• Українська
  • Русский
  • English
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

15 January, 2008 - 00:00

Jan. 15 1826: The uprising of Ukraine’s Decembrists (Chernihiv Regiment) is suppressed in the vicinity of the village of Kovalivka.

1992: The Presidium of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine passes the Decree on the National Anthem of Ukraine (music by Mykhailo Verbytsky).

Jan 16. 1918: The Small Rada of the Ukrainian National Republic passes a bill organizing a volunteer army.

1919: Ukraine’s interim workers’ and peasants’ government adopts a decree on the nationalization of sugar refineries.

Jan. 17 1919: The Central Military-Revolutionary Committee of the Donbas is formed.

1921: The Ukrainian Free University is founded in Vienna, which is transferred to Prague later that fall. After World War II it is moved to Munich.

Jan. 18 1919: Ukraine’s interim government adopts a decree on the separation of church and state.

1944: The Volyn region witnesses the first serious confrontation between the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and NKVD troops.

Jan. 19 1906: The first issue of Shershen, the first revolutionary satirical periodical in the history of Ukrainian journalism, comes off the presses in Kyiv.

1992: On the initiative of the Ukrainian Republican Party and Rukh, Ukrainian reserve officers swear the oath of allegiance to Ukraine during a solemn ceremony.

Jan. 20 1661: The Polish king grants Lviv’s Jesuit Collegium “the status of academy and the title of university.”

1943: The first issue of the newspaper Ukrainske slovo comes off the presses in Winnipeg.

Jan. 21 1919: A popular assembly in the town of Khust resolves to join Transcarpathia to the Ukrainian National Republic.

1934: The 12th congress of the CP(B)U resolves to transfer Ukraine’s capital from Kharkiv to Kyiv.

Issue: 
Rubric: