Ethnoconfessional features and national-cultural life of the Ruthenian population of the Habsburg monarchy in the perception of M. M. Levchenko in 1849

Authors

  • Mikhail Yu. Drоnоv Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences , Институт славяноведения РАН

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31168/2073-5731.2020.3-4.1.03

Keywords:

The Hungarian campaign of 1849, Hutsuls, Carpatho-Ruthenians, M. M. Levchenko, Rusyns, Sotaks, Ukrainians

Abstract

The article is devoted to the publication published in 1855 by Mikhail Mikhailovich Levchenko (1830–1891 or 1892) “Memories of the cam- paign in Hungary in 1849. (Notes of an infantryman)”. A member of the Hungarian campaign, infantry officer M. M. Levchenko (a little Russian patriot, later a well-known lexicographer and ethnographer) personally got acquainted with the life of various peoples of the Austrian Empire. The officer paid considerable attention to the East Slavic population of Hungary and Galicia — Ruthenians. Unlike other participants of the Hungarian campaign, whose diaries and memoirs were published, Levchenko was initially keenly interested in Slavs, so he clearly char- acterized the Ruthenians as “tribesmen of our Little Russians”. At the same time, despite certain knowledge in the field of Slavic studies, Levchenko’s text also contains obvious inaccuracies, which are ana- lyzed in this article. Levchenko was greatly impressed by the nascent national and cultural life of Ruthenians, especially Galicians, and the development of literature and education. Apparently, Levchenko’s stay in 1849 in the lands of the Habsburg monarchy with an East Slavic popu- lation had a noticeable impact on all his further activities. Thus, it is noteworthy that Levchenko popularized in Russia the ethnonym Rusyn as a national name for all Little Russians and Ruthenians.

For citation
Dronov M.Yu. Ethnoconfessional features and national-cultural life of the Ruthenian population of the Habsburg monarchy in the perception of M. M. Levchenko in 1849 // Slavic Almanac. 2020. Issues 3–4. P. 38–59. DOI: 10.31168/2073-5731.2020.3-4.1.03

Author Biography

  • Mikhail Yu. Drоnоv, Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Институт славяноведения РАН

    Candidate of History, research fellow, Department of Eastern Slavic Studies, Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences.

    E-mail: mikhaildronov@rambler.ru

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Published

2020-12-01

Issue

Section

History