OblastVolyn Region

Volyn Region has a storied past dating from the 10th century that provides a fertile ground for guided tours of its historic sites for visitors interested in researching links to their Ancestral Heritage.

HISTORY


ORIGINS.

Volyn Region [Volhynia] is an historic province in Central and Eastern Europe, situated between south-eastern Poland, south-western Belarus, and Western Ukraine. The alternative name for the region is Lodomeria after the city of Volodymyr-Volynsky (previously known as Volodymer), which was once a political capital of the medieval Volhynian Principality. According to some historians, the region is named after a semi-legendary city of Volin or Velin, whose name may come from the Proto-Slavic root *vol/vel-wet‘.

HISTORY.

The territory of the Volyn Region was mentioned in the works of Arabian scholar Al-Masudi, who called the local tribe as “people of Valin” In one of his 10th century writings.  Volyn’s early history coincides with that of the duchies or principalities of Halych and Volhynia. These two successor states of the Kievan Rus formed Halych-Volhynia between the 12th and the 14th centuries.

After the disintegration of the Grand Duchy of Halych-Volhynia circa 1340, the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania divided the region between themselves. After 1569 Volhynia was organized as a province of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. During this period many Poles and Jews settled in the area and both Roman and Greek Catholic churches were established in the province.

After the Third partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1795, the Volyn Region was annexed as the Volhynian Governorate of the Russian Empire. The Russian government greatly changed the religious make-up of the area by forcibly liquidating the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, transferring all of its buildings to the ownership and control of the Russian Orthodox Church. Many Roman Catholic church buildings were also transferred to the Russian Church.

20TH CENTURY DIASPORA.

At the end of the First World War, nationalists tried to form the Ukrainian National Autonomy. The area had seen a revival of Ukrainian [Ruthenian] culture after years of Russian oppression and the denial of Ukrainian traditions. After German troops were withdrawn, the whole region was engulfed by a new wave of military aggression by both the Poles, Bolsheviks, and Russians competing for control of the territory. Ukraine was forced to fight on three fronts – Bolsheviks, Poles and a Volunteer Army of Imperial Russia. In 1921, after the end of the Polish–Soviet war, a treaty known as the Peace of Riga divided the territory between Poland and the Soviet Union.

From 1935 to 1938 the government of the Soviet Union deported numerous nationals from Volhynia in a population transfer to Siberia and central Asia, as part of the de-kulakization, an effort to suppress peasant farmers in the region. Following the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in 1939 and the subsequent invasion and division of Polish territories between the Reich and the USSR, the Soviet Union invaded and occupied the Polish part of Volhynia which resulted in most of the Polish and ethnic German-minority population of Volhynia being deported to the Polish territories that had been annexed by Nazi Germany.

During the subsequent German invasion, an estimated 40,000 to 60,000 Polish people in Volhynia were massacred by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. In 1945 following the end of World War II, the Soviets expelled ethnic Germans from Volhynia – because Nazi Germany had used ethnic Germans in eastern Europe as a pretense for invading these areas earlier – all part of a mass population transfer after the war resulting in most of the remaining ethnic Polish population being expelled to Poland as well.

Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, Volhynia has been an integral part of Ukraine.

TOURIST SITES AND ATTRACTIONS.

Lutsk Castle in SummerLubart Castle (the 13th-14th centuries) also known as Lutsk Castle or Upper Castle in Lutsk – is the most prominent landmark of the Volyn region and as such appears on Ukraine’s 200 hryvnia currency bill. The castle was named after Demetrius of Liubar or Liubartas the last ruler of a united Galicia-Volhynia.

The current castle, towering over the Styr River, was built mostly in the 1340s. Three main towers, now named “Lubart”, “Švitrigaila” (after Lithuanian princes) and the “Bishop”, were built up in the course of the 16th and 17th centuries.

Several museums are open on its territory: paintings, bells, building ceramics, printing, and weapons.

Radziwill Castle – also known as Olyka CastleOLYKA CASTLE 3 – in Olyka was the principal seat of the Radziwill family in Volhynia from 1564 until the late 18th century. The Olyka Castle comprises four residential buildings of unequal height, forming a court in the middle and encircled by a moat.

It was almost continuously under construction for eight decades and sustained numerous sieges between 1591 and 1648. It is probably the largest aristocratic residence in Ukraine, with 365 rooms.

The towers of the original castle have crumbled to the ground, but the network of bastions is still in place. Other buildings of the castle complex include a 17th-century gateway, a two-storey clock tower, and the Collegiate Church of the Holy Trinity (1635–1640).

Museum-Estate of Lesya Ukrainka in Kolodyazhne. The museum is situated on the premises of this age-old farmstead where where Larisa Kosach, the birth name of Lesya Ukrainka, one of the most famous Ukrainian writers known for her poems and plays, spent her childhood and youth from 1882 to 1897.   It was here that Lesya Ukrainka’s poetic talent started to take shape under the tutelage of her mother – the talented writer Olga Kosach (Olena Pchilka). The Kosach family was famous for their hospitality and renowned writers, poets, painters, musicians and other artists often visited them.

In 1991, the museum exposition was updated, its four sections presenting memorabilia of Lesya Ukrainka and her family, including archival editions of the works of the poetess and of her mother.


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