Maps: How Ukraine became Ukraine – The Washington Post

Forthe past year, Ukraine has been plunged into chaos. Mass protests against pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych led to his ouster in February 2014. That sparked a spiraling crisis: a fledgling interim government in Kiev looked on as Russia first seized and then annexed the territory of Crimea, a strategic Black Sea peninsula. A pro-Russian separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine, believed to have direct backing from Moscow, has led to the deaths of thousands since.

To some, Ukraine has become the geopolitical faultline between the liberal democraticWest and authoritarian, neo-imperial Russia under President Vladimir Putin. Foreign policy luminaries in Washington openly discuss the current state of affairs as a new Cold War.

Beneath the political divisions of the present lies a country's deep, complex past. The land that's now Ukraine has long been dear toRussian nationalists.But it has also been home to a host of other peoples and empires.Its shifting borders and overlapping histories all have echoes in the current heated moment.

What followsis a sketch of howUkraine became Ukraineover1,300 years of history, mappedby The Washington Post's cartographer Gene Thorp. Ukraine's modern borders are outlined in green throughout.

8th century to 13th century

The "Rus" -- the people whose name got tacked on to Russia-- were originally Scandinavian traders and settlers who made their way from the Baltic Sea through the marshes and forests of Eastern Europe down toward the fertile riverlands of what's now Ukraine. OtherViking adventurers journeyedto Constantinople, the great capital of the Byzantine Empire, to find their fortune -- sometimes as hired muscle.

The first major center of the "Rus" was at Kiev, established in the 9th century. In 988, Vladimir, a prince of the Kievan Rus, was baptized by a Byzantine priest in the old Greek colony ofKhersonesos on the Crimean coast.His conversion marked the advent of Orthodox Christianity among the Rus and remainsa moment of great nationalist symbolism for Russians. Putin invoked this older Vladimir in a speech last December when justifying his annexation of Crimea.

Successive Mongol invasions beginning in the 13th century subdued Kiev's influence, and led eventually to the rise of other Rus settlementsto the north, including Moscow. The Turkic descendants of the Mongol Golden Horde formed their own Khanate along the northern rim of the Black Sea.

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Maps: How Ukraine became Ukraine - The Washington Post

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