суббота, 16 мая 2009 г.

KYIV (Kiev) OVERVIEW

Kyiv (also known as Kiev), a scenic city of close to 3 million people situated on the Dnipro River, is the bustling capital of Ukraine. Ancient Kievan Rus, which reached its greatest period of ascendancy during the 11th and 12th centuries, was a center of trade routes between the Baltic and the Mediterranean. The city of Kyiv and the power of Kievan Rus were destroyed in 1240 by Mongol invaders and the lands of Kievan Rus were divided into principalities located to the west and north: Galicia, Volynia, Muscovy and later, Poland, Lithuania, and Russia. Once a powerful force on the European scene, Ukraine's fate in modern times has been decided in far-off capitals. As a result, modern Ukrainian history, for the most part, has been defined by foreign occupation.

Kyiv suffered severely during World War II, and many irreplaceable architectural and art treasures were destroyed. Earlier in the 1930's the Soviet authorities systematically destroyed many churches. Extensive restoration has revived much of historic Kyiv. The city hit the headlines in April 1986, when the nuclear reactor at nearby Chernobyl exploded, but scientists generally agree that the city is now safe from radiation effects.

Despite repressions, suffering, political turmoil, and ecological disasters, Ukraine's spirit and national identity have never died. On August 24, 1991, after the aborted coup in Moscow, Ukraine proclaimed its independence. As of 1994, Ukraine has diplomatic relations with over 135 countries and close to 60 diplomatic missions are established in Kyiv. News correspondents, business representatives, and students from all over the world reside in Kyiv, and the flow of foreign tourists and official delegations is heavy year round. The resident American community consists of Embassy personnel (including dependents), correspondents, business representatives, clergy, professors, and students.

The art and architecture of Kyiv are world treasures. The Cathedral of St. Sophia, where the princes of Kyiv were crowned in the years of Kyiv's grandeur, has outstanding mosaics and frescoes dating back to the 11th century. Overlooking the old section of Kyiv, Podol, stands the Ukrainian Baroque church of St. Andrew, much beloved by Ukrainians. The Percherska Lavra, the Monastery of the Caves, a short trolley ride from the center of town, has two 11th-century cathedrals on its grounds, in addition to its world-famous catacombs, bell tower, and museum collections. Close to the center of town stands the Golden Gate, a structure which dates back to 1037. This recently reconstructed remains of the former fortified wall of the city defined the limits of the city in centuries past. Several blocks away, stands the magnificent 19th-century Cathedral of St. Volodymyr.

Theater buffs will find much to choose from here. Most performances are in Ukrainian or Russian. The recently renovated Kyiv Opera House presents very good opera as well as a broad repertoire of ballets. The Kyiv Young Theater is very popular and stages innovative plays in Ukrainian or Russian. The Ivan Franko Theater is the center of Ukrainian drama, comedy, and musicals. This repertoire has just opened its 75th season and includes brilliant versions of Aeneid and Teve Tevel, the original version of Fiddler on the Roof.

The modern center with surviving parts of the old city are on the hilly west, or right bank, of the Dnipro River. The main street, Khreshchatik, runs between two steep hills. Parallel about half a kilometer west, is vulytsya Volodymyrska, the main street of the Old Kyiv area (Staryj Kyiv). From the north end of Khreshchatik, vulytsya Hrushevskoho rises southeast along a ridge to the Caves Monastery at Perchersk. Woods and parks cover most of the steep right-bank slopes. The capital's newer sections stretch out on the flat left bank. These are characterized by large housing developments and industrialized neighborhoods.

Ukrainian pottery, embroidery, and handicrafts are available throughout the city, particularly in shops on Andrievsky Uzviz, at Percherska Lavra, and St. Sophia's church. Quality and quantity vary from shop to shop. A growing number of hard currency stores stock Western food, alcohol, clothing, and electrical appliances. Most prices, in hard-currency stores, are higher than those in the West, and availability of stock is unpredictable.

Apartment rentals Kiev

суббота, 9 мая 2009 г.

Turmoil in Ukraine

Since I have been in the states many have asked me about the political situation in Ukraine. The economy has become the victim of the political bickering between President Yushchenko and Prime Minister Tymoshenko. While the fighting continues over who should lead the country, factories are laying off thousands of workers, cities have gone days without heat unable to pay their bills, and lines are forming outside the banks as people have already withdrawn 20% of their savings. The frustration and disappointment of those who had placed their hope in the Orange Revolution is evident everywhere. Tents are back in downtown Kiev, but this time the banners read “Everyone out.”

It seems like Ukraine is on the edge of another revolution and Russia is positioning itself to pick up the pieces and use Ukraine as an example to other former Soviet countries as a warning of what happens when Western free market practices are adopted. Some are predicting the first region of Ukraine to split will be Zarcarpatia. Zarcarpatia has historically been under Hungarian rule in the Austro-Hungarian Hapsburg Empire that fell apart after World War I. And there are those who are predicting the region will petition to rejoin Hungary. Russia will allow this in return for Europe allowing Crimea to return to Russia. This will be followed with Chernivsti bringing its region back into Romania and then the rest of Ukraine splitting in half – the Eastern half returning to Russia and the Western half destined to struggle on its own until out of fatigue it is forced to also rejoin Russia.

So what is going to happen in Ukraine? No one really knows. The only thing we do know is the country is in turmoil and the political fighting must stop if the country and its people are going to grow and live normal lives. Pray for Ukraine and for the leaders of the country. What happens today will determine the future for the children. They deserve better! Thanks!

KievForRent.com: apartment rental in kiev

воскресенье, 5 апреля 2009 г.

Ukrainian opposition expects up to 50,000 at Kiev crisis rally

KIEV, April 2 (RIA Novosti) - Ukraine's Party of Regions hopes to bring up to 50,000 people on to the streets of Kiev on April 3 to demand guarantees from the government amid the ongoing financial crisis, a party member said on Thursday.

The party disrupted work in Ukraine's parliament on Thursday to demand that Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko's coalition government produce an anti-crisis program and issue anti-crisis guarantees.

"I do not know for sure how many people will take part in protests in Kiev tomorrow. There could be thousands [of protestors], perhaps up to 50,000," Mikhail Chechetov was quoted by the UNIAN news agency as saying.

He dismissed rumors that the Party of Regions had paid people to participate in the rallies.

The opposition party accuses the country's authorities of being unable to cope with the deepening financial crisis. Some 3,000 party activists staged a rally in central Kiev in late March.

Ukraine's economy declined by more than a quarter year-on-year in January-February as prices for metals and chemicals, the country's key exports, remained low. The national currency, the hryvnia, has lost much of its value, and ongoing disputes with Russia over natural gas have also stoked political tensions.

Parliament voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday for presidential elections to be held on October 25 this year, three months ahead of the end of President Viktor Yushchenko's first term of office. Yushchenko's approval rating has fallen to single figures.

Apartment Rental In Kiev

Fashion week in Kiev

A model presents a creation by Ukrainian designer Oksana Karavanska during fashion week in Kiev, Ukrain, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

A model presents a creation by Ukrainian designer Oksana Karavanska during fashion week in Kiev, Ukrain, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

A model presents a creation by Ukrainian designer Oksana Karavanska during fashion week in Kiev, Ukrain, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

A model presents a creation by Ukrainian designer Oksana Karavanska during fashion week in Kiev, Ukrain, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

A model presents a creation by Ukrainian designer Ludmila Kislenko during fashion week in Kiev, Ukrain, March 15, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

Model present creations by Ukrainian designers Oksana Karavanska and Ludmila Kislenko during fashion week in Kiev, Ukrain, March 15, 2009.


Apartment Rental Kiev

48 hours in Kiev

With a history dating back to the Vikings, and a position as capital of Europe's largest country, Kiev is the last great metropolis to remain undiscovered by mass tourism, American bratpackers or British weekenders. A city of gold-domed cathedrals and churches, it's remarkably clean and green with urbane, friendly people.

Beam down

British Airways (0845 77 333 77, www.britishairways.com) and Ukraine International Airlines (01293 596 609, www.ukraine-international.com) both fly direct to Kiev from Gatwick five times a week. Return fares start at £309 and £252 respectively. Ukrainian Travel (0161 652 6050, www.ukraine.co.uk) offers three-night city breaks for £349.

Get your bearings

Kiev is bisected by the Dnipro river. Almost everything of interest lies on the western bank, and is easily accessible on foot or by the city's three metro lines (7p per journey). As yet there is no central tourist office, but maps and guidebooks are readily available at hotels or from bookstalls and kiosks. If you can find a copy, the Kiev Business Guide has decent listings.

Check in

To issue a tourist visa (£25) the Ukrainian Consulate in London requires pre-booked accommodation through recognised agents such as Ukrainian Travel or Scotts Travel (020-7383 5353) or, online, at www.hotelsukraine.com. Hotel Bratislava at 1 Andriya Malyshka St (00 380 44 559 7570), on the east bank of the river, offers twin rooms from £45 per night. The three-star Hotel Lybid, at 1 Peremohy Square (00 380 44 274 0063), costs from £77 per night, or the four-star President Kyivsky, at 12 Hospitalna St (00 380 44 220 19 34), costs from £107 per night. Alternatively, Kiev Apartment Hotel Service (00 380 44 493 1837, www.kievhotelservice.com) offers central apartments from £48 per night for the first three nights; less if you stay longer.

Take a ride

Boat trips along the river leave from the landing stage at Poshtova Ploscha. They last for about 90 minutes and are well worth taking for the views of islands and the Caves Monastery. And they'll only set you back around £1.30.

Take a hike

Kievans take the metro (Hidropark) to the islands to walk in the woods. In the winter, hide away in one of the restaurants, cafés and bars. In the summer you can also swim from the sandy beaches, play tennis, rent a boat or pedalo or even practise your disco moves on a dance floor.

Lunch on the run

You can munch on an open sandwich, hot dog or pizza for the equivalent of 15 to 20p, if you buy it from one of the city's stalls and kiosks; add on 10p for an ice cream to follow. For picnics, stock up on fruit, meats and caviar at the central Bessarabsky Market. Or, if you fancy a lazy afternoon, revel in the fact that half a litre of beer costs 25p, and kvas, a liquorice-like drink, sells from roadside tankers for about 4p a glass.

Cultural afternoon

Museums honour everything from the Afghan War to the Chernobyl disaster. Visit the Ukraine History Museum, at Volodomyrska 2 for a view of Ukrainian history from the 18th century to the present. The Museum of Fine Arts at Khrushchevsky 4 also spans the centuries. For Soviet greatness, see the Museum of the Great Patriotic War complete with its gigantic "motherland statue" and military paraphernalia.

Window shopping

Khreshchatyk Vulytsia is the city's commercial thoroughfare. Showcase shops include the Central Department Store (TsUM) for gifts and standard post-Soviet consumer goods. An attractive alternative is the open-air market on Andriyivsky uz. It is crammed with traditional souvenirs such as painted wooden eggs, matrioshka dolls and lace.

The icing on the cake

Unique in its scale and grandeur, the Caves Monastery contains a number of churches and museums above the underground monasteries. Begun in the 11th century, the underground passages contain icons and the mummified remains of monks from centuries past. Believers touch them for their healing qualities. There is a charge for the museums and churches, but entrance to the caves themselves is free. Purchase a candle (7p) and, if you're female, wear a headscarf (available to rent for a 35p refundable deposit).

A walk in the park

Babiy Yar (grandmother's park) was once a forest on the edge of the city. A large Soviet memorial commemorates over 100,000 civilians and soldiers who were massacred here by the Nazis. On the other side of the park, a simple memorial to Kiev's Jewish community was unveiled a few years ago. The nearest metro station is Dorohozhychi.

Bracing brunch

The arrival of a fast-food chain in Kiev has brought welcome competition to the city's eateries, and improvements in service. Visit the Restaurant USSR, for views of the nearby Caves Monastery and the Motherland monument, or go to Hidropark for something altogether similar.

Demure dinner

Gorge yourself silly at Tsarskoe Selo, on Sichnevoho Povstannya (near the Caves Monastery). Quail stuffed with liver, wine and quails' eggs costs £11, while a big bowl of borscht is £5. Or, Pantagruel, next to the Golden Gate, offers German-style food and beer and is popular with expatriates and "New Ukrainians". Students and young Ukrainians hang out at Pizza Vesuvio, Reitarska, 25, which has pizzas for £2.50.

Sunday morning, go to church

St Sophia includes a golden-domed cathedral, belltower and monastery. Founded in the 11th century and originally Byzantine in style, it received an extensive makeover in the 18th century but some of the original frescoes survive. Entry costs £1.25 for foreigners. The lavish Mikhailovsky Cathedral was demolished on Stalin's orders, but has recently been rebuilt and entrance is free. Don't miss the overbearing Doric columns of the Stalin-era Foreign Ministry building next door.

An aperitif

Kiev is a good place for drinkers. Choose from a multitude of spirits, wines and liqueurs and pay only around 50p in a café for a liberal shot of vodka or brandy, or a litre of beer. One place worth visiting is Chumatsky Dvir on Andriyivsky uz or, for beer drinkers, Cafe Slavutych on Kreshchatyk vul.

Apartment Kiev Ukraine

среда, 11 марта 2009 г.

GUAM headquarters opens in Kiev

Ukraine, Kiev, Feb. 26 / Trend News corr. D.Babesyuk /

The new GUAM headquarters opened in Kiev. The office is located on Freedom Square.

The Georgian, Azerbaijani and Ukrainian foreign ministers participated in the opening ceremony.

GUAM Secretary General Valery Chechelashvili took part in the session.

The Moldovan, Japanese, Polish, U.S. and Czech ambassadors were also present.

Top U.S. official Ian Kelly delivered his greetings to the attendees via an Internet conference.

Georgia>, and in 1997 during an EU presidential summit in Strasbourg. In 1999, <> joined the organization and left four years later. In 2006, GUAM was renamed the Organization for Democracy and Economic Development -

A delegation of GUAM representatives met Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko.

Georgian and Azebaijani foreign ministers Grigol Vashadze and Elmar Mammadyarov said GUAM is vital to resolving conflicts in the region.

Mammadyarov said goods turnover between the GUAM member-countries had grown to $4.1 billion.

"We began with $1 billion. We are moving in the right direction," Mammadyarov said.

Apartment Kiev

воскресенье, 8 марта 2009 г.

Brief Ukraine History

The Ukraine history possesses two unique features.

  • Kievan Rus' is the predecessor of the three major nationalities - modern Belarusians, Russians, and Ukrainians.
  • History of the Kievan Rus and Russia was written by the foreigners. German historians were invited to Russia in 18th century in order to write its history. They created their own theory of Russia's origination, which didn’t reflect real historical facts.

Both of these features became the source of numerous debates around Ukrainian history. We still can hear arguing over the heritage of Kievan Rus. We’re still not sure whether to consider some historical persons as traitors or the greatest Ukrainian patriots of all time.

One can discuss. One can argue. But our past can’t be changed. Ukrainian history has things to be proud of. We look forward to the happy future of the independent Ukraine.

In the Beginning of Ukraine History

Crescent shaped pectoral with animal figurines. Gold, 4th century B.C.Kievan Rus.Ukraine history.
The Pectoral from the Tolstaya Mogila
Source: http://vm.kemsu.ru

Archeological finds show that the earliest settlements in the Dnepr and Dniester valleys appeared several thousand years ago. The territory of present-day Ukraine was inhabited by Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, and Goths throughout the first millennium B.C.

Antes and the Ros', the ancestors of the Eastern Slavs, occupied central and eastern Ukraine in the 6th century A.D. About 14 East Slav tribe unions existed in Ukraine during the 6th - 9th centuries. They became the political foundation for forming the core of the powerful Kievan Rus.

It included the cities of Kyiv, Chernihiv, Pereiaslav , Novgorod, Halych, Smolensk, Rostov, Susdal and later Moscow.

Kievan Rus

The beginning of Ukraine history.Prince Oleg is the founder of Kievan Rus,Princ Oleg is a founder of the Kievan Rus'.
Source: http://www.guidetorussia.org

Kievan Rus is the beginning of the Ukraine history as a state. Kyiv Rus spread from the Black Sea to the White Sea, from the Carpathians to the Volga River.

According to the Russian Primary Chronicle Kievan Rus was founded by the Varangian (Swedish Viking) Oleg in 862. (Some Slavic historians have debated the role of the Varangians in the establishment of Kievan Rus. They consider that Oleg was not a Varangian but one of the Slavic princes).

During almost 100 years Oleg, his successor Igor (reigned 912-945), Igor's widow Olga (who was regent until about 962), and Olga's son Sviatoslav (r. 945-972) turned the scattered Slavic tribes into an organized powerful state. Kyiv became the political center of the Eastern Slavs. 

Princess OlgaPrincess Olga. Source: 
http://www.pskov.ru/

The time of the greatest rise the Slavic State reached during the reigns of Prince Vladimir (Vladimir the Great, r. 980 -1015) and Prince Yaroslav (Yaroslav the Wise, r. 1019-1054).

Vladimir's most important merit was the Christianization of Kievan Rus. The successful military raids of the Prince expanded the limits of the Rus territory. At that time Kyiv had 400 churches, 8 markets, and over 50000 residents (compared to 20000 in London, Hamburg, and Gdansk). 

Yaroslav the Wise
Yaroslav the Wise. Source:
http://www.vor.ru


Yaroslav improved relations with the rest of Europe, especially the Byzantine Empire. He promulgated the first East Slavic law code, Russkaya Pravda (Justice of Rus′); founded a school system; built Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kiev and Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod.

After his death the Kievan Rus split into two principalities: Galicia-Volhynia in the south-west and several regional centers in the north-east that eventually became Muscovy. After the conquest of the Kievan Rus (13th cent.) by the Mongols of the Golden Horde, the history of Ukraine and Russia went their separate ways.

In the mid-14th century Lithuania and Poland began to enlarge their territory at the expense of their eastern neighbors. As the result of the dynastic union between Poland and Lithuania in 1386, Ukraine came under Polish rule. Meanwhile, the Turks and Tatars were making similar moves into the Crimea. At the same time the rising principality of Muscovy tried to control the vast area south of its borders.

At the end of the 15th century a glorious period of struggle for national independence in the Ukraine history began. Cossack Republic appeared on the European political map.

The Cossacks

Ukraine history heroic period.Zaporozhian Sich is a cossack settlement
Zaporizhian Sich. Source: 
www.potop.kiev.ua/hortica.htm


The Cossack Republic is usually viewed as precursor of Ukraine. Its appearance played an outstanding part in the historical fate of Ukraine. The Cossack liberation movement is one of the most tragic and heroic period in Ukraine history.

Due to serfdom and the oppressive domination of Polish rule, many men escaped beyond the area of the lower Dnepr rapids. There they established a military order called the Zaporozhian Sich ("clearing beyond the rapids"). These fugitives became known as Cossacks or Kozaks, an adaptation of the Turkic word Kazak, meaning "outlaw" or "adventurer." 

 Zaporozhian Cossacks Write a Letter to the Turkish Sultan, 1880–91. Oil on canvas. Ilia Repin,Russian MuseumZaporizhian Cossacs. By I.Repin.
Source: www.19thc-artworldwide.org

The Cossacks initially were focused on the struggle against Turkey-Tatar aggression. But from 1648 to 1654 Cossacks under their Hetman (Ukrainian for Cossack leader) Bohdan Khmelnytsky organized a series of revolts against the Poles. In order to secure a military ally against Poland, the Cossacks signed an agreement with Muscovy in 1654, known as the Pereiaslav Agreement.

By the terms of the Agreement, Ukraine was to be largely independent; but Ukraine found itself under the long lasting domination of the Russian Empire. The short period of Ukraine's sovereignty was followed by hundreds of years of colonial existence. In 1667, Moscow and Warsaw signed the Treaty of Andrusov, which partitioned Ukraine. The right-bank of the Dnepr River went to Poland. Russia obtained left-bank Ukraine.

The last Hetman of Ukraine was forced by Empress Catherine II to resign in 1764; the Zaporozhian Sich was razed by Russian troops in 1775, and Ukraine, its political autonomy terminated. The glorious period of Cossack Republic in Ukraine history was over.The country was drawn into the vortex of civil war, political crisis and economic displacement for many years.

Ukraine History and the USSR

Mikhailo Grushevsky is a first President in Ukraine Hystory Mikhailo Grushevsky.Source:
http://www.ukraine-observer.com



The revolutionary events of 1917 put an end to the Russian Empire. On January 22, 1918, for the first time in Ukraine history, Ukraine proclaimed its independence. Mykhailo Hrushevsky, an outstanding historian and a noted cultural figure, became President of the Ukrainian National Republic (UNR). He was the first President in Ukraine history.

Ukrainian independence was short-lived. Ukraine was simply not ready for political independence. The Ukrainians did not have a clear policy of national independence or a single prominent leader who could unite them. The dream of an independent Ukraine ended in 1922 when the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (Ukrainian SSR) was founded. Ukraine history during 74 years became an organic part of the USSR history.

Ukraine as the part of the Soviet Union had its own organs of state authority and administration, its own budget, and Constitution. It was a clearly defined nation and territorial entity having its own capital (Kharkiv, in 1919-1934, and Kyiv, starting in 1934). In the years of reconstruction of its industries devastated by WW I and the civil war, hundreds of factories were built in Ukraine, bringing its level with the world's industrialized countries.

But at the same time there were also a lot of "Hero Projects"- public works programs which relied heavily on slave labor. Throughout the Stalinist era (and later) the KGB spent much of its time rounding up supposed "enemies of the state" to be sentenced for construction work in Siberia.

A forceful agricultural collectivization and artificial famines as part of the collectivization policies killed millions of previously independent peasants and others throughout the country. Estimates of deaths from the 1932-33 famine alone range from 3 million to 7 million.

World War II

The best tank in the world during WWII was designed and built in Ukraine.A Vice President of Ukrainian Academy of Science Y.OPaton took part in the design of T34.Professor Y.O. Paton (1870-1953).
Source: http://www.infoukes.com


A

Under the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed in 1939, the USSR occupied Ukrainian lands under Polish control. In the early 1940s, the Ukrainska Povstanska Armiia (UPA), otherwise known as the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, was formed in Western Ukraine and fought the Soviets, Nazis, and Poles.

In 1941 Nazis invaded the USSR. All of Ukraine fell under the Germans' control. During World War II, many Ukrainians, particularly in the west, welcomed the Germans as liberators and collaborated with them against the USSR. However, the Nazis' harsh occupation (1941-44) of Ukraine turned many of them into anti-German guerrilla fighters.

The German field commanders couldn’t understand this tenacious resistance, wondering why anyone would fight to return to Stalin's rule. The answer was very simple. The Soviet people defended their homes and families.

According to UNRRA, Ukraine's material losses during the war amounted to $1000 billion. 714 towns and cities, 28000 villages, 2 million buildings, over 16000 industrial enterprises, 28000 state and 870 collective farms were devastated. More then 5 million civilians were tortured to death during the Nazi occupation and 3 million Ukrainians were killed in the war.

When the war ended, most Ukrainian cities - notably Kiev, Dnipropetrovs'k and Sevastopol - were in ruins. The Dnepr River was a major German defence line prior to the general retreat of 1944, and these cities suffered prolonged sieges.

In the early post-war period Ukraine's economy was restored by the strenuous selfless effort of the entire nation. Ukraine history has always been rich in human talents.

During periods of relative liberalization - as under Nikita Khrushchev, from 1955 to 1964 - Ukrainian communists pursued national objectives. In the years of perestroika, under USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev, national goals were again advanced by Ukrainian officials.

Apartement for rent Ukraine