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Serhiy Gromenko’s Skoropadskyi and Crimea: From Confrontation to Accession examines how the fledgling Ukrainian State under Hetman Pavlo Skoropadskyi and the international community grappled with Crimea’s status at the end of World War I. Through a gripping narrative, Gromenko dissects the competing proposals—independence, union membership, autonomy under Kyiv, or foreign protectorate—and reveals why Ukraine ultimately lost its hold on the peninsula. This authoritative study combines political analysis, period testimonies, and archival documents to illuminate themes of statehood, national identity, and liberation struggles in early 20th-century Ukraine
Format & Features:
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352 pages; 140 × 210 mm hardcover
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Ukrainian-language edition
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Published by Nash Format, January 1, 2021