- The haidamakas, also
haidamaky or
haidamaks (singular haidamaka, Ukrainian: Гайдамаки, Haidamaky) were
Ukrainian paramilitary outfits composed of commoners...
- Ukraine,
Moldavia and the
Ottoman Empire. in general, the
activity of the
haidamaks began in
wison and
summer and
ended in
winter due to the temperatures...
-
known for its
depiction of the
Haidamak rebellions in
Taras Shevchenko's
longest of poems,
Haidamaky ("The
Haidamaks", 1843). The city is also a pilgrimage...
-
ideologue Alfred Rosenberg.
Thousands of Jews were
slaughtered by
Cossack Haidamaks in the 1768 m****acre of Uman in the
Kingdom of Poland. In 1772, the empress...
- [Ukrainian
matters and things:
materials for the
history of
Cossacks and
Haidamaks]. Lviv. pp. 146, 147.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint:
location missing publisher...
- vataman; Russian: атаман; Ukrainian: отаман) was a
title of
Cossack and
haidamak leaders of
various kinds. In the
Russian Empire, the term was the official...
- 1768, in
which several thousand Poles, Jews and
Uniates were
murdered by
haidamaks. In 1768, the Bar
Confederation was
formed by the Poles,
including Casimir...
-
Paliy uprising (1702–1704)
Bulavin Rebellion (1707–1708) 1734
Haidamak Uprising 1750
Haidamak Uprising Koliivshchyna (1768–1769) Pugachev's
Rebellion (1774–75)...
-
named after Maksym Zalizniak, a
leader of the
Koliivshchyna rebellion of
haidamaks in 1768. Its
trunk is 9
metres in cir****ference and is
about 30 metres...
-
atman in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Ataman, a
title of
Cossack and
haidamak leaders of
various kinds World Soul (disambiguation) Atma (disambiguation)...