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If you or your relatives live in Ukraine, go ahead and add your surname to the list. Please list the surnames in alphabetical order, according to Ukrainian Cyrillic. Please add the Ukrainian Cyrillic spellings as well. This list needs to be periodically updated from the Ukrainian Wikipedia.
After the partitions of Poland (1772–1795), Western Ukraine came under the Austrian Empire, where peasants needed surnames for taxation purposes and military service and churches were required to keep records of all births, deaths and marriages. The surnames with the suffix -enko are the most known and
The Mariinskyi Palace, official residence of the president of Ukraine, in July 2018. The president of Ukraine is the head of state of Ukraine, directly elected to a five-year term by voting eligible citizens of Ukraine. The officeholder leads the executive branch of the government and is the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
On 5 July 1991, the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR passed a law establishing the post of the "President of the Ukrainian SSR". The title was changed to "President of Ukraine" upon the proclamation of independence on 24 August 1991, simultaneously making then-Speaker of the parliament Leonid Kravchuk acting president.
Pages in category "Ukrainian-language surnames" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 839 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelenskyy was born to Jewish parents on 25 January 1978 in Kryvyi Rih, then in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. [29] [30] [31] His father, Oleksandr Zelenskyy, is a professor and computer scientist and the head of the Department of Cybernetics and Computing Hardware at the Kryvyi Rih State University of Economics and Technology; his mother, Rymma Zelenska, is a ...
Stepan Vytvytskyi, President of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile (1954–1965) Volodymyr Yaniv, a member of the Ukrainian National Committee in Kraków (1941) Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Minister for Foreign Affairs (2007) Serhiy Yefremov, the deputy head of the Central Council of Ukraine (1917) Viktor Yushchenko, President of Ukraine (2005–2010)
Mykhaylo Hrushevsky, President of the Ukrainian People's Republic; Ivan Hrynokh, Vice President of the Ukrainian Supreme Liberation Council; Stepan Klochurak, Prime Minister of the Hutsul Republic (1919) Yevhen Konovalets, leader of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (1929–1938) Leonid Kravchuk, President of Ukraine (1991–1994)