18th-century Ukrainian paramilitary outfits made up of commoners
For other uses, see Haydamaky.
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The haidamakas, also haidamaky or haidamaks (singular haidamaka, Ukrainian: Гайдамаки, Haidamaky) were Ukrainian paramilitary outfits composed of commoners (peasants, craftsmen), and impoverished noblemen in the eastern part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. They were formed in reaction to the Commonwealth's actions that were directed to reconstitute its orders[clarification needed] on territory of right-bank Ukraine,[1] which was secured following ratification of the Treaty of Perpetual Peace with the Tsardom of Russia in 1710.
^Haidamaka movement (ГАЙДАМАЦЬКИЙ РУХ). Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine
word haydamak has two related meanings: either 'Ukrainian insurgent against the Poles in the 18th century', or 'brigand'. The role played by haydamaks in...
Ukrainian words of Turkic origin. chaban: shepherd; from çoban= shepherd haydamak: 18th century peasant rebel in Ukraine; another meaning is brigand (highway...
Kurdish gajduk (гайдук), in Russian haidamaka (гайдамака), in Ukrainian haydamak (הײַדאַמאַק), in Yiddish In 1604-1606, István Bocskay, Lord of Bihar, led...
murders of Polish noblemen, Catholic priests and thousands of Jews by haydamaks. Four years later, in 1772, the military Partitions of Poland had begun...
April 1992. The ship was given the new pennant number U120 and renamed Haydamak after an old military unit designation. The 1464th naval reconnaissance...
1952), Russian-Israeli businessman and philanthropist, father of Alexandre Haydamak, paramilitary bands in 18th-century Ukraine This page lists people with...
irregulars who served with the French Army during the Algerian War of 1954–62. Haydamak - pro-Cossack paramilitary (18th century) Honghuzi – Manchurian bandits...
Ukraine. He is often referred to as the "Ukrainian Robin Hood" and "the last haydamak". Following the Second Partition of Poland in 1792, a vast territory of...
ordering the liquidation of the Ukrainian insurgents. The Austrians and Haydamaks subsequently returned to Dibrivka and bombarded the village with artillery...
the end of the month, Uman was encircled again. On 29 July, a group of haydamaks captured the city and started a pogrom, killing 150 people. On 15 July...
(1984) [1964]. "Study at the Academy of Arts: the appearance of Kobzar and Haydamaks (1838-1842)". Т.Г. Шевченко: біографія [T.G. Shevchenko: A Biography]...
In 1694, a church was built here. In July 1768, Ivan Bondarenko [uk]'s haydamaks visited the town. Around 1850, Dominique Pierre de la Flise visited Mostyshche...
order to counter the Bolshevik uprisings, the Odesa Council recruited the Haydamak detachments . For two days, they fought with the Red Guards in the city...
soldiers and a dozen officers facing off against 300 Red Guards. 250 Haydamaks of the 3rd Haydamatsky Kuren were sent from Katerynoslav to reinforce...
Governorate. The first record of Jewish presence in Hraniv is in 1738, when the Haydamaks plundered the town, along with Rashkiv, and killed many Jews, and again...
serfage and often referred to as the "Ukrainian Robin Hood" and "the last Haydamak". He was born in 1787 in Lityn Region. There is the Ustym Karmeliuk's museum...
also created numerous oil paintings, some graphic works depicting the Haydamak (paramilitary fighters), and illustrations for Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol...
Haydamaky may refer to: Haydamaks, 18th-century Ukrainian rebels against the Polish nobility Haydamaky (band), a Ukrainian folk-rock band formed in 1991...
population. A few days later, she led Black Guards into battle against the haydamaks at Katerynoslav, capturing the city for the Soviets and personally disarming...
a turbulent time for Jews and Poles in the town. During 1734 and 1750, Haydamak uprisings devastated the ethnically Polish and Jewish populations in the...