Ukrainian historical regions
A list of the various regions of Ukraine and/or inhabited by Ukrainians and their ancestors throughout history.
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Main historical regions
Coat of arms | Name | Location | Description |
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Trans– Carpathian |
Carpathian region beyond the main Carpathian ridge (west of the ridge) | ||
Halychyna | Other names Galicia, Cis–Carpathian (east of the ridge) | ||
Volhynia | Other names Volyn | ||
Podolia | Podolia means lower land | ||
Kyiv land | Other names Duchy of Ruthenia, Ruthenia proper | ||
Chernihiv land | |||
Sloboda Ukraine | |||
Zaporizhian Sich | |||
Donbass | Other names land of Cumans | ||
Black Sea Littoral | Other names Yedisan, Ochakov Oblast | ||
Tavria | Other names Taurida | ||
Budjak | |||
Bucovina | Other names Shypyntsi land |
Traditional regions
The traditional names of the regions of Ukraine are important geographic, historical, and ethnographic identifiers.
Over-Dnieper Ukraine, Great Ukraine Land of Kiev - Right-bank Ukraine (east of Zhytomyr Oblast, Kiev Oblast, Cherkasy Oblast), Central Ukraine
- Polesia, Land of Turov (north of Kiev Oblast, east of Brest Oblast, west of Gomel Oblast), Northern Ukraine
- Land of Pereyaslav (predominantly Poltava Oblast and east of Kiev Oblast), southern part of Left-bank Ukraine, Little Russia, Central Ukraine
Land of Chernihiv (predominantly Chernihiv Oblast, west of Bryansk Oblast, east of Gomel Oblast), northern part of Left-bank Ukraine, Little Russia, Northern Ukraine - Severia (Sumy Oblast, Kharkiv Oblast, Kursk Oblast, Belgorod Oblast)
- Sloboda Ukraine (mostly Kharkiv Oblast)
Ruthenia, Kingdom of Rus, Western Ukraine, Western Oblast, Liitle Poland Volhynia (Volyn Oblast, Rivne Oblast, west of Zhytomyr Oblast, north of Ternopil Oblast, north of Khmelnytsky Oblast), former principality - Chełm, Belz, San River, Przemyśl (east of Podkarpackie Voivodeship and Lublin Voivodeship), former principality and a constituent land of Ruthenia
- Berestia (west of Brest Oblast, south of Podlaskie Voivodeship)
Galicia (Lviv Oblast, Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, Ternopil Oblast) - Prykarpattia (Boikos and Lemkos, collectively Rusyns)
- Pokuttia (Hutsuls)
Podolia (Khmelnytsky Oblast, Vinnytsia Oblast, north of Odessa Oblast, west of Kirovohrad Oblast), Little Poland Zaporizhzhia (Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, east of Kirovohrad Oblast), New Serbia, Central Ukraine - Pontic steppe, Wild Fields, New Russia
- Donbass ("Donets Basin") (Donetsk Oblast, Luhanks Oblast), also known as Cuman Land, Slavo-Serbia, Eastern Ukraine
- Azov Littoral (Zaporizhia Oblast, south of Donetsk Oblast, southwest of Rostov Oblast)
- Black Sea Littoral, Southern Ukraine
- Over-Buh, Yedisan, Transnistria (Odessa Oblast, Mykolaiv Oblast)
- Bugeac (Budzhak) (southwest of Odessa Oblast)
- Tavria (Kherson Oblast)
- Crimea (Krym), also known as Tavria, Taurida
Transcarpathia / Carpathian Ruthenia, Subcarpathian Rus, Carpatho-Ukraine and many others - Northern Bukovina (Chernivtsi Oblast)
Regions historically inhabited by Ukrainians (mostly with other nations), which are partly or wholly outside modern Ukraine:
- Kuban granted to Black Sea Cossacks colonization from the Russian government during the Russian-Circassian War
- Northern Caucasus (also called Pink Ukraine)
- Volga Region (around Saratov, called Yellow Ukraine)
- Siberia (city of Omsk, Grey Ukraine)
- Russian Far East (see Green Ukraine)
Regions of Ukraine
Geopolitical, historical, and cultural factors play a role in assigning different areas of Ukraine to semi-official regions. The map on the right shows the approximate locations of some broad-brush regions. The terms "West Ukraine", "East Ukraine", "South Ukraine" and "Central Ukraine" occur in common usage. There is no clear definition of the boundaries of such regions, but rather a general reference. Lists of what may constitute such regions might include:
- Western Ukraine may mean either the historic region of Galicia, or may also include Volhynia, Podolia, Transcarpathia, and/or Bukovina.
- Eastern Ukraine may mean either the Don basin, Sloboda Ukraine, continental Taurida regions etc.
- South Ukraine often includes the whole Taurida, the Kryvyi Rih basin, and the regions of Mykolayiv and Odessa oblasts. Alternatively it may include the Don basin, in particularly the adjacent land to the Azov Sea.
- Central Ukraine, a more vague term, often denotes what is not included in Western or South-Eastern definitions.
Other terms are rarely used - such as "South-West Ukraine", which can denote either Transcarpathia, or Budjak. Sometimes the term "South-Eastern Ukraine" is used to define both regions of the Southern and Eastern Ukraine. Due to the shape of the country, in narrow definition, term "Northern Ukraine" is often used to denote either the bulge of Chernihiv/Sumy Oblasts or, in broader terms, the whole of Polesia. "North-western Ukraine" almost exclusively refers to the historic region of Volhynia. This makes the term "North-Eastern Ukraine" rarest of them all - it is either used as synonym for the narrow definition of Northern Ukraine, or as synonym for Sloboda Ukraine (particularly the Sumy Oblast).
- Western Ukraine
- Eastern Ukraine
- Central Ukraine
- Southern Ukraine
- Northern Ukraine
- The historical regions
Historical Ukrainian states
- Kievan Rus' (a state of Early East Slavs, (880s–1240)
- Galicia-Volhynia (1199–1349)
- Cossack Hetmanate (1649–1764)
- Central Rada of the Ukrainian People's Republic (1917–1918)
- Hetmanate of the Ukrainian State (1918)
- West Ukrainian People's Republic (1918–1919)
- Directorate of the Ukrainian People's Republic (1918–1920)
- Galician Soviet Socialist Republic (1920)
- Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1919–1991)
- Carpatho-Ukraine (1939)
References
- Paul Robert Magosci, Ukraine: A Historical Atlas, 1985. University of Toronto Press, Toronto. ISBN 0-8020-3428-4