Authors: Anna Reid
28
Ibid., p. 161.
29
Economist,
7 May 1994.
1
Daniel Kaufmann, ‘Diminishing Returns to Administrative Controls and the Emergence of the Unofficial Economy: a Framework of Analysis and Application to Ukraine,’ World Bank, Kiev, 1994.
2
Daniel Kaufmann, ‘The Missing Pillar of a Growth Strategy for Ukraine: Institutional and Policy Reforms for Private Sector Development,’ Harvard Institute of International Development and the World Bank, October 1996, p. 6.
3
Interview with the author, November 1996.
4
Interview with the author, November 1996.
5
Nikolai Gogol,
Taras Bulba,
in
Village Evenings Near Dikanka and Mirgorod,
trans. Christopher English, Oxford, 1994, p. 251.
The standard surveys, covering Ukraine from prehistoric times to the present, are Orest Subtelny’s
Ukraine: a History
(Toronto 1988), and Paul Magocsi’s equally magisterial
A History of Ukraine
(Toronto, 1996.)
George Vernadsky’s
Kievan Russia,
volume two of his multi-volume
A History of Russia
(New Haven 1948), is a thorough, though now rather dated, account of medieval Rus. James Billington’s
The Icon and the Axe
(London 1966) gives an original overview of Rus art and culture; Richard Pipes’s
Russia under the Old Regime
(London 1974) traces the effects of Mongol suzerainty.
For the history of Polish rule in Ukraine, I relied on Norman Davies’s two-volume
God’s Playground
(Oxford 1981) and Adam Zamoyski’s
The Polish Way
(London 1987). Roman Szporluk’s
After Empire: What?
in
Daedalus,
vol.123, no.3, stresses Ukraine’s enduring Polish ties. Subtelny’s
The Mazepists
(Boulder 1981) details the rise and fall of Mazeppa, and Robert Massie’s
Peter the Great
(London 1981) includes a lively account of the events surrounding the battle of Poltava. Geoffrey Hosking’s
Russia: People and Empire
(London 1997) throws new light on tsarist imperialism. On Shevchenko’s career, I used Pavlo Zaitsev’s
Taras Shevchenko: a Life,
written in the 1930s and reprinted by the University of Toronto Press in 1988; translations of Shevchenko’s poetry are taken from Vera Rich’s
Song Out of Darkness
(London 1961). Hugh Seton-Watson’s
Nations and States
(London 1977) and John Armstrong’s
Ukrainian Nationalism
(Colorado 1990) thoughtfully analyse modern Ukrainian nationalism.
Pipes’s
Russia under the Bolshevik Regime: 1919–1924
(London 1994) covers the Civil War in Ukraine, as, marvellously, do Isaac Babel’s
Collected Stories
(London 1994) and Mikhail Bulgakov’s
The White Guard
(London 1989). The seminal works on Stalin’s famine and purges are Robert Conquest’s
The Harvest of Sorrow
(London 1986) and
The Great Terror
(London 1990). Victor Kravchenko’s
I Chose Freedom
(New York 1946) and Lev Kopelev’s
The Education of a True Believer
(New York 1980) are outstanding first-hand accounts of the period. Paul Hollander’s
Political Pilgrims
(New York 1981) is a blackly comic round-up of Western apologists for communism, Eugene Lyon’s
Assignment in Utopia
(London 1937) a fascinating memoir of life as a journalist in 1930s Moscow.
The most balanced treatments I found of the Ukrainian war record were David Marples’s
Stalinism in Ukraine in the 1940s
(New York 1992) and Philip Friedman’s
Roads to Extinction: Essays on the Holocaust
(New York 1980). Martin Gilbert’s
The Holocaust
(London 1986) details Jewish massacres month by month and town by town. Amongst survivors’ memoirs, Leon Weliczker Well’s
The Janowska Road
(London 1966) and Anatoly Kuznetsov’s
Babi Yar
(London 1970) stand out. Conquest’s
The Nation Killers
(London 1970) covers the deportation of the Crimean Tatars; Vera Tolz’s article in
World War 2 and the Soviet People
(London 1993) incorporates new research on the subject. The only English-language history of the khanate I know of is Alan Fisher’s
The Crimean Tatars
(Stanford 1978). The Transcarpathian débâcle of 1939 is hilariously described by Michael Winch in his
Republic for a Day: an Eye-Witness Account of the Carpatho-Ukraine Incident
(London 1939). Petro Grigorenko’s
Memoirs
(London 1983) cover, amongst much else, the Tatar liberation movement and the beginnings of Ukrainian dissidence.
Eye-witness accounts of the Chernobyl disaster are taken from Yuri Shcherbak’s
Chernobyl: a Documentary Story
(London 1989). The best general analyses of the accident are
The Chernobyl Disaster,
by Viktor Haynes and Marko Bojcun (London 1988), and Marples’s
The Social Impact of the Chernobyl Disaster
(London 1988).
Ukraine: Perestroika to Independence
by Taras Kuzio and Andrew Wilson (London 1994) details the tumultuous years 1987–1991; Solomea Pavlychko’s
Letters from Kiev
(New York 1992) capture the atmosphere of the time. Zbigniew Brzezinski’s
The Premature Partnership,
in vol.73, no.2 of
Foreign Affairs,
and Szporluk’s
Belarus, Ukraine and the Russian Question: a Comment
in vol.9, no.4 of
Post-Soviet Affairs
stress Russia’s non-acceptance of the loss of empire, and urge continued Western support for Ukrainian independence.
Amongst modern travel books, Anne Applebaum’s
Between East and West
(London 1995) and Neal Ascherson’s
Black Sea
(London 1995) both movingly cover parts of Ukraine. Lastly, Patricia Herlihy’s
Odessa: a History 1794–1914
(Cambridge, Mass. 1986) and Michael Hamm’s
Kiev: a Portrait, 1800–1917
(Princeton 1993) are excellent city histories.
Akmecet
Aleksandr I, Tsar
Aleksandr II, Tsar
assassination
Alexey, Tsar
Algirdas, Grand Duke
Allies
split on Galicia issue
support White Russians
Andriyivsky Uzviz, Kiev
Andropov, Yuriy, links with Ukraine
Anna, Queen
anti-Semitism
May Laws
in Russian empire
in Ukraine
Antonov, Oleg
Antonovych, Volodymyr
Aral Sea
Asquith, Herbert
Astor, Nancy
Austria
in First World War
nineteenth century defeats
Polish rights in Galicia
rule over Bukovyna
rule over Lviv
Autocephalous Orthodox Church
Avhustivka
Babel, Isaac
in Civil War
Babiy Yar
Badayev, Yuriy
Bakhchisarai
Baluse, Jean
Balzac, Honors de
Bandera, Stepan
Basil II, Emperor
Batory, King Stefan
Batu, Khan
Baturin
Beauplan, Sieur de,
A Description of
Ukraine
Belarus
lack of national leaders
Belzec, gas chambers
Berestechko, battle of
Bilokin, Valentyn
Bingel, Erwin
Black Sea Fleet
Black Sea steppe
Bolsheviks
attack on Kiev (1918)
in Crimea
Jews in positions of authority
The Books of Genesis of the Ukrainian People
Brest-Litovsk, Treaty
Brezhnev, Leonid, links with Ukraine
Bryullov, Karl
Brodsky family
Brotherhood of SS Cyril and Methodius
Brusilov, General
Brzezinski, Zbigniew
The Bukovyna
Bulgakov, Mikhail
Manuscripts Don't Burn
The White Guard
Bush, George
Buturlin, Vasiliy
By Fire And Sword
(Sienkiewicz)
Byron, Robert
First Russian, then Tibet
Byzantium
influence on Rus
Capa, Robert
Carpathian mountains
Carr, E. H.
Caspian Sea
Catherine II, Empress
in Crimea
dissolution of hetmanate and Sich
grants privileges to Cossack nobility
New Russian tour
makes peace with Ottamans
Catholic Church, Polish
Celan, Paul
Celebi Cihan, Norman
Cemiloglu, Mustafa
Chamberlin, William
describes famine in
Russia's Iron Age
Charles XII, King of Sweden
Chechens, deportation (1944)
war
Chekhov, Anton,
The Steppe
Chernenko, Konstantin, links with Ukraine
Chernivtsi
in First World War
Chernobyl
clean-up
deaths
evacuation
explosion
fallout
health consequences
IAEA report
Obligatory Evacuation Zone
power station
radiation levels
television news bulletin
Chernomyrdin, Viktor
Chersonesus
Chesnevsky, Valery
Chornovil, Vyacheslav
Christians, Orthodox
see
Orthodox Christians
The Chronicle of Bygone Years
Chubukshiyeva, Saide
churches
demolished under Stalin
in Kamyanets
in Lviv
Churchill, Winston
Civil War (1918-21)
Jewish massacres
Clarke, Edward Daniel, Crimea
Clinton, President Bill
Colton, Tim
collectivisation
communism, unpopularity in
Ukraine
demonstrations against
Communist Party
purges
of Ukraine
Conquest, Robert
purges death estimate
famine death estimate
The Nation Killers
prison sentences
Conrad, Joseph
Constantine
(schooner)
Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, Byzantine Emperor
Constantinople
Cossacks
in Civil War (1918-21)
emasculation
Khmelnytsky Rebellion
nobles' privileges
raids on Turkey
Crimea
attractions
demolition of Tatar buildings
economy
Russian annexation
Russian nationalism
Tatar returnees
Tatar seats in parliament
Tatar history
Crimean War (1854-5)
Crusades
Czartoryski, Prince Adam
Davies, Norman,
God's Playground
dekulakisation
Demjanjuk, Ivan
deportee nationalities
Dmowski, Roman
Dnieper River
as borderline
Catherine II's royal progress
mass baptism
trade decline
Dnepropetrovsk
Donbass
Donetsk
Duranty, Walter, famine reporting
Dzyuba, Ivan
Edict of Ems (1876)
Einsatzgruppen, Jewish massacres
Elizabeth, Empress
Engelhardt, Pavel
evacuation zone, Chernobyl
Eye-Witness Chronicle
famine
see
'Great Hunger'
Fastiv, massacre
Ferdinand, Archduke, assassination
Feuchtwanger, Lion,
Moscow
First World War
food requisitioning (1928-32)
foreign investment
Forever Flowing
(Grossman)
Franko, Ivan
Budget of the Beasts
Frederick, King of Prussia
Galicia
at the Paris peace talks (1919)
electoral system under Austro-Hungary
emigration
German invasion (1941)
inter-war Polonisation
Polish domination under Austro-Hungary
Polish rule between the wars
Polish-Ukrainian rivalry
poverty
Soviet occupation (1939-41)
Ukrainian language
Ukrainian nationalism
Germans
in Crimea (1918)
occupation and evacuation of Kiev (1918)
Germany, invasion of Soviet Union (1941)
Gide, André
Giray khans
Gogol, Nikolai
Taras Bulba
Village Evenings near Didanka and Mirgorod
Gorbachev, Mikhail
Chernobyl statement
military coup
perestroika
referendum on Union Treaty
return of Tatars
return to Moscow
Gordeyevna, Lydiya
Goring, Hermann
Grabski, Stanislaw
'Great Hunger' (1932-3)
cover-up in Western press
Grossman, Vasiliy,
Forever Flowing
Hagia Sofia, Constantinople
Helsinki Group, imprisonment
Hemans, Simon
Henri I, King of France
Herald Tribune
famine reports
Polish 'pacification' campaign in Galicia (1930)
Herriot, Edouard, visit to collective farm
Himmler, Heinrich
History of the Russes or Little Russia
History of Ukraine-Rus
(Hrushevsky)
Hitler, Adolf
Hlukhiv
Hoch, Jan Ludvik (Robert Maxwell)
Holocaust
Ukrainian attitudes
Ukrainian involvement
in Drohobycz
in Kiev
in Lviv
in Odessa
today
in Uman
in Vynnytsya
Hryhoryev, Matviy
Hrytsay, Hanna
Hrushevsky, Mykhaylo
exile
History of Ukraine-Rus
OGPU surveillance
President of Ukraine
Hryhorenko, General Petro
Hurenko, Stanyslav
The Hussar
(von Rezzori)
Hutsuls
Ibrahim, Veli
inflation
Ingush
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Chernobyl report
International Monetary Fund (IMF), loan to Ukraine
Iogaila, Grand Duke
Ivan IV, Tsar (The Terrible)
Ivano-Frankivsk
Izvestiya
, on Tatar deportations
Jadwiga, Queen of Poland
Jews
Civil War massacres
early history in Ukraine
emigration
hidden by gentiles
Holocaust
in Ivano-Frankivsk
John Paul II, Pope
Jones, Gareth
Josef II, Emperor of Austria
Kaffa
Kamyanets Podilsky
churches
Poles
Kaniv, Shevchenko monument
Karakumy desert
Kazakhstan, deported kulaks
Kazimierz, Jan, King of Poland
Kerr, Philip
Keynes, Maynard
Kharkiv, trials
Kherson
Khmel, Hryhoriy
Khmelnytsky, Hetman Bohdan
image today
Jewish massacres
Pereyaslav Treaty
reason for rebellion
Khotyn
Khrushchev, Nikita
fall
handover of Crimea
links with Ukraine
Sovietising Galicia (1939-41)
speech on deportations
Kiev
Babiy Yar
Bolshevik attack (1918)
churches
in Civil War (1918-21)
in First World War
foundation
independence movement
(1988-1990)
long decline
Mongol invasion
nuclear fallout
poverty
provincialism
Rada (Central Council, 1918)
Rada (Verhovna Rada, 1990+)
St Vladimir's University
Kievan Rus
disintegration
European links
foundatiaon
historeography
Lithuanian rule
north-south split
Kirim Giray, Khan
Koch, Erich
Kochubey, Viktor
Koestler, Arthur
Kohl, Chancellor Helmut
Kohl, Johann Georg, Little Russians
Kolesnyk, Moishe-Leib
korenizatsiya
Korzeniowski see Conrad
Kostomarov, Mykola
Kotlyarevsky, Ivan
Kovalevska, Lyubov
Kravchenko, Viktor
dekulakisation
famine
korenizatsiya