The Ruin (Ukrainian history)

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The Ruin
Date June 29, 1659-May 16, 1686
Location Ukraine: Right-bank Ukraine, Left-bank Ukraine, and Zaporizhia
Result Eternal Peace Treaty; Partition of Ukraine between Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and Tsardom of Russia; Left-Bank Ukraine with Kyiv and the territories of the Zaporizhia came under Russian control, while Right-Bank Ukraine came under Polish control.
Belligerents
Right-Bank Cossacks
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1658-1668)
Ottoman flag Ottoman Empire (from 1669)
Left-Bank Cossacks
Tsardom of Russia
Commanders
Pavlo Teteria
Petro Doroshenko
Yurii Khmelnytsky
Jan II Kazimierz
Stefan Czarniecki
Ottoman flag Mehmed IV
Ottoman flag Kara Mustafa
Yakym Somko
Ivan Briukhovetsky
Demian Mnohohrishny
Ivan Samoylovych
Grigory Romodanovsky
Vasily Galitzine
History of Ukraine  v  d  e 

The Ruin (Ukrainian: Руїна) is a period of Ukrainian history from the death of hetman Bohdan Khmelnitsky in 1657 and until ascension of hetman Ivan Mazepa in 1687. This period is characterised by continuous strife, civil war, and foreign intervention of Ukraine's neighbours. The Ukrainian saying of the time: "Від Богдана до Івана не було гетьмана" (there was no hetman between Bohdan (Khmelnitsky) and Ivan (Mazepa)) — accurately summarises the chaotic events of this period.

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[edit] Background

The Ruin started after the death of hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky who delivered the country from centuries of Polish domination though years of Wars of Liberation and its entry into the Tsardom of Moscow. While Khmelnytsky was a charismatic and influential leader, clearly one of the prominent figures in Ukrainian history, he did not, however, establish clear rules of succession and in his will wanted his son Yurii to become the new hetman. Yurii Khmelnytsky was unfortunately not only young and inexperienced but clearly lacked the charisma and the leadership qualities of his father. As a result, he was used as a puppet by different foreign powers[citation needed] and when he ruled on two different occasions the result of his reign was devastating for Ukraine.[citation needed]

[edit] Start of Civil War

Out of many contenders for the hetman's office one was Ivan Vyhovsky. A general chancellor of the Hetmanate and an adviser to Bohdan Khmelnytsky himself, who in his will the hetman wanted to see Ivan as Yurii's right hand. Having been elected a hetman himself, in 1657 he was trying to establish a more independent policy from Moscow and found himself in a middle of a civil war, which in many instances was instigated by many of Ukraine's neighbours. In particular, Russian military commanders in many of Ukrainian cities supported his contenders for the office and thereby kept civil war growing in intensity and size.[citation needed]

Petro Andrusiv. Hetman Vyhosky routes the tsar's army near Konotop. 1659
Petro Andrusiv. Hetman Vyhosky routes the tsar's
army near Konotop. 1659

In this situation Vyhovsky was forced to enter into negotiations with Poland, a rival of Moscow and a contender for Ukrainian territories which it had lost during the Liberation war of 1648 - 1654. The result was the Treaty of Hadiach in 1658 with favourable conditions for Ukraine.[citation needed]

At this period Russia was involved in long and protracted war with Poland and was conquering some of its territories. Vyhovsky's alliance with Poland alarmed Tsar Alexis, who treated this as a violation of the Treaty of Pereyaslav and sent a military contingent to Ukraine in 1658 to pursue Vyhovsky. In addition to exterminating hetman's supporters, led by Prince Romodanovsky was involved in wide spread robbery and abuse of the local population.[1]

Even though the Russian forces and their allies were routed at the battle of Konotop in 1659, Vyhovsky's rule was doomed mainly because his alliance with the Poles remained very unpopular among the poorer and also because he neglected the lower classes of the Ukrainian society and sought support among the rich Cossack elite who were quick to betray him either to Poland or to Moscow.

[edit] Succession of hetmans

Hetman Petro Doroshenko
Hetman Petro Doroshenko
Ivan Samoylovych
Ivan Samoylovych

What followed was a bloody and destructive civil war during which a number of hetmans tried to establish their rule in different parts of Ukraine. Virtually all of them tried to ally themselves with foreign powers: Tsardom of Russia, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Ottoman Empire. The Treaty of Pereyaslav that allied Ukraine with Moscow had been rewritten as Yurii Khmelnytsky was forced to amend the treaty with even more favourable conditions. If alliance with Orthodox Russia was not popular with some hetmans, alliance with non-Orthodox powers, such as Poland, Crimea, or Turkey, was even less popular.[citation needed]

During this period a number of hetmans stayed in power for short periods of time and often controlled only parts of the country:

With Ivan Mazepa coming to office in 1687 and with stability that followed, the period of the Ruin was effectively over.

[edit] Sources