Ukraine History Curriculum - 9th Grade
This curriculum outlines the key topics and themes covered in the 9th-grade history course in Ukraine, focusing on the "Long Nineteenth Century." It explores the era of modernization and national revival in Europe, with a specific focus on the Ukrainian experience within the Russian and Austrian (later Austro-Hungarian) Empires.
Introduction:
- The "Long Nineteenth Century": An era of modernization and national revival in Europe.
- Administrative and territorial divisions of Ukrainian territories under Russian and Austrian/Austro-Hungarian rule.
- Periodization of 19th-century Ukrainian history through the lens of the national movement.
- Demographics: Population size, social structure, and ethnic composition of Ukraine.
- Other ethnic groups in Ukraine: Poles, Russians, Crimean Tatars, Jews, Germans, and others.
- The Pale of Settlement for Jews.
Section 1: Ukrainian Lands within the Russian Empire (Late 18th - First Half of 19th Century):
- Russian imperial policies towards Ukrainian territories.
- Cossack society after the destruction of the Zaporozhian Sich.
- Socioeconomic conditions in villages and cities.
- Trade and the Chumak trading tradition.
- The crisis of serfdom.
- Beginnings of the Industrial Revolution.
- New socioeconomic developments in Southern Ukraine (e.g., Porto Franco in Odessa).
- The rise of the Ukrainian National Revival and the formation of modern Ukrainian national identity.
- Key figures and groups in the early Ukrainian national movement: The Novhorod-Siverskyi patriotic group, the Kharkiv branch of the Ukrainian movement, and the Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius.
- Polish and Russian opposition movements in Ukraine.
- The Polish Uprising of 1830-1831 and its impact on Ukraine.
- Social movements.
Section 2: Ukrainian Lands within the Austrian Empire (Late 18th - First Half of 19th Century):
- Austrian imperial policies towards Ukrainian territories.
- Reforms of Joseph II and social protests.
- Beginnings of the Ukrainian National Revival in the Austrian Empire.
- The "Buditeli" movement in Transcarpathia.
- The role of the Greek Catholic parish clergy in Galicia.
- The "Russian Trinity."
- The European Revolutions of 1848-1849 in Ukrainian regions under Austrian rule.
- Social movements and the abolition of serfdom.
- The Supreme Ruthenian Council and its national program.
Zorya Halytska* newspaper.
- Early experiences with parliamentary activity.
Section 3: Everyday Life and Culture (Late 18th - First Half of 19th Century):
- Daily life and the status of women.
- Conditions for cultural development.
- Education: Lviv University and the opening of universities in Kharkiv and Kyiv.
- Scientific advancements and notable scientists.
- Cultural and educational societies.
- Development of Ukrainian literature and the formation of the modern Ukrainian literary language.
Key literary figures and works: Ivan Kotlyarevsky's Aeneid, Taras Shevchenko's Kobzar*, Panteleimon Kulish, and Nikolai Gogol.
- Music, theater, fine arts, and architecture.
Section 4: Ukrainian Lands within the Russian Empire (Second Half of the 19th Century):
- The Ukrainian question in international relations.
- The Crimean War (1853-1856).
- Abolition of serfdom and reforms of the 1860s-1870s.
- Modernization of industry and agriculture.
- Expansion of the domestic market, trade, and urbanization.
- "Building fever" and the development of railways.
- Changes in social structure: The rise of the intelligentsia and the working class (proletariat).
- Ukrainian entrepreneurial families.
- The Hromada movement of the 1860s-1890s (e.g., the Kyiv Hromada).
- "Chlopomania" (peasant-oriented populism).
- The January Uprising (1863-1864) and its consequences for Ukraine.
- The Southwestern Department of the Russian Geographical Society.
- "Young Hromadas."
- The Valuev Circular and the Ems Ukaz.
- Volodymyr Antonovych and Mykhailo Drahomanov.
- The Brotherhood of Tarasovs.
- Crimean Tatar national revival and Ismail Gasprinsky.
- The emergence of labor and social democratic movements.
Section 5: Ukrainian Lands within Austria-Hungary (Second Half of the 19th Century):
- Socioeconomic development in western Ukrainian regions.
- The peasant reform of 1848 in the Austrian Empire.
- The Ukrainian cooperative movement and labor migration.
- Russophiles vs. Ukrainophiles (Populists/Narodovtsi).
- The Prosvita society and the Shevchenko Scientific Society.
- Narodovtsi policies of the "new era."
- Expansion of the Narodovtsi movement in the 1880s-1890s in Galicia, Bukovina, and Transcarpathia.
- The radical movement in Galicia and Ivan Franko.
- Formation of political parties: The Russian-Ukrainian Radical Party and the Ukrainian National Democratic Party.
- Ukrainian representation in the Galician Sejm and the Austrian Parliament in Vienna.
Section 6: Ukraine in the Early 20th Century (Pre-Modernization):
- Socioeconomic development, industrial modernization, and monopolization.
- Regional specialization of industry and agriculture.
- The cooperative movement.
- Politicization and radicalization of the Ukrainian national movement.
- Creation and activities of political parties, cultural and educational organizations, military and sports organizations.
- Challenges in consolidating the Ukrainian nation.
- Independent and autonomist trends within the national movement.
- Growing political tensions.
- The Russian Revolution of 1905-1907 in Ukraine.
- Activities of Ukrainian parliamentary communities in the first and second State Dumas.
- The "Ukrainian issue" in the third and fourth State Dumas.
- The Society of Ukrainian Progressives.
- Ukrainian representation in the Galician Sejm and the Austrian Parliament.
- Pyotr Stolypin's agrarian reforms and their impact on Ukraine.
- The Ukrainian political and national cultural movement (1907-1914).
- Electoral reform in Austria-Hungary.
- Increased pressure on the Ukrainian movement from Russian imperial authorities.
- Xenophobia and chauvinism.
- The Beilis trial.
Section 7: Everyday Life and Culture (Mid-19th - Early 20th Century):
- Impact of modernization on Ukrainian society and changes in worldview.
- Various forms and directions of education.
- The struggle to establish a Ukrainian university in Lviv.
- The Church and women's emancipation.
- Scientific societies and notable scientists.
- Features of cultural development.
- Literature and the professional Ukrainian theater (e.g., the Tobilevych family).
- Music, Ukrainian romantic and realist painting, modern art.
- Stylization and modernism in architecture.
- Everyday life, changes in urban and rural development.
- Healthcare and medical services.
- Leisure, entertainment, and cultural pursuits.
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