Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VinnytsiaVinnytsia - Wikipedia

    From 1653 to 1667, Vinnytsia was a regimental city of the Hetman state, and in 1793, it was ceded to the Russian Empire. During the 1930s and early 1940s, the city was the site of massacres, first during Stalin's purges and then during the Holocaust in Ukraine and the Nazi occupation .

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jan_PotockiJan Potocki - Wikipedia

    Jan Potocki was born into the Potocki aristocratic family, that owned vast estates across Poland.He was educated in Geneva and Lausanne, served twice in the Polish Army as a captain of engineers, and spent some time on a galley as novice to the Knights of Malta. His colorful life took him across Europe, Asia and North Africa, where he embroiled himself in political intrigues, flirted with ...

  3. In 1812, disillusioned and in poor health, he retired to his estate at Uładówka (now Uladivka) near Vinnytsia in present-day Ukraine, suffering from "melancholia" (which today would probably be diagnosed as depression), and during the last few years of his life he completed his novel.

  4. History of Ukraine - Ukraine under direct imperial Russian rule: Following the abolition of autonomy in the Hetmanate and Sloboda Ukraine and the annexation of the Right Bank and Volhynia, Ukrainian lands in the Russian Empire formally lost all traces of their national distinctiveness.

  5. Vinnytsya, city, west-central Ukraine, lying along the Southern Buh river. It was first mentioned in historical records in 1363 as a fortress belonging to Prince Algirdas of Lithuania. Vinnytsya was often raided by the Tatars and passed later to Poland and finally, in 1793, to Russia.

  6. Following the 17th century failed attempt to regain statehood in the form of the Cossack Hetmanate, the future Ukrainian territory again ended up divided between three empires: the Russian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

  7. xiv.pages.dev › 0xL2VuLndpa2lwZWRpYS5vcmcvL0phbl9Qb3RvY2tpJan Potocki - XIV

    Count Jan Potocki (Polish pronunciation: [ˈjan pɔˈtɔt͡skʲi]; 8 March 1761 – 23 December 1815) was a Polish nobleman, ethnologist, linguist, traveller and author of the: Enlightenment period, whose life.And exploits made him a celebrated figure in Poland.He is: known chiefly for his picaresque novel, The Manuscript Found in Saragossa.. Born into affluent Polish nobility, Potocki lived ...