Contributors
vadym adadurov graduated from the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (Paris). He holds a PhD in history. He is a doctor habilitatus and an associate professor at the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv.
He is a researcher and publisher of historical documents from the archival collections in Austria, the Vatican, Poland, France, Lithuania, Germany, and Moldova. Among his academic interests are modern historiography, the history of France and its relations with Eastern Europe, religious studies, intellectual history, microhistory, and the history of empire. Among his books are Napoleonida na Skhodi Ievropy: uiavlennia, proekty ta diial’nist uriadu Frantsii shchodopivdenno- zakhidnykh okra'in Rosiis'ko’i imperil napochatku XIXstolittia (Lviv, 2007 and 2018); Fundatsiia Halyts'ko’i mytropolii u svitli dyplomatychnoho lystuvannia mizh Avstriieiu ta Sviatym Prestolom 1807-1808 rokiv (Lviv, 2011); Voina tsivi- lizatsii: sotsiokul’turnaia istoriia russkohopokhoda Napoleona (Kyiv, 2017).andrii bovgyria holds a PhD in history. He is a research associate at the Institute of Ukrainian History (National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine). His research is focused on the history of Ukraine in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and social and intellectual history. He is the author of Kozats’ke isto- riopysannia v rukopysnii tradytsii XVIIIst. (Kyiv, 2010); “Echoes of Poltava: Trials of Mazepists and Mazepism in Eighteenth-Century Ukraine” in Harvard Papers in Ukrainian Studies. Poltava 1709: The Battle and the Myth (Cambridge, 2012), and the editor of Korotkyi opys Malorosii (1340-1776) (Kyiv, 2012). kyrylo halushko holds a PhD in history from the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Since 2013, he is a researcher at the Institute of Ukrainian History (National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine). Among his interests are cartography, the history of nationalism, and memory studies.
He is the author (or co-author) of more than ten monographs and handbooks, among them are Etnonatsionalna struktura naselennia Ukramy (Kyiv, 2003); Etnosotsiolohiia (Kyiv, 2008); Ukrainskii natsionalizm: likbez dlia russkikh (Kyiv, 2008); Ukrama na karti levropy (Kyiv, 2013); Vid kraiu do krainy. Nazva, terytoriia, kordony i symvolika Ukramy (Kyiv, 2015).victor horobets' is professor and chair of the Department of Social History of the Institute of History of Ukraine of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. He is interested in the social and political history of early modern Ukraine, diplomacy, and international relations. He is the author of Prysmerk Het’manshchyny: Ukra'ina v roky reform Petra I (Kyiv, 1998); Elita kozats’koi Ukramy vposhukakh politychnoi lehitymatsii: stosunky z Moskvoiu ta Var- shavoiu, 1654-1665 (Kyiv, 2001); “Volymo tsariaskhidnoho”: ukrams’kyiHet'- manat ta rosiis’ka dynastiia do ipislia Pereiaslava (Kyiv, 2007); Vlada ta sotsium Het'manatu: doslidzhennia z politychnoi i sotsial’noi istorii rann'omodernoi Ukrainy (Kyiv, 2009); Konflikt i vlada v rann'omodernii Ukraini. Sotnyk novhorod-sivers’kyiproty het'mana Viis'ka Zaporoz’koho, 1715-1722 (Kyiv, 2016); Het'man Briukhovets’kyi: zhyttia u slavi, vladi ta han'bi (Kyiv, 2019); and many others.
natalia iakovenko is professor of history at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy and a specialist in Latin philology. Her publications include Ukrains 'ka shliakhta z kintsia XIV do seredyny XVII stolittia: Volyni Tsentralna Ukrama (Kyiv, 1993); Narys istorii Ukrainy z naidavnishykh chasiv do kintsia XVIII stolittia (Kyiv, 1997); Paralelnyi svit: doslidzhennia z istorii uiavlen' ta idei v Ukraini XVI - XVII st. (Kyiv, 2002); Dzerkala identychnosti: doslidzhennia z istorii uiavlen' ta idei v UkrainiXVII-pochatku XVIIIstolittia (Kyiv, 2012); Uposhukakh novoho neba: zhyttia i teksty Ioanykiia Galiatovs’koho (Kyiv, 2016).
maksym iaremenko holds a PhD in history. He is associate professor in the Department of History of the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy.
His research is focused on the history of the Orthodox Church, education, and the social history of early modern and modern Ukraine. He is the author of Kyivs’ke chernetstvo XVIIIst. (Kyiv, 2007); ‘Akademiky’ ta Akademiia.Sotsial'na istoriia osvity i osvichenosti v Ukrami XVIIIst. (Kharkiv, 2014); Pered vyklykamy unifikatsii ta dystsyplinuvannia: kyivs’kapravoslavna mytropoliia u XVIIIstolitti (Lviv, 2017). He is also a co-editor of the academic journal Kyivs’ka Akademiia (Kyiv Academy; ka.ukma.edu.ua).
zenon e. kohut is professor emeritus of history at the University of Alberta since 2014. Between 1994 and 2012 he was the director of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (University of Alberta) and the director of the Kowalsky Program for the Study of Eastern Ukraine (1998-2012). His research is focused on the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and political and social history. His publications include Russian Centralism and Ukrainian Autonomy: Imperial Absorption of the Hetmanate, 1760s—1830s (Cambridge, 1988); Making Ukraine: Studies on Political Culture, Historical Narrative, and Identity (Edmonton, 2011); co-editor of Culture, Nation, and Identity: The Ukrainian-Russian Encounter (1600—1945) (Edmonton, 2003); History as a Battleground: Russian- Ukrainian Relations and Historical Consciousness in Contemporary Ukraine (Saskatoon, 2002).
volodymyr kravchenko is professor of history in the Department of History, Classics, and Religious Studies (University of Alberta) and the director of the Contemporary Ukraine Studies Program (cusp) of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (cius, University of Alberta). His specialization is history of Ukrainian and Russian historical writing in the nineteenth and twenty-first centuries; Ukrainian studies in North America; and the Ukrainian- Russian borderland in historical perspective. His recent publications include: “Why Didn't the Antemurale Historical Mythology Develop in Early Nineteenth-century Ukraine?” in Rampart Nations: Bulwark Myths of East European Multiconfessional Societies in the Age of Nationalism, ed.
Liliya Berezhnaya and Heidi Hein-Kircher (New York, 2018); Ukrama, imperiia, Rosiia: vybrani statti z modernoi istorii ta istoriohrafii (Kyiv, 2011); Kharkiv/Khar’kov: stolitsa pogranich’ia (Vilnius, 2010).gary marker is professor emeritus of history at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. His research is focused on the early modern period in the history of East Slavic peoples, primarily Russia and Ukraine. He is the author of Publishing, Printing and the Origins of Intellectual Life in Russia, 1700—1800 (Princeton, 1985); Days of a Russian Noblewoman: The Memories of Anna Labz- ina (DeKalb, 2001); and Imperial Saint: The Cult of St Catherine and the Dawn of Female Rule in Russia (DeKalb, 2007). He has also published many articles on religious discourses within East Slavic Orthodoxy in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries as part of an ongoing project entitled “Mazepa and His Preachers.”
volodymyr masliychuk is a doctor habilitatus and a professor of history at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in Kyiv. His interests include the history of Sloboda Ukraine, social history, and methodology in humanities. His publications include Kozats’ka starshyna slobids’kykhpolkiv druhoipolovyny XVII -pershoi tretyny XVIIIst. (Kharkiv, 2003); Provintsiia naperekhresti kul'tur: doslidzhennia z istorii Slobids’koi Ukrainy XVII- XIXst. (Kharkiv, 2007); Ditozhubnytstvo na Livoberezhnii ta Slobids’kii Ukraini v druhii polovyni XVIIIst. (Kharkiv, 2008); Nepovnolitni zlochyntsi u Kharkivs’komu namisnytstvi 1780-1796 rr. (Kharkiv, 2012); Zdobutky ta iliuzii: osvitni initsiatyvy na Livoberezhnii ta u Slobids’kii Ukraini druhoipolovyny XVIII-pershoi polovyny XIX st. (Kharkiv, 2018).
oksana mykhed received her ba and ma in history at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy and her PhD in history from Harvard University. She was visiting Assistant Professor of Ukrainian Studies at Columbia University for the academic year 2013-14. Her research interests are early modern and modern Ukrainian, Russian, and Polish histories, in particular the disintegration of the Russian, Habsburg, and Ottoman empires, and the formation of imperial boundaries and borderland communities.
She is the author of “Not by Force Alone: Public Health and the Establishment of Russian Rule in the Russo-Polish Borderland, 1762-1785,” in Borderlands in World History, 1700-1914, ed. P. Readman, C. Radding, C. Bryant (London, 2014).vadym nazarenko holds a PhD in history. Since 2017, he is a researcher at the National Museum of Architecture and Material Culture of Ukraine. His research interests include military history, social history, historical demography, the history of everyday life, and ethnology. Among his publications are “Kyivs'kyi harnizon u XVIII st.: struktura ta funktsii,” Visnyk Kyivs’koho nat- sionalnoho universytetu im. Tarasa Shevchenka. Seriia: Istoriia, no. 4 (2013); “Kyivs'ka harnizonna shkola u XVIII st.,” Naukovipratsi istorychnoho fakul'tetu Zaporiz’koho natsionalnoho universytetu, no. 41 (Zaporizhzhia, 2014); “Reformy harnizonnych voisk Rossiiskoi imperii XVIII v. (na primere Kievskogo harni- zona),” Vesnik Hrodzenskaha dziarzaunaha universiteta imia Ianki Kupaly. Sieriia 1, no. 2 (2015).
oleksandr PANKiEiEV is a research coordinator and an editor-in-chief of the Forum for Ukrainian Studies at the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of Alberta. He also serves as the president of the Alberta Society for the Advancement of Ukrainian Studies. His research interests include the history of Steppe Ukraine, Russian-Ukrainian relations, bureaucracy and elites in Ukraine, ethnography, oral history, and digital media. He is an author of three historical sourcebooks: Azovs'ke namisnytstvo: nerealizovanyiproekt (coauthored with Anna Olenenko; Zaporizhzhia, 2011); Hrupovi formuliarni spysky chynovnytstva u Novorosiis’kii hubernii za 1798 rik (Zaporizhzhia, 2011); Rozpys sprav Katerynoslavs’koho namisnytstva: dilovodstvo ta kantseliars’ke chynovnyt- stvo (Kyiv, 2018); and many articles.
SERHii plokhy is the Mykhailo Hrushevsky Professor of Ukrainian History and the director of the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University.
He has published extensively on Ukrainian, East European, and international history. His books have won numerous awards, including the Lionel Gelber Prize for the best English-language book on international relations (The Last Empire: The Final Days of the Soviet Union [New York, 2014]), the Antonovych Foundation Book Award and Taras Shevchenko National Prize for Non-Fiction (The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine [New York, 2017]), and the Ballie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction (Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy [New York, 2018]).liudmyla posokhova is a doctor habilitatus and a professor of history at the Department of Ukrainian History of V.N. Karazin Kharkiv State University. She is the author of many academic books and articles. Her research is focused on the history of education in Ukraine at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the nineteenth centuries. Her publications include: “‘Im Kiever Partes-Gesang ausgebildet': Ukrainische Sänger in der Hofkapelle des Zaren in der ersten Hälfte des 18. Jahrhunderts,” in Musik am russischen Hof: Vor, während und nach Peter dem Großen (1650-1750), ed. L. Erren (Oldenbourg, 2017); Pravoslavnye kollegiumy naperesechenii kul'tur, traditsii, epokh (konets XVII- nachalo XVIII v.) (Moscow, 2016); Naperekhresti kul'tur, tradytsii, epokh: pravoslavni kolehiumy Ukramy naprykintsi XVII - napochatku XIX st. (Kharkiv, 2011).
ihor serdiuk is a doctor habilitatus, professor of history, and a coordinator of the Centre of Historico-Anthropological Research at the Volodymyr Korolenko National Pedagogical University of Poltava. He is a co-editor of the historical portal Historians.in.ua. In 2020, he was awarded the Ivan Franko International Prize for academic achievements. He is the author of Malen'kyi doroslyi: dytyna i dytynstvo vHetmanshchyniXVIIIst. (Kyiv, 2018); and ‘Polkovykh horodov obyvateli’: istoryko-demohrafichna kharakterystyka mis’koho naselennia Het’manshchyny druhoi polovyny XVIII st. (Poltava, 2011). His research is focused on the history of childhood, historical demography, the social history of the Hetmanate, and urban studies.
volodymyr sklokin holds a PhD in history from V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University. He is associate professor at the Department of Modern Ukrainian History of the Ukrainian Catholic University. He also serves as chair of the department and director of the Graduate Program in Public History at the same university. His research interests include new imperial history, Enlightenment studies, and the theory and history of historiography. He is the author of Rosiis’ka imperiia i Slobids’ka Ukraina u druhiipolovyniXVIIIstolit- tia:prosvichenyi absoliutyzm, impers’ka intehratsiia, lokalnesuspil’stvo (Lviv, 2019); and co-editor of Impers’ki identychnosti v ukrains’kii istorii XVIII- pershoipolovyny XIXst. (Lviv, 2020).
ihor skochylias is professor of history at the Ukrainian Catholic University. His interests include religious studies (especially in the context of early modern history) and the history of the Orthodox and Greek Catholic Churches in Ukraine. His publications include: Koscioly Wschodnie wpanstwiepolsko- litewskim wprocesieprzemian i adaptacji: metropolia kijowska w latach 14581795 (Lublin-Lviv, 2014); Halyts’ka (L'vivs'ka) ieparkhiiaXII-XVIIIstolit': orha- nizatsiina struktura tapravovyi status (Lviv, 2010); Sobory eparchii chelmskiej XVII wieku. Program religijny Slavia Unita w Rzeczypospolitej (Lublin, 2008); co-editor of Przed wielkim podzialem: metropolia kijowska Cerkwi Prawoslawnej do 1458 roku (Lublin-Lviv, 2013).
oleksii sokyrko holds a PhD in history from the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. He is associate professor at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. His interests include the military history of East Central Europe and Ukraine. Among his publications are: Lytsari druhoho sortu: naimane viis’ko Livoberezhnoi Het’manshchyny 1669-1726 rr. (Kyiv, 2006); “Kantseliariia ta arkhiv Heneral'noi artylerii Het'manshchyny seredyny XVII - kintsia XVIII st.,” Kyivs’ka starovyna, no. 2 (2012).
mykola symchych holds a PhD in history. He is a research associate at the Department of History of Philosophy in Ukraine of the Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. He is the author of Philosophia rationalis u Kyievo-Mohylians’kii akademii: komparatyvnyi analiz mohylians’kykh kursiv lohiky kintsia XVII-pershoipolovyny XVIIIst. (Vinnytsia, 2009). His fields of interest include philosophy at the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries), early modern scholasticism, and scholastic and analytic metaphysics.
frank e. sysyn is professor of history at the Department of History, Classics, and Religious Studies at the University of Alberta. He is also director of the Petro Jacyk Centre for Ukrainian Historical Research at the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies (cius). He served as an acting director of the cius in 1991-93 and currently serves as the head of the Toronto Office of the cius. He is a specialist in the history of early modern Ukraine and the Polish- Lithuanian Commonwealth. His interests include social, intellectual, and religious history as well as historiography. He is editor-in-chief of the Hrushevsky Translation Project: Mykhailo Hrushevsky, History of Ukraine-Rus', 10 vols in 12 books (Edmonton-Toronto, 1997-2020). His publications include Between Poland and the Ukraine: The Dilemma of Adam Kysil, 1600-1653 (Cambridge, 1986); Mykhailo Hrushevsky: Historian and National Awakener (Saskatoon, 2001); and numerous articles on the Khmel'nyts'kyi Uprising and early modern Ukrainian historiography.
OLEKSii tolochko is director of the Center for Kyivan Rus studies at the Institute of Ukrainian History (National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine). His research has addressed various problems of the medieval and early modern history of Eastern Europe. Among his latest books are ‘Russkaia istoriia’ Vasiliia Tatishcheva: istochniki i izvestiia (Moscow, 2005); Kratkaia versiia “Pravdy Russkoi”:proiskhozhdenie teksta (Kyiv, 2010); and Ocherki nachal'noi Rusi (Kyiv and St Petersburg, 2015). His most recent project was leading a team of Ukrainian scholars in a textological examination of the thirteenth-century Galician-Volhynian Chronicle (forthcoming, 2020).
iurii voloshyn is professor in the Department of Ukrainian History in Poltava National Pedagogical University. His research interests include historical demography, historical anthropology, and the social history of the Het- manate of the eighteenth century. He is the author of Rozkol’nyts’ki slobody na terytoriiPivnichnoiHet’manshchyny u XVIIIst.: istoryko-demohrafichnyi aspekt (Poltava, 2005); Misto Poltava v Rumiantsevs’komu opysi Malorosii 1765-1769 rr. (Kyiv, 2012); Kozaky ipospolyti: mis’ka spilnota Poltavy druhoipolovyny XVIII st. (Kyiv, 2016); and Kozats’ka femida. Hrods’ke sudochynstvo v Het’manshchyni (Kyiv, 2019).
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