European Union‘s Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) with Ukraine went into force on March 1, 1998. The European Union (EU) has encouraged Ukraine to implement the PCA fully before discussions begin on an association agreement. The EU Common Strategy toward Ukraine, issued at the EU Summit in December 1999 in Helsinki, recognizes Ukraine’s long-term aspirations but does not discuss association. On January 31, 1992, Ukraine joined the then-Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (now the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe—OSCE), and on March 10, 1992, it became a member of the North Atlantic Cooperation Council. Ukraine also has a close relationship with NATO and had previously declared interest in eventual membership, this however was removed from the government’s foreign policy agenda, upon election of Viktor Yanukovych to the presidency, in 2010. It is the most active member of the Partnership for Peace (PfP). All major political parties in Ukraine support full eventual integration into the European Union. The Association Agreement with the EU was expected to be signed into effect by the end of 2011, but the process has been suspended as of 2012 due to recent political developments.

Ukraine maintains peaceful and constructive relations with all its neighbours; it has especially close ties with Russia and Poland, although relations with the former are complicated by energy dependence and payment arrears.

Administrative divisions

The system of Ukrainian subdivisions reflects the country’s status as a unitary state (as stated in the country’s constitution) with unified legal and administrative regimes for each unit.

Ukraine is subdivided into twenty-four oblasts (provinces) and one autonomous republic (avtonomna respublika), Crimea. Additionally, the cities of Kiev, the capital, and Sevastopol, both have a special legal status. The 24 oblasts and Crimea are subdivided into 490 raions (districts), or second-level administrative units. The average area of a Ukrainian raion is 1,200 square kilometres (460 sq mi); the average population of a raion is 52,000 people.

Urban areas (cities) can either be subordinated to the state (as in the case of Kiev and Sevastopol), the oblast or raion administrations, depending on their population and socio-economic importance. Lower administrative units include urban-type settlements, which are similar to rural communities, but are more urbanized, including industrial enterprises, educational facilities, and transport connections, and villages.

In Soviet times, the economy of Ukraine was the second largest in the Soviet Union, being an important industrial and agricultural component of the country’s planned economy. With the dissolution of the Soviet system, the country moved from a planned economy to a market economy. The transition process was difficult for the majority of the population which plunged into poverty. Ukraine’s economy contracted severely following the years after the Soviet dissolution. Day to day life for the average person living in Ukraine was a struggle. A significant number of citizens in rural Ukraine survived by growing their own food, often working two or more jobs and buying the basic necessities through the barter economy.

In 1991, the government liberalised most prices to combat widespread product shortages, and was successful in overcoming the problem. At the same time, the government continued to subsidise state-run industries and agriculture by uncovered monetary emission. The loose monetary policies of the early 1990s pushed inflation to hyperinflationary levels. For the year 1993, Ukraine holds the world record for inflation in one calendar year. Those living on fixed incomes suffered the most. Prices stabilised only after the introduction of new currency, the hryvnia, in 1996.

The country was also slow in implementing structural reforms. Following independence, the government formed a legal framework for privatisation. However, widespread resistance to reforms within the government and from a significant part of the population soon stalled the reform efforts. A large number of state-owned enterprises were exempt from the privatisation process.

In the meantime, by 1999, the GDP had fallen to less than 40 percent of the 1991 level. It recovered considerably in the following years, but still doesn’t reach historical maximum. In the early 2000s, the economy showed strong export-based growth of 5 to 10 percent, with industrial production growing more than 10 percent per year. Ukraine was hit by the economic crisis of 2008 and in November 2008, the IMF approved a stand-by loan of $16.5 billion for the country.

Ukraine’s 2010 GDP (PPP), as calculated by the CIA, is ranked 38th in the world and estimated at $305.2 billion. Its GDP per capita in 2010 according to the CIA was $6,700 (in PPP terms), ranked 107th in the world. Nominal GDP (in U.S. dollars, calculated at market exchange rate) was $136 billion, ranked 53rd in the world. By July 2008 the average nominal salary in Ukraine reached 1,930 hryvnias per month. Despite remaining lower than ieighbouring central European countries, the salary income growth in 2008 stood at 36.8 percent According to the UNDP in 2003 4.9% of the Ukrainian population lived under 2 US dollar a day and 19.5% of the population lived below the national poverty line that same year. According to the World Bank in 2010 only 0.1% of population lived under 2 US dollar a day.

Ukraine produces nearly all types of transportation vehicles and spacecraft. Antonov airplanes and KrAZ trucks are exported to many countries. The majority of Ukrainian exports are marketed to the European Union and CIS.[160] Since independence, Ukraine has maintained its own space agency, the National Space Agency of Ukraine (NSAU). Ukraine became an active participant in scientific space exploration and remote sensing missions. Between 1991 and 2007, Ukraine has launched six self made satellites and 101 launch vehicles, and continues to design spacecraft.

The country imports most energy supplies, especially oil and natural gas, and to a large extent depends on Russia as its energy supplier. While 25 percent of the natural gas in Ukraine comes from internal sources, about 35 percent comes from Russia and the remaining 40 percent from Central Asia through transit routes that Russia controls. At the same time, 85 percent of the Russian gas is delivered to Western Europe through Ukraine.

The World Bank classifies Ukraine as a middle-income state. Significant issues include underdeveloped infrastructure and transportation, corruption and bureaucracy. In 2007 the Ukrainian stock market recorded the second highest growth in the world of 130 percent. According to the CIA, in 2006 the market capitalization of the Ukrainian stock market was $111.8 billion.

Ukrainian administrative divisions by monthly salary

Growing sectors of the Ukrainian economy include the information technology (IT) market, which topped all other Central and Eastern European countries in 2007, growing some 40 percent.[167] Ukraine ranks fourth in the world iumber of certified IT professionals after the United States, India and Russia

Ukraine has a very large heavy-industry base and is one of the largest refiners of metallurgical products in Eastern Europe. However, the country is also well known for its production of high-technological goods and transport products, such as Antonov aircraft and various private and commercial vehicles. The country’s largest and most competitive firms are components of the PFTS index which is traded on the PFTS Ukraine Stock Exchange.

Well known Ukrainian brands include, amongst others, Naftogaz Ukrainy, AvtoZAZ, PrivatBank, Roshen, Yuzhmash, Nemiroff, Motor Sich, Khortytsa, Kyivstar, and Aerosvit.

Dnipropetrovsk’s central business district

Ukraine is regarded as being a developing economy with high potential for future success, however such a development is thought to be likely only with new all-encompassing economic and legal reforms. Although Foreign Direct Investment in Ukraine has remained relatively strong ever since recession of the early 1990s, the country has had trouble maintaining stable economic growth. Issues relating to current corporate governance in Ukraine are primarily linked to the large scale monopolisation of traditional heavy industries by wealthy individuals such as Rinat Akhmetov, the enduring failure to broaden the nation’s economic base and a lack of effective legal protection for investors and their products. Despite all this, Ukraine’s economy is still expected to grow by around 3.5% in 2010.

Most of the Ukrainian road system has not been upgraded since the Soviet era, and is now outdated. The Ukrainian government has pledged to build some 4,500 km (2,800 mi) of motorways by 2012. In total, Ukrainian paved roads stretch for 164,732 kilometres (102,360 mi). The network of major routes, marked with the letter ‘M’ for ‘International’, extends nationwide and connects all the major cities of Ukraine as well as providing cross-border routes to the country’s neighbours. Currently there are only two true motorway standard highways in Ukraine; a 175 kilometres (109 miles) stretch of motorway from Kharkiv to Dnipropetrovsk, and a section of the M03 which extends 18 km (11 mi) from Kiev to Boryspil, where the city’s international airport is located.

Rail transport in Ukraine plays the role of connecting all major urban areas, port facilities and industrial centres with neighbouring countries. The heaviest concentration of railroad track is located in the Donbas region of Ukraine. Although the amount of freight transported by rail fell by 7.4 percent in 1995 in comparison with 1994, Ukraine is still one of the world’s highest rail users. The total amount of railroad track in Ukraine extends for 22,473 kilometres (13,964 mi), of which 9,250 kilometres (5,750 mi) is electrified. Currently the state has a monopoly on the provision of passenger rail transport, and all trains, other than those with cooperation of other foreign companies on international routes, are operated by its company ‘Ukrzaliznytsia’.

Rail transport is heavily utilised in Ukraine

The aviation section in Ukraine is developing very quickly, having recently established a visa-free program for EU nationals and citizens of a number of other Western nations, the nation’s aviation sector is handling a significantly increased number of travellers. Additionally, the granting of the Euro 2012 football tournament to Poland and Ukraine as joint hosts has prompted the government to invest huge amounts of money into transport infrastructure, and in particular airports.

Kiev Boryspil is the county’s largest international airport; it has a total of three main passenger terminals and is the base for both of Ukraine’s national airlines. Other large airports in the country include those in Kharkiv, Lviv and Donetsk (all of which have recently constructed, modern terminals and aviation facilities), whilst those in Dnipropetrovsk and Odessa have plans for terminal upgrades in the near future. Ukraine has a number of airlines, the largest of which are the nation’s flag carriers, Aerosvit and UIA. Antonov Airlines, a subsidiary of the Antonov Aerospace Design Bureau is the only operator of the world’s largest fixed wing aircraft, the An-225.

International maritime travel is mainly provided through the Port of Odessa, from where ferries sail regularly to Istanbul, Varna and Haifa. The largest ferry company presently operating these routes is Ukrferry.

Ukraine produces and processes its owatural gas and petroleum. However, the majority of these commodities are imported (and transited), mostly from Russia. Natural gas is heavily utilized not only in energy production but also by steel and chemical industries of the country, as well as by the district heating sector. In 2012, Shell started exploration drilling for shale gas in Ukraine—a project aimed at the nation’s total gas supply independence.

Ukraine has sufficient coal reserves and increases its use in electricity generation.

Ukraine is a net energy exporting country (in 2011, 3.3% of electricity produced were exported)[181] but also one of Europe’s largest energy consumers. As of 2011, 47,6% of total electricity generation in Ukraine was coming from nuclear power,[181] with the country receiving most of its nuclear fuel from Russia. The largest nuclear power plant in Europe, the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, is located in Ukraine. Coal– and gas-fired thermal power station and hydroelectricity are the second and third largest kinds of power generation in the country.

The share of renewables within the total energy mix of Ukraine is still very small, but is growing fast. Total installed capacity of renewable energy installations more than doubled in 2011 and now stands at 397 MW. In 2011 several large solar power stations were opened in Ukraine, among them Europe’s largest solar park in Perovo, (Crimea). Ukrainian State Agency for Energy Efficiency and Conservation forecasts that combined installed capacity of wind and solar power plants in Ukraine could increase by another 600 MW in 2012. According to Macquarie Research, by 2016 Ukraine will construct and commissioew solar power stations with a total capacity of 1.8 GW, which is almost equivalent to the capacity of two nuclear reactors.

The Economic Bank for Reconstruction and Development estimates that Ukraine has great renewable energy potential: the technical potential for wind energy is estimated at 40 TWh/year, small hydropower stations at 8.3 TWh/year, biomass at 120 TWh/year, and solar energy at 50 TWh/year. In 2011, Ukraine’s Energy Ministry predicted that the installed capacity of generation from alternative and renewable energy sources would increase to 9% (about 6 GW) of the total electricity production in the country.

According to the constitution, the state language of Ukraine is Ukrainian. Russian is widely spoken, especially in eastern and southern Ukraine. According to the 2001 census, 67.5 percent of the population declared Ukrainian as their native language and 29.6 percent declared Russian. Most native Ukrainian speakers know Russian as a second language. Russian was the de facto official language of the Soviet Union but both Russian and Ukrainian were official languages in the Soviet Union and in the schools of the Ukrainian SSR learning Ukrainian was mandatory. Effective in August 2012, a new law on regional languages entitles any local language spoken by at least a 10% minority be declared official within that area. Russian was within weeks declared as a regional language in several southern and eastern oblasts (provinces) and cities. Russian caow be used in these cities/Oblasts administrative office work and documents.

Ukrainian is mainly spoken in western and central Ukraine. In western Ukraine, Ukrainian is also the dominant language in cities (such as Lviv). In central Ukraine, Ukrainian and Russian are both equally used in cities, with Russian being more common in Kiev, while Ukrainian is the dominant language in rural communities. In eastern and southern Ukraine, Russian is primarily used in cities, and Ukrainian is used in rural areas. These details result in a significant difference across different survey results, as even a small restating of a question switches responses of a significant group of people.

For a large part of the Soviet era, the number of Ukrainian speakers declined from generation to generation, and by the mid-1980s, the usage of the Ukrainian language in public life had decreased significantly. Following independence, the government of Ukraine began restoring the image and usage of Ukrainian language through a policy of Ukrainisation. Today, all foreign films and TV programs, including Russian ones, are subbed or dubbed in Ukrainian.

Percentage of native Ukrainian speakers by subdivision according to the 2001 census

 

Percentage of native Russian speakers by subdivision according to the 2001 census

According to the Constitution of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, Ukrainian is the only state language of the republic. However, the republic’s constitution specifically recognises Russian as the language of the majority of its population and guarantees its usage ‘in all spheres of public life’. Similarly, the Crimean Tatar language (the language of 12 percent of population of Crimea) is guaranteed a special state protection as well as the ‘languages of other ethnicities’. Russian speakers constitute an overwhelming majority of the Crimean population (77 percent), with Ukrainian speakers comprising just 10.1 percent, and Crimean Tatar speakers 11.4 percent. But in everyday life the majority of Crimean Tatars and Ukrainians in Crimea use Russian.

Ukraine is a destination on the crossroads between central and Eastern Europe, betweeorth and south. It has mountain ranges – the Carpathian Mountains suitable for skiing, hiking, fishing and hunting. The coastline on the Black Sea is a popular summer destination for vacationers. Ukraine has vineyards where they produce native wines, ruins of ancient castles, historical parks, Orthodox and Catholic churches as well as a few mosques and synagogues. Kiev, the country’s capital city has many unique structures such as Saint Sophia Cathedral and broad boulevards. There are other cities well-known to tourists such as the harbour town Odessa and the old city of Lviv in the west. The Crimea, a little “continent” of its own, is a popular vacation destination for tourists for swimming or sun tanning on the Black Sea with its warm climate, rugged mountains, plateaus and ancient ruins. Cities there include: Sevastopol and Yalta – location of the peace conference at the end of World War II. Visitors can also take cruise tours by ship on Dnieper River from Kiev to the Black Sea coastline. Ukrainian cuisine has a long history and offers a wide variety of original dishes.

The Seven Wonders of Ukraine are the seven historical and cultural monuments of Ukraine; the sites were chosen by the general public through an internet-based vote.

According to the Ukrainian Census of 2001, ethnic Ukrainians make up 77.8% of the population. Other significant ethnic groups are theRussians (17.3%), Belarusians (0.6%), Moldovans (0.5%), Crimean Tatars (0.5), Bulgarians (0.4), Hungarians (0.3%), Romanians (0.3%), Poles (0.3%), Jews (0.2), Armenians (0.2), Greeks (0.2%) and Tatars (0.2%). The industrial regions in the east and southeast are the most heavily populated, and about 67.2 percent of the population lives in urban areas.

In total, Ukraine has 457 cities, 176 of them are labeled oblast-class, 279 smaller raion-class cities, and two special legal status cities. These are followed by 886 urban-type settlements and 28,552 villages.

Largest cities or towns of Ukrain

 

Rank

City name

Oblast

Pop.

Rank

City name

Oblast

Pop.

 

Kiev
Kiev

Kharkiv
Kharkiv

1

Kiev

Kiev (city)

2,786,518

11

Luhansk

Luhansk

470,152

Odessa
Odessa

Dnipropetrovsk
Dnipropetrovsk

2

Kharkiv

Kharkiv

1,440,676

12

Makiivka

Donetsk

398,058

3

Odessa

Odessa

1,003,705

13

Vinnytsia

Vinnytsia

369,200

4

Dnipropetrovsk

Dnipropetrovsk

1,001,612

14

Simferopol

Crimea

359,551

5

Donetsk

Donetsk

977,257

15

Sevastopol

Sevastopol

380,301

6

Zaporizhia

Zaporizhia

776,918

16

Kherson

Kherson

340,525

7

Lviv

Lviv

758,351

17

Poltava

Poltava

298,492

8

Kryvyi Rih

Dnipropetrovsk

670,068

18

Chernihiv

Chernihiv

296,896

9

Mykolaiv

Mykolaiv

499,659

19

Cherkasy

Cherkasy

287,591

10

Mariupol

Donetsk

489,702

20

Sumy

Sumy

272,899

 

The dominant religion in Ukraine is Orthodox Christianity, which is currently split between three Church bodies: the Ukrainian Orthodox Church autonomous church body under thePatriarch of Moscow, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kiev Patriarchate, and the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church.

“What religious group do you belong to?” Sociology poll by Razumkov Centre about the religious situation in Ukraine

A distant second by the number of the followers is the Eastern Rite Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, which practices a similar liturgicaland spiritual tradition as Eastern Orthodoxy, but is in communion with the Holy See of the Roman Catholic Church and recognises the primacy of the Pope as head of the Church.

“What religious group do you belong to?” Sociology poll by Razumkov Centre about the religious situation in Ukraine (2006)

Additionally, there are 863 Latin Rite Catholic communities, and 474 clergy members serving some one million Latin Rite Catholics in Ukraine. The group forms some 2.19 percent of the population and consists mainly of ethnic Poles and Hungarians, who live predominantly in the western regions of the country.

Protestant Christians also form around 2.19 percent of the population. Protestant numbers have grown greatly since Ukrainian independence. The Evangelical Baptist Union of Ukraine is the largest group, with more than 150,000 members and about 3000 clergy. The second largest Protestant church is the Ukrainian Church of Evangelical faith (Pentecostals) with 110000 members and over 1500 local churches and over 2000 clergy, but there also exist other Pentecostal groups and unions and together all Pentecostals are over 300,000, with over 3000 local churches. Also there are many Pentecostal high education schools such as the Lviv Theological Seminary and the Kiev Bible Institute. Other groups include Calvinists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Lutherans, Methodists and Seventh-day Adventists. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon) is also present.

There are an estimated 500,000 Muslims in Ukraine, and about 250,000 of them are Crimean Tatars.[209] There are 487 registered Muslim communities, 368 of them on the Crimean peninsula. In addition, some 50,000 Muslims live in Kiev; mostly foreign-born.

The Jewish population is a tiny fraction of what it was before World War II. (In Tsarist times, Ukraine had been part of the Pale of Settlement, to which Jews were largely restricted in the Russian Empire.) The largest Jewish communities in 1926 were in Odessa, 154,000 or 36.5% of the total population; and Kiev, 140,500 or 27.3%. The 2001 census indicated that there are 103,600 Jews in Ukraine, although community leaders claimed that the population could be as large as 300,000. There are no statistics on what share of the Ukrainian Jews are observant, but Orthodox Judaism has the strongest presence in Ukraine. Smaller Reform and Conservative Jewish (Masorti) communities exist as well.

One 2006 survey put the number of non-religious in Ukraine at approximately 62.5% of the population.

Health

Ukraine’s healthcare system is state subsidised and freely available to all Ukrainian citizens and registered residents. However, it is not compulsory to be treated in a state-run hospital as a number of private medical complexes do exist nationwide. The public sector employs most healthcare professionals, with those working for private medical centres typically also retaining their state employment as they are mandated to provide care at public health facilities on a regular basis.

All the country’s medical service providers and hospitals are subordinate to the Ministry of Health, which provides oversight and scrutiny of general medical practice as well as being responsible for the day to day administration of the healthcare system. Despite this standards of hygiene and patient-care have fallen

 

Hospitals in Ukraine are organised along the same lines as most European nations, according to the regional administrative structure; resultantly most towns have their own hospital (Міська Лікарня) and many also have district hospitals (Районна Лікарня). Larger and more specialised medical complexes tend only to be found in major cities, with some even more specialised units located only in the capital, Kiev. However, all Oblasts have their owetwork of general hospitals which are able to deal with almost all medical problems and are typically equipped with major trauma centres; such hospitals are called ‘regional hospitals’.

Ukraine currently faces a number of major public health issues, and is considered to be in a demographic crisis due to its high death rate and low birth rate (the current Ukrainian birth rate is 11 births/1,000 population, and the death rate is 16.3 deaths/1,000 population). A factor contributing to the relatively high death is a high mortality rate among working-age males from preventable causes such as alcohol poisoning and smoking. In 2008, the country’s population was one of the fastest declining in the world at −5% growth. The UN warned that Ukraine’s population could fall by as much as 10 million by 2050 if trends did not improve. In addition to this obesity, systemic high blood pressure and the HIV endemic are all major challenges facing the contemporary Ukrainian healthcare system.

As of March 2009 the Ukrainian government to reforming the health care system, by the creation of a national network of family doctors and improvements in the medical emergency services. Former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko put forward (in November 2009) an idea to start introducing a public healthcare system based on health insurance in the spring of 2010.

The University of Kiev is one of Ukraine’s most important educational institutions

According to the Ukrainian constitution, access to free education is granted to all citizens. Complete general secondary education is compulsory in the state schools which constitute the overwhelming majority. Free higher education in state and communal educational establishments is provided on a competitive basis. There is also a small number of accredited private secondary and higher education institutions.

Because of the Soviet Union’s emphasis on total access of education for all citizens, which continues today, the literacy rate is an estimated 99.4%. Since 2005, an eleven-year school program has been replaced with a twelve-year one: primary education takes four years to complete (starting at age six), middle education (secondary) takes five years to complete; upper secondary then takes three years. In the 12th grade, students take Government Tests, which are also referred to as school-leaving exams. These tests are later used for university admissions.

Ukraine produces the fourth largest number of post-secondary graduates in Europe, while being ranked seventh in population

Ukraine produces the fourth largest number of post-secondary graduates in Europe, while being ranked seventh in population

The first higher education institutions (HEIs) emerged in Ukraine during the late 16th and early 17th centuries. The first Ukrainian higher education institution was the Ostrozka School, or Ostrozkiy Greek-Slavic-Latin Collegium, similar to Western European higher education institutions of the time. Established in 1576 in the town of Ostrog, the Collegium was the first higher education institution in the Eastern Slavic territories. The oldest university was the Kyiv Mohyla Academy, first established in 1632 and in 1694 officially recognized by the government of Imperial Russia as a higher education institution. Among the oldest is also the Lviv University, founded in 1661. More higher education institutions were set up in the 19th century, beginning with universities in Kharkiv (1805), Kiev (1834), Odessa (1865), andChernivtsi (1875) and a number of professional higher education institutions, e.g.: Nizhyn Historical and Philological Institute (originally established as the Gymnasium of Higher Sciences in 1805), a Veterinary Institute (1873) and a Technological Institute (1885) in Kharkiv, aPolytechnic Institute in Kiev (1898) and a Higher Mining School (1899) in Katerynoslav. Rapid growth followed in the Soviet period. By 1988 a number of higher education institutions increased to 146 with over 850,000 students Most HEIs established after 1990 are those owned by private organizations.

The Ukrainian higher education system comprises higher educational establishments, scientificand methodological facilities under federal, municipal and self-governing bodies in charge of education. The organisation of higher education in Ukraine is built up in accordance with the structure of education of the world’s higher developed countries, as is defined byUNESCO and the UN.

Nowadays higher education is either state funded or private. Students that study at state expense receive a standard scholarship if their average marks at the end-of-term exams and differentiated test is at least 4 (see the 5-point grade system below); this rule may be different in some universities. In the case of all grades being the highest (5), the scholarship is increased by 25%. For most students the level of government subsidy is not sufficient to cover their basic living expenses. Most universities provide subsidized housing for out-of-city students. Also, it is common for libraries to supply required books for all registered students. There are two degrees conferred by Ukrainian universities: the Bachelor’s Degree (4 years) and the Master’s Degree (5–6th year). These degrees are introduced in accordance with Bologna process, in which Ukraine is taking part. Historically, Specialist’s Degree (usually 5 years) is still also granted; it was the only degree awarded by universities in the Soviet times.

Ukrainian customs are heavily influenced by Christianity, which is the dominant religion in the country. Gender roles also tend to be more traditional, and grandparents play a greater role in raising children than in the West. The culture of Ukraine has been also influenced by its eastern and western neighbours, which is reflected in its architecture, music and art.

A collection of traditional pysanky fromVolyn

The Communist era had quite a strong effect on the art and writing of Ukraine. In 1932, Stalin made socialist realism state policy in the Soviet Union when he promulgated the decree “On the Reconstruction of Literary and Art Organisations”. This greatly stifled creativity. During the 1980s glasnost (openness) was introduced and Soviet artists and writers again became free to express themselves as they wanted.

The tradition of the Easter egg, known as pysanky, has long roots in Ukraine. These eggs were drawn on with wax to create a pattern; then, the dye was applied to give the eggs their pleasant colours, the dye did not affect the previously wax-coated parts of the egg. After the entire egg was dyed, the wax was removed leaving only the colourful pattern. This tradition is thousands of years old, and precedes the arrival of Christianity to Ukraine. In the city of Kolomya near the foothills of the Carpathian mountains in 2000 was built the museum of Pysanka which won a nomination as the monument of modern Ukraine in 2007, part of the Seven Wonders of Ukraine action.

The history of Ukrainian literature dates back to the 11th century, following the Christianisation of the Kievan Rus’. The writings of the time were mainly liturgical and were written in Old Church Slavonic. Historical accounts of the time were referred to as chronicles, the most significant of which was the Primary Chronicle. Literary activity faced a sudden decline during the Mongol invasion of Rus’.

Ukrainian literature again began to develop in the 14th century, and was advanced significantly in the 16th century with the introduction of print and with the beginning of the Cossack era, under both Russian and Polish dominance. The Cossacks established an independent society and popularized a new kind of epic poems, which marked a high point of Ukrainian oral literature. These advances were then set back in the 17th and early 18th centuries, when publishing in the Ukrainian language was outlawed and prohibited. Nonetheless, by the late 18th century modern literary Ukrainian finally emerged.

The 19th century initiated a vernacular period in Ukraine, led by Ivan Kotliarevsky’s work Eneyida, the first publication written in modern Ukrainian. By the 1830s, Ukrainianromanticism began to develop, and the nation’s most renowned cultural figure, romanticist poet-painter Taras Shevchenko emerged. Where Ivan Kotliarevsky is considered to be the father of literature in the Ukrainian vernacular; Shevchenko is the father of a national revival.

Then, in 1863, use of the Ukrainian language in print was effectively prohibited by the Russian Empire. This severely curtained literary activity in the area, and Ukrainian writers were forced to either publish their works in Russian or release them in Austrian controlled Galicia. The ban was never officially lifted, but it became obsolete after the revolution and the Bolsheviks’ coming to power.

Ukrainian literature continued to flourish in the early Soviet years, when nearly all literary trends were approved. These policies faced a steep decline in the 1930s, when Stalin implemented his policy of socialist realism. The doctrine did not necessarily repress the Ukrainian language, but it required writers to follow a certain style in their works. Literary activities continued to be somewhat limited under the communist party, and it was not until Ukraine gained its independence in 1991 when writers were free to express themselves as they wished.

Ukrainian architecture is a term that describes the motifs and styles that are found in structures built in modern Ukraine, and byUkrainians worldwide. These include initial roots which were established in the Eastern Slavic state of Kievan Rus’. After the 12th century, the distinct architectural history continued in the principalities of Galicia-Volhynia. During the epoch of the Zaporozhian Cossacks, a new style unique to Ukraine was developed under the western influences of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. After the union with theTsardom of Russia, architecture in Ukraine began to develop in different directions, with many structures in the larger eastern, Russian-ruled area built in the styles of Russian architecture of that period, whilst the western Galicia was developed under Austro-Hungarian architectural influences, in both cases producing fine examples. Ukrainiaational motifs would finally be used during the period of theSoviet Union and in modern independent Ukraine.

The great churches of the Rus’, built after the adoption of Christianity in 988, were the first examples of monumental architecture in the East Slavic lands. The architectural style of the Kievan state, which quickly established itself, was strongly influenced by the Byzantine. Early Eastern Orthodox churches were mainly made of wood, with the simplest form of church becoming known as a cell church. Major cathedrals often featured scores of small domes, which led some art historians to take this as an indication of the appearance of pre-Christian pagan Slavic temples.

The Lviv Opera and Ballet Theatre; the architecture of Western Ukraine has been greatly influenced by its long history as a part of Austria-Hungary and Poland

Several examples of these churches survive to this day; however, during the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries, many were externally rebuilt in the Ukrainian Baroque style (see below). Examples include the grand St. Sophia of Kiev – the year 1017 is the earliest record of foundation laid, Church of the Saviour at Berestove – built from 1113 to 1125, and St. Cyril’s Church, circa 12th century. All can still be found in the Ukrainian capital. Several buildings were reconstructed during the late-19th century, including the Assumption Cathedral in Volodymyr-Volynskyi, built in 1160 and reconstructed in 1896–1900, the Paraskevi church in Chernihiv, built in 1201 with reconstruction done in the late 1940s, and the Golden gates in Kiev, built in 1037 and reconstructed in 1982. The latter’s reconstruction was criticized by some art and architecture historians as a revivalist fantasy. Unfortunately little secular orvernacular architecture of Kievan Rus’ has survived.

As Ukraine became increasingly integrated into the Russian Empire, Russian architects had the opportunity to realize their projects in the picturesque landscape that many Ukrainian cities and regions offered. St. Andrew’s Church of Kiev (1747–1754), built by Bartolomeo Rastrelli, is a notable example of Baroque architecture, and its location on top of the Kievan mountain made it a recognizable monument of the city. An equally notable contribution of Rasetrelli was the Mariyinsky Palace, which was built to be a summer residence to Russian EmpressElizabeth. During the reign of the last Hetman of Ukraine, Kirill Razumovsky, many of the Cossack Hetmanate‘s towns such as Hlukhiv,Baturyn and Koselets had grandiose projects built by the appointed architect of Little Russia, Andrey Kvasov. Russia, winning successive wars over the Ottoman Empire and its vassal Crimean Khanate, eventually annexed the whole south of Ukraine and Crimea. RenamedNew Russia, these lands were to be colonized, and new cities such as the Nikolayev, Odessa, Kherson and Sevastopol were founded. These would contain notable examples of Imperial Russian architecture.

In 1934, the capital of Soviet Ukraine moved from Kharkiv to Kiev. During the preceding years, the city was seen as only a regional centre, and hence received little attention. All of that was to change, but at a great price. By this point, the first examples of Stalinist architecturewere already showing, and, in light of the official policy, a new city was to be built on top of the old one. This meant that much-admired examples such as the St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Monastery were destroyed. Even the St. Sophia Cathedral was under threat. Also, the Second World War contributed to the wreckage. After the war, a new project for the reconstruction of central Kiev was unveiled. This transformed the Khreshchatyk avenue into one of the most notable examples of Stalinism in Architecture

. However, by 1955, the new politics of architecture once again promptly stopped the project from fully being realised.

Europe mall in Dnipropetrovsk, an example of modern architecture in Ukraine

The task for modern Ukrainian architecture is diverse application of modern aesthetics, the search for an architect’s own artistic style and inclusion of the existing historico-cultural environment. An example of modern Ukrainian architecture is the reconstruction and renewal of the Maidan Nezalezhnosti in central Kiev, despite the limit set by narrow space within the plaza, the engineers were able to blend together the uneven landscape and also use underground space to set a new shopping centre.

A major project, which may take up most of the 21st century, is the construction of the Kiev City-Centre on the Rybalskyi Peninsula, which, when finished, will include a dense skyscraper park amid the picturesque landscape of the Dnieper.

     Ukraine greatly benefited from the Soviet emphasis on physical education. Such policies left Ukraine with hundreds of stadia, swimming pools, gymnasia, and many other athletic facilities. The most popular sport is football. The top professional league is the Vyscha Liha (“premier league”). The two most successful teams in the Vyscha Liha are rivals FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC Shakhtar Donetsk. Although Shakhtar is the reigning champion of the Vyscha Liha, Dynamo Kyiv has been much more successful historically, winning two UEFA Cup Winners’ Cups, one UEFA Super Cup, a record 13 USSR Championships and a record 12 Ukrainian Championships; while Shakhtar only won six Ukrainian championships and one and last UEFA Cup. Ukraine co-hosted UEFA Euro 2012 alongside Poland.

Sergey Bubka holds the record in the Pole vault; with a great strength, speed and gymnastic abilities, he is repeatedly voted the world’s best athlete.

Many Ukrainians also played for the Soviet national football team, most notably Ihor Belanov and Oleh Blokhin, winners of the prestigious Golden Ball Award for the best football player of the year. This award was only presented to one Ukrainian after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Andriy Shevchenko, the current captain of the Ukrainian national football team. The national team made its debut in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, and reached the quarterfinals before losing to eventual champions, Italy. Ukrainians also fared well in boxing, where the brothers Vitali and Wladimir Klitschko have held world heavyweight championships.

Ukraine made its Olympic debut at the 1994 Winter Olympics. So far, Ukraine has been much more successful in Summer Olympics (115 medals in five appearances) than in the Winter Olympics (five medals in four appearances). Ukraine is currently ranked 35th by number of gold medals won in the All-time Olympic Games medal count, with every country above it, except for Russia, having more appearances.

Kyiv

Kyiv,the capital of Ukraine,is one of the oldest cities of Eastern Europe.It was founded 1525 years ago by Prince Kiy and was named after him.

  Currently, Kiev is the traditional and most commonly used English name for the city, but in 1995 the Ukrainian government adopted Kyiv as the mandatory romanization for use in legislative and official acts.

As a prominent city with a long history, its English name was subject to gradual evolution. The early English spelling was derived from Old East Slavic form Kyjevъ, derived from Kyi , the legendary founder of the city.

Early English sources use various names, including Kiou, Kiow, Kiew, Kiovia. On one of the oldest English maps of the region, Russiae, Moscoviae et Tartariae published by Ortelius (London, 1570) the name of the city is spelled Kiou. On the 1650 map by Guillaume de Beauplan, the name of the city is Kiiow, and the region was named Kÿowia. In the book Travels, by Joseph Marshall (London, 1772), the city is referred to as Kiovia. While the choice of these spellings have likely been influenced by the Polish name of the city as until mid-17th century the city was controlled by Poland, the name Kiev that started to take hold at later times, likely originates on the basis of Russian orthography and pronunciation, during a time when Kiev was in the Russian Empire (since 1708, a seat of a governorate).

In English, Kiev was used in print as early as in 1804 in the John Cary’s “New map of Europe, from the latest authorities” in “Cary’s new universal atlas” published in London. The English travelogue titled New Russia: Journey from Riga to the Crimea by way of Kiev, by Mary Holderness was published in 1823. By 1883, the Oxford English Dictionary included Kiev in a quotation. Kiev is also based on the old Ukrainian language spelling of the city name and was used by Ukrainians and their ancestors from the time of Kievan Rus until only about the last century.

Kyiv is the romanized version of the name of the city used in modern Ukrainian. Starting from the 20th century it has been used in English-language publications of the Ukrainian diaspora and in some academic publications concerning Ukraine. Following independence in 1991, the Ukrainian government introduced the national rules for transliteration of geographic names from Ukrainian into English. According to the rules, the Ukrainian Київ transliterates into Kyiv. This has established the use of the spelling Kyiv in all official documents issued by the governmental authorities since October 1995. The spelling is used by the United Nations, all English-speaking foreign diplomatic missions, several international organizations, Encarta encyclopedia, and by some media in Ukraine. In October 2006, the United States federal government changed its official spelling of the city name to Kyiv, upon the recommendation of the US Board of Geographic Names. The British government has also started using Kyiv. The alternate romanizations Kyyiv (BGN/PCGN transliteration) and Kyjiv (scholarly) are also in use in English-language atlases. Most major English-language news sources like BBC continue to use Kiev.

Kiev is one of the oldest cities of Eastern Europe and has played a pivotal role in the development of the medieval East Slavic civilization as well as in the modern Ukrainiaation.

It is believed that Kiev was founded in the late 9th century (some historians have wrongly referred to as 482 CE). The origin of the city is obscured by legends, one of which tells about a founding-family consisting of a Slavic tribe leader Kyi, the eldest, his brothers Shchek and Khoryv, and also their sister Lybid, who founded the city (The Primary Chronicle). According to it the name Kyiv/Kiev means to “belong to Kyi”. Some claim to find reference to the city in Ptolemy’s work as the Metropolity (the 2nd century). Another legend points that Saint Andrew passed through the area and where he erected a cross, a church was built. Also since the Middle Ages an image of the Saint Michael represented the city as well as the duchy.

There is little historical evidence pertaining to the period when the city was founded. Scattered Slavic settlements existed in the area from the 6th century, but it is unclear whether any of them later developed into the city. 8th-century fortifications were built upon a Slavic settlement apparently abandoned some decades before. It is still unclear whether these fortifications were built by the Slavs or the Khazars. If it was the Slavic peoples then it is also uncertain when Kiev fell under the rule of the Khazar empire or whether the city was, in fact, founded by the Khazars. The Primary Chronicle (a main source of information about the early history of the area) mentions Slavic Kievans telling Askold and Dir that they live without a local ruler and pay a tribute to the Khazars in an event attributed to the 9th century. At least during the 8th and 9th centuries Kiev functioned as an outpost of the Khazar empire. A hill-fortress, called Sambat (Old Turkic for “High Place”) was built to defend the area. At some point during the late 9th or early 10th century Kiev fell under the rule of Varangians and became the nucleus of the Rus’ polity. The date given for Oleg’s conquest of the town in the Primary Chronicle is 882, but some historians, such as Omeljan Pritsak and Constantine Zuckerman, dispute this and maintain that Khazar rule continued as late as the 920s (documentary evidence exists to support this assertion) Other historians suggest that the Magyar tribes ruled the city between 840 and 878, before migrating with some Khazar tribes to Hungary. According to these the building of the fortress of Kiev was finished in 840 by the lead of Keő (Keve), Csák and Geréb, the three brothers, possibly members of the Tarján tribe (the three names are mentioned in the Kiev Chronicle as Kyi, Shchek and Khoryv, none of them are Slavic names and it has been always a hard problem to solve their meaning/origin by Russian historians. Though the three names were put into the Kiev Chronicle in the 12th century and they were identified as old-Russian mythological heroes).

During the 8th and 9th centuries, Kiev was an outpost of the Khazar empire. However, being located on the historical trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks and starting in the late 9th century or early 10th century, Kiev was ruled by the Varangian nobility and became the nucleus of the Rus’ polity, whose ‘Golden Age’ (11th to early 12th centuries) has from the 19th century become referred to as Kievan Rus’. In 968, the nomadic Pechenegs attacked and then besieged the city. In 1203 Kiev was captured and burned by Prince Rurik Rostislavich and his Kipchak allies. In the 1230s the city was besieged and ravaged by different Rus’ princes several times. In 1240 the Mongol invasion of Rus led by Batu Khan completely destroyed Kiev, an event that had a profound effect on the future of the city and the East Slavic civilization. At the time of the Mongol destruction, Kiev was reputed as one of the largest cities in the world, with a population exceeding one hundred thousand.

In the early 1320s, a Lithuanian army led by Gediminas defeated a Slavic army led by Stanislav of Kiev at the Battle on the Irpen’ River, and conquered the city. The Tatars, who also claimed Kiev, retaliated in 1324–1325, so while Kiev was ruled by a Lithuanian prince, it had to pay a tribute to the Golden Horde. Finally, as a result of the Battle of Blue Waters in 1362, Kiev and surrounding areas were incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania by Algirdas, Grand Duke of Lithuania. In 1482, the Crimean Tatars sacked and burned much of Kiev. In 1569 (Union of Lublin), when the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was established, the Lithuanian-controlled lands of the Kiev region, Podolia, Volhynia, and Podlachia, were transferred from Grand Duchy of Lithuania to the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, and Kiev became the capital of Kiev Voivodeship. In 1658 (Treaty of Hadiach), Kiev was supposed to become the capital of the Duchy of Rus’ within Polish–Lithuanian–Ruthenian Commonwealth, but the treaty was never ratified to this extent. Kept by the Russian troops since 1654 (Treaty of Pereyaslav), it became a part of the Tsardom of Russia from 1667 on (Truce of Andrusovo) and enjoyed a degree of autonomy. None of Polish-Russian treaties concerning Kiev has beeever ratified. In the Russian Empire Kiev was a primary Christian centre, attracting pilgrims, and the cradle of many of the empire’s most important religious figures, but until the 19th century the city’s commercial importance remained marginal.

In 1834, the Saint Vladimir University was established; it is now called the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kiev after the Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko. Shevchenko was a field researcher and editor for the geography department.

During the 18th and 19th centuries city life was dominated by the Russian military and ecclesiastical authorities; the Russian Orthodox Church formed a significant part of Kiev’s infrastructure and business activity. In the late 1840s, the historian, Mykola Kostomarov, founded a secret political society, the Brotherhood of Saint Cyril and Methodius, whose members put forward the idea of a federation of free Slavic people with Ukrainians as a distinct and separate group rather than a subordinate part of the Russiaation; the society was quickly suppressed by the authorities.

Following the gradual loss of Ukraine’s autonomy, Kiev experienced growing Russification in the 19th century by means of Russian migration, administrative actions and social modernization. At the beginning of the 20th century, the city centre was dominated by the Russian-speaking part of the population, while the lower classes living on the outskirts retained Ukrainian folk culture to a significant extent. However, enthusiasts among ethnic Ukrainiaobles, military and merchants made recurrent attempts to preserve native culture in Kiev (by clandestine book-printing, amateur theatre, folk studies etc.)

During the Russian industrial revolution in the late 19th century, Kiev became an important trade and transportation centre of the Russian Empire, specialising in sugar and grain export by railway and on the Dnieper river. As of 1900, the city had also become a significant industrial centre, having a population of 250,000. Landmarks of that period include the railway infrastructure, the foundation of numerous educational and cultural facilities as well as notable architectural monuments (mostly merchant-oriented). The first electric tram line of the Russian Empire was established in Kiev (arguably, the first in the world).

Kiev prospered during the late 19th century industrial revolution in the Russian Empire, when it became the third most important city of the Empire and the major centre of commerce of its southwest. In the turbulent period following the 1917 Russian Revolution, Kiev became the capital of several short-lived Ukrainian states and was caught in the middle of several conflicts: World War I, during which it was occupied by German soldiers from 2 March 1918 to November 1918, the Russian Civil War, and the Polish-Soviet War. Kiev changed hands sixteen times from the end of 1918 to August 1920.

Starting in 1921, the city was a part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, a founding republic of the Soviet Union. Kiev was greatly affected by all the major processes that took place in Soviet Ukraine during the interwar period: the 1920s Ukrainization as well as the migration of the rural Ukrainophone population made the Russophone city Ukrainian-speaking and propped up the development of the Ukrainian cultural life in the city; the Soviet Industrialization that started in the late 1920s turned the city, a former centre of commerce and religion, into a major industrial, technological and scientific centre, the 1932–1933 Great Famine devastated the part of the migrant populatioot registered for the ration cards, and Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge of 1937–1938 almost eliminated the city’s intelligentsia

In 1934 Kiev became the capital of Soviet Ukraine. The city boomed again during the years of the Soviet industrialization as its population grew rapidly and many industrial giants were created, some of which exist to this day.

In World War II, the city again suffered significant damage, and was occupied by Nazi Germany from 19 September 1941 to 6 November 1943. More than 600,000 Soviet soldiers were killed or captured in the great encirclement battle of Kiev in 1941. Most of them never returned alive. Shortly after the city was occupied, a team of NKVD officers that had remained hidden dynamited most of the buildings on the Khreshchatyk, the main street of the city, most of whose buildings were being used by German military and civil authorities; the buildings burned for days and 25,000 people were left homeless.

Allegedly in response to the actions of the NKVD, the Germans rounded up all the local Jews they could find, nearly 34,000, and massacred them at Babi Yar over the course of 29–30 September 1941.

Kiev recovered economically in the post-war years, becoming once again the third most important city of the Soviet Union. The catastrophic accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in 1986 occurred only 100 km (62 mi) north of the city. However, the prevailing northward winds blew most of the radioactive debris away from the city.

In the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union the Declaration of Independence of Ukraine was proclaimed in the city by the Ukrainian parliament on 24 August 1991. Kiev is the capital of independent Ukraine. Later, in 2004–2005 the city played host to the largest public demonstrations in support of the Orange Revolution.

Geographically, Kiev belongs to the Polesia ecological zone (a part of the European mixed woods). However, the city’s unique landscape distinguishes it from the surrounding region.

Kiev is located on both sides of the Dnieper River, which flows south through the city towards the Black Sea. The older right-bank (western) part of the city is represented by numerous woody hills, ravines and small rivers. It is a part of the larger Dnieper Upland adjoining the western bank of the Dnieper in its mid-flow. Kiev expanded to the Dnieper’s lowland left bank (to the east) only in the 20th century. Significant areas of the left-bank Dnieper valley were artificially sand-deposited, and are protected by dams.

The Dnieper River forms a branching system of tributaries, isles, and harbors within the city limits. The city is adjoined by the mouth of the Desna River and the Kiev Reservoir in the north, and the Kaniv Reservoir in the south. Both the Dnieper and Desna rivers are navigable at Kiev, although regulated by the reservoir shipping locks and limited by winter freeze-over.

In total, there are 448 bodies of open water within boundaries of Kiev, which include Dnieper itself, its reservoirs, and several small rivers, dozens of lakes and artificially created ponds. They occupy 7949 hectares of territory. Additionally, the city boasts of 16 developed beaches (totalling 140 hectares) and 35 near-water recreational areas (covering more than 1000 hectares). Many are used for pleasure and recreation, although some of the bodies of water are not suitable for swimming.

According to the UN 2011 evaluation, there were no risks of natural disasters in Kiev and its metropolitan area

Climate

Kiev has a humid continental climate.The warmest months are June, July, and August, with mean temperatures of 13.8 to 24.8 °C (57 to 77 °F). The coldest are December, January, and February, with mean temperatures of -4.6 to -1.1 °C (24 to 30 °F). The highest ever temperature recorded in the city was 39.4 °C (102.9 °F) on 31 July 1936. The coldest temperature ever recorded in the city was −32.2 °C (−26.0 °F) on 7 & 9 February 1929. Snow cover usually lies from mid-November to the end of March, with the frost-free period lasting 180 days on average, but surpassing 200 days in recent years.

he municipality of the city of Kiev has a special legal status within Ukraine compared to the other administrative subdivisions of the country. The most significant difference is that the city is subordinated directly to the national-level branches of the Government of Ukraine, skipping the regional level authorities of Kiev Oblast. Additionally, the Head of City Administration—the leading executive position is held by a directly elected, rather than appointed, figure, who is also the Head of the City Council—the Mayor of Kiev, and municipal institutions have a higher level of self governance than elsewhere in Ukraine.

Currently, the Kiev City Council Secretary and Deputy Mayor Galyna Gerega is the acting Mayor of Kiev while Oleksandr Popov is the Head of the City State Administration and the de-facto head of the city government.

      

  

Subdivisions

The first known formal subdivision of Kiev dates to 1810 when the city was subdivided into 4 parts: Pechersk, Starokyiv, and the first and the second parts of Podil. In 1833–1834 according to Tsar Nicholas I‘s decree, Kiev was subdivided into 6 police raions; later being increased to 10. As of 1917, there were 8 Raion Councils (Duma), which were reorganised by bolsheviks into 6 Party-Territory Raions.

During the Soviet era, as city was expanding, the number of raions also gradually increased. These newer districts of the city, along with some older areas were theamed in honour of prominent communists and socialist-revolutionary figures; however, due to the way in which many communist party members eventually, after a certain period of time, fell out of favour and so were replaced with new, fresher minds, so too did the names of Kiev’s districts change accordingly.

The last raion reform took place in 2001 when the number of raions has been decreased from 14 to 10.

Under Oleksandr Omelchenko (mayor from 1999 to 2006), there were further plans for the merger of some raions and revision of their boundaries, and the total number of raions had been planned to be decreased from 10 to 7. With the election of the new mayor-elect (Leonid Chernovetsky) in 2006, these plans were conducted.

The Dnieper River naturally divides Kiev into the Right Bank and the Left Bank areas. Historically located on the western right bank of the river, the city expanded into the left bank only in the 20th century. Most of the Kiev’s attractions as well as the majority of business and governmental institutions are located on the right bank. The eastern ‘Left Bank’ is predominantly residential. There are large industrial and green areas in both the Right Bank and the Left Bank.

Kiev is further informally divided into historical or territorial neighbourhoods, each housing from about 5,000 to 100,000 inhabitants.

Ethnic composition

According to the 2001 census data, more than 130 nationalities and ethnic groups reside within the territory of Kiev. Ukrainians constitute the largest ethnic group in Kiev, and they account for 2,110,800 people, or 82.2% of the population. Russians comprise 337,300 (13.1%), Jews 17,900 (0.7%), Belarusians 16,500 (0.6%), Poles 6,900 (0.3%), Armenians 4,900 (0.2%), Azerbaijanis 2,600 (0.1%), Tatars 2,500 (0.1%), Georgians 2,400 (0.1%), Moldovans 1,900 (0.1%).

Both Ukrainian and Russian are commonly spoken in the city; approximately 75% of Kiev’s population responded “Ukrainian” to the census question on their native language, roughly 25% responded “Russian”. According to a 2006 survey, Ukrainian is used at home by 23% of Kievans, 52% use Russian and 24% switch between both.

Most of the city’s growing population of Muslims comprises Tatars, Caucasians and other people from the former Soviet Union. The Ar-Rahma Mosque was built for the needs of the community in 2000.

Modern Kiev is a mix of the old (Kiev preserved about 70 percent of more than 1,000 buildings built during 1907–1914) and the new, seen in everything from the architecture to the stores and to the people themselves. When the capital of the Ukrainian SSR was moved from Kharkiv to Kiev many new buildings where commissioned to give the city “the gloss and polish of a capital”. In the discussions centered on how to create a showcase city center the current city center of Khreshchatyk and Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) were not the obvious choices. Some of the early, ultimately not materialised, ideas included a part of Pechersk, Lypky, European Square and Mykhailivska Square. The plans of building massive monuments (of Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin) where also abandoned; due to lack of money (in the 1930s–1950s) and because of Kiev’s hilly landscape. Experiencing rapid population growth between the 1970s and the mid-1990s, the city has continued its consistent growth after the turn of the millennium. As a result, Kiev’s central districts provide a dotted contrast of new, modern buildings among the pale yellows, blues and greys of older apartments. Urban sprawl has gradually reduced, while population densities of suburbs has increased. The most expensive properties are located in the Pechersk, and Khreshchatyk areas. It is also prestigious to own a property iewly constructed buildings in the Kharkivskyi Raion or Obolon along the Dnieper.

Ukrainian independence at the turn of the millennium has heralded other changes. Western-style residential complexes, moderightclubs, classy restaurants and prestigious hotels opened in the centre. And most importantly, with the easing of the visa rules in 2005, Ukraine is positioning itself as a prime tourist attraction, with Kiev, among the other large cities, looking to profit from new opportunities. The centre of Kiev has been cleaned up and buildings have been restored and redecorated, especially Khreshchatyk and Maidan Nezalezhnosti. Many historic areas of Kiev, such as Andriyivskyy Descent, have become popular street vendor locations, where one can find traditional Ukrainian art, religious items, books, game sets (most commonly chess) as well as jewellery for sale.

At the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 Kiev was the only Commonwealth of Independent States city to have been inscribed into the TOP30 European Green City Index (placed 30th).

Kiev’s most famous historical architecture complexes are the St. Sophia Cathedral and the Kiev Pechersk Lavra (Monastery of the Caves), which are recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. Noteworthy historical architectural landmarks also include the Mariyinsky Palace (designed and constructed from 1745 to 1752, then reconstructed in 1870), several Orthodox churches such as St. Michael’s Cathedral, St. Andrew’s, St. Vladimir’s, the reconstructed Golden Gate and others.

One of Kiev’s widely recognized modern landmarks is the highly visible giant Mother Motherland statue made of titanium standing at the Museum of the Great Patriotic War on the Right bank of the Dnieper River. Other notable sites is the cylindrical Salut hotel, located across from Glory Square and the eternal flame at the World War Two memorial Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and the House with Chimaeras.

Among Kiev’s best-known monuments are Mikhail Mikeshin’s statue of Bohdan Khmelnytsky astride his horse located near St. Sophia Cathedral, the venerated Vladimir the Great (St. Vladimir), the baptizer of Rus’, overlooking the river above Podil, the monument to Kyi, Schek and Khoryv and Lybid, the legendary founders of the city located at the Dnieper embankment. On Independence Square in the city centre, two monuments elevate two of the city protectors; the historic protector of Kiev Michael Archangel atop a reconstruction of one of the old city’s gates and a modern invention, the goddess-protector Berehynia atop a tall column.

      

         

Kiev was the historic cultural centre of the East Slavic civilization and a major cradle for the Christianization of Kievan Rus’. Kiev retained through centuries its cultural importance and even at times of relative decay, it remained the centre of the Eastern Orthodox Christianity of the primary importance. Its sacred sites, which include the Kiev Pechersk Lavra (the Monastery of the Caves) and the Saint Sophia Cathedral are probably the most famous, attracted pilgrims for centuries and now recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site remain the primary religious centres as well as the major tourist attraction. The above mentioned sites are also part of the Seven Wonders of Ukraine collection.

Kiev’s theatres include, the Kiev Opera House, Ivan Franko National Academic Drama Theatre, Lesya Ukrainka National Academic Theater of Russian Drama, the Kiev Puppet Theater, October Palace and National Philharmonic of Ukraine and others. In 1946 Kiev had four theatres, one opera house and one concert hall. But most tickets then where allocated to “privileged groups”.

Other significant cultural centres include the Dovzhenko Film Studios, and the Kiev Circus. The most important of the city’s many museums are the Kiev State Historical Museum, Museum of the Great Patriotic War, the National Art Museum, the Museum of Western and Oriental Art, the Pinchuk Art Centre and the National Museum of Russian art.

In 2005 Kiev hosted the 50th annual Eurovision Song Contest as a result of Ruslana’s “Wild Dances” victory in 2004.

There are numerous songs, paintings, photos dedicated to the city. Among them there is an extensive Russian, Ukrainian, Polish folklore, less known are German and Jewish. One of the better songs are called “Without Podil, Kiev is impossible” (poet L.Dukhovny), “How not to love you, Kiev of mine?” (poet Dmytro Lutsenko), Khreschatyk (poet Yuri Rybchynsky), and many others. Renowned Ukrainian composer Oleksandr Bilash wrote an operetta called “Legend of Kiev”.

Attractions in Kiev

It is said that one can walk from one end of Kiev to the other in the summertime without leaving the shade of its many trees. Most characteristic are the horse-chestnut.

Kiev is known as a green city with two botanical gardens and numerous large and small parks. The World War II Museum is located here, which offers both indoor and outdoor displays of military history and equipment surrounded by verdant hills overlooking the Dnieper river.

Among the numerous islands, Venetsianskyi (or Hidropark) is the most developed. It is accessible by metro or by car, and includes an amusement park, swimming beaches, boat rentals, and night clubs. The Victory Park (Park Peremohy) located near Darnytsia subway station is a popular destination for strollers, joggers, and cyclists. Boating, fishing, and water sports are popular pastimes in Kiev. The area lakes and rivers freeze over in the winter and ice fishermen are a frequent sight, as are children with their ice skates. However, the peak of summer draws out a greater mass of people to the shores for swimming or sunbathing, with daytime high temperatures sometimes reaching 30 to 34 °C (86 to 93 °F).

The centre of Kiev (Independence Square and Khreschatyk Street) becomes a large outdoor party place at night during summer months, with thousands of people having a good time iearby restaurants, clubs and outdoor cafes. The central streets are closed for auto traffic on weekends and holidays. Andriyivskyy Descent is one of the best known historic streets and a major tourist attraction in Kiev. The hill is the site of the Castle of Richard the Lionheart; the baroque-style St Andrew’s Church; the home of Kiev born writer, Mikhail Bulgakov; the monument to Yaroslav the Wise, the Grand Prince of Kiev and of Novgorod; and numerous other monuments.

A wide variety of farm produce is available in many of Kiev’s farmer markets with the Besarabsky Market located in the very centre of the city being most famous. Each residential region has its own market, or rynok. Here one will find table after table of individuals hawking everything imaginable: vegetables, fresh and smoked meats, fish, cheese, honey, dairy products such as milk and home-made smetana (sour cream), caviar, cut flowers, housewares, tools and hardware, and clothing. Each of the markets has its own unique mix of products with some markets devoted solely to specific wares such as automobiles, car parts, pets, clothing, flowers, and other things.

At the city’s southern outskirts, near the historic Pyrohiv village, there is an outdoor museum, officially called the Museum of Folk Architecture and Life of Ukraine It has an area of 1.5 square kilometres (1 sq mi). This territory houses several “mini-villages” that represent by region the traditional rural architecture of Ukraine.

Kiev also has numerous recreational attractions like bowling alleys, go-cart tracks, paintball venues, billiard halls and even shooting ranges. The 100-year-old Kiev Zoo is located on 40 hectares and according to CBC “the zoo has 2,600 animals from 328 species”.

Kiev is home to some 40 different museums. In 2009 they recorded a total of 4.3 million visits.

The Museum of the Great Patriotic War: is a memorial complex commemorating the Great Patriotic War located in the hills on the right-bank of the Dnieper River in Pechersk.

The museum has moved twice before ending up in the current location, where it was ceremonially opened on 9 May 1981, Victory Day, by then Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. On 21 June 1996, the museum was accorded its current status as a National Museum by a special decree signed by Leonid Kuchma, the then President of Ukraine. It is one of the largest museums in Ukraine with over 300,000 exhibits, and is centered around the 62-meter tall Motherland statue, which has become one of the landmarks in the city. The museum has been visited by over 21 million visitors.

he memorial complex covers the area of 10 hectares (approximately 24.7 acres) on the hill, overlooking the Dnieper River. It contains the giant bowl “The Glory Flame”, a site with World War II military equipment, and the “Alley of the Hero Cities”. One of the museums also displays the armaments used by the Soviet army post World War II. The sculptures in the alley depict the courageous defence of the Soviet border from the 1941 German invasion, terrors of the Nazi occupation, partisan struggle, devoted work on the home front, and the 1943 Battle of the Dnieper.

Kiev fortress is the 19th-century fortification buildings situated in Ukrainian capital Kiev, that once belonged to western Russian fortresses. These structures (once a united complex) were built in the Pechersk and neighbourhoods by the Russian army. Now some of the buildings are restored and turned into a museum called the Kiev Fortress, while others are in use in various military and commercial installations.

Having lost their military importance in the 20th century, the buildings continued to be used as barracks, storage and incarceration facilities. However, some of them played independent historical roles. The Kosyi Kaponir (“Skew Caponier”) became a prison for the political inmates in the 1900s (decade)–1920s and was later turned into a Soviet museum. Now it is the center of the modern museum. A small fortress built in 1872 on the legendary Lysa Hora (Bald Mountain) in 1906 became a place of executions for convicted political inmates. It is now a landscape reserve and part of the museum complex.

Constructed in 1898 by architect Vladislav Gorodetsky, the building was originally designed as the museum for the local society of patrons of arts and antique lovers. The façade of the building conveys a classic architecture form – precise reproduction of a six-column porch of Doric order with entablature, triglyphs, metopes and frieze decoration depicting the Triumph of Arts. The architectural composition featuring figures of gryphons and large concrete lions at the top of the stairs were created by an Italian sculptor, Emilio Sala.

The National Art Museum of Ukraine is a museum dedicated to Ukrainian art. Originally called the Kiev City Museum of Antiques and Art, the founders set out to put together a collection of pieces representative of Ukrainian fine art. Ranging from medieval icons to portraits of military and church leaders during Cossack times, some depicting caricatures of Mamay. Works include those of Taras Shevchenko, Ilya Yefimovich Repin, Vladimir Borovikovsky, Vasily Andreevich Tropinin, Mykola Pimonenko, Mikhail Vrubel, Nikolai Ge, and Oleksandr Murashko. Today, the museum continues to expand its collection. Some new additions include a unique icon relief of St. George and works by the international Kiev born pioneer of Geometric abstract art Kazimir Malevich.

The current exhibition includes over 20 thousand pieces. Among many are works by the constructivist, Vasiliy Yermilov, and Cubo-Futurist Alexander Bogomazov. The Ukrainian side is represented by works by artists such as David Burliuk, Aleksandra Ekster, Vadim Meller, Kliment Red’ko, Solomon Nikritin, Victor Palmov, Maria Sinyakova, Mikhail Boichuk and Mykola Pymonenko.

The Golden Gate: is a historic gateway in the ancient city’s walls. The name Zoloti Vorota is also used for a nearby theatre and a station of the Kiev Metro. This gateway was one of three constructed by Yaroslav the Wise, Prince of Kiev, in the mid-11th century. It was reputedly modelled on the Golden Gate of Constantinople, from which it took its name. In 1240 it was partially destroyed by Batu Khan‘s Golden Horde. It remained as a gate to the city (often used for ceremonies) through the 18th century, although it gradually fell into ruins. In 1832 the ruins were excavated and an initial survey for their conservation was undertaken. Further works in the 1970s added an adjacent pavilion, housing a museum of the gate. In the museum one can learn about the history of construction of the Golden gate as well as ancient Kiev. In 1982, the gate was completely reconstructed for the 1500th anniversary of Kiev, although there is no solid evidence as to what the original gates looked like. Some art historians called for this reconstruction to be demolished and for the ruins of the original gate to be exposed to public view. In 1989, with the expansion of the Kiev Metro, the Zoloti Vorota station was opened nearby to serve the landmark. What makes it unique is that its architectural ensemble is very much based on the internal decorations of ancient Ruthenian churches.

The small Ukrainian National Chernobyl Museum acts as both a memorial and historical center devoted to the events surrounding the 1986 Chernobyl disaster and its effect on the Ukrainian people, the environment, and subsequent attitudes toward the safety of nuclear power as a whole.

Sports

Kiev has many professional and amateur football clubs, including Dynamo Kyiv, Arsenal Kyiv and FC Obolon Kyiv which play in the Ukrainian Premier League. Of these three, Dynamo Kyiv has had the most success over the course of its history. For example, up until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the club won 13 USSR Championships, 9 USSR Cups, and 3 USSR Super Cups, thus making Dynamo the most successful club in the history of the Soviet Top League.

Other prominent non-football sport clubs in the city include: the Sokil Kyiv ice hockey club and BC Kyiv basketball club. Both of these teams play in the highest Ukrainian leagues for their respective sports and whilst BC Kyiv was founded just recently in 1999, Sokil was founded in 1963, during the existence of the Soviet Union. Both these teams play their home games at the Kiev Palace of Sports.

During the 1980 Summer Olympics held in the Soviet Union, Kiev held the preliminary matches and the quarter-finals of the football tournament at its Olympic Stadium, which was reconstructed specially for the event. From 1 December 2008 stadium the stadium underwent a full-scale reconstruction in order to satisfy standards put in place by UEFA for hosting the Euro 2012 football tournament; the opening ceremony took place in the presence of president Viktor Yanukovich on 8 October 2011, with the first major event being a Shakira concert which was specially planned to coincide with the stadium’s re-opening during Euro 2012. Other notable sport stadiums/sport complexes in Kiev include the Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium, the Palace of Sports, among many others.

Most Ukrainiaational teams play their home international matches in Kiev. The Ukraine national football team, for example, will play matches at the re-constructed Olympic Stadium from 2011.

As with most capital cities, Kiev is a major administrative, cultural and scientific centre of the country. It is the largest city in Ukraine in terms of both population and area and enjoys the highest levels of business activity. As of 1 January 2010, there were around 238,000 business entities registered in Kiev.

Official figures show that between 2004 and 2008 Kiev’s economy outstripped the rest of the country’s, growing by an annual average of 11.5%. Following the global financial crisis that began in 2007, Kiev’s economy suffered a severe setback in 2009 with gross regional product contracting by 13.5% in real terms. Although record high, the decline in activity was 1.6 percentage points smaller than that for the country as a whole. The economy in Kiev, as in the rest of Ukraine, recovered somewhat in 2010 and 2011. Kiev is a middle-income city, with prices currently comparable to many mid-size American cities (i.e., considerably lower than Western Europe); and despite the poverty of the rest of the country, and large tracts of Soviet apartment blocks, has a notable lack of slums.

Because the city boasts large and diverse economic base and is not dependent on any single industry and/or company, its unemployment rate has historically been relatively low – only 3.75% over 2005–2008. Indeed, even as the rate of joblessness jumped to 7.1% in 2009, it remained far below the national average of 9.6%.

Kiev is the undisputed center of business and commerce of Ukraine and home to the country’s largest companies, such as Naftogaz Ukrainy, Energorynok and Kyivstar. In 2010 the city accounted for 18% of national retail sales and 24% of all construction activity. Indeed, real estate is one of the major forces in Kiev’s economy. Average prices of apartments are the highest in the country and among the highest in eastern Europe. Kiev also ranks high in terms of commercial real estate for it is here where the country’s tallest office buildings (such as Gulliver and Parus) and some of Ukraine’s biggest shopping malls (such as Dream Town and Ocean Plaza) are located.

Scientific research is conducted in many institutes of higher education and, additionally, in many research institutes affiliated with the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences Kiev is home to Ukraine’s ministry of education and science, and is also noted for its contributions to medical and computer science research.

There are many libraries in the city with the Vernadsky National Library, which is Ukraine’s main academic library and scientific information centre, as well as one of the world’s largest national libraries, being the largest and most important one. The National Library is affiliated with the Academy of Sciences in so far as it a deposit library and thus serves as the academy’s archives’ store. Interestingly the national library is the world’s foremost repository of Jewish folk music recorded on Edison wax cylinders. Their Collection of Jewish Musical Folklore (1912–1947) was inscribed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register in 2005.

Kiev hosts many universities, the major ones being Kiev National Taras Shevchenko University, the National Technical University “Kiev Polytechnic Institute”, and the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy. Of these, the Mohyla Academy is the oldest outright, having been founded as a theological school in 1632, however the Shevchenko University, which was founded in 1834, is the oldest in continuous operation. The total number of institutions of higher education in Kiev currently approaches 200, allowing young people to pursue almost any line of study. While education traditionally remains largely in the hands of the state there are several accredited private institutions in the city.

There are about 530 general secondary schools and ca. 680 nursery schools and kindergartens in Kiev. Additionally, there are evening schools for adults, and specialist technical schools.

Local public transportation in Kiev includes the Metro (underground), buses and minibuses, trolleybuses, trams, taxi and funicular. There is also an intra-city ring railway service. The publicly owned and operated Kiev Metro is the fastest, the most convenient and affordable network that covers most, but not all, of the city. The Metro is continuously expanding towards the city limits to meet growing demand, currently having three lines with a total length of 66.1 kilometres (41.1 miles) and 51 stations (some of which are renowned architectural landmarks). The Metro carries around 1.422 million passengers daily accounting for 38% of the Kiev’s public transport load. In 2011, the total number of trips exceeded 519 million.

The historic tram system, once a well maintained and widely used method of transport, is now gradually being phased out in favor of buses and trolleybuses.

All public road transport (except for some minibuses) is operated by the united Kyivpastrans municipal company. It is heavily subsidized by the city.

The Kiev public transport system, except for taxi, uses a simple flat rate tariff system regardless of distance traveled: tickets or tokens must be purchased each time a vehicle boarded. Digital ticket system is already established in Kiev Metro, with plans for other transport modes. Discount passes are available for grade school and higher education students. Pensioners use public transportation free. There are monthly passes in all combinations of public transportation. Ticket prices are regulated by the city government, and the cost of one ride is far lower than in Western Europe.

The taxi market in Kiev is expansive but not regulated. In particular, the taxi fare per kilometer is not regulated. There is a fierce competition between private taxi companies.

 There are many places of historic interest in it.Among them there are the Kyivo-Pechersk Monastery (arose in the 11th century), St.Sophia’s Cathedral(1037),the Golden Gates(the remains of only one of them has come down to us).The tzar’s palace and St.Andrew’s Church were built after the design of V.Rastrelli in 17-18 centuries.

   Kyiv is situated on the hilly right bank and the low left bank of the Dnieper River.

   It is one of the most beautiful cities of Europe.One half of its territory is occupied by parks and gardens.It is olso the largest city of the country with population of about 3 million.Kyiv is a historic, political, religious, scientific and cultural centre of Ukraine.It is the seat of the highest body of state power of Ukraine, the Verkhovna (Supreme) Rada.

   A large part of Ukraine’s industrial output is produced by Kyiv’s enterprises: motorcycles, tape-recorders, excavators, industrial machines, electric equipment, furniture, clothing, foodstuffs, ets. Kyiv is a cultural and academic centre of Ukraine. Research institutes, the National Scientific Library, the Central Botanical Garden, and the Main Astronomical Observatory are located there.

   There is a great number of secondary schools, universities, institutes, colleges as well as the National Academy of Sciences there.

   Kyiv’s cultural life is rich and varied.There are many theatres ,museums,exhibitions in it.There are government-funded museums in Kyiv:the Natural History Museum,the Historical Museum,the museums of art:National Art, Ukrainian Decorative Folk Art,Western and Eastern Art;some literary-memorial museums.

   There are also museums organised and run by private individuals.The main professional theatres in Kyiv are: the National Opera,the Ukrainian Drama Theatre,the Puppet Theatre and many others.They are greatly appreciated by the Kyivites and the guests of the city.Kyiv is famous for its monuments.The monument to Prince Volodymyr in the picturesque park on the Dnieper hills has become a symbol of the ancient city.

Many monuments have been inerected in Kyiv’s squares, parks and other public places.Kyiv is the Hero-City.In the park of Immortal Glory there is an obelisk in honour of those who died in the Second Word War.

   The main street in Kyiv is Khrechatyk Street which looks like a park lane: it is a river of green and gold trees from early spring till late autumn.

   During the Great Patriotic War this street was almost completely destroyed and it was rebuilt in the post-war years.There are many fine buildings in Khreshchstyk which form the unique architectural ensemble. Kreshchatyk is very beautiful in spring when chesnut trees are in blossom. A chesnut tree is the symbol of Kyiv. Independence Sguare and European one are considered to be the centres of cultural, political, commercial life.

THE IMPACT OF DR. HORBACHEVSKY ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF UKRAINIAN SCIENCE

AND CULTURE

 Doctor of Medicine, Professor, Head of Medical Chemistry Department, Dean of Faculty of Medicine at the Czech University, Prague, Rector of the Czech University, Prague, Member of Sanitary Council of Czech Kingdom, Member of the Highest Health Council of Austro-Hungarian Empire in Vienna, Member of Technical Investigation Council in Vienna, a Life Member of Lords’ House of Austrian Parliament, ls! Minister of Health of Austro-Hungarian Empire, Rector of Free Ukrainian University in Prague, Member of Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Full and Honorary Member of T.Shevchenko Scientific Society, Ukraine.

« Dr. Ivan Horbachevsky (Horbaczewski) was one of the most famous scientists of his time in the field of chemical organic synthesis. His investigations were a revolution in the medical, organic and biological chemistry.

In 1877 a young graduate of the University of Vienna, Doctor of Medical Sciences Ivan Horbachevsky was appointed as an assistant at the Institute of Medicinal Chemistry, the University of Vienna. In 1882 he was the first ever in the world science to synthesize uric acid from’urea and glycine aminoacid. This discovery brought a great glory to the Austrian science and Vienna University. Great attention to the synthesis of uric acid outside the organism is explained by the fact that in that period of time in biology and medicine the so- called vitalistic direction existed, according to which the substances contained in the living organism caot be synthesized artificially outside the organism.

^ In his works Dr.Ivan Horbachevsky explored the causes and pathogenesis of gout, mechanisms of catabolism of mononucleotides, which are constituents of nucleic acids./His hypotheses as to the nature and causes of pellagra were proved by the next generation of scientists and provided the ground for developing a rational human nutrition system. His persistent research work in the spheres of organic and biological chemistry enabled him to isolate virtually all amino acids and prove that aminoacids are the building blocks of proteins. One of his achievements is that he determined the origins of uric acid in organism. The significance of his works devoted to the conversion of nucleic acids to end products is highly estimated in the point of view of regulation of synthesis and decomposition of nucleic acids, which has an impact on our ideas about the life on the molecular level. Due to his great managerial and leadership skills Dr. Horbachevsky was offered a position in the Highest Sanitary Council in Vienna, later he became the President of the Council. Being one of the most outstanding scientific and public figures, Dr. Horbachevsky wasappointed as the first Minister of Health in 1918, thus becoming the founder of the Ministry of Health in Austria, the first ministry of health in the world. The development plan and the program of activities, suggested by Dr. Horbachevsky for the Austrian Ministry of Health, were used for organizing equivalent ministries in the United Kingdom, France, and other countries.

For his outstanding achievements in chemical and medical science and public health. Dr. Horbachevsky was elected as a life member of the House of Lords of Austrian Parliament and an advisor to the Austrian royal court.

In 1884 he became the first professor ever in medical chemistry at the Czech University in Prague. Dr. Horbachevsky is recognized as the founder of the teaching subject medical chemistry, which was introduced to the curricula at all the Czech Faculties of Medicine. This was facilitated by one of his most fundamental works – the four-volume Czech university textbook of medical chemistry (inorganic,
organic, and biological chemistry), which was compiled and published by Dr. Horbachevsky in 1904-1909.

Dr. Horbachevsky founded the Institute of Medical Chemistry at Charles University, and is regarded a co-founder of Czech biochemistry. In fact, he created a scientific school of biochemistry, developed scientific bases of experimental biochemistry, the work which is being successfully continued by his disciples and followers.

Dr. Horbachevsky was appointed four times as the Dean of the Czech Faculty of Medicine and once as the Rector of the Czech University in Prague (1902-1903). For his outstanding scientific and public service Dr. Horbachevsky was elected as a member of the Royal Czech Scientific Society (later the Czech Academy of Sciences), a member of Czech Sanitary Council. Dr. Horbachevsky made great efforts to improve environmental situation in the country. According to his recommendations the system of sewage decontamination was developed in Prague, which prevented spreading typhoid fever and other infections among the population.

The works of Dr. Horbachevsky became an invaluable contribution into the Czech science. He
developed new methods of synthesizing uric acid, creatine, discovered the xanthine oxidase enzyme and
elements of nucleic acids in the cells, which form uric acid.  

Having spent eventually all his adult life outside Ukraine, Dr. Horbachevsky always demonstrated great concern for his home country, its achievements and problems. He made great efforts to support the struggle for Ukrainian independence. In spite of existing totalitarian regime , he promoted Ukrainian science and culture. He contributed greatly to establishing the Ukrainian University in Lviv. Dr. Horbachevsky was elected as a member of T. Shevchenko Scientific Society in Lviv.

The brilliant scientist was one ofrounders and later the first President of Ukrainian Medical Association. In 1926 and 1932 he organized the 1st and the 2ndUkrainian Scientific Congresses. His successful activities promoted Ukrainian science on the world level.

Dr. Horbachevsky made great efforts in order to create a national medical school. His leadership qualities and persistent work contributed greatly to establishing the Ukrainian Free University in Prague. In 1931-34 Dr. Horbachevsky became the Rector of the University, which trained hundreds physicians – Ukrainians, Czechs, Slovaks. Publishing the first Ukrainian university textbook “Organic Chemistry” in Prague was an invaluable contribution into the development of Ukrainian science.Much was done by Dr. Horbachevsky in the sphere of developing Ukrainian scientific chemical terminology.

Dr. Horbachevsky established a charitable foundation to help students from low-income social groups. In Prague he established Ukrainian Liberation Struggle Museum Society and chaired its Board. He participated in the meeting of Ukrainian Parliamentary Representation in. Vienna, which supported Ukrainian liberation movement and proclaimed Western Ukrainian People’s Republic in 1918.

In 1925 Dr. Horbachevsky was elected as the Academician of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences in Kyiv in the field of biochemistry. He trained numerous physicians and biochemistry researchers for Ukraine.

Considering  Dr. Horbachevsky’s invaluable impact on development of world biochemical science, his outstanding  political, educational and public activities in Austria, Czech Republic and Ukraine, his contribution into the cooperation between the nations,  his anniversary deserves to be * commemorated on the international level

 Medical education in the United States includes educational activities involved in the education and training of medical doctors in the United States, from entry-level training through to continuing education of qualified specialists.

A typical outline of the medical education pathway is presented below; however, medicine is a diverse profession with many options available. For example, some doctors work in pharmaceutical research, occupational medicine (within a company), public health medicine (working for the general health of a population in an area), or join the armed forces.

Medical school

In the United States a medical school is a four year institution with the purpose of educating physicians in the field of medicine. This article discusses the the medical education of allopathic and osteopathic physicians. See this article for a discussion of naturopathic medical education.

Admissions

Admission into medical school usually requires either three years of undergraduate study (very rare) or a four-year bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university, depending on the medical institution. Nearly all medical schools require the applicant to have attained a bachelor’s degree prior to matriculation. Admissions criteria may include overall performance in the undergraduate years and performance in a group of courses specifically required by U.S. medical schools, the score on the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT), application essays, letters of recommendation (most schools require either one letter from the undergraduate institution’s premedical advising committee or a combination of letters from at least one science faculty and one non-science faculty), and interviews.

Beyond objective admissions criteria, many programs look for candidates who have had unique experiences in community service, volunteer-work, international studies, and research. The application essay is the primary opportunity for the candidate to describe her/his reasons for entering a medical career. The essay requirements are usually open-ended to allow creativity and flexibility for the candidate to draw upon their personal experiences/challenges to make her/him stand out amongst other applicants. If granted, an interview serves as an additional way to express these subjective strengths that a candidate may possess.

Most commonly, the bachelor degree is in one of the biological sciences, but not always; in 2005, nearly 40% of medical school matriculants had received bachelor’s degrees in fields other than biology or specialized health sciences. All medical school applicants must, however, complete year-length undergraduate courses with labs in biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, and physics; some medical schools have additional requirements such as biochemistry, calculus, and English.

A student with a bachelor’s degree who has not taken the premedical coursework may complete a postbaccalaureate (postbacc) program. Such programs allow rapid fulfillment of prerequisite course work as well as grade point average improvement. Some postbacc programs are specifically linked to individual medical schools to allow matriculation without a gap year.

Several universities across the U.S. admit high school students to both their undergraduate colleges and the medical schools simultaneously; students attend a single six-year to eight-year integrated program consisting of two to four years of an undergraduate curriculum and four years of medical school curriculum, culminating in both a bachelor’s and M.D. degree or a bachelor’s and D.O. degree.

While not necessary for admission, several private organizations have capitalized on this complex and involved process by offering services ranging from single-component preparation(MCAT, essay, etc.) to entire application review/consultation.

Program

Once admitted to medical school, it takes four years to complete a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.), or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.). The course of study is divided into two roughly equal components: pre-clinical and clinical. Both allopathic (M.D.) and osteopathic physicians (D.O.) have equal rights and an equal scope of practice in the United States, with some osteopaths supplementing their practice with principles of osteopathic medicine in addition to the mainstream allopathic methods.

Preclinical study generally comprises the first two years and consists of classroom and laboratory instruction in core subjects such as anatomy, biochemistry, physiology, pharmacology, histology, embryology, microbiology, pathology, pathophysiology, and neurosciences. Once students successfully complete preclinical training, they generally take step one of the medical licensing boards, the USMLE, or the COMLEX.

The clinical component usually occupies the final two years of medical school and takes place almost exclusively on the wards of a teaching hospital or, occasionally, with community-based physicians. The students observe and take part in the care of patients under the supervision of resident and attending physicians. Rotations are required in internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, family medicine, obstetrics/gynecology, neurology, and psychiatry. Beyond these, a variable number of specialty electives are required. During the fourth year, most medical students take Step 2 of the medical licensing boards (USMLE, or COMLEX). Upon completion of medical school, the student gains the title of doctor and the degree of M.D. or D.O., but cannot practice independently until completing at least an internship and also Step 3 of the USMLE or COMLEX.

Many medical schools also offer joint degree programs in which some medical students may simultaneously enroll in master’s or doctoral-level programs in related fields such as a Masters in Business Administration, Masters in Health Care Administration, Masters in Public Health, JD, MALD, and Masters in Health Communication.

Internship

During the last year of medical school, students apply for postgraduate residencies in their chosen field of specialization. These vary in competitiveness depending upon the desirability of the specialty, prestige of the program, and the number of applicants relative to the number of available positions. All but a few positions are granted via a national computer match which pairs an applicant’s preference with the programs’ preference for applicants.

Historically, post-graduate medical education began with a free-standing, one-year internship. Completion of this year continues to be the minimum training requirement for obtaining a general license to practice medicine in most states. However, because of the gradual lengthening of post-graduate medical education, and the decline of its use as the terminal stage in training, most new physicians complete the internship requirement as their first year of residency.

Notwithstanding the trend toward internships integrated into categorical residencies, the one-year “traditional rotating internship” (sometimes called a “transitional year”) continues to exist. Some use it to re-apply to programs into which they were not accepted, while others use it as a year to decide upon a specialty. In addition, five states still require osteopathic physicians to complete a traditional rotating internship before residency.

Residency

Each of the specialties in medicine has established its own curriculum, which defines the length and content of residency training necessary to practice in that specialty. Programs range from three years after medical school for internal medicine to five years for surgery to six or seven for neurosurgery. This does not include research years that may last from one to four years if a PhD degree is pursued. Each specialty training program incorporates an internship year to satisfy the requirements of state licensure.

formal training beyond residency. Examples of these include cardiology, endocrinology, oncology after internal medicine; cardiothoracic surgery, pediatric surgery, surgical oncology after general surgery; reproductive endocrinology/infertility, maternal-fetal medicine, gynecologic oncology after obstetrics/gynecology. There are many others for each field of study. The training programs for these fields are known as fellowships and their participants are fellows to denote that they already have completed a residency and are Board Eligible or Board certified in their basic specialty. Fellowships range in length from one to three years and are granted by application to the individual program or sub-specialty organizing board. Fellowships often contain a research component.

Continuing education

The physician or surgeon who has completed his or her residency and possibly fellowship training and is in the practice of their specialty is known as an attending physician or consultant. Each specialty has requirements for practitioners to undertake continuing medical education activities.

 

The functions of Participle II

Participle II has but one form which can express both an action simultaneous with the action expressed by the finite form, and prior to it, but it more often expresses a prior action.

The editorial office of all newspaper published in London are in Fleet street.

I have read all the novels written by Jack London.

So Participle II has no tense distinctions but it has voice distinctions – it is usually passive in its meaning.

However there are cases where we can hardly speak of a passive meaning: a drunk man, a retied officer, a drowned man, a faded leaf, etc.

The functions of Participle II are the same as those of Participle I – the attribute and the adverbial modifier.

·                    Participle II as an attribute

She collected all the pictures taken during their honey-moon and put them in an album.

Participle II in this function can be preceded by the preposition as.

This substance as described by the American scientists has a very complicated structure.

·                    Participle II in the function of an adverbial modifier.

o        Participle II can be used as an adverbial modifier of time.

It is often preceded by the conjunction when here.

When questioned she would not answer.

The conjunction until also occurs here.

The letter will stay here until called for.

o        Participle II can be used as an adverbial modifier of comparison with the conjunctions as if, as though.

The trees were silent as if cut of marble.

o        Participle II can be used as an adverbial modifier of condition often with the conjunction if.

If treated carefully this substance is not dangerous for the experimenter.
The conjunction unless also occurs here.

I’ll tell them nothing unless asked.

o        Participle II can be used as an adverbial modifier of concession with the conjunctions though, although.

Though crushed she was no broken.

·                    Participle II can be used as a predicative.

I was very surprised hearing this.

He was determined to win this contest.

·                    Participle II can is used in the Objective Participial construction.

When used in Objective Participial construction Participle II performs the function of part of a complex object.

I saw him admitted into the room.

The Perfect Tenses

The Present Perfect tense

·                    The Present Perfect is often accompanied by the adverbs ever, never, just, already, of late, lately, yet. They are placed before the notional verb, of late, lately at the end, – yet, already both ways.

I have not (yet) answered this letter (yet).

He’s just returned.

I’ve seen several interesting film of late.

Note: In American English both the Present Perfect and the Past Indefinite are used with adverb just.

I’ve just seen him = I just saw him.

·                    The Present Perfect is also used for announcements of something that has happened.

The lecturer has fallen ill.

Ivanov has broken his leg.

President’s daughter has kidnapped.

·                    The Present Perfect can be used emphatically instead of the Present Indefinite in adverbial clauses of time when the speaker wants to emphasize that the action in the principal clause will only take place after the action in the subordinate clause.

You will go for a walk after you have done all your lessons.

·                    The Present Perfect Inclusive denotes an action, which began in the past, has been going on for a certain period of time and is still going oow. Normally, the Present Perfect Continuous is used here and the Present Perfect replaces it when the Present Perfect Continuous cannot be used.

I have known him for about ten years.

I’ve been married for five years.

·                    The Present Perfect is used in statements of the above type where the action refers to the past but the speaker means that it holds good for the present.

I’ve always preferred tragedy to comedy.

I’ve always preferred tragedy to comedy.

The theory of numbers has always attracted all gifted mathematicians.

Note: After the Present Perfect of the verb to be all prepositions of place (in London) are replaced by the preposition of direction (to London).

Have you ever been to London?

The Past Perfect tense

·                    The Past Perfect denotes an action completed by a definite moment in the past.

They had completed the construction by the end of April.

When director returned from Vienna, we had completed writing our program.

This definite moment can be expressed in two ways, – either by an adverbial phrase with the preposition by or by another action in the Past Indefinite.

·                    The Past Perfect is used to transfer from a moment in the past to further past.

I couldn’t remember the title of the article (which) he had recommended me to read.

·                    The Past Perfect can be used emphatically instead of the Past Indefinite in adverbial clauses of time when the speaker wants to emphasize that the action in the principal clause only took place after the action in the subordinate clause.

He agreed to continue the work after they had paid him part of money.

·                    The Past Perfect Inclusive denotes an action, which began before a definite moment in the past, had been going on for a certain period of time and at that moment was still going on. Normally, the Past Perfect Continuous is used here and the Past Perfect Inclusive replaces it when the use of the Past Perfect Continuous is impossible.

She said that she had known him for a few years.

·                    The Past Perfect is used in the first part of sentences with the conjunctions no sooner … than, hardly … when, scarcely … when; the world order in such sentences is often inverted – the auxiliary verb had stands before the subject.

No sooner had I taken off my coat, than the phone rang.

Hardly had we set down at the table, when Boris came.

·                    The Past Perfect can be used in combination with the Past Continuous when there are two actions, the first completed by a definite moment in the past and the second which was going on at that moment.

He looked through his field-glasses. The ships had left the port and were going North.

I came into the hall. The musicians had turned their instruments and were playing a sonata by Mozart.

The Future Perfect tense

This tense denotes an action completed by a definite moment in the future.

We’ll have made this program by the end of April.

When Boris comes we’ll have gone to bed.

This definite moment can be expressed in two ways – either by an adverbial phrase with the preposition by or by another action in the Present Indefinite.

Note: One should be careful in using the Future Perfect with verbs and expressions denoting states.

I’ll be back by six.

But:

I’ll have come back by six.

 

Literature:

Principal:

1.     Гурська А.І., Новосядла Є.Й. English for Advanced Medical Students. – Л.: Світ. – 2003. – 92 c.

2.     Юдіна Є.Є., Потяженко Л.В. Підручник англійської мови. – К.: Вища шк., 1994. – 319 с.

3.     Verba G.V., Verba L.G. Reference Book in English Grammar. – K.: Osvita, 1995. – 175 p.

4.     http://english-grammar.com.ua/

5.     http://www.englishgrammarsecrets.com/

6.     http://englishplus.com

7.     http://englishstandarts.blogspot.com

 

Additional:

1. Адамчик М.В. Великий англо-український словник. – Київ, 2007.

2Barbara Ganson Cohen. Medical Terminology. – Lipincott Company, Philadelphia. – 1994. – 217 p.

3. English Grammar in Use. A self-study reference and practical book for intermediate students. – Cambridge Press, 1985. – 174 p.

4. Glendinning E. H., Holmstrom A.S. English in Medicine. – Cambridge, University Press. – 1998. – 312 p.

5. Language Access to Medicine. Ireland. – 1994. – 211 p.

6. Murphy R. English Grammar in Use. А self-study reference and practice book for intermediate students. – Cambridge, University Press. – 1998. – 267 p.

7. O’Brien T., Jameson J., Kirvan D. Nucleus English for science and technology medicine. – England, Longman. – 1999. – 177 p.

 

 

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