Volodymyr Parkhomenko

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Volodymyr Oleksandrowytsch Parkhomenko ( Ukrainian Володимир Олександрович Пархоменко , Russian Владимир Александрович Пархоменко Vladimir Alexandrovich Parkhomenko ; born September 9 . Jul / 21st September  1880 greg. In Smile , Poltava Governorate , Russian Empire ; † 1942 in Leningrad , Soviet Union ) was a Ukrainian historian . In particular, he was a specialist in the history of the Kiev Rus .

Life

Volodymyr Parchomenko was born into a priestly family in the Poltava Governorate and received his training at the Theological Seminary in Poltava and at the Theological Academy in Saint Petersburg . In 1905 he completed his studies as a candidate in theology, graduated from the archaeological institute and then taught church history at the Theological Seminary in Poltava. In 1912 he became a master of theology.

Between 1913 and 1917 he taught at the teachers' institute in Tbilisi and was director of the Sukhumi seminar. He was then director of the Ukrainian grammar school in Kaniw in 1917/18 and in 1918 he was associate professor in the Department of Russian History. At the end of 1918 he moved with his family to Poltava and from there to the Crimea , where he was elected as a private lecturer at the Tauride University . He also taught at the Kuban Polytechnic Institute and Kuban University. From 1921 on, he was in Kiev a research associate of the All-Ukrainian Academy of Sciences and professor at the Institute of Education (now Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv) and joined the circle of the luminaries of the Ukrainian science to mykhailo hrushevsky , Serhiy Yefremov , ahatanhel krymsky , Nikolai Makarenko ( Макаренко Микола Омелянович ), Fedir Schmit ( Шміт Федір Іванович ) and DM Shcherbakivskym ( Д. М. Щербаківським ).

Because of material difficulties, and his difficult relationship with Hruschewskyj he returned to Poltava and taught there from 1924 at the Pedagogical University W. G. Korolenko . However, the difficult socio-political situation in Ukraine and the city, which is geographically remote from the leading scientific centers, did not contribute to active research. In March 1925 he became a professor at the Institute of Public Education in Dnipropetrovsk . He also became director of the ethnographic department of the Regional Museum of History and Archeology in Dnipropetrovsk and chairman of the local scientific society. On September 30, 1929, he was arrested for allegedly belonging to an underground counter-revolutionary organization and sentenced to 10 years in a camp the following year. On June 6, 1933, at the request of his sister, he was released from the Gulag in Solowki as a disabled person . In the second half of the 1930s he moved to Leningrad, where he worked in the branch of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR . He died in 1942 during the German siege of Leningrad and was rehabilitated on June 17, 1989.

literature

  • Andrij Portnow Володимир Пархоменко: Дослідник ранньої історії Русі. Львів, 2003 (Історики України; 6)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Entry on Volodymyr Parchomenko in the Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia ; accessed on October 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  2. a b c d e f g h i Entry on Volodymyr Parchomenko on the website of the history of Poltava ; accessed on October 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  3. ^ Entry on Volodymyr Parchomenko in the encyclopedia of the National Taras Shevchenko University of Kiev ; accessed on October 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  4. a b c d Entry on Volodymyr Parchomenko in the Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine ; accessed on October 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)