Greater Ukraine
Greater Ukraine refers to an irredentist concept of the territory claimed by some Ukrainian nationalist groups outside of Ukraine which are considered part of national homeland by Ukrainians, based on the present-day or historical presence of Ukrainian populations in those areas.
History
Rise of nationalism
The 10 commandments of the Ukrainian People's Party (1902–1907) were developed by Ukrainian nationalist, the leader of UPP Mykola Mikhnovsky in 1904. These commandments were kind of honor code for the party. They called for a one, united, indivisible, from the Carpathians to the Caucasus, independent, free, democratic Ukraine – a republic of working people.[1]
Claimed regions
Since Mikhnovsky the idea of ‘Ukrainian Independent United State’ (Ukrainian: Українська Самостійна Соборна Держава Ukrainska Samosiyna Soborna Derzhava) has been a key nationalist slogan, but many would argue that the ‘unification’ (соборність sobornist’) of Ukrainian lands was partially completed in 1939–45.
Today’s would-be Ukraina irredenta is mainly in the east, on the territory that is now part of
- Starodub region north of Chernihiv
- the south-eastern parts of Voronezh
- Belgorod, Kursk and Rostov oblasts
- Kuban region
In the west, some radical nationalists would also covet the following territories:
- left bank of river Dniester in Moldova (
Transnistria (de facto) / eastern Moldova (de jure)) - north-eastern
Slovakia: Prešov region - south-eastern
Poland: Zakerzonia (Chełm and Przemyśl) - south-western
Belarus: Brest region - northern
Romania: southern Bukovina and the area around Maramureș
The possibility of Ukraine making serious territorial pretensions against its neighbors can be discounted (irredentist movements have become more prevalent within Ukraine itself, supporting unification of predominantly Russian-speaking regions with the Russian Federation, see 2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine). Nevertheless, more radical Ukrainian nationalists may well attempt to take advantage of Russian difficulties in troubled regions such as the north Caucasus, and perhaps even further afield, particularly if any serious conflict should develop between Russia and Ukraine.[2]
Kuban
Ukrainians first settled the Kuban in 1792 and until the mid-twentieth century the majority of the population there identified themselves as Little Russians or Ukrainians.and the percentage of those who identified themselves as Ukrainians dropped from an official 55% (1926) to 0.9% (2002).
See also
- Greater Russia
- Greater Romania
- Greater Bulgaria
- Greater Macedonia
- Greater Hungary
- Greater Serbia
- Greater Croatia
- Italian irredentism
References
- (in Russian) Мирчук П. Возрождение национальной идеи. — Киев: Украинская издательская спилка, 1999
- Andrew Wilson, Ukrainian nationalism in the 1990s: a minority faith, Cambridge University Press, 1997, pp. 181, 183