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- 2. Ivan Krypiakevych was a Ukrainian historian, academician, professor of Lviv University and director of the Institute
- 3. AUSTRIAN PERIOD Krypiakevych was born and raised in Lemberg (Lviv) in Austrian Galicia in a family
- 4. INTERWAR GALICIA During the interwar period, Krypiakevych, being excluded from a university position by the Polish
- 5. SOVIET ANNEXATION AND WAR The 1939 fall of the Polish Republic and the Soviet annexation of
- 6. SOVIET PERIOD The return of the Soviets brought renewed repressions to the west Ukrainian intelligentsia and
- 7. MAJOR WORKS Krypiakevych's early works dealt with the early modern history of the City of Lviv
- 8. LEGACY With the emergence of the Gorbachev reforms and Ukrainian independence, his major works from pre-Soviet
- 9. FAMILY Ivan Krypiakevych had two sons who later became Ukrainian scientists. Petro-Bohdan (1923-1980) Roman (1925-1999) Roman
- 10. Died April 21, 1967 in Lviv, buried in the Lychakiv cemetery
- 12. Скачать презентацию
Слайд 2Ivan Krypiakevych was a Ukrainian historian, academician, professor of Lviv University and director of the
Ivan Krypiakevych was a Ukrainian historian, academician, professor of Lviv University and director of the
25 June 1886 – 21 April 1967
Слайд 3
AUSTRIAN PERIOD
Krypiakevych was born and raised in Lemberg (Lviv) in Austrian Galicia in a family
AUSTRIAN PERIOD
Krypiakevych was born and raised in Lemberg (Lviv) in Austrian Galicia in a family
During his school years Krypiakevych talked exclusively in Polish language.
Later he studied history under Mykhailo Hrushevsky at Lviv University.
He wrote his 1911 doctorate on "The Cossacks and Bathory's Privileges," a study of the origins of the Ukrainian Cossacks legally registered with the Polish government.
From 1905, he began publishing in the scholarly journal of the Shevchenko Scientific Society, which under the leadership of Hrushevsky became a kind of unofficial Ukrainian Academy of Sciences serving the Ukrainian people on both sides of the Austrian-Russian border. In 1907 Krypiakevych on the notice of Andrzej Kazimierz Potocki, a Governor of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, was imprisoned for student protests that took place near the Lviv University. He initially was detained as a terrorist, but later it was degraded as disturbing a public peace.
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INTERWAR GALICIA
During the interwar period, Krypiakevych, being excluded from a university position by
INTERWAR GALICIA
During the interwar period, Krypiakevych, being excluded from a university position by
Слайд 5
SOVIET ANNEXATION AND WAR
The 1939 fall of the Polish Republic and the Soviet annexation of Galicia brought
SOVIET ANNEXATION AND WAR
The 1939 fall of the Polish Republic and the Soviet annexation of Galicia brought
The university was suppressed during the German occupation but Krypiakevych found work at the Ukrainian Publishing House in Lviv. Unlike many of his Galician Ukrainian colleagues, mostly for family reasons, he decided to remain in Lviv after the German retreat westwards.
Слайд 6
SOVIET PERIOD
The return of the Soviets brought renewed repressions to the west Ukrainian intelligentsia
SOVIET PERIOD
The return of the Soviets brought renewed repressions to the west Ukrainian intelligentsia
Слайд 7
MAJOR WORKS
Krypiakevych's early works dealt with the early modern history of the City
MAJOR WORKS
Krypiakevych's early works dealt with the early modern history of the City
During the period of Polish ascendency, Krypiakevych co-authored and published many popularizations, the most important of which were his "Great History of Ukraine" (1935), his "History of the Ukrainian Army" (1936), and his "History of Ukrainian Culture" (1937). His textbooks of Ukrainian history were widely used both in Galicia and also among Ukrainians in North America.
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LEGACY
With the emergence of the Gorbachev reforms and Ukrainian independence, his major works from pre-Soviet times
LEGACY
With the emergence of the Gorbachev reforms and Ukrainian independence, his major works from pre-Soviet times
Today, he is widely revered as one of Hrushevsky's foremost students, a continuator of his tradition, and one of the most important historians of western Ukraine.
The Institute of Ukrainian Studies of the National Academy of Sciences in Lviv is named in his honour.
In 1993 the Institute of Social Studies of Academy of Sciences of the UkrSSR in Lviv was renamed into the Krypiakevych Institute of Ukrainian Studies (National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine).
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FAMILY
Ivan Krypiakevych had two sons who later became Ukrainian scientists.
Petro-Bohdan (1923-1980)
Roman (1925-1999)
Roman Krypiakevych,
FAMILY
Ivan Krypiakevych had two sons who later became Ukrainian scientists.
Petro-Bohdan (1923-1980)
Roman (1925-1999)
Roman Krypiakevych,
Слайд 10 Died April 21, 1967 in Lviv, buried in the Lychakiv cemetery
Died April 21, 1967 in Lviv, buried in the Lychakiv cemetery