Biography Of: Levytsky, Volodymyr Alumni in IATPProfessor of Uzhhorod National University volodymyr Tarasyuk (CC) introduced Andriy levytsky (PIE, 2001), Professor at the Kyiv National University and http://www.biographycorner.com/biography_l/levytsky-volodymyr_biography_c4f6cc45
List Of Ukrainians - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia Marxist thinker and a founder of the Soviet Union; volodymyr Vynnychenko Yakov Kulik volodymyr Petryshyn Yuri Linnik volodymyr levytsky http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ukrainians
Extractions: Over US$220,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! This is a list of famous or notable people from Ukraine This list is incomplete ; you can help by expanding it edit edit Composers ... Opanas Slastion , folklorist, inventor of modern type of bandura , bandurist, painter,the first illustrator of Taras Shevchenko 's " Kobzar ", architect
User:Gerritholl/mathematicians - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia Gerson Tullio Levi-Civita - Norman Levinson - Hyman Levy - Paul Lévy -volodymyr levytsky - Hans Lewy - Anders Lexell - Wilhelm Lexis - Simon Lhuilier http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Gerritholl/mathematicians
Extractions: Over US$220,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! User:Gerritholl edit Ernst Abbe Niels Henrik Abel Abraham bar Hiyya Max Abraham ... Antoni Zygmund Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Gerritholl/mathematicians Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages ... Permanent link This page was last modified 01:33, 19 August 2005. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see for details).
Towards An Intellectual History with the exception of volodymyr Antonovych, for the twentieth century the Shevchenko, Kulish, Drahomanov, Kachala, Nechuilevytsky, and Hrinchenko, http://www.utpjournals.com/product/utq/671/intellectual13.html
Extractions: Published in University of Toronto Quarterly - Volume 67 Number 1, Winter 1997/98- Letters in Canada. To see more articles and book reviews from this and other journals visit UTPJOURNALS online at UTPJOURNALS.com Towards an Intellectual History of Ukraine: An Anthology of Ukrainian Thought from 1710 to 1995 xii, 420. $65.00 cloth, $24.95 paper Reviewed in University of Toronto Quarterly Volume 67, Number 1 Winter 1997/98- Letters in Canada 1996 Frank E. Sysyn Over twenty years ago, Omeljan Pritsak presented his plan to translate sixty volumes of Ukrainian historical texts to his colleagues at the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. As with many projects of that visionary organizer of scholarship, some more modest part of his plan has been fulfilled. Six volumes of translations of medieval and early modern texts have already appeared in the excellent Harvard Library of Early Ukrainian Literature. Modern Ukrainian history has not been as fortunate, despite the increasing interest in Ukraine and teaching of courses in the field. The anthology will serve those who wish to gain a general view of Ukrainian intellectual life and those who teach Ukrainian and East European intellectual history. Although one may regret that the editors did not provide a bibliography of other texts available in English translation, they have already done much to make modern Ukrainian intellectual history accessible to the English-language reader.
Full Alphabetical Index Translate this page levytsky, volodymyr (296*) Lexell, Anders (75) Lexis, Wilhelm (96*) Lhuilier,Simon (66) Libri Guglielmo (429*) Lie, Sophus (2699*) Lifshitz, Evgenii (441*) http://alas.matf.bg.ac.yu/~mm97106/math/alphalist.htm
Extractions: Peter J. Potichnyj There is a great deal of confusion about the behaviour of Ukrainians during 1939-45, and it is not limited to non-Ukrainians. Forty years after World War II, some Ukrainians are themselves unclear on issues that affected them four decades ago and have influenced their thinking to this day. The common view of the war is that of an enormous struggle between the forces of good and evil, in which the former triumphed. It follows from this view that the nations and individuals who were not on the side of the Allies (except, of course, for the neutral countries) must have been on the side of the Axis powers or, worse still, on the side of the Nazis. Whatever does not fit this neat pattern is either overlooked or misunderstood, and so it has been with the present debate over collaboration and war criminality among Ukrainians. During World War II Ukrainians collaborated with all sides, for two main reasons. First, as one of the world's largest national groups without a sovereign state, Ukrainians did not control their destiny at a crucial time in world history. Second, not unlike Jews, Ukrainians were - and still are - scattered throughout the world; thus in 1939-45 they could be found in all kinds of places and situations. Since the war's fiercest battles were on Ukrainian territory, it is not surprising that Ukrainians fought in various armies and military formations, in large numbers and on all fronts. In the Soviet army alone were 4.5 million citizens of Ukraine. According to Soviet statistics, 409,668 Ukrainians were awarded medals for bravery in the war; 961 became heroes of the Soviet Union; and 60 per cent of the 250,000-strong Soviet partisan force in Ukraine was Ukrainian.
MSN Encarta - Ukraine such as Dmytro levytsky, moved to Russia in search of training and wider such as the statues of Saint volodymyr (Vladimir) and the Cossack leader http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761573617_4/Ukraine.html
Extractions: Search for books and more related to Ukraine Facts and Figures Quick information and statistics for Ukraine Encarta Search Search Encarta about Ukraine Editors' Picks Great books about your topic, Ukraine ... Click here Advertisement document.write(' Page 4 of 10 Encyclopedia Article Multimedia 13 items Dynamic Map Map of Ukraine Article Outline Introduction Land and Resources The People of Ukraine Culture ... History B Although prehistoric and Greek paintings have been discovered in Ukraine, the first major style to develop was the religious iconography of the Kievan period. Between the 16th and 18th centuries, long-standing Byzantine traditions gave way to European influences during the Renaissance and the baroque period, when secular, non-religious themes were introduced. Portraits were especially popular. When eastern Ukraine lost its autonomy under Russian rule in the late 18th century, many Ukrainian painters, such as Dmytro Levytsky, moved to Russia in search of training and wider markets. Renowned for his poetry, Taras Shevchenko is also considered the father of modern Ukrainian painting. Historical themes and landscapes were a popular genre through much of the 19th century. Realist tendencies appeared in the final decades, represented most notably by
MSN Encarta - Search View - Ukraine such as Dmytro levytsky, moved to Russia in search of training and wider markets . In 988 Saint volodymyr (Vladimir), grand prince of Kyiv, http://encarta.msn.com/text_761573617__1/Ukraine.html
Extractions: The search seeks the exact word or phrase that you type, so if you donât find your choice, try searching for a key word in your topic or recheck the spelling of a word or name. Ukraine I. Introduction Ukraine (Ukrainian Ukraina ), country in eastern Europe, and the second largest country in Europe after Russia. Ukraine is bordered on the west by Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary; on the southwest by Romania and Moldova; on the south by the Black Sea and Sea of Azov; on the east and northeast by Russia; and on the north by Belarus. The Crimean Autonomous Republicâencompassing the Crimean Peninsula, or Crimea, in the southâis included in Ukraineâs borders. The capital and largest city is Kyiv (Kiev). Much of Ukraine is a fertile plain suited for agriculture. Ukraine is rich in natural resources, and has a developed economy with significant agricultural and industrial sectors. The country has a democratic form of government headed by a president. From the 9th century ad northern Ukraine was part of Kievan Rus, the first significant East Slavic state, which succumbed to the Mongol invasions of the 13th century. Ukraine was for centuries thereafter under the rule of a succession of foreign powers, including Poland and the Russian Empire. In 1918 a Bolshevik (Communist) government was established in Ukraine, and in 1922 the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) was one of the four founding republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Ukraineâs declaration of independence, approved by a popular vote on December 1, 1991, was a major factor in the USSRâs collapse later that month.
WhoWasThere Reply volodymyr levytsky was 48 this year and would die in a further 36 years.Georgii Pfeiffer was 48 this year and would die in a further 26 years. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/cgi-bin/mathyear.cgi?YEAR=1920
WhoWasThere Reply volodymyr levytsky was 78 this year and would die in a further 6 years.Giovanni Vacca was 78 this year and would die in a further 3 years. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/cgi-bin/mathyear.cgi?YEAR=1950
Conf2002 The key works are Panas Myrny, Lykhi liudy (1877); Ivan Nechuilevytsky, MykolaDzheria Paniotto, volodymyr. The Levels of Anti-Semitism in Ukraine. http://www.judaica.kiev.ua/Conference/Conf2002/Conf47-02.htm
Extractions: Jewish-Ukrainian relations are richly reflected in modern Ukrainian literature, and yet this subject has attracted little serious analysis. My paper focuses on key figures and works in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These are examined in the light both of literary trends and of the wider context provided by public pronouncements and discussions. Some key questions have been raised earlier. In 1983 two Canadians, Aster and Potichnyj, produced an enlightening publication entitled Jewish-Ukrainian relations: Two Solitudes, the product of a ground-breaking conference on the subject. Since that time, momentous changes have overtaken the countries of the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, a number of similar conferences have been held on the subject in Ukraine and several books have been published on the subject. Least, however, has been done on the crucial issue of literary perceptions, which, of course, both encode and transmit particular views of history, politics and culture to contemporary readers. This is an appropriate time, therefore, to take stock of new research and to reexamine the literature of the last two centuries.
Statement On The Current Crisis volodymyr Dibrova, Writerin-Residence, Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute (USA) Marco levytsky, Editor, Ukrainian News; Vice President Ukrainian http://www.ukrainianstudies.org/petition.htm
Extractions: W e, the undersigned, scholars and professionals working in the field of Ukrainian Studies and related disciplines in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, and Asia, all of us sharing a profound concern for the well-being of Ukraine and its citizens, its institutions, its record on human rights, freedom of the press, and its overall standing in the community of democratic and law-abiding nations, feel it essential to express our views on the present crisis there. We know that this crisis can only be solved by the citizens of Ukraine, but we believe that overarching moral issues, the need for solidarity with our Ukrainian colleagues and friends, and our own involvement in Ukraine oblige us to speak out. We are deeply troubled by the murder of the journalist Heorhii Gongadze and the handling of the investigation into his death. The long delay in determining and admitting the identity of the victim and, with it, the very fact of the crime, has raised serious questions about the independence and the impartiality of the investigation.
Telephone Book Ministry Of Education And Science Of Ukraine Deputy Head of the Direction Head of the Department, SKYBA volodymyr Vladyslavovych Deputy Head of Direction, levytsky Georgiy Yosypovych, 37-26-24 http://education.gov.ua/pls/edu/docs/common/dov12e.html
Ukrainian Soccer News ::: Ukraine Shovkovsky (levytsky 90), Starostiak (Luzhny 46), Parfenov, Holovko, volodymyr Veremeiev, UNT Coach We can only fight for second place. http://www.ukrainiansoccer.net/news/news_article.asp?ID=8058
Petition-them.com NAME SUPPLIED, MARCO levytsky. NATALIE MASNYJ, KATRINA MAKSYMYK. NAME SUPPLIED,NAME SUPPLIED LARISSA HORONOWITSCH, volodymyr DOBROVOLSKYI http://www.petitionthem.com/default.asp?sect=detail&pet=1756&page=3
Krawtchouk Another faculty member at the department was volodymyr Kistiakowsky, levytsky taught mathematics in Lviv after it came under Soviet rule during World http://mason.gmu.edu/~ikatcha1/Krawtchouk.html
Extractions: This true story has connections to the politics and work of leading mathematicians and Noble prize winners from European countries and the United States, the Great Terror in Soviet Ukraine, the history of the relativity theory, nuclear bomb, space exploration and aviation, prisoner's dilemma, Lindbergh, and Arthur Koestler's best-seller. French transliteration of the Ukrainian mathematician's name, education and start of his academic career Invitations to the US and contacts with foreign scholars Job offers, International Congress of Mathematicians in Bologna (Italy) ... Photos of Krawtchouk, Levi-Civita, Grave, and others, and the leadership of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. Crime evidence: Krawtchouk's article content of the journal book recommendation to Levi-Civita's wife, Krawtchouk's refusal to take part in a show trial of Ukrainian intellectuals and his contacts with Ukrainian mathematicians from Poland ... Prisoner's dilemma in theory and reality , a book on Schmidt's expedition Lindbergh's intelligence trip Stalin, scholars and one investigation in Ukraine
Art Gallery / Articles 92, 93), Vladimir (volodymyr) Burliuk, Alexandra Exter (Oleksandra Ekster) (ex.cat. nos. S. Hordynsky, M. levytsky, M. Moroz, Ivanna NyzhnykVynnykiv, http://art.sumix.com/articles/article_19.html
Extractions: While the artists in Western Ukraine remained under the influence of Western European art movements, many of those working in Kiev, Kharkiv, and Odessa retained ties with Moscow and Leningrad. Yurii Narbut, who explored the possibilities of adapting folk ornamentation in his work, and P. Volokydin were influenced by the World of Art Movement while P. Kholodny created symbolist paintings (ex. cat. no. 72). During the period of Ukrainization in the 1920s, however, a variety of styles flourished, as did a number of different artistic groups. Some of the artists that followed modern trends and participated in the avant-garde were concerned with Cubo-Futurism and Con-structivism like V. Ermilov (ex. cat. no. 94) in Kharkiv, and O. Bohomazov (ex. cat. no. 84), V. Palmov (ex. cat. no. 89), and A. Petrytsky (ex. cat. no. 87) in Kiev. Petrytsky, an avant-garde theatrical designer, painted over a hundred portraits of Ukrainian personalities, most of which were destroyed in the 1930s. Others like V. Meller (ex. cat. no. 85) and K. Sikorsky experimented with abstraction, while M. Zhuk, and Yu. Mykhailiv, who was fascinated by mythology, continued the traditions of the Symbolists. In Western Ukraine under the domination of Poland, the most prominent Lviv artist was O. Novakivsky, a graduate of the Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow, who began with Impressionism, but was attracted by French Post-Impressionism and Expressionism. He painted numerous self-portraits (ex. cat. no. 73), portraits of his wife and friends, as well as legendary figures (Dovbush, 1931), landscapes (Mount Hregit, 1931), and still life compositions in vibrant colors and with swirling brushstrokes. Through his art school in Lviv under the patronage of Metropolitan Sheptytsky, from 1923 to 1935, Novakivsky shaped a whole generation of future artists such as R. Chornii, S. Hordynsky, M. Levytsky, M. Moroz, Ivanna Nyzhnyk-Vynnykiv, and others, who went on to explore a variety of modern trends in art.
Extractions: In August 2005, the European Ph.D. College of Polish and Ukrainian Universities and Maria Curie-Sk³odowska University Press published the poem The Town of Lublin by Józef Czechowicz in the translation by Andriy Savenets within the mixed ECPUU and MCSU Press editorial project. The Ukrainian text of the poem is put beside the faximile reprints of the original manuscript. The book also contains the translators foreword and the photos of Lublin taken by Józef Czechowicz between the World Wars. August 24, on the Independence Day of Ukraine, the delegation of the European Ph.D. College of Polish and Ukrainian Universities took part in the wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the soldiers of the Ukrainian Peoples Republic Army at the Orthodox graveyard at Lipova Str. in Lublin. El¿bieta Ziêtek and Andriy Savenets laid a wreath from the ECPUU at the tombstone. July 19, 2005 the Council of Minister of the Republic of Poland made a decision to grant financial support from the state budgets general reserve to the Minister of National Education and Sport for subsidising the functioning and didactic activity of the European Ph.D. College of Polish and Ukrainian Universities in 2005. According to the resolution, the subsidy will amount 2.762 thousand Polish zlotys and cover the education of the College Ph.D. students and their scholarships, as well as the functioning and activities of the College.