Kiev: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Ro Thorpe mNo edit summary |
imported>Ro Thorpe mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{subpages}} | {{subpages}} | ||
'''Kiev''' ('''''Kyiv''''' in Ukrainian) is the capital city of [[Ukraine]], located in the north-central part of the country along the banks of the river Dnipro (Dnieper river) | '''Kiev''' ('''''Kyiv''''' in Ukrainian) is the capital city of [[Ukraine]], located in the north-central part of the country along the banks of the river Dnipro (Dnieper river). It has a population of about three million. | ||
The Kiev [[oblast]] is the province surrounding the city of Kiev. | The Kiev [[oblast]] is the province surrounding the city of Kiev. |
Revision as of 15:06, 5 March 2014
Kiev (Kyiv in Ukrainian) is the capital city of Ukraine, located in the north-central part of the country along the banks of the river Dnipro (Dnieper river). It has a population of about three million.
The Kiev oblast is the province surrounding the city of Kiev.
History
Following are some historical milestones of Kyivan history:
- Legend has it that Kyiv was founded about 500 CE by three brothers -- Ky, Khoriv, and Shchek -- along with their sister Lybid.
- Around 900 CE, King Oleh from Scandinavia seized power over the city, starting the Kyivan Rus' dynasty. (The term rus' means red-haired.)
- For 100 years the region expanded as a riverine trade route, sending fur, honey, and slaves south to Constantinople, and receiving luxury goods in return.
- Around 1000 CE, King Volodymyr married into Constantinople royalty and forcibly converted the people of Kyiv from paganism to Orthodox Christianity. Subsequently Yaroslav the Wise (Volodymyr's son) expanded Kyiv into a major sociopolitical and economic center.
- Mongol raiders sacked Kyiv in 1240, and the city languished and shrank.
- About 1800, czarist policies encouraged an influx of Russian immigration, boosting the population considerably.
- In the early 1900s, the Bolshevik Revolution resulted in many Red versus White battles in and around Kyiv, and subsequent Stalinist famines killed many.
- Early in the 1940s, the German invasion of World War II also destroyed many lives, both military and civilian.
- Around 1990, as the Soviet Union crumbled, Ukrainians agitated for independence, ultimately leading to the peaceful democratic Orange Revolution in the first decade of the 21st Century.