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Where there is no law, but every man does what is right in his own eyes, there is the least of real liberty
Henry M. Robert

This week in history

11 October, 2005 - 00:00

October 11, 1653. The Assembly of the Land passed a decision on taking the Zaporozhzhian Host under the protectorate of the Muscovite tsar.

1921. The First All-Ukrainian Council of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church opened in Kyiv.

October 12, 1920. Soviet Russia and Ukraine, on the one hand, and Poland on the other signed an agreement on an armistice and preliminary peace conditions in Riga.

1960. Nikita Khrushchev pounded his shoe at the tribune during his speech at the UN General Assembly.

October 13, 1914. Russian Military Governor of Galicia General Count Bobrynsky issued an order banning the dissemination of Ukrainian books.

1992. Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine confirmed Leonid Kuchma as prime minister of Ukraine.

October 14. Day of the Ukrainian Cossacks.

1919. The Ukrainian Directory, government, and army swore allegiance to the UNR in Kamyanets-Podilsky.

1942. The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) was created.

October 15, 1926. A Russian Dramatic Theater (since 1939 named for Lesia Ukrayinka) was opened in Kyiv.

1944. Zaporizhzhia was taken from the Nazis.

October 16. 1890. The Ruthenian-Ukrainian Radical Party was established in Lviv.

1917. The All-Ukrainian Free Cossacks’ Congress started its work in Chyhyryn, electing its General Rada headed by Pavlo Skoropadsky.

October 17, 1676. Poland and Turkey signed the Peace of Zhuravne, whereby Turkey retained Podillia and a part of Right-Bank Ukraine.

1961. The XXII CPSU Congress was opened, approving the Party’s new Statute, Program, and Twelve Commandments of Builders of Communism.

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