ZAPORIZHZHYA

zäpˌərĭzhˈə, Rus. Zaporozhye, city (1989 pop. 884,000), capital of Zaporizhzhya region, in Ukraine, a port on the Dnieper River, opposite the island of Khortytsya. The city, founded in 1770 on the site of the Zaporizhzhya Cossack camp, consists of old Zaporizhzhya (called Aleksandrovsk before 1921) and the new industrial Zaporizhzhya, which developed during the 1930s and adjoins the Dniprohes installations and the port of Lenin.

It is a major rail junction and industrial center and the site of the Dniprohes dam and power station, one of the country's largest hydroelectric plants. Large quantities of grain are exported. The city has steel mills, coking plants, aluminum and magnesium works, and factories that produce automobiles, farm machinery, and transformers. Well supplied with electricity, Zaporizhzhya forms, together with the adjoining Donets Basin and the Nikopol manganese and Kryvyy Rih iron mines, one of Ukraine's leading industrial complexes. The high concentration of older industry, however, has had a harmful effect on air quality.

The Zaporizhzhya Cossacks

The island of Khortytsya, in the Dnieper, was headquarters (sich) of the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks from the 16th to 18th cent. (The word Zaporizhzhya means "beyond the rapids," i.e., of the Dnieper.) For nearly three centuries the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks served as the rallying point for Ukrainian struggles against social, national, and religious oppression.

After the union of Poland and Lithuania in 1569, Ukraine came under Polish rule; but the Poles were too weak to defend it from frequent devastating Tatar raids. The need for self-defense led at the end of the 15th cent. to the rise of the Ukrainian Cossacks, who by the mid-16th cent. had formed a state, organized along republican lines and ruled by a hetman, along the lower and middle Dnieper. At its height it occupied most of S Ukraine except the Black Sea littoral, a possession of the Crimean khans. Although they formally recognized the sovereignty of the Polish kings, the Cossacks, for all practical purposes, enjoyed complete political independence.

By the end of the 16th cent., however, Poland sought fuller control over Ukraine and the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks. Persecution of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church after 1596 provoked repeated outbreaks among the Ukrainians, and the Cossacks, as staunch adherents of the Orthodox faith, participated actively in the rebellions. In 1648 the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks, led by Hetman Bohdan Chmielnicki, began a series of campaigns that eventually defeated the Poles and freed Ukraine from Polish domination. Chmielnicki's forces suffered defeat in 1651, however, and were forced at Bila Tserkva to accept a treaty unfavorable to Ukraine.

In 1654, Chmielnicki persuaded the Cossacks to transfer their allegiance to the Russian czars. By the Treaty of Andrusov in 1667, the left bank of the Dnieper and Kiev were ceded to Russia. The Russians proceeded to encroach upon Cossack privileges much as the Poles had, thus engendering revolts in what was left of the Zaporizhzhya territory. When Hetman Ivan Mazepa joined Charles XII of Sweden against Russia in the Northern War, he shared in the Swedish defeat at Poltava (1709). Many Zaporizhzhya Cossacks fled to the khanate of Crimea, but in 1734 they were allowed to return to their old territory and to establish a new Cossack headquarters.

Russia, however, continued to view the Cossacks with suspicion; and in 1775 the Russian army, on orders from Catherine II, destroyed the Zaporizhzhya camp, thus completely abolishing the last stronghold of Ukrainian independence. Most of the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks then moved to Turkish territory at the mouth of the Danube, where they founded a new community. In 1828–29, however, they returned to Ukraine and settled along the shores of the Sea of Azov.

When the Russians tried in the 19th cent. to settle them in the newly conquered N Caucasus, the Cossacks rebelled and were disbanded (1865). Those Zaporizhzhya Cossacks who had remained in Ukraine were allowed in 1787 to settle along the Black Sea shores between the Dnieper and Buh rivers; they became known as the Black Sea Cossacks. In 1792 they were resettled in the Kuban region and after 1860 became known as the Kuban Cossacks.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Zaporizhzhya  - 10 results

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...The most recent initiative from the Zaporizhzhya provincial council, renowned in Ukraine...energy sector. It observed that in Zaporizhzhya, with its many energy-intensive...transported over the energy grid. 32 In Zaporizhzhya almost half of industrial production...
...last couple of years. Last year at Zaporizhzhya, the plant manager had to find an...Goskomatom tried to remove the director at Zaporizhzhya, Vladimir Bronnikov, who had the...Goskomatom forced a rewrite of the Zaporizhzhya spent fuel storage facility contract...
...Dnepr Hydro-Electric Power Station Dniprohes , located near Zaporizhzhya, entered production, and from the 1950s to the 1970s additional...the Chornobyl Chernobyl , Rivne Rovno , South Ukrainian, Zaporizhzhya Zaporozhe , Khmelnytskyy, and Crimea stations. In 1992...
...1989 r. , Kiev: Ministerstvo Statystyky Ukrainy , 1992. Zaporizhzhya: Chislennost naselennie Zaporozhskoi oblasti po dannym Vsesoyuznoi perepisi naseleniya 1989 goda , Zaporizhzhya: Zaporozhske Upravlenie Statistiki : 1991. Crimea: Rivenosvity...
...are to be found. These include such cities as Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk with populations of more than one million, and Zaporizhzhya and Kryvyy Rih with populations approaching one million. Ukraines second largest city, numbering more than 1.6 million...
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journal articles on: Zaporizhzhya  - 2 results

 
 
...1999. TESF. Business Partner Transcarpathia. Uzhgorod: TESF, 2001. Van Zon, H. "The Mismanaged Integration of Zaporizhzhya with the World Economy: Implications for Regional Development in Peripheral Regions." Regional Studies 32, no. 7 (1998...
...According to the All-Ukrainian census, more than half of the inhabitants in the Donetsk, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhya, Odesa, Mykolayiv, and Kherson oblasts are Ukrainians. The number of Ukrainians in the south and east constitute two...


 

newspaper articles on: Zaporizhzhya  - 6 results

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...agg 2-1) Liteks Lovetch 2, Omonia Nicosia 1 (agg 2-1) Lokomotiv Sofia 2, Bnei Yehuda 0 (agg 6-0) Metallurg Zaporizhzhya 3, CSF Zim 0 (agg 3-0) Rapid Bucharest 1, FK Sarajevo 0 (agg 2-1) Trabzonspor 0, Apoel Nicosia 0 (agg 2-1...
...Bratislava v Dinamo Minsk (5.0), Basle v FC Vaduz (7.0), BneiYehuda v Lokomotiv Sofia (5.0),CSF Zimbru v Metallurg Zaporizhzhya (6.0),CSKA Sofia v Hajduk Kula (6.30). Chornomorets vWisla Plock (4.0), Dinamo Bucharest v Beitar Jerusalem...
...Worldwide it provides approximately as much energy as nuclear power The largest nuclear power station is the six-reactor Zaporizhzhya power station in the Ukraine which has a gross ouput of 6,000 mega-watts. Sealife and oceans The black swallower can...
...1 Artmedia Bratislava 2, Dinamo Minsk 1 Basel 1, FC Vaduz 0 Bnei Yehuda 0, Lokomotiv Sofia 2 CSF Zimbru 0, Metallurg Zaporizhzhya 0CSKA Sofia 0, Hajduk Kula 0. Chornomorets 0, Wisla Plock 0 Dinamo Bucharest 1, Beitar Jerusalem 0 FC Twente 1, Levadia...
...Feyenoord 2, Maccabi Haifa 1 Liteks Lovetch 1, Marseille 1 Mlada Boleslav 0, Molde 0 Rangers 0, Panathinaikos 1 Metallurg Zaporizhzhya 1, Partizan Belgrade 4 FC Groningen 2, Rapid Bucuresti 1 Nacional 0, Rubin Kazan 0 Parma 1, Ruzomberok 0 Club Brugge...
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encyclopedia articles on: Zaporizhzhya  - 10 results

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ZAPORIZHZHYA zap rizh , Rus. Zaporozhye, city (1989 pop. 884,000), capital of Zaporizhzhya region, in Ukraine, a port on the Dnieper...city, founded in 1770 on the site of the Zaporizhzhya Cossack camp, consists of old Zaporizhzhya...
...Kharkiv , Dnipropetrovsk , Donetsk , Zaporizhzhya , Makiyivka , Mariupol , and Luhansk...established a military order called the Zaporizhzhya Sich ("clearing beyond the rapids...Catherine II to resign in 1764; the Zaporizhzhya Sich was razed by Russian troops in...
...hydroelectric station, central Ukraine, on the Dnieper River near Zaporizhzhya. The hydroelectric station supplies power for the industrial centers of Dnipropetrovsk, Kryvyy Rih, and Zaporizhzhya. More than 1 / 2 mi (.8 km) long and 200 ft (61 m...
...runaway serfs. By the 16th cent. they had settled along the lower and middle Dnieper River (for their history to 1775, see Zaporizhzhya ). Similar communities grew up on the Don (see Don Cossacks ) and its tributaries. They were all organized on principles...
ALEKSANDROVSK see Zaporizhzhya , Ukraine. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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