Khotyn

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Khotyn (Ukrainian: Хотин, Polish: Chocim, Romanian: Hotin, Turkish: Khotin, Russian: Хотин, translit. Khotin) is a city in the Chernivtsi Oblast of western Ukraine, and is the administrative center of the Khotynsky Raion (district) within that oblast. According to the 2001 census, it has a population of 11,124. In earlier times, the town was part of the Bessarabia region. Due to the fluctuations in control, the official name also changed, and there is a multitude of spellings for the town's name, including Khotyn, Chocim, Chotyn, Hotin, Choczim, or Khotin.

[edit] History

Fortress of Khotin on the Dniester River.
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Fortress of Khotin on the Dniester River.

Khotyn, located on cliffs above the Dniester, was first chronicled in 1001,[1] when it was a minor settlement of Kievan Rus.[2][3] Archaeological excavations found the Kievan town that covered the area of some twenty hectares.[4] It later became part of the Principality of Halych and its successor, Halych-Volhynia. The town was an important trading center due to its location by a river crossing. A Genoese trading colony was established there by the 13th century.

Khotyn was first mentioned in 1310, as a residence of a catholic bishop, being held in the first half of the 14'th century by the Kingdom of Poland, which intended to impose Catholicism to the local vlach communities, mentioned there in the 10-13'th centuries; the first fortifications date back from this period. In 1351, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania conquers the area, only to give it three years later to the vlachs, which formed their own independent principality after 1365, named Moldavia.

The present-day fortress was constructed after 1400 by the Moldavian ruler Alexander the Kind, with the help of Vytautas the Great of Lithuania. From 1432, it was occupied for thirty years by Poland, due to the weakness of Alexander's successors. The fortress, strengthened by Stephen the Great in the 15th century, was the strongest on the northern border of medieval Moldavia.

As the Moldovan state dwindled into insignificance, the Ottoman Empire sought to gain control of the strategic river crossing. As a result, Khotyn's later history was dominated by wars between the Christian powers and the expanding Ottoman Empire. The Turks suffered two decisive defeats at Khotyn in the 17th century, at the hands of the army of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: in 1621 by hetman Jan Chodkiewicz, and again in 1673 by Jan III Sobieski.

The Ottoman Empire finally seized it in 1713 during the Great Northern War and held it during the following century. The Turks amplified and enlarged the citadel, which was taken by the Russians on three occasions: in 1739 by Burkhard Christoph von Munnich, in 1769 by Prince Alexander Galitzine, in 1788 by Prince Josias of Coburg and Ivan Saltykov, in 1807 by Ivan Michelson. Along with Eastern Moldavia, it passed to Russia in 1812, as a result of the Russo-Turkish War (1806-1812).

Monument to the heroes of the Khotin Uprising.
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Monument to the heroes of the Khotin Uprising.

The collapse of the Russian Empire in the Russian Civil War of 1918-1922 prompted Romania to annex territories along its border, including Khotyn. Shortly after the town became part of Romania, in January 1919, local Ukrainians alienated by the nationalist policies of the Romanian authorities started a revolt.[1][2] [3] after the Khotin Uprising was cruelly defeated by the newly arrived the major forces of the Romanian Army the plunder of the Ukrainian population soon followed.[2]

The city remained under Romanian rule until June 1940, when the town was ceded to the Soviet Union with the rest of the Chernivtsi region following the June 1940 Soviet Ultimatum. Khotyn thus became part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. After Operation Barbarossa, where Romania acted as a Germany ally, the area was retaken by Romanians from 1941 to 1944. With the defeat of the Axis forces the town was reattached to Soviet Ukraine. It remains with Ukraine, independent since 1991.

[edit] Battles

Defending the Polish banner at Chocim in 1621
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Defending the Polish banner at Chocim in 1621
Jan Karol Chodkiewicz (in red) at Chocim, 1621
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Jan Karol Chodkiewicz (in red) at Chocim, 1621

In the Battle of Khotyn in 1621, an army of 160,000 [citation needed] Turkish veterans, led by Osman II, advanced from Adrianople towards the Polish frontier. The Turks, following their victory in the Battle of Cecora, had high hopes of conquering Poland. The Polish commander Jan Karol Chodkiewicz crossed the Dniester in September 1621 with approximately 35,000 soldiers and entrenched the Khotyn Fortress, blocking the path of the Ottoman march. The arrival of 40,000 Ukrainian Cossack forces under their hetman Petro Konashevych was instrumental in that victory. The Commonwealth hetman held the sultan at bay for a whole month, until the first snow of autumn compelled Osman to withdraw his diminished forces. But the victory was dearly purchased by Poland. A few days before the siege was raised, the aged grand hetman died of exhaustion in the fortress on September 24, 1621. The Commonwealth forces held under the command of Stanisław Lubomirski. The battle, described by Wacław Potocki in his most famous work Transakcja wojny chocimskiej, marked the end of the long period of Moldavian Magnate Wars.

In 1673, the Polish hussars again fought a major battle on this site. This time Polish forces under the command of soon-to-be-king Jan Sobieski defeated the Ottomans on 11 November 1673.

In the Russo-Turkish War, the fortress was taken by Russian field marshal Burkhard Christoph von Munnich on August 19, 1739. This victory is remembered primarily through the Ode on the Taking of Khotin from the Turks, composed by the young Mikhail Lomonosov. This ode has a place in the history of Russian literature: its sonorous iambic verse is often taken as a starting point of the modern Russian poetry.

[edit] Famous people

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Oleksandr Derhachov (editor), "Ukrainian Statehood in the Twentieth Century: Historical and Political Analysis", Chapter: "Ukraine in Romanian concepts of the foreign policy", 1996, Kiev ISBN 966-543-040-8
  2. ^ a b Ihor Burkut, Khotyn uprising against Greater Romania, "Chas", January 1, 2003
  3. ^ For the discussion whether the uprising was a Russian Bolshevik coup see article Khotin Uprising

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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COA of Chernivtsi Oblast Administrative divisions of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine Flag of Ukraine

Raions: Hertsaivskyi | Hlybotskyi | Kelmenetskyi | Khotynskyi | Kitsmanskyi | Novoselytskyi | Putylskyi | Sokyrianskyi | Storozhynetskyi | Vyzhnytskyi | Zastavnivskyi

Cities: Chernivtsi | Hertsa | Khotyn | Kitsman | Novodnistrovsk | Novoselytsia | Sokyriany | Storozhynets | Vashkivtsi | Vyzhnytsia | Zastavna

Urban-type settlements: Berehomet | Hlyboka | Kelmenetsi | Kostryzhivka | Krasnoilsk | Luzhany | Nepolokivtsi | Putyla | more...

Villages: Bila Krynytsya | Boiany | Chornivka | Voloka | more...


Coordinates: 48°29′N 26°30′E