- Pokuttya
Pokuttya or Pokuttia ( _ua. Покуття, _ro. Pocuţia, _pl. Pokucie) is a historical area of
Central Europe , between upperPrut andCheremosh rivers, in modernUkraine . Historically it was a culturally-distinct area inhabitated byRomanians andUkrainians on the previously-unpopulated borderlands between the lands ofLviv andHalych . Although the historical centre of the area wasKolomyia , the name itself is derived from the name of the town ofKuty and literally means "by Kuty" ("Kut" by itself means "corner"). Presently, the region is inhabited byUkrainians . The land also is mentioned in the song performed bySofia Rotaru .History
Initially a part of
Kievan Rus' and one of its successor states,Halych-Volhynia , the area was occupied by the Kingdom of Poland in1325 , and annexed in1349 byCasimir III of Poland .Władysław II Jagiełło , needing financial support in his battles against theTeutonic Knights , used the region as a guarantee in a loan which he obtained from Petru I ofMoldavia , who thus gained control of the region in1388 . Petru I was eager at gaining influence in the internal politics of the Kingdom of Poland, supporting the cause of his long-time allies,Jagiellons ofGrand Duchy of Lithuania . Pokuttia, therefore, became the feodal property of the princes ofMoldavia , but remained within the Kingdom of Poland. As in other famous similar cases in middle age Europe (such asFoix , orDauphin%C3%A9 ), the local feodal had to swearoath of allegiance to the king "for the specific territory", even when the former was himself an independent ruler of another state. Depending on the political and military strength of each person, the king could ask for "allegiace", omtiting the words "for Pokuttia", or could refrain from asking an oath altogether. Consequently, the region became a matter for judicial and military dispute between the two countries, because the debt had never been paid in full by Poland, and because Pokuttia was a more valuable asset than the money. In1485 , Moldavian prince Stephen the Great, after losing in the previous year his country's exit to the Black Sea to theOttomans , was in serious need of alliances, and swore allegiance toCasimir IV Jagiellon , King of Poland for Pokuttia, in what is known as the "Colomeea oath". [Popular culture has it that Casimir ordered the tent in which the oath was taking place to be uncovered at a moment's notice, so as to present Stephen on his knees in front of the latter's nobles and escort. It is said that Stephen, renouned for his religious piety, quickly turned towards an icon and crossed himself, in order not to appear undignified in front of his men.] However, Casimir's successorJohn I Albert of Poland , used the treaty as a pretext to invadeMoldavia itself in1497 , but after four months of siege, failed to conquer the fortress ofSuceava , Stephen's capital. Moreover, when abandoning the siege, his army ran into a trap, was decimated, and many nobles were killed. "SeeBattle of the Cosmin Forest ."After that, in
1498 , Pokuttia was conquered by Stephen the Great, annexed and retained byMoldavia until theBattle of Obertyn in1531 , when it was recaptured by Poland'shetman Jan Tarnowski , who defeated Stephen's sonPetru Rareş . Minor Polish-Moldavian clashes for Pokuttia continued for the next 15 years, until Petru Rareş's death.Following the
Partitions of Poland of1772 , Pokuttya fell under theHabsburg Monarchy .In the wake of the
World War I and the fall ofAustria-Hungary , it became disputed between Poland and a short-livedWest Ukrainian People's Republic . However, during thePolish-Ukrainian War it was seized without fight by theRomania n army (see:Romanian occupation of Pokuttya ), and handed over to Polish authorities. After thePolish-Soviet War was concluded, it remained in Poland.In the effect of the 1939 invasion and partition of Poland between
Nazi Germany andSoviet Union , the area was attached to theUkrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (falling to Nazi control after the start ofOperation Barbarossa and until1944 ). It remains a part of modern Ukraine, incorporated into the western Ukrainian "oblast" ofIvano-Frankivsk , roughly corresponding to the southern half of the oblast.Throughout middle ages,
Obertyn was Pokuttia's main castle, whileKolomyia was the region's main town and fair.Notes
Places of interest
*
Deliatyn (Deltyatyn )
*Hody-Dobrovidka
*Kobaky
*Kolomyia (Romanian: Colomeea)
*Kosiv
*Kosmach
*Kuty ,Stari Kuty (Romanian: Cuturi)
*Lanchyn
*Pechenizhyn
*Obertyn (Romanian: Obertin)
*Verkhovyna
*Vorokhta
*Yabluniv
*Yaremche
*Zabolotiv
*Carpathian National Park
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