List_of_Ukrainian_rulers

List of leaders of Ukraine

List of leaders of Ukraine

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This is a list that encompasses and includes all leaders and rulers in the history of Ukraine. This page includes the titles of the Grand Prince of Kiev, Grand Prince of Chernigov, Grand Prince of Pereiaslavl, Grand Prince of Galicia–Volhynia, Hetman of Ukraine and President of Ukraine. The following list begins with the leaders who ruled over the territory of Ukraine during Antiquity and is followed by the princes who ruled the principalities that constituted Kievan Rus and continues with the presidents of Ukraine.

The territory has been known by a plethora of names, it has been known historically as: Kievan Rus, Rus', the Kingdom of Galicia-Volhynia, the Zaporozhian Host and the Hetmanate. The sovereigns of these fluctuating political entities have accordingly been described in a variety of ways: knyaz, knyahinya, korol, hetman and president. Two of the earliest noble titles: knyaz and velyky knyaz translate into English as "Prince" and "Grand Prince" respectively, whilst korol translates into 'king'.

The list includes its presidents both before and after the Soviet era, and the Soviet leaders themselves, who, unlike the presidents, were not formal heads of state. Ukraine has had only eight presidents since 1917, divided into two periods (1917–1921 and 1991–present). In between, the country was a part of the Soviet Union (1922–1991) with the name of Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

Princes of Kiev

Legendary princes (482–882)

More information Portrait, Name ...

Rurik Dynasty (862–1362)

Personal seal of Yaroslav the Wise

The Rurikids were descendants of Rurik (Ukrainian: Рюрик) (Hrørekr), a Varangian pagan konung or chieftain, who according to the Primary Chronicle was invited to rule Novgorod in 862 and who came to become the ruler of the Northern Slavic tribes of the (Krivchians and Slovene) as well as the Finnish tribes (Meria, Chud and Ves). Later his son or grandson, Prince Ihor, became the Prince of separate Kievan territories to the south beginning the rule of the Riurykide dynasty of Kievan Rus. The existence of Rurik is a point of contention for historians, P. Kovaletsky and Omeljan Pritsak believe that Rurik was the same person as Hroereckr (Rorik), the 9th century Norse king of Jutland and Frisia and that pervasive myths and legends about him formed the basis for the primary chroniclers. Alternatively, Alexsei Shakmatov accepts the Primary Chronicle's account as factual and Rurik is a historic being.[3]

Partitions of Kievan Rus' in Ukrainian territory under Rurik dynasty[4]

Grand Principality of Rus', Kievan Rus'
(862-1132)
                                  
Principality
of Kiev

(1132-1301)
Principality
of Chernihiv

(1097-1307)
Principality of Halych
(1097-1199)
(divided in Terebovlia,
Peremyshl and Zvenigorod until 1141)
Principality
of Volhynia

(1097-1199)
Principality
of Pereyaslavl

(1097-1215)
              Kingdom of Halych-Volhynia
(1199-1345)
      
              Annexed to
Vladimir-Suzdal
Annexed to
Lithuania
Part of the
Principality of
Bryansk
(1307-1401)
Annexed to Lithuania
(since 1401)
Halych to Poland;
Volhynia to Lithuania

(Note: As many princes ruled at different times in many places, the numbering of the princes is restricted to the Kievan Rus'/Kiev and the Kingdom of Galicia-Volhynia)

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Under the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (1362–1471)

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.

  • Algimantas Alšėniškis (Olgimunt Holszański, Olgimont-Mykhailo Olshansky) (1324–1331)
  • Fiodor of Kiev a.k.a. Teodoras Butvydaitis, brother of Gediminas (1331–1362)
  • Vladimiras Algirdaitis (Volodymyr Olgerdovych) (1362–1394)
  • Skirgaila (1395–1397)
  • Ivan Olshansky (Jonas Alšėniškis) (1397–c. 1402)
  • Jurgis Gedgaudas; lt (Jerzy Giedygołd) (1404–1411)
  • Andriy Ivanovych Olshansky (c. 1412–c. 1422)
  • Mykhailo Ivanovych Olshansky (1422–1432)
  • Mykhailo Semenovych Boloban Olshansky (1433–1435)
  • Švitrigaila (1435–c. 1440), Grand Duke of the Rus' (1432–c. 1440)
  • Aleksandras Olelka (Olelko Volodymyrovych) (1443–1454)
  • Simonas Olelkaitis (Semen Olelkovych) (1454–1471)

Voivodes of Kiev

Kostiantyn Vasyl Ostrozky

Under the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (1471–1569)

  • Martynas Goštautas (Marcin Gasztołd) (1471–1475)
  • Ivan Chodkiewicz (Jonas Ivanas Chodkevičius) (1480–1484)
  • Jerzy Pac (Jurgis Pacas) (1486–1492)
  • Dymitr Putiatycz (Dmytro Putyatych) (1492–1505)
  • Jerzy Montowtowicz (Jurgis Montovtt) (1505–1508)
  • Jan Gliński (Jonas Glinskis, Ivan Hlynsky) (1508)
  • Jerzy Holszański (Jurgis Alšėniškis, Yuriy Olshansky) (1508–1511)
  • Jerzy Radziwiłł (Jurgis Radvila) (1511–1514)
  • Andrzej Niemirowicz (Andriy Nemyrych) (1514–1541)
  • Jan Holszański (Ivan Olshansky) (1542–1544)
  • Fryderyk Proński (Semen Hlebovych Pronsky, Frederikas Prunskis) (1545–1555)
  • Hrehory Chodkiewicz (Grigorijus Chodkevičius) (1555–1559)
  • Konstanty Wasyl Ostrogski (Kostiantyn Vasyl Ostrozky) (1559–1569)

Under the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569–1793)

When the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was formed by the Union of Lublin in 1569, Kiev and surrounding areas, Podolia, Volhynia, and Podlaskie, as the Kiev Voivodeship, Bratslav Voivodeship, Volhynian Voivodeship, and Podlaskie Voivodeship, were transferred from Lithuania to Poland.

Cossack Hetmans

A Hetman was a military and civil leader, democratically elected by the Cossacks.

Under Lithuania and Poland (1486–1646)

Several Cossack regiments were operating in Ukraine at this time that were largely independent of each other, so some of the Hetmans' tenures overlap.

1486–1492   Yurii Pats   governor of Kyiv; organizer Cossack units.
1488–1495   Bohdan Hlynskyi   Cossack leader, destroyer Ochakov.
1492–1505   Dmytro Putyatych  Cossack leader.
1510–1524   Senko Polozovych   governor of Kyiv; Cossack leader.
1514–1535   Ostap Dashkevych  Cossack leader.
1516–1528   Przecław Lanckoroński   Cossack leader.
1550–1557   Dmytro Vyshnevetsky   founder of the fortress at Minor Khortytsia.
1568   Semen Birulia   Cossack leader.
1568   Karpo Maslo   Cossack leader.
1568   Andrush   Moldavian boyar Cossack leader.
1568   Lisun   Cossack leader.
1568   Yatsko Bilous   Cossack leader.
1568   Andrii Liakh   Cossack leader.
1577–1578   Ivan Pidkova   Cossack leader.
1578   Lukian Chornynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1581   Samiilo Zborovskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1584   Bohdan Mykoshynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1585   Mykhailo Ruzhynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1585   Kyryk Ruzhynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1585   Zakhar Kulaha   Cossack leader, hetman.
1586   Lukian Chornynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1586   Bohdan Makoshynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1588   Potrebatskyy   Cossack leader, hetman.
1589   Zachary Kulaga   Cossack leader, hetman.
1594   Bohdan Mykoshynskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1594–1596   Hryhoriy Loboda   Cossack leader.
1594–1596   Severyn Nalyvaiko   Cossack leader.
1596   Matvii Shaula   Cossack leader, hetman.
1596   Kryshtof Krempskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1596   Kryshtof Nechkovskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1596–1597   Hnat Vasylevych   Cossack leader, hetman.
1597   Tykhin Baibuza   Cossack leader, hetman.
1598   Florian Hedroits   Cossack leader.
1598   Mitlovskyi   Cossack leader.
1602–1603   Ivan Kutskovych   Cossack leader, hetman.
1603   Ivan Kosyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1606   Hryhorii Izapovych   Cossack leader, hetman.
1606   Samiilo Zborovskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1606   Bohdan Olevchenko   Cossack leader, hetman.
1617   Dmytro Barabash   Cossack leader, hetman.
1618   Mykhailo Skyba   Cossack leader.
1619–1621   Yatsko Nerodych   Cossack leader, hetman.
1620   Petro Odynets   Cossack leader.
1624   Hryhoriy Chorny   Cossack leader, hetman.
1625   Fedir Pyrskyi   Cossack leader, hetman.
1628   Hryhoriy Chorny   Cossack leader, hetman.
1629–1630   Hryhoriy Chorny   Cossack leader, hetman.
1630   Taras Fedorovych   Cossack leader, hetman.
1632   Andrii Didenko   Cossack leader, hetman.
1633   Dorofii Doroshenko   Cossack leader, acting hetman.
1633  Dorosh Kutskovych   Cossack leader, acting hetman.
1633   Hyria Kanevets   Cossack leader.
1633–1635   Ivan Sulyma   Cossack leader, hetman.
1636–1637   Vasyl Tomylenko   Cossack leader, hetman.
1637   Pavlo Pavliuk   Cossack leader, hetman.
1638   Yakiv Ostrianyn   Cossack leader, hetman.
1638   Dmytro Hunia   Cossack leader, hetman.
1639–1642   Karpo Pivtora-Kozhukha   Cossack leader, hetman.
1642–1646   Maksym Hulak   Cossack leader, hetman.

Cossack Hetmanate (1648–1764)

Following the Khmelnytsky uprising a new Cossack republic, the Hetmanate, was formed.

More information No., Hetman ...

Historians such as Mykola Arkas[36] question legitimacy of the Teteria's elections accusing the later in corruption.[37] Also some sources claim election of Teteria being taken place in January 1663.[38] The election of Teteria led to the Povoloch Regiment Uprising in 1663, followed by bigger number of unrest in the modern region of Kirovohrad Oblast as well as Polesie (all in the Right-bank Ukraine).[39] Moreover, the political crisis that followed the PushkarBarabash Uprising divided the Cossack Hetmanate completely on both bank of Dnieper River.[39] Coincidentally, on 10 January 1663, the Tsardom of Muscovy created the new Little Russian Office (Prikaz) within its Ambassadorial Office.

Vouched by Charles Marie François Olier, marquis de Nointel, Yuriy Khmelnytsky was freed from the Ottoman captivity, appointed and along with Pasha Ibragim was sent to Ukraine fight the Moscow forces of Samoilovych and Romadanovsky. In 1681 Mehmed IV appointed George Ducas the Hetman of Ukraine, replacing Khmelnytsky.

Following the anathema on Mazepa and the election of Ivan Skoropadsky, Cossack Hetmanate was included into the Russian Government of Kiev in December 1708. Upon the death of Skoropadsky, the Hetman elections were disrupted and were awarded as a gift and a type of princely titles, first to Moldavian nobleman and later to the Russian Empress favorite.

On 5 April 1710 the council of cossacks, veterans of the battle at Poltava, elected Pylyp Orlyk as the Hetman of Ukraine in exile. Orlyk waged a guerrilla warfare at the southern borders of the Russian Empire with the support from Ottoman and Swedish empires.

The Ruin (1660–1764) was a time in Ukrainian history when the country fell into disarray and chaos. Afterwards, the Cossack state emerged as a vassal of the Russian Empire. During this period a number of hetmans stayed in power for short periods of time and often controlled only parts of the country. Moreover, the Treaty of Andrusovo (1667) split the Cossack Hetmanate along the Dnieper River into Left-bank Ukraine, which enjoyed a degree of autonomy within the Tsardom of Russia; and Right-bank Ukraine which remained part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and at times (1672–1699) part of the Ottoman Empire.

More information Right-bank Ukraine, Left-bank Ukraine ...
More information Partition, Right-bank Ukraine ...

Under the Russian Empire and the Habsburg monarchy

After the dissolution of the Cossack Hetmanate, a new Malorossiyan collegium was established in 1764, and the Zaporozhian Host was disbanded in 1775. As a result of the second and third Partitions of Poland in 1793 and 1795, eastern and central parts of the territory of present-day Ukraine were incorporated directly into the Russian Empire. The western part became part of the Habsburg monarchy earlier, in the following order: Carpathian Ruthenia (1526/1699), Galicia (1772), and Bukovina (1775).

Ukraine In the Russian Empire (1721 – 1917)

1721 – 1725 Peter I the Great (Петро І Великий)

1725 – 1727 Catherine I (Катерина І)

1727 – 1730 Peter II (Петро II)

1730 – 1740 Anna (Анна)

1741 – 1742 Elizabeth (Єлизавета Петрівна)

1742 Peter III (Петро III)

1762 – 1796 Catherine II the Great (Катерина II Велика)

1796 – 1801 Paul I (Павло І)

1801 – 1825 Alexander I the Blessed (Олександр I Блаженний)

1825 – 1855 Nicholas I (Микола І)

1855 – 1881 Alexander II the Liberator (Олександр II Визволитель)

1881 – 1894 Alexander III the Peacemaker (Олександр III Миротворець)

1894 –1917 Nicholas II (Микола II)

The Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria in the Austrian Empire (1772–1918)

1772 – 1780 Maria Theresa (Марія Терезія)

1780 – 1790 Joseph II (Йосип II)

1790 – 1792 Leopold II (Леопольд II)

1792 – 1835 Francis II (Франциск II)

1835 – 1848 Ferdinand I (Фердинанд І)

1848 – 1916 Francis Joseph I (Франц Йосип І)

1916 – 1918 Charles I (Карл I)

Leaders during the Russian Revolution

Ukrainian People's Republic (1917–1921)

The Ukrainian People's Republic was formed after the Russian Revolution of 1917, and lasted until the Peace of Riga between Poland and Soviet Russia in March 1921. The state leadership position title varied and, despite a rather widespread misconception, none of them had an official Presidential title.

The Directorate of Ukraine was a provisional council of the UNR formed after Skoropadskyi's Hetmanate fell apart. On 22 January 1919, the Act of Unification of the Ukrainian People's Republic and the West Ukrainian People's Republic was passed. The text of the universal was made by the members of the Directory.

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Ukrainian State (1918)

Following a coup inspirated by the German military authorities on 29 April 1918, an authoritarian provisional state was proclaimed by a former Imperial Russian General Pavlo Skoropadskyi, who proclaimed himself Hetman of Ukraine. This regime was deposed in December same year, when the Ukrainian People's Republic was reinstalled, now led by the Directory.

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Western Ukrainian People's Republic (1918–1919)

The government of the Western Ukrainian People's Republic, which was proclaimed on 19 October 1918, united with the Ukrainian People's Republic on 22 January 1919, although this was mostly a symbolic act because the western Ukrainians retained their own Ukrainian Galician Army and government structure. After the Polish-Ukrainian War, Poland took over most of territory of the West Ukrainian People's Republic by July 1919.

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Leaders after the Russian Revolution

Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1917–1991)

The nomenclature for the head of state position was changing. At first it was called the Chairman of the Central Executive Committee, then it was called the Uprising Nine (Povstanburo) which was later reorganized into the Central Military-Revolutionary Committee (sort of revkom). In mid July 1918 there were some biases about the idea of the Ukrainian SSR, but with the help of more nationally inclined bolsheviks such as Skrypnyk, Zatonsky, and others the government of the Soviet Ukraine was preserved. After the defeat of Directoria the head of state was again called as the chairman of the Central Executive Committee. Ukraine was incorporated into the Soviet Union on 30 December 1922. Since 1938 the position began to be called as the chairman of the Presidium of Verkhovna Rada which was abolished in 1990. From 1990 to 1991 it was simply the head of the Verkhovna Rada until the introduction of the office of the President of Ukrainian SSR.

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Directorate of the UPR in exile (1920–1948)

In Paris and Prague to 1945; in New York City during 1945–1946; in Munich during 1945–1948:

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Carpatho-Ukraine (1939)

  Christian People's Party

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Ukrainian State (1941)

Prime Minister of the Ukrainian State:   Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists

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Presidents of the UPR in exile (1948–1992)

In Munich during 1948–1992, and in New York City in 1992:

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Presidents of modern Ukraine

On 5 July 1991, the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR passed a law establishing the post of the "President of the Ukrainian SSR". The title was changed to "President of Ukraine" upon the proclamation of independence on 24 August 1991, simultaneously making then-Speaker of the parliament Leonid Kravchuk acting president.

The first presidential election in Ukraine was held on 1 December 1991. On 22 August 1992, the last President of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile Mykolva Plaviuk transferred his authorities to the first post-Soviet president Leonid Kravchuk.

  Non-partisan, without support or independent   People's Union "Our Ukraine"   Party of Regions   All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland"   Petro Poroshenko Bloc "Solidarity"   Servant of the People

More information №, President ...
  1. Acting President as then-Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada between the proclamation of independence and the first presidential election.
  2. Acting President after the 2014 Revolution of Dignity and the subsequent flight of Viktor Yanukovych to Russia.

Timeline

Volodymyr ZelenskyyPetro PoroshenkoOleksandr TurchynovViktor YanukovychViktor YushchenkoLeonid KuchmaLeonid KravchukIvan PlyushchVladmir IvashkoValentyna Shevchenko (politician)Oleksiy VatchenkoIvan HrushetskyOleksandr LiashkoDemyan KorotchenkoYaroslav StetskoMykhailo BurmystenkoLeonid KorniyetsGrigory PetrovskySymon PetliuraChristian RakovskyVolodymyr VynnychenkoGeorgy PyatakovYevhen PetrushevychPavlo SkoropadskyiCommunist Party of Ukraine (Soviet Union)Voldymyr ZatonskyYukhym MedvedevMykhailo HrushevskyVolodymyr Pavlovych Naumenko

See also


References

  1. "Nordiska furstar lade grunden till Ryssland". historiskamedia.se.[permanent dead link]
  2. Suszko, Henryk (2003). Latopis hustyński. Opracowanie, przekład i komentarze. Slavica Wratislaviensia CXXIV. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego. ISBN 83-229-2412-7; Tolochko, Oleksiy (2010). The Hustyn' Chronicle. (Harvard Library of Early Ukrainian Literature: Texts). ISBN 978-1-932650-03-7
  3. "Riuryk of Novgorod". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  4. For simplifying the matter, only the most important parts of Ukrainian Kievan Rus will appear.
  5. "Sveerne". www.fortidensjelling.dk.
  6. Олександр Палій (2015). Історія України: Посібник. Yuri Marchenko. p. 105. ISBN 978-617-684-099-2.
  7. History of Ukraine-Rus': From prehistory to the eleventh century, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press, 1997
  8. Also known as Jarisleif I. See Google books
  9. According to A. Nazarenko. It was thought not long ago that the first wife of Sviatopolk was Barbara Komnene, a supposed daughter of Alexios I Komnenos. However, the lack of tradition of such a name in the Byzantine Empire led to doubt. Today she may be considered fictional.
  10. Possibly identified with Yaroslav Sviatoslavich, prince of Murom. Information presented for Constantine refers to Yaroslav.
  11. In 1141-46 Volhynia was ruled by Sviatoslav Vsevolodovich. See his entry below in the table.
  12. Some authors give Rurik II a two-year-reign (1210–1212), and attribute to Vsevolod the Red a second reign (1212–1215), which, in this case, would mean that Vsevolod died in 1215, and not in 1212.
  13. Dimnik, Martin. The Dynasty of Chernihiv – 1146–1246.
  14. The chroniclers neglect to reveal the identity of Yaroslav's wife, but the Lyubetskiy sinodik calls her Irene; Dimnik, Martin op. cit. 121.
  15. Basing their observations on the evidence of the Lay of Igor's Campaign, a number of historians have suggested that her name was Evfrosinia and that she may have been Igor's second wife; on the other hand, the chronicles neither give Yaroslavna's name nor suggest that she was Igor's second wife; Dimnik, Martin op. cit. 121.
  16. Kann, Robert A. (2010). A history of the Habsburg Empire, 1526–1918. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-04206-3. OCLC 951424408. The Habsburg policy in Galicia and Bukovyna to support the Uniate church and her educational institutions and to a lesser degree the Greek Orthodox Church for the benefit of the Ruthenian Ukrainian population cannot be classified simply as divide et impera" "the first and second generation of Ruthenian literary men under Habsburg rule served this ultimate goal of Ruthenian-Ukrainian nationalism
  17. Subtelny, Orest (2012). Ukraine a history. Univ. of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-0991-4. OCLC 948518600. the populace belong to the great Ruthenian [Ukrainian] nation, whose 15 million members, of whom 2.5 million live in Galicia, all speak the same language" (1848) "the Supreme Ruthenian Council, the first modern Ukrainian political organization" "they attempted to neutralize the Supreme Ruthenian Council by forming a rival Ukrainian organization that was pro-Polish.
  18. A history of Ukraine: the land and its peoples. 1 June 2011. The Ruthenian club established the first permanent Ukrainian theatre anywhere and with cadres from Galicia and Dnieper Ukraine
  19. Wilson, Andrew, 1961- author. (15 October 2015). The Ukrainians : unexpected nation. ISBN 978-0-300-21965-4. OCLC 922581401. the Ukrainians were known as 'Rusyns' or, in the English version Ruthenians {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  20. Новосівський, Іван М. (1970). Bukovinian Ukrainians; a historical background and their self-determination in 1918. Association of Bukovinian Ukrainians. OCLC 151305. Rumanized Ruthenian (Ukrainian) faith and customs
  21. "Ruthenians". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  22. Depending on the title of the ruler it was called either principality or kingdom.
  23. Engel, Pál (2001). The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526. I.B. Tauris Publishers. ISBN 1-86064-061-3.
  24. Font, Márta (1991). "II. András orosz politikája és hadjáratai [Andrew II's policy and campaigns in Rus']". Századok (in Hungarian). 125 (1–2): 107–144k. ISSN 0039-8098.
  25. Hollý, Karol (2007). "Princess Salomea and Hungarian–Polish Relations in the Period 1214–1241" (PDF). Historický Časopis. 55 (Supplement): 5–32. ISSN 0018-2575.
  26. До половецкого плена; Соловьёв С. М. История России с дневнейших времён
  27. Thurston, Herbert (ed.). Butler's Lives of the Saints – September.
  28. Referred as natus dux et dominus Russiae
  29. Pavlo Teteria, Hetman of the Right-bank Ukraine. Cossack leaders of Ukraine (textbook).
  30. Lohvyn, Yu. Pavlo Teteria. Hetmans of Ukraine. "Merry Alphabet".
  31. Pavlo Teteria. History of the Great Nation.
  32. Horobets, V. Civil wars in Ukraine of 1650s-1660s. Encyclopedia of history of Ukraine. Vol.2. Kyiv: "Naukova Dumka", 2004.

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