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history of Belarus until 1995 - unifications, divisions and changing loyalties

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Belarus and its 5 neighbouring countries

I knew the history of Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine and Russia very well, from school, university and family. But I knew precious lit­t­le about Belarus (pop 9.5m). So thank you Andrew Wilson.

In 862 the Slavic tribes united with Scandinavian tribes and formed the medieval Kievan Rus state, existing from C9th-C13th. Rus’ was not Russia, nor Ukraine or Belarus, but the 3 East Slavic peop­l­es once shared a common home. The main part that became Belarus was the Prin­cipality of Polotsk on the River Dvina which do­m­inated trade with Baltic Latvia.

The Grand Duchy became a powerful state spanning Belarus; Lithuania; Kiev; Ukrainian Chernigov and Volyn; and Western Russia from the Baltics to the Black Sea. The Grand Duchy began acquiring power in the C13th and only began to lose its authority after C16th wars. In 1569 the Grand Duchy and the Kingdom of Poland signed the Union of Lublin: on equal terms the Duchy and the Crown federated in a state.

In the C15th Litva grew into the largest state in Europe, cov­er­ing Lithuan­ia, Bel­ar­us, Lat­via, Ukraine, Pol­and and Russia, a multi-ethnic state of Poles, Lithuan­ians, Belarus­ians and Jews, collect­ively called Litvins (Lit­­­vaks in Yiddish).

Rzecz Pospolita/Polish Commonwealth (1569-1795) was a stormy time; the state fought wars with Sweden & Russia. The Commonwealth’s long wars weakened the state and it lost independence. In 1772 part of Bel­arus was annexed to The Russian Empire (1772-1917); the Commonwealth was  divided into Russia, Aus­tria and Prussia in 1795.

Nesvizh Castle, residence of the Radziwiłł family. 
183 metres above sea level. Built in C17th

Most Belarusians belonged to the Greek Cath­olic Ch­urch. This Church had a strong Bar­oque cul­t­ure, influenced by the Jesuits and central European not­ions of Mag­deburg Legal Code. Then note the split between Roman Cathol­ics and Orth­odox. Many Catholics supp­orted the Litvin idea and local patriot­ism, while the Orthodox arg­ued for kinship with the  Russians against the Poles.

  
Built in the old Russian Orthodox style
Closed in 1949 and fully functioning again in 1990

main railway station, Minsk
1873

My grandmother knew Odessa was the world’s cultural centre, but my aunts knew Minsk was. Progress there was boos­t­ed by modern trans­p­­ort: a Moscow-Warsaw road was laid via Minsk; as was a Moscow-Warsaw railway link, and a Ukraine-Baltic Sea railway. Thus Minsk became an important rail junction-manufact­ur­ing hub, with trams, tele­phones, generators, fact­or­ies, news­papers, theatres, colleges and religious centres. Literature and drama were important. Magnificant Gorki Park got a beautiful summer theatre before WW1.

In 1906 Russian PM Stolypin’s agrarian reform began. The mass move­ment of peas­ants (1906–16) saw 33,000+ men leave Belarusian terr­it­ory for Sib­­­eria, before their land was the scene of bloody bat­tles between Ger­man and Russian forces in 1915-6.

The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk mark­ed Bel­ar­us’ early exit from WW1 in Mar 1918 when the Belarusian People’s Republic lasted for a few weeks, but ended. After the Polish-Soviet War (1919-21), Belarus lost half of its territory to Poland. In 1921, the Riga Peace Treaty caused Belarus to be divided between the Be­l­­arusian Sov­iet Socialist Rep­ublic and Poland. A national movement grew briefly in the 1920s.

Prior to WW2, Jews remained the third largest ethnic groups in Bel­arus in general and Jews accounted for 50+% in Minsk, Pinsk, Vitebsk and Homiel in particular. But tragedy hit again. The Holocaust murd­ered 800,000+ Bel­ar­us Jews and des­t­royed the multi-ethnic bas­is of Litvinism. Belarusian resist­ance slowed the Ger­man advance in 1941, to protect Moscow, and in mid 1944 the German army was de­c­imated by the Russians in Belarus!

Belar­usians had a very Soviet view of WW2. Unlike Ukraine or Lith­ua­n­ia, there was no nationalist resistance movement i.e partis­ans were pro-Soviet and they dominated the post-war leadership of Bel­ar­us’ Commun­ist Party. Note Minsk's City Gates, two 11-storey towers completed by 1953. The buildings are one of the most remarkable examples of Russian Empire style, appropriate since the heart of Minsk was located near the huge railway station. The lack of the threat of in­v­as­ion from the West meant high levels of Russian in­vest­­ment, well into the 1980s. Thus Belarus became the industrial hub of the western USSR, at least until the Chernobyl disaster in 1986. Chernobyl was in Uk­raine, but very close to the Belarus border.

City Gates, Minsk
Built 1947-53 

Victory Square, Minsk, 1954
in honour of the soldiers of the Soviet Army and partisans of Belarus

Until independence in 1991, Belarus was the smallest of the 3 Slavic republics included in the Soviet Union, after Russia and Uk­raine. While Belarusians shared a distinct ethnic identity and lang­uage, they had almost never enjoyed unity and pol­it­ical sover­eignty. Bel­ar­­us­ history was thus a study of re­gional forces and their inter­pl­ay. The territory underwent part­ition­ and changed hands.. often!!

Since 1994, Belarus was ruled by Alyaksandr Luk­ashenka who promised to preserve the best of the Sov­iet syst­em; its social contract, historical memory and st­ability. He could mar­g­in­alise the nat­ion­alist movement, which had been unable to dis­p­lace the Communists in 1991-4, and re­shaped it under his own auth­or­it­ar­ianism. He consolidated power in the early 2000s and he could en­joy huge Rus­sian sub­sidies of cheap oil and gas in return for political loy­alty. But this union began to coll­ap­se after the Ukrainian War began in 2014. Belarus sought to protect its sov­ereignty; Russia demanded more in terms of friendship and was no longer willing to pay so many of Bel­arus’ bills.

Now read Lukashenkan-history in Origins. Photo credits: Belarus Travel 





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