Cossacks: Their History and Country

Cossacks: Their History and Country

by William Penn Cresson

13 chapters6h 33mEnglish1919

About this book

One of the earliest histories of the Cossacks to appear in English, with an emphasis on the exploits of famous Cossack leaders and Cossack struggles for political autonomy. Originally published in 1919. From the Foreword: "It is the proudest boast of the Cossacks of today -- as of their forbears of the Ukraine -- that they have never been classed as serfs nor for a moment lost their freeman's instinct for the principles of liberty. While the peasants of North Russia were bowed in shameful submission to the Great Princes of Moscow and later to the 'dark forces' of the Tsar's court and the Baltic-German officialdom of the capital on the Neva, the history of the Cossack inhabitants of the southern steppes was (as we shall later see) a long epic of heroic resistance to the encroachments of autocracy." - Summary by Kazbek

Chapters (12)

1Chapter I. The Origin of the "Free People"
1799
2Chapter II. The Zaporogian Cossacks
2434
3Chapter III. Yermak and the Cossack Conquest of Siberia
2226
4Chapter IV. Bogdan Hmelnicky: A Cossack National Hero
2579
5Chapter V. The Struggle for the Ukraine
892
6Chapter VI. Mazeppa
2190
7Chapter VII. The End of the Free Ukraine: Little Russia
1436
8Chapter VIII. Pougatchev
2269
9Chapter IX. The Hetman Platov
2584
10Chapter X. The Cossacks of To-day: Organization and Government
1319
11Chapter XI. The Cossacks of To-day: The Don
1317
12Chapter XII. The Frontiers of Europe
1908

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