Russian and Ukrainian people
The Cossack, Russian Kazak, (from Turkic kazak, “adventurer”
or “free man”), was a member of a people
dwelling in the northern hinterlands of the Black and Caspian seas. They had a
tradition of independence and finally received privileges from the Russian
government in return for military services. Originally (in the 15th century)
the term referred to semi-independent Tatar groups, which formed in the Dnieper
region. The term was also applied (by the end of the 15th century) to peasants
who had fled from serfdom in Poland, Lithuania, and Muscovy to the Dnieper and
Don regions, where they established free self-governing military communities.
In the 16th century there were six major Cossack hosts: the Don, the Greben (in
Caucasia), the Yaik (on the middle Ural River), the Volga, the Dnieper, and the
Zaporozhian (mainly west of the Dnieper).
Polish kings in the early 16th century began to organize the
Zaporozhian Cossacks into military colonies to protect Poland’s borders.
Throughout the 16th century and the first half of the 17th, those Cossacks
retained their political autonomy, briefly forming a semi-independent state
under Bohdan Khmelnytsky (c. 1649). Threatened by Polish domination, the Zaporozhian
Cossacks signed a treaty with Russia in 1654, under which their autonomy was to
be respected. The Russians likewise used the Cossacks first as defenders of the
Russian frontier and later as advance guards for the territorial extension of
the Russian Empire. Internally, the Cossacks regained a greater degree of their
cherished liberties under the Russians than they had known under the Poles. The
Russian throne reserved the right to approve Cossacks’ negotiations with the
Poles and the Turks, the peoples with whom Russian relations were the most
sensitive. Otherwise, the chief ruler, or hetman (ataman), of the Cossack army
had a free hand in foreign policy. Thus, in exchange for some military
obligations, the Cossacks had restored some of their autonomy—in the short
term. Over the years, however, Russia increasingly came to dominate the
Cossacks.
Under the Russian umbrella, the Cossacks expanded eastward
from their home in the Don and were early colonizers of Siberia. Indeed,
Cossack leader Yermak Timofeyevich became a Russian folk hero for his role in
the conquest of that region. By the end of the 19th century, the number of
Cossack groups had expanded to 11, including the Don, Kuban, Terek, Orenburg,
and Ussuri Cossacks.
When their privileges were threatened, the Cossacks
revolted, their most-famous rebel leaders of the 17th and 18th centuries being
Stenka Razin, Kondraty Bulavin, and Yemelyan Pugachov. Hetman Ivan Mazepa
contributed 5,000 Cossacks to the cause of Charles XII of Sweden during the
Second Northern War. As a result, they gradually lost their autonomous status.
By the late 18th century, all Cossack males were required to serve in the
Russian army for 20 years, and, although each Cossack village (stanitsa)
continued to elect its own assembly, the hetman was appointed by the central
government. The Cossacks’ social structure, which had traditionally been based
on equality and communal landholding, deteriorated, particularly after 1869,
when Cossack officers and civil servants were allowed to own land privately and
rent it to outsiders.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, the Russians used Cossacks
extensively in military actions and to suppress revolutionary activities.
During the Russian Civil War (1918–20), the Cossacks were divided. Those in
southern Russia formed the core of the White armies there, and about 30,000
fled Russia with the White armies. Under Soviet rule Cossack communities ceased
to function as administrative units. In the 21st century, under Russian Pres.
Vladimir Putin, Cossacks resumed their historical relationship with Moscow.
Cossack auxiliaries bolstered local police forces within Russia, most notably
at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games, but their use of harsh tactics and
enforcement of a conservative moral code sparked concerns among human rights
organizations, Cossack paramilitary groups fought alongside Russian troops
during the 2008 invasion of Georgia, and they participated in Russia’s armed
annexation of the Ukrainian autonomous republic of Crimea in 2014 as well as
the subsequent Russian-backed insurgency in eastern Ukraine. According to the
2010 Russian census, some 68,000 people identified themselves as ethnic
Cossacks.
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