Russian National Party Explained

Country:Czechoslovakia
Russian National Party
Native Name:Русская Народная Партія
Leader1 Title:Leader
Leader1 Name:Ivan Zhidovsky
Foundation:1900
Dissolution:1939
Headquarters:Lviv (1900-1914)
Uzhhorod
Ideology:Galician Russophilia
Regionalism
Newspaper:Narodnaja gazeta
National:Czechoslovak National Democracy (1924–1934)

The Russian National Party or Russian People's Party (Russian: Русская народная партия), founded in 1900,[1] was a political party created by Western Ukrainian Russophiles in the Austro-Hungarian Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria to represent their interests.[2] It represented radicalization among western Ukrainian Russophiles towards the end of the 19th and beginning of the twentieth centuries, promoting the standard literary Russian language without local linguistic features and conversion to Russian Orthodoxy.[3] The Russian National Party had ties to Russian nationalist parties in the Russian Empire and received subsidies from the Russian government.[4] Its members actively helped the Russian administration during its rule in western Ukraine during the first world war.[3]

The party remained active in Czechoslovakia. RNP leader became governor of Carpathian Ruthenia in 1924. RNP cooperated with the National Democrats and ran with them in 1924, 1925,[5] in 1929 as part of Russian National Bloc[6] and in 1935.

In parliamentary elections, it was a member of the Ukrainian parliamentary association of Austria-Hungary.

Notes and References

  1. [Paul Robert Magocsi]
  2. [Orest Subtelny]
  3. Ronald Grigor Suny, Michael D. Kennedy. (2001)Intellectuals and the Articulation of the Nation." Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. pg. 130
  4. Orest T. Martynowych. (1991). Ukrainians in Canada: The Formative Period, 1891-1924. Toronto: University of Toronto, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press, pp.16-17
  5. Book: Poslanecká sněmovna v II. volebním období . 3. 1926. Archive of the National Assembly.
  6. Book: Politika a náboženství Podkarpatské Rusi v letech 1919–1929. 47–48. Sabina Línová. 2019.