Greeks in Ukraine
Greeks in Ukraine or Crimean Greeks are a Hellenic minority that reside in or used to live on the territory of modern Ukraine. Most of them live in Donetsk Oblast and particularly concentrated around the city of Mariupol.
Greeks in Ukraine | |
Total population | |
---|---|
91,548 (2001) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Donetsk Oblast | 77,516 (2001) |
Crimea | 2,795 (2001) |
Zaporizhia Oblast | 2,179 (2001) |
Odessa Oblast | 2,083 (2001) |
The rest | 6,975 (2001) |
Languages | |
Russian (88.5%), Urum, Rumeíka | |
Religion | |
Orthodox Christianity | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Pontic Greeks and Caucasus Greeks |
According to the 2001 Ukrainian Census, there were 91,548 ethnic Greeks in Ukraine, or 0.2% of the population. However, the actual percentage of those with Greek ancestry is likely to be much higher due to widespread intermarriage between ethnic Greeks and those Ukrainian citizens who are Ukrainian Orthodox, particularly in eastern Ukraine, as well as the absence of strong links to Greece or use of the Greek language by many with Greek ancestry in these areas and who therefore are not classified as Greeks in official censuses.
Most Greeks in Ukraine belong to the larger Greek diaspora known as Pontic Greeks.
History
A Greek presence throughout the Black Sea area existed long before the beginnings of Kievan Rus. For most of their history in this area, the history of the Greeks in Russia and in Ukraine forms a single narrative, of which a division according to present-day boundaries would be an artificial anachronism. Most present-day Greeks in Ukraine are the descendants of Pontic Greeks from the Pontus region between the fall of the Empire of Trebizond in 1461 and the Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829.
Ancient Greek colonies (6th century BCE–1st century BCE)
Greeks established colonies on what are now the Ukrainian shores of the Black Sea as early as the 6th century BCE. These colonies traded with various ancient nations around the Black Sea, including Scythians, Maeotae, Cimmerians, Goths and predecessors of the Slavs. These earlier Greek communities had, however, assimilated into the wider, indigenous population of the region.
Greek-speaking kingdoms in Crimea (4th century BCE–15th century CE)
The Greek colonies coalesced into the Bosporan Kingdom in the 4th century BCE, which lasted as a Roman client state until the 4th century CE. Additionally, the Kingdom of Pontus was founded in the 3rd century BCE and controlled territory in Ukraine (including the Bosporan Kingdom) until its acquisition by the Roman Empire in the 1st century CE.
After the 13th century Cuman and Mongol-Tatar Golden Horde invasion of the steppes of southern Ukraine and Russia to the north, Greeks had remained only in the towns on the southern slopes of the Crimean Mountains and became divided into two sub-groups: Tatar-speaking Urums and Rumaiic Pontic Greeks with Rumeíka Greek as their mother tongue.
The Crimean Principality of Theodoro gained independence from the Empire of Trebizond in the early 14th century and lasted until its conquest by the Ottoman Empire in the 15th century.
Russian conquest (18th century)
The Urums and Rumaiic Pontic Greeks lived among the Crimean Tatars until the Russian Empire conquered the Crimea in 1783. Then Catherine the Great decided to relocate the Pontic Greeks from Crimea to the northern shores of the Sea of Azov. New territory was assigned for them between today's cities of Mariupol and Donetsk, covering the southern portion of the Donetsk Oblast in Ukraine. Ukrainians and Germans, and afterwards Russians, were settled among the Greeks. The Ukrainians mostly settled villages and some towns in this area, unlike the Greeks, who rebuilt their towns, even giving them their original Crimean names. Since this time in Ukraine the names of settlements in the Crimea match names of places in the south of the Donetsk Oblast: Yalta-Yalta, Hurzuf-Urzuf, etc.
During 1937–1938, the Pontic Greeks endured another deportation by the Soviet authorities known as the Greek Operation of NKVD.
Ottoman Empire refugees (15th century–19th century)
The Greeks of present-day Ukraine are mainly the descendants of various waves of especially Pontic Greek refugees and "economic migrants" who left the region of Pontus and the Pontic Alps in northeastern Anatolia between the fall of the Empire of Trebizond in 1461 and the Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829, although some had settled in Ukraine in the late-19th or early-20th centuries.
Greek Civil War refugees (1946–1949)
Other Greeks arrived in Ukraine even later, particularly, as Greek Communist refugees from mainly Greek Macedonia and other parts of Northern Greece, who had fled their homes following the 1946–1949 Greek Civil War and settled in the USSR, Czechoslovakia and other Eastern Bloc states. However, even among these late arrivals, there were many communist Greek refugees who settled in Ukraine following the Greek Civil War who were in fact Pontic Greeks or Caucasus Greeks and therefore often had ancestors who had lived within the southern territories of the Russian Empire before settling in Greece in the early 20th century.
By the 2001 census 91,500 Greeks remained, the vast majority of whom (77,000) still lived in the Donetsk Oblast. Higher estimates such as 160,000 [1] were reported previously, the fall being explained by assimilation forced by the Soviet government. Other small populations of Greeks are in Odessa and other major cities.
Distribution
Raions of Donetsk Oblast with significant Greek minority:
Raion | Number of Greeks (2001) | Percentage |
Mariupol | 21 923 | 4,3% |
Donetsk | 10 180 | 1,0% |
Velyka Novosilka Raion | 9 730 | 19,7% |
Starobesheve Raion | 7 491 | 13,4% |
Nikolske Raion | 6 223 | 20,0% |
Telmanove Raion | 6 172 | 17,5% |
Manhush Raion | 5 882 | 20,1% |
Gallery
Hellenic cultural heritage in Ukraine:
- Ruins of Olbia
- Ruins of Tyras
- Ruins of the 1935 Basilica in Chersonesus
- Ruins of Panticapaeum
- Ruins of Myrmekion
- Saint Michael Church, Nizhyn (built: 1719-1729)
- All Saints Church, Nizhyn (1782)
- Holy Trinity Cathedral, Odessa (1804-1808)
- Nativity of the Theotokos Church, Kropyvnytskyi (1805-1812)
- Saint George Church, Mohyliv-Podilskyi (1808-1819)
- St. Nicholas' Collegiate Church, Mykolaiv (1799-1828)
- St. Elias Church, Yevpatoria (1911-1918)
- Greek magistrate, Nizhyn (18th century)
- House of Filiki Eteria, Odessa
- Maraslis House, Odessa
- Maraslis Villa, Odessa
- Museum of Greek Priazovya, Sartana, Mariupol
- Grigorios Maraslis Monument, Odessa
- Ignatius of Mariupol Monument, Mariupol
- Arkhip Kuindzhi Monument, Mariupol
- Crimean Greek man smoking a pipe 1840
- Crimean Greek woman in native costume Tauride province Crimea early 20th century
- Traditional Greek costumes in Museum of Greek Priazovya in Sartana, Mariupol
- Members of the Greek community of Ukraine at an annual festival
See also
- Greece–Ukraine relations
- Mariupol#Language structure
- Pontic Greeks, Greek diaspora
- Greeks in Russia
- Greeks in Georgia
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greeks in Ukraine. |
References
- Coins of Olbia: Essay of Monetary Circulation of the North-western Black Sea Region in Antique Epoch. Киев, 1988. ISBN 5-12-000104-1.
- Coinage and Monetary Circulation in Olbia (6th century B.C. – 4th century A.D.) Odessa (2003). ISBN 966-96181-0-X.
- The City of Tyras. A Historical and Archaeological Essay. Одесса: Polis-Press, 1994).. ISBN 9785770745313