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secretary of its senate. From 1934 to 1939, he taught at the Greek
Catholic Theological Academy. All of his major works during this period appeared in Ukrainian and not Polish. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, he remained active in various educational and public projects such as preserving the gravesites of fallen Ukrainian soldiers and promoting tourist literature about Ukrainian Galicia. From 1934, he was head of the Historical Section of the Shevchenko Scientific Society.
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302:, his major works from pre-Soviet times were reprinted and uncensored editions of certain of his Soviet-era works like "Bohdan Khmelnytsky" were published. Today, he is widely revered as one of Hrushevsky's foremost students, a continuator of his tradition, and one of the most important historians of western Ukraine. The Institute of Ukrainian Studies of the National Academy of Sciences in Lviv is named in his honour.
226:). For several years, he experienced political persecution, but in 1948, he was able to return to Lviv, and, with the help of the Soviet Ukrainian historian, Fedir Shevchenko, learned to adapt his historical writing to Soviet conditions and to the Soviet censors. From 1951, he headed the Institute of Social Sciences at the Lviv branch of the Academy of Sciences of the
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During the period of Polish ascendency, Krypiakevych co-authored and published many popularizations, the most important of which were his "Great
History of Ukraine" (1935), his "History of the Ukrainian Army" (1936), and his "History of Ukrainian Culture" (1937). His textbooks of Ukrainian history
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During the interwar period, Krypiakevych, being excluded from a university position by the Polish regime, continued to teach at various gymnasia and to actively support the
Shevchenko Scientific Society. From 1921 to 1924, he was a professor of the Secret Ukrainian University in Lviv and was
106:. He wrote his 1911 doctorate on "The Cossacks and Bathory's Privileges," a study of the origins of the Ukrainian Cossacks legally registered with the Polish government. From 1908 to 1914, he published extensively in Galician Ukrainian journals and magazines and took part in the
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his "Bohdan
Khmelnytsky" appeared in a very luxurious edition (1954). During the 1960s, he was very active at editing historical journals and mentoring younger Ukrainian historians, but a few years after his death in 1967, the
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were widely used both in
Galicia and also among Ukrainians in North America. At this time, he also prepared a new scholarly "History of Ukraine" which was only published in 1949 in the west under the pseudonym 'Ivan Kholmsky'.
116:, which under the leadership of Hrushevsky became a kind of unofficial Ukrainian Academy of Sciences serving the Ukrainian people on both sides of the Austrian-Russian border. In 1907 Krypiakevych on the notice of
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but
Krypiakevych found work at the Ukrainian Publishing House in Lviv. Unlike many of his Galician Ukrainian colleagues, mostly for family reasons, he decided to remain in Lviv after the German retreat westwards.
230:. In 1958, he was elected an "Academic" of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR. He died in 1967 in Lviv, a respected member of the Soviet Ukrainian historical profession. Ivan Krypiakevych was buried at
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282:, and had made possible so many of the cultural and academic achievements of the 1960s, came to an end (1972), and Krypiakevych's scholarly legacy was partly repressed. His monograph on the medieval
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171:. Although he did turn away from Hrushevsky's populism to a pro-state interpretation of Ukrainian history, he revered his mentor's memory and in 1935 published a short biography of him.
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of
Galicia brought far-reaching changes to academic as well as social and political life and Krypiakevych was appointed professor of history at the reorganized and partially
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112:, or "Enlightenment" movement geared to raise the educational level of the Galician Ukrainian peasantry. From 1905, he began publishing in the scholarly journal of the
345:(Lviv, 1990). Reprint of the work which originally appeared under the pseudonym "Ivan Kholmsky." Contains a biographical introduction by Yaroslav Dashkevych.
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During the Soviet period, Krypiakevych was known as an expert on the era of
Khmelnytsky and on the occasion of the Three Hundredth Anniversary of the
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Unlike many other students of
Hrushevsky, Krypiakevych never politically or intellectually rebelled against the authority of his mentor,
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reforms; he then undertook further studies of the
Cossacks in international politics, and then the Cossack "state" created by
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of the Soviets brought renewed repressions to the west Ukrainian intelligentsia and in 1946 Krypiakevych was deported east to
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Krypiakevych's early works dealt with the early modern history of the City of Lviv and the social history of
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355:(Lviv, 1990). Uncensored edition of the 1954 work. Contains some introductory remarks by Yaroslav Isaievych.
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Renaissance, which had briefly occurred under the protection of Ukrainian Communist Party leader,
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in Lviv. From 1918 to 1919, he taught at the newly established Ukrainian University at
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Scholarly study of the life and work of Ivan Krypiakevych is only beginning, but see:
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54:; 25 June 1886 – 21 April 1967) was a Ukrainian historian, academician, professor of
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In 1993 the Institute of Social Studies of Academy of Sciences of the UkrSSR in
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Ivan Krypiakevych had two sons who later became Ukrainian scientists.
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From 1911 to 1939, he taught at the Polish gymnasia (High Schools) at
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in 1648. Most of these works were published in the "Memoirs of the
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was renamed into the Krypiakevych Institute of Ukrainian Studies (
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in a family of the Greek Catholic priest and emigrant from the
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with many of his colleagues being accused in the Ukrainian
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2nd ed. (Kiev, 2002), p. 374. Also available on-line.
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Members of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
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and director of the Institute of Social Sciences of
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358:Article on "Krypiakevych, Ivan," in the
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311:National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
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325:Petro-Bohdan (1923-1980)
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92:Chełm Land
403:. Chtyvo.
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