Yurii Khmelnytsky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yurii Khmelnytsky
Yurii Khmelnytsky

In office
August 27, 1657 – October 21, 1657
Preceded by Bohdan Khmelnytsky
Succeeded by Ivan Vyhovsky
In office
October 17, 1659 – 1663
Preceded by Ivan Vyhovsky
Succeeded by Pavlo Teteria

In office
1678 – 1681
Preceded by Petro Doroshenko
Succeeded by Office abolished

Born 1641
Subotiv, near Chyhyryn, Ukraine
Died 1685
Kamianets-Podilskyi, Ukraine
Religion Greek Orthodox

Yurii Khmelnytsky (Ukrainian: Юрій Хмельницький) (16411685), son of the famous Bohdan Khmelnytsky, was a Cossack political and military leader. Although he spent half of his adult life as a monk, he also was Hetman of Ukraine on several occasions — in 1659-1660 and 16781681.

[edit] Biography

Yurii Khmelnytsky was born in Subotiv near Chyhyryn in central Ukraine. In 1659 the Cossack Rada elected 17-year-old Yurii as their hetman in Bila Tserkva instead of deposed Ivan Vyhovsky. The young hetman was faced with the uneasy alliance with Muscovite Russia and the ongoing wars against Poland and the Crimean Khanate.

During the latter conflict, Yurii Khmelnytsky's Cossacks were defeated Near the town of Korsun, he was captured by the Poles and later pledged loyalty to king Jan II Kazimierz. This provoked a civil war within Ukraine in 1661, when the new ataman Yakym Somko led the pro-Russian Cossacks against Yurii and his new Polish allies. At the battle near the town of Pereiaslav in the summer of 1662 Yurii Khmelnytsky was defeated by Somko's Cossacks and the Russians under Grigory Romodanovsky.

After the defeat, Khmelnytsky entered an alliance with the Crimean Tatars but this resulted in little beyond massive looting and raiding of Ukrainian towns by the Tatars. Thereupon Yurii gave up his hetman title and became a monk at one of Korsun monasteries in the fall of 1662. Between 1664 and 1667 he was imprisoned in Lviv by hetman Pavlo Teteria.

In 1672 the monk Yurii was captured near Uman by Tatars and brought to Constantinople, where he was allowed to live in a Greek Orthodox monastery. In 1676 — after the Sultan's ally, Petro Doroshenko, surrendered to the Russians — the Porte decided to use Khmelnytsky's famous name to reinforce their claim to the Right-bank Ukraine.

In 1678 the Turkish army captured Chyhyryn and declared Yurii Khmelnytsky as a new hetman of Ukraine, although in reality he was only a puppet for the Ottoman sultan. Together with his Muslim army Yurii captured and burned down Kaniv and other Ukrainian towns. He then established his capital at Nemirov, reigning as a vassal of sultan Mehmed IV until 1681, when the Turks removed him from power due to his unstable mental health and unprecedented cruelty. Two years later, he was briefly re-instated by the Poles. Finally in 1685 the Turks captured Yurii and executed him in Kamianets-Podilskyi.

In the minds of many Ukrainians he was remembered as a complete opposite of his father Bohdan Khmelnytsky, that is, not a national hero and great military leader but a mere puppet of foreign powers who was a cruel tyrant to his people.[citation needed]

Preceded by
Bohdan Khmelnytsky
Hetman of Ukraine
1657–1657
Succeeded by
Ivan Vyhovsky
Preceded by
Ivan Vyhovsky
Hetman of Ukraine
1659–1663
Succeeded by
Pavlo Teteria
Preceded by
Pavlo Teteria
Hetman of Ukraine
1678–1681
Succeeded by
Pavlo Teteria

[edit] See also

[edit] References