Maksym Kryvonis
Maksym Kryvonis | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Perebyinis |
Born | Around 1600 |
Died | November 1648 Zamość, Belz Voivodeship, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth |
Allegiance | Zaporozhian Host |
Years of service | 1648 |
Rank | Colonel |
Commands | Lysianka Regiment Cherkasy Regiment Korsun Regiment Bila Tserkva Regiment Uman Regiment |
Battles / wars | |
Children | Oleksandr Kryvonosenko |
Maksym Kryvonis (Ukrainian: Максим Кривоніс, Polish: Maksym Krzywonos; literally means "crooked-nose") was one of the Cossack leaders and a commander of the Ukrainian peasants against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. For the first time in the history of Lviv, during the siege of the city his regiment captured the Vysokyi Zamok Castle, which was defended by the strong Polish–Lithuanian garrison. Kryvonis was one of the most important figures during the Khmelnytskyi Uprising in 1648.
Origins
[edit]The question about his origins remains unresolved. A Polish pamphlet published in 1648 claimed that he was a serf of the Nemyrych family[2] (a hypothesis favoured by Soviet historiography). However, a German source about a meeting with Kryvonis in 1648 says that he is of Scottish origin ("ein gebohrenen Schott")[3] In this case his real name may well have been not a nickname based on his crooked or broken nose, but a translation of his Scottish family name Cameron.
Khmelnytsky Uprising
[edit]Kryvonis was one of the most effective generals of the Uprising. He was awarded the rank of colonel of Cherkasy Regiment. His actions in Korsun and Pylyavtsi battles in 1648 led to crushing Cossack victories over the Polish armies. His actions against prince Jeremi Wiśniowiecki at Makhnivka and Starokostiantyniv were less successful.
Also there are different accounts of Kryvonis's demise: killed (shot) during the siege of Lviv, assassinated (poisoned) by Jesuits, killed by orders of Bohdan Khmelnytsky who loathed him, or perished of plague during the siege of Zamość in 1648.
Massacres of Jews
[edit]Cossacks took part in massacres and devastation of Jewish communities during the Uprising. Kryvonis led the capture of Tulchyn, killing many Jews in process.[4] Jewish chronicles of that time portray Kryvonis as being responsible for the most brutal attacks on Jews in 1648.[5] Leonid Plyushch states in his book that Kryvonis's pogroms are often attributed to Bohdan Khmelnytsky.[6]
Literature
[edit]Kryvonis (Polish: Maksym Krzywonos) was also a character in With Fire and Sword, a novel by Nobel-winning 19th-century Polish author Henryk Sienkiewicz. In the 1999 movie based on the novel he was played by Maciej Kozłowski.
References
[edit]- ^ "ПОВСТАННЯ БОГДАНА ХМЕЛЬНИЦЬКОГО" [BOHDAN KHMELNYTSKY REBELLION] (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 2 June 2022.
- ^ Документы об освободительной войне украинского народа 1648-1654 г.г., Киев, Наукова Думка, 1965, p.70: "Nie gniewajac na siebie wlasnego dziedzica... cnego Niemierzyca" "Do not make your master, honorable Nemyrych, angry".
- ^ Дмитро НАЛИВАЙКО "ОЧИМА ЗАХОДУ: Рецепція України в Західній Європі XI-XVIII ст.", КИЇВ — «Основи» — 1998, http://litopys.org.ua/ochyma/ochrus4.htm. German anonymous pamphlet "On the new rebellion of Cossacks against Poland", 1649, possibly by polish general of German origin Christopher Houvaldt. D.Nalyvayko, however, is skeptical on the matter of Scottish origins of Kryvonis.
- ^ Amelia M. Glaser (2015). Stories of Khmelnytsky. Stanford University Press. p. 128. ISBN 0804793824.
- ^ Amelia M. Glaser (2015). Stories of Khmelnytsky. Stanford University Press. p. 12. ISBN 0804793824.
- ^ Leonid Plyushch (1980). History's carnival. Stanford University Press. p. 291. ISBN 0002621169.
- Крипякевич, Іван (1936). Ukrainian: ІСТОРІЯ УКРАЇНСЬКОГО ВІЙСЬКА, romanized: Istoriya Ukrainskoho Viyska. Kviv: Видання Івана Тиктора.
External links
[edit]- 1648 deaths
- Ukrainian Cossacks
- Colonels of the Cossack Hetmanate
- Cossack rebels
- Zaporozhian Cossack military personnel of the Khmelnytsky Uprising
- Ukrainian people of Scottish descent
- Ukrainian military leaders
- 17th-century military personnel
- 17th-century Ukrainian people
- Antisemitism in Ukraine
- Ukrainian mass murderers
- Genocide perpetrators