Ukraine's geographic location between Europe and
Asia was an important factor in its early history. The steppes
were the domain of Asiatic nomads, the Black Sea coast was inhabited
by Greek colonists, and the forests in the northwest were the
homeland of the agrarian East Slavic tribes from whom, eventually,
the Ukrainian, Russian, and Belarusian nations evolved.
Ukrainian history began with the rumble of hooves - Scythians
dominated the steppes north of the Black Sea from the 7th to
the 4th centuries BC, initiating centuries of outside political
and cultural domination. Traces of Scythian culture can be found
in Kiev's Caves Monastery, where the tombs contain superb goldwork
depicting highly detailed animal and human forms. Following
the Scythians, a series of invaders, including Ostrogoths, Huns
and the Turko-Iranian Khazars, ruled areas of present-day Ukraine.
The first people to unify and control the area for a long period
were Scandinavians known as the Rus. The Rus took Kiev in 882
AD, and by the late 10th century the city was the centre of
a unified state known as Kievan Rus, which stretched from the
Volga west to the Danube and south to the Baltic. In 988, the
Kievan Rus leader Volodymyr accepted Christianity from Constantinople,
beginning a long period of Byzantine influence over Ukrainian
politics and culture. By 1520 the Ottoman Empire controlled
all of coastal Ukraine.
Military devastation and plague had wiped out much of the population
of the Ukrainian steppe by the 15th century, when the region
became popular with runaway serfs and Orthodox refugees escaping
more tightly controlled neighbouring domains. These people came
to be known as kazaks (Cossacks), a Turkic word meaning outlaw,
adventurer or freebooter. Ukrainian Cossacks eventually formed
a state that, although officially under Polish and later Russian
rule, was to a significant degree self-ruling, but 20 years
later the state was divided between Poland and Russia.
Ukrainian nationalism flourished in the 1840s, prompting Russian
authorities to ban the Ukrainian language in schools, journals
and books. Following WWI and the collapse of tsarist authority,
Ukraine finally had a chance to gain its independence, but none
of the bewildering array of factions could win decisive support.
Civil war broke out and the country quickly descended into anarchy,
with six armies vying for power and Kiev changing hands five
times in one year. After prolonged fighting involving Russia,
Poland and various Ukrainian political and ethnic factions,
Poland retained portions of western Ukraine and the Soviets
got the rest.
Ukraine officially became part of the USSR in 1922.
While the leadership in Moscow sorted itself out, another Ukrainian
national revival took off in the 1920s. When Stalin took power
in 1927, however, he made a test case out of Ukraine for his
ideas about 'harmful' nationalism. In 1932-33 he engineered
a famine that killed as many as 7 million Ukrainians. Execution
and deportation of intellectuals further depopulated the country.
Stalin also went after the country's premier religious symbols,
its churches and cathedrals, destroying over 250 buildings.
During the purges of 1937-39, millions more Ukrainians were
either executed or sent to Soviet labour camps. WWII brought
further devastation and death, with 6 million perishing in the
fighting between the Red Army and the German forces. It's estimated
that during the first half of the 20th century, war, famine
and purges cost the lives of over half the male and a quarter
of the female population of Ukraine.
The 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine and the appallingly slow
official Soviet response provoked widespread discontent, and
the Uniate Church emerged from isolation two years later. The
Ukrainian People's Movement for Restructuring, an umbrella nationalist
movement founded in Kiev by prominent intellectuals and writers,
won local seats across the country in 1990.
In July of that year, the parliament issued a sovereignty -
but not secession - declaration to little effect. Shortly after
the failed Soviet coup in August 1991, the Communist Party of
Ukraine (CPU) was banned, and in December the population voted
overwhelmingly for independence.
Leonid Kravchuk, former chairman of the CPU, was elected as
the first president of Ukraine. Factionalism forced the government's
resignation in September 1992, and disagreements with Russia
over Ukraine's cache of inherited nuclear weapons and control
of the Black Sea fleet (harboured in the Crimean port of Sevastopol)
strained relations between the two countries. Meanwhile, skyrocketing
inflation, fuel shortages and plummeting consumer power plagued
the country and exacerbated regional and ethnic differences.
Pro-Russian reformer Leonid Kuchma beat Kravchuk in the 1994
presidential election. The CPU benefited from the political
and economic turmoil, capturing a substantial majority of parliamentary
seats in the 1994 elections.
In the late 1990s, new tensions arose between Ukraine and Russia
over Ukraine's closer ties with NATO. A worrying turn from political
stability occurred in late April 2001 with the dismissal of
the Prime Minister, Viktor Yushchenko. He has vowed to return,
but in the short term, Ukrainian politics looks fragile indeed.


