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Zaporizhian Sich (Ukrainian: Запорізька Січ, Zaporiz'ka Sich) original Slavonic name "Zaporizhska Sich'" was the center of the Dnieper Cossacks of Zaporizhia. The term has also been metonymically used as an informal reference to the whole Zaporizhia or to the Zaporozhian Host.
Initially the Zaporizhian Sich was a fortified military camp, the foundation for which was laid out on the Isle of Khortytsia in 1556 by D.I. Vyshnevetsky. But only in 1618 did Hetman Petro Konashevych Sahaidachny order his Cossacks to build the earthen perimeter with the log walls on top of it. The log fort was surrounded with the massive abatis made from entire trees. Hence the term "Sich": it is a noun derived from the verb "to cut" and denotes the abatis type of fortification: by cutting the forest.
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Organisation and Government
The Zaporozhian Host was led by a Hetman, aided by a head secretary, head judge, head archivist and the supreme government body called the Sichova Rada (council).
Some sources refer to the Zaporizhian Sich as a "cossack republic",1 as the highest power in it belonged to the assembly of all its members, and because the leaders (starshyna) were elected. The Cossacks formed a society (hromada) that consisted of "kurens" (several hundreds of cossacks). There was a cossack military court, which severely punished violence and stealing among compatriots, bringing women to the Sich, consumption of alcohol in periods of conflict, etc. There were active Orthodox churches and schools, providing religious and secular education for children.
Sich population was quite international. It included Ukrainians, Moldovans, Tatars, Poles, Lithuanians and Russians. The social structure was also complex—destitute gentry and boyars, merchants and peasants, outlaws of every sort, run-away slaves from Turkish galleys, etc. This led to the formation of gangs largely indeperndent of the government whose main occupation was robbety. However by the mid 17th century these formations largely disappeared and integrated into Sich society.
The remoteness of the place and rapids on the Dnieper river effectively guarded the place.
Army and Warfare
Cossacks developed a large fleet of light fast light vessels. Their campaigns were targeted at were rich settlements on the Black Sea shores of the Ottoman Empire and several times took them as far as Constantinople. 2
Formation
The Zaporizhian Sich emerged as a natural method of defense by the Ukrainian people against the frequent and devastating raids of Crimean Tatars, who captured hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians, Belarusians and Poles. Such slaving operations were called "the harvesting of the steppe".
Because of the Tatars' constant interference, Ukrainians found it hard to survive, let alone make a living. They created a self-defense force, the Cossacks, fierce enough to stop the Tatar hordes.
Some researchers say that the constant threat from the Crimean Tatars was the impetus for the emergence of cossackdom. During the raids of retribution to the Black Sea shores of the Ottoman Empire and Crimean Khanate, the cossacks not only robbed rich settlements, but liberated their compatriots from slavery.
History
Establishment
In later years the Sich became the center of Cossack life south of the borders of Russian Tsardom. The Zaporozhian Host was governed by the Sichova Rada and the term Zaporizhian Sich was applied to the "Cossack state".
After the Treaty of Pereyaslav (1654), the Host was split into two, the Hetmanate with its capital at Chyhyryn, and the more autonomous region of Zaporizhia which continued to be based at the Sich. During this period the Sich changed location several times.
During the reign of the Russian Tsar Peter, cossacks aided Russia in channel and fortification lines construction. An estimated 20 - 30 thousands were sent each year to Northern Russia for channels construction at Ladoga Lake. Hard labour in cold and unfamiliar climate led to a high level of mortality among the cossacks. Only an estimated 40% returned home.3
After the Battle of Poltava the original Sich was destroyed in 1709, and Mazepa's capital - Baturyn was razed. This is sometimes referred to as the Old Sich (Stara Sich). From 1734 to 1775 a New Sich (Nova Sich) was constructed.
Fear of the independence of the Sich, resulted in the Russian Government first abolishing the Cossack Hetmanate in 1764 and finally totally destroying the Zaporizhian Sich itself by military force in 1775.
By the late 18th century, the Cossack officer class in Ukraine was incorporated into the Imperial Russian nobility (Dvoryanstvo). The rank and file Cossacks however, including a substantial portion of the old Zaporozhians, were reduced to peasant status. They were able to maintain some freedoms and continued to provide refuge for those fleeing serfdom in Russia and Poland. This aroused the anger of the Russian empress Catherine II. Also tension rose after the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca, when the need for a further southern frontier was gone after the annexation of Crimea. With the colonisation of New Russia, tensions were created between the Cossacks, and numerous Serbian colonists. As the excuse for that Catherine II decided to diregard the Pereyaslav Treaty and simply disband the Sich.
Destruction
In May 1775, General Pyotr Tekeli received orders to occupy the main Zaporozhian fortress, the Sich, and to destroy it. The order was given by a "Zaporozhian Cossack" Hrytsko Nechesa, who is better known as Grigory Potemkin, who was formally admitted into Cossackdom a few years earlier. Potemkin was given direct order from Empress Catherine.
On June 5 1775, General Tekeli surrounded the Sich with artillery and infantry. He postponed the storming, and even allowed visits, whilst the head of the Host, Petro Kalnyshevsky was deciding on how to react to the Empress's ultimatum. Under the guidance of a starshyna Lyakh, behind Kalnyshevky's back a conspiracy was formed with a group of 50 Cossacks to go fishing in the river Inhul next to the Southern Buh in the Ottoman provinces. The pretext was enough to allow the Russians to let the Cossacks out of the siege, who were joined by numerous others. The fleeing Cossacks travelled to the Danube Delta where they formed a new Danube Sich, under the protectorate of the Ottoman Empire.
When Tekeli realised the escape, there was little left for the remaining Cossacks. The Sich was razed to the ground. The operation however was bloodless, and even though Petro Kalnyshevsky was arrested and exiled to the Solovki (and lived there in a cell to the age of 112), most of the Cossacks were spared further repressions. Lower level starshynas were given Army ranks and all the privileges that accompanied them.
All high level starshynas were repressed or exiled. Lower ranks were allowed to join Husar and Dragoon regiments. Most of ordinary cossacks were made state peasants and serfs.4 The Ukrainian writer Adrian Kaschenko (1858-1921) 5, historian Olena Apanovich 6 note that the final abolishment of the Zaporizhian Sich, the Cossack historic stronghold perceived as the bastion of protection of the Ukrainians and their ways of life, had such a strong symbolic effect that the memories of the event remained for the long time in the local folklore.
See also
- Cossackdom
- History of the Cossacks
- Zaporozhian Host
- Tatar invasions
- Jewish cossacks
- Khmelnytsky Uprising
- Black Sea Cossack Host formed a few years after the destruction of the Zarporozhiya.
- Danubian Sich, formed by some of the escapees of the Zaporozhian Cossacks in the delta of Danube, under the protectorate of the Ottoman Empire.
- Dmytro Yavornytsky, historian of the Zaporozhian Cossacks who mapped the locations of the various Siches.
References
- ^ http://www.ukraine-eu.mfa.gov.ua/eu/ua/publication/content/6162.htm
- ^ Cossack Navy 16th - 17th Centuries
- ^ Володимир Антонович. Про козацькі часи на Україні. - Дев'ята глава
- ^ Turchenko F. (ed), "Ukrains'ke kozatstvo. Mala entsyklopediia", Kyiv, 2002
- ^ Adrian Kashchenko, "Opovidannia pro slavne viys'ko zaporoz'ke nyzove", Dnipropetrovsk, Sich, 1991, ISBN 5777503012
- ^ Olena Apanovich, "Ne propala ihnya slava", "Vitchizna" Magazine, N 9, 1990
External links
- Cossack raids
- Cossack Navy 16th - 17th Centuries
- Zaporizhia - Encyclopedia of Ukraine
- Story about Zaporizhean Cossaks by A.Kaschenko, Ukrainian language
- Article on Zaporizhian Sich in "Welcome to Ukraine" Magazine
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 15 November 2008, at 04:20.
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