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

    Volhynia (also spelled Volynia) (/ voʊˈlɪniə / voh-LIN-ee-ə; Ukrainian: Волинь, romanized:Volynʹ, Polish: Wołyń, Russian: Волынь, romanized:Volynʹ, Yiddish: װאָלין, romanized:Volin) is a historic region in Central and Eastern Europe, between southeastern Poland, southwestern Belarus, and north western Ukraine.

  2. Attacks on Poles during the massacres in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia were marked with extreme sadism and brutality. Rape, torture and mutilation were commonplace, with entire villages wiped out as a result.

  3. The Principality or, from 1253, Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia, [a] also known as the Kingdom of Ruthenia or Kingdom of Rus/Russia, [2] [better source needed] [b] was a medieval state in Eastern Europe which existed from 1199 to 1349.

    • Early History
    • 19th Century
    • 20th Century

    In the 16th century, with the 1569 Treaty of Lublin, Volhynia became a largely self-governing part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, keeping its Ukrainian character but having its elite become Polish, or Polonized. Most of Volhynia was annexed by the Russian Empire in the late 18th century due to the partitions of Poland. But Austria also got ...

    In the early 19th century, Volhynia was still dominated by its Polish nobility. They continued to rule over the Ukrainian peasants who lived there. Volhynia experienced a Russification program in the 19th century and did not get to experience the Ukrainian national awakening that was going on in neighboring Galiciaduring this time.

    After the end of World War I, Volhynia was partitioned between Poland and the Soviet Union, with western Volhynia becoming a part of Poland and eastern Volhynia becoming a part of the Soviet Union, specifically a part of the Ukrainian SSR. Volhynia experienced a Ukrainianization movement in the 1920s but a lot of its notable Ukrainian intellectuals...

  4. Volhynia, area of northwestern Ukraine that was a principality (10th–14th century) and then an autonomous component of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and was ruled largely by its own aristocracy (after the late 14th century). The region became prominent during the 12th century, when many emigrants.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The Kingdom of Galicia-Volhynia or Galicia-Vladimir, was a principality in post- Kievan Rus' in the late twelfth century and existed until the middle of the fourteenth century. It is also called Galicia-Volynia, Halych-Volhynia, Galicia-Volyn, and Galich-Volyn.

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  7. Nov 16, 2016 · .Volhynia, a border region in the northwest of present-day Ukraine, is almost completely absent on Europe’s landscape of memory. Here, in 1943, a section of Ukraine’s nationalist underground...

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