Transcarpathian Ukraine

Transcarpathian Ukraine

 

Transcarpathian Rus’, Transcarpathia, the historical name of the present-day TransCarpathian Oblast, Ukrainian SSR.

Since ancient times the Transcarpathian Ukraine has been inhabited by Eastern Slavs. In the tenth and 11th centuries, it was part of Kievan Rus’. After its seizure by Hungarian feudal lords in the llth century, the region remained part of Hungary, later Austria and Austria-Hungary, until 1919, when it became part of the bourgeois Czechoslovak Republic. A Hungarian fascist regime was established there in 1938–39.

The Soviet Army liberated the Transcarpathian Ukraine in 1944. The Congress of People’s Committees of the Transcarpathian Ukraine, meeting in the city of Mukachevo on Nov. 26, 1944, adopted a manifesto proclaiming the reunification of the region with the Soviet Ukraine. The inclusion of the Transcarpathian Ukraine in the Ukrainian SSR was carried out in accordance with a treaty signed on June 29, 1945, by the USSR and Czechoslovakia. The Transcarpathian Oblast of the Ukrainian SSR, with its administrative center at Uzhgorod, was established by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on Jan. 22, 1946.

REFERENCES

Kolomiets, I. G. “Ocherki po istorii Zakarpat’ia,” part 1. In Tr. Tomskogo gos. un-ta: Seriia istoricheskaia, vol. 121, issue 2. Tomsk, 1953.
Kolomiets, I. G. Ocherki po istorii Zarkarpat’ia, part 2. Tomsk, 1959.