List of invasions and occupations of Ukraine explained

The territory of present-day Ukraine, a large country in eastern Europe north of the Black Sea, has been either invaded or occupied a number of times throughout its history.

List

ConflictInvasionAttacking force(s)YearDetails
Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe1450–1769According to Ukrainian-Canadian historian Orest Subtelny, "from 1450 to 1586, eighty-six raids were recorded, and from 1600 to 1647, seventy. Although estimates of the number of captives taken in a single raid reached as high as 30,000, the average figure was closer to 3000...In Podilia alone, about one-third of all the villages were devastated or abandoned between 1578 and 1583."[1] In 1769, the last major Tatar raid, which took place during the Russo-Turkish War, saw the capture of 20,000 slaves.[2]
Russo-Polish War (1654–1667)Battle of Konotop (1659)data-sort-value="Russia, Tsardom of"1659Ukrainian Cossacks led by Ivan Vyhovsky repelled an invasion by the Russian Tsardom at Konotop.[3]
Ukrainian War of Independence
(1917–1921)
First Soviet invasion of Ukraine
Battle of Kruty
Battle of Kiev (1918)
1918Initial fighting in the war (Ukrainian–Soviet War) lasted from January to June 1918, ending with the Central Powers' intervention.
Central Powers intervention in Ukraine
Imperial German and Austro-Hungarian forces entered Ukraine to push out Bolshevik forces, as part of an agreement with the Ukrainian People's Republic.Occupation: Ukrainian State (1918), a German-installed government of much of Ukraine.
Allied intervention in Ukraine

1918–1919Failure: Allies evacuate
Second Soviet invasion of Ukraine1919A full-scale invasion began in January 1919. Ended with the invasion by the White Army.
South RussiaWhite Army captures Donbas, Kharkiv, Odesa, Kyiv. Ended with the invasion by the Red Army.
Third Soviet invasion of Ukraine1919–1920Red Army captures Kharkiv, Kyiv, Donbas and Odesa.
World War II
(1939–1945)
Hungarian invasion of Carpatho-Ukraine1939The Kingdom of Hungary occupied and annexed the just-proclaimed Carpatho-Ukraine.The Governorate of Subcarpathia (1939–1945) region included her former territory.
Soviet invasion of Poland
(Ukrainian Front)
The Soviet Union invaded Poland in September 1939, extending into Western Ukraine.

Occupation: After the Soviet annexation of Eastern Galicia and Volhynia, the Soviet Union occupied Western Ukraine until it fell to Nazi Germany in November 1941. They retook the land in 1944.[4]

Operation Barbarossadata-sort-value="Germany, Nazi"1941Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union, including Ukraine, in June 1941 with assistance from allied Romania.[5] By November they controlled almost all of what had been Soviet Ukraine, including the portion annexed in 1939.Occupations:
Russo-Ukrainian War
(2014–present)
Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Russian Federation2014Russia invaded and subsequently annexed Crimea, then administered by Ukraine as the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, during February–March 2014,[6] [7] and also took control of part of the village of Strilkove in neighboring Kherson Oblast.[8] Occupation: The Republic of Crimea and federal city of Sevastopol (2014–present), claimed by Russia as federal subjects and considered an occupation by the government of Ukraine (as part of the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine) and by the United Nations.[9] [10]
War in Donbas2014–2022After a commencement of hostilities in April 2014, Russian forces invaded the Donbas region of Ukraine in August of that year.[11] A report released by the Royal United Services Institute in March 2015 said that "the presence of large numbers of Russian troops on Ukrainian sovereign territory" became a "permanent feature" of the war following the invasion,[12] with regular Russian and Ukrainian forces coming into direct conflict at the Battle of Ilovaisk[13] [14] and likely the Battle of Debaltseve.[15] Low-intensity fighting continued through 2022, despite the declaration of numerous ceasefires.Occupation: The Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic (2014–2022) were breakaway states in eastern Ukraine that were supported by Russia.
Russian invasion of Ukraine2022–presentRussia began a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022.[16] Occupation: Russia occupied over 25% of Ukrainian territory before being pushed back in counteroffensives. Russia unilaterally declared that the Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts were annexed into the Russian Federation (2022–present).

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Subtelny, Orest. Ukraine: A History. 105–106. registration. Orest Subtelny. University of Toronto Press. 2000. 0802083900. 940596634.
  2. Mikhail. Kizilov. Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish Sources . Oxford University. 2007. 11. 1. 2–7.
  3. Book: Subtelny, Orest . Ukraine: A History . University of Toronto Press . 1988 . 978-1-4426-8282-5 . 3 . Toronto . 288146960 . Orest Subtelny.
  4. Book: Magocsi, Paul R. . A History of Ukraine . . 1996 . 978-1-4426-7037-2 . 244764615.
  5. Book: Solonari, Vladimir . A Satellite Empire: Romanian Rule in Southwestern Ukraine, 1941-1944. . 2019 . 978-1-5017-4319-1 . Ithaca, New York . 1083701372.
  6. Book: DeBenedictis, Kent . Russian 'hybrid warfare' and the annexation of Crimea : the modern application of Soviet political warfare . 2021 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-0-7556-4002-7 . London . 1 . 1238134016.
  7. Web site: Pifer . Steven . Steven Pifer . 2019-03-18 . Five years after Crimea's illegal annexation, the issue is no closer to resolution . 2022-02-24 . . en-US.
  8. Book: Kofman . Michael . Lessons from Russia's Operations in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine. . Migacheva . Katya . Nichiporuk . Brian . Radin . Andrew . Tkacheva . Olesya . Oberholtzer . Jenny . 2017 . . 978-0-8330-9617-3 . Santa Monica . 990544142.
  9. News: 2016-03-20 . 'Няша' Поклонська обіцяє бійцям 'Беркута' покарати учасників Майдану . uk . "Nasha" Poklonsky promises to the "Berkut" fighters to punish the participants of the Maidan . . 2022-02-26.
  10. Web site: United Nations . United Nations . 71/205. Situation of human rights in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol (Ukraine) . 2022-02-26 . undocs.org.
  11. Book: Snyder, Timothy . The road to unfreedom: Russia, Europe, America . 3 April 2018 . 978-0-525-57446-0 . First . New York, NY . 191 . 1029484935.
  12. Web site: Igor Sutyagin . March 2015 . Briefing Paper: Russian Forces in Ukraine . https://web.archive.org/web/20150508220714/https://www.rusi.org/downloads/assets/201503_BP_Russian_Forces_in_Ukraine_FINAL.pdf . 8 May 2015 . dead . 11 March 2015 . Royal United Services Institute.
  13. Web site: Tim Judah. Ukraine: A Catastrophic Defeat. The New York Review of Books. 5 September 2014. 31 March 2022.
  14. News: Thousands of Russian soldiers fought at Ilovaisk, around a hundred were killed. KyivPost. 31 March 2022. en-US.
  15. Ivan Katchanovski. The Separatist War in Donbas: A Violent Break-up of Ukraine?. European Politics and Society. 2016. en. 17. 4. 473. 10.1080/23745118.2016.1154131. 155890093 .
  16. Web site: 2022-02-24 . Ukraine conflict: Russian forces invade after Putin TV declaration . 2022-02-24 . BBC News . en-GB.