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469:, where he would live from 1923 to 1945. In 1923, he successfully defended his doctoral dissertation at the Prague Free University, and began teaching at the Mykhailo Drahomanov Ukrainian High Pedagogical Institute from 1925, becoming a department chair and dean of history. Panas established the Service de Presse Ukrainien in 1931. In 1932, he became an
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at the
Ukrainian Gymnasium in Czechoslovakia, presented papers at meetings of the Ukrainian Historical and Philological Society, wrote articles for the Ukrainian General Encyclopaedia published in Lviv (then known as Lwów under Polish rule), and was a member of the Union of Ukrainian Journalists and
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341:. During this time, he established a Ukrainian-language grammar school in Veseli Terny where he taught English, literature, and history, and was later appointed "officer in charge of the political education and organization of the masses" by the
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540:(Our World), a socialist-leaning periodical from 1952 to 1958, and started a publication company of the same name. During this period, he also contributed to the Institute for the Study of the USSR, located in
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in 1914. While in Saint
Petersburg, he joined Ukrainian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1915, at the age of 22. He became the editor of the party's bi-weekly publication,
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In 1948, he represented the Social
Democratic Labour Party at the inaugural session of the Ukrainian National Council (not to be confused with the Nazi-collaborationist
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Members of the
Congress of the Ukrainian Social Democratic Labour Party, held in Poděbrady, Czechoslovakia in 1926. Panas Fedenko standing first from the left.
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With the advance of Soviet forces into Prague in 1945, Panas left German-occupied
Czechoslovakia for Germany proper, re-settling in the city of
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360:(then known as Katerynoslav), where he edited and co-edited a number of Social Democratic Labour Party periodicals, including
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in his native
Verkhnedneprovsk uezd, before being elected as a delegate to the Rada himself, a role he occupied up until the
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Panas was appointed a political commissar of the
Ukrainian Army the same year at the age of 25, participating in the
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Fedenko was born into a peasant family of eight children, near the village of Veseli Terny (then part of
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763:"Fedenko, Panas − Materials from Personal Inheritance | Special Collections of the Slavonic library"
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as a representative of the Social
Democratic Labour Party and began publishing journals such as
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before graduating in 1913 and enrolling in the
Imperial Institute of History and Philology in
461:(The National and Social Struggle of the Ukrainian People), before emigrating once again to
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in-exile (as the
Ukrainian Socialist Party) as its general secretary from 1950 to 1967.
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489:'s executive community as a representative of the Social Democratic Labour Party.
368:(Workers' Gazette). While in Dnipro, he met and befriended fellow revolutionary
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as Bolshevik forces advanced further into Ukraine. Panas participated in the
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Members of the Executive of the Labour and Socialist International
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In 1919, both Panas and Mazepa were elected as delegates to the
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1 December] 1893 – 10 September 1981) was a Ukrainian
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Ukrainian politician, historian, and revolutionary (1893–1981)
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and taught at the Katerynoslav Teacher Training Institute.
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Political work necessitated his relocation to the city of
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Ukrainian Social Democratic Labour Party politicians
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On the advice of a teacher, he was transferred to a
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Marxist and Bolshevist theories on national matters
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Natsionalna i sotsiialna borotba ukrainskoho narodu
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738:"Panas Fedenko: Returning from Historical Limbo"
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839:Ukrainian emigrants to the United Kingdom
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309:(Ukrainian Life), a journal published by
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252:Ukrainian Social Democratic Labour Party
166:Ukrainian Social Democratic Labour Party
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523:Ukrainian Socialist-Revolutionary Party
477:in 1935. Panas also taught history and
824:Ukrainian people in the Russian Empire
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325:Panas returned to Ukraine after the
487:Labour and Socialist International
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558:He died in 1981 and is buried in
335:dissolution of the Russian Empire
390:and the re-establishment of the
305:(Our Life), and contributed to
834:Ukrainian emigrants to Germany
250:from 1917 to 1918 and led the
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698:www.encyclopediaofukraine.com
423:Ukrainian government in-exile
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81:1917 – 29 April 1918
21:Eastern Slavic naming customs
814:People from Khersonsky Uyezd
501:Ukrainian National Committee
457:in 1922, where he published
377:All-Ukrainian Labor Congress
313:, a fellow party member, in
819:Politicians from Kryvyi Rih
392:Ukrainian People's Republic
242:politician, historian, and
181:Ukrainian People's Republic
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664:www.ukrainiansintheuk.info
347:1918 Ukrainian coup d'état
19:In this name that follows
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508:Ukrainian Socialist Party
246:. He was a member of the
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224:Panas Vasyliovych Fedenko
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528:In 1951, Panas moved to
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268:Katerynoslav Governorate
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232:Панас Васильович Феденко
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551:Panas moved to Munich,
546:Socialist International
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519:Ukrainian Radical Party
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248:Ukrainian Central Rada
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433:(Socialist Thought).
431:Sotsialistychna dumka
399:First Winter Campaign
280:Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
264:Verkhnedneprovsk uezd
258:Early life and career
207:First Winter Campaign
187:Years of service
411:Soviet–Ukrainian War
388:Anti-Hetman Uprising
202:Ukrainian–Soviet War
471:associate professor
429:(Free Ukraine) and
327:February Revolution
321:Independent Ukraine
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351:Pavlo Skoropadskyi
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607:Also rendered as
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364:(Our Cause) and
331:Tsar Nicholas II
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276:Kryvyi Rih Raion
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172:Military service
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117:13 December 1893
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56:Панас Феденко
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48:Panas Fedenko
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31: and the
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770:. Retrieved
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745:. Retrieved
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701:. Retrieved
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667:. Retrieved
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570:Bibliography
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553:West Germany
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156:West Germany
143:(1981-09-10)
120:Veseli Terny
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87:Succeeded by
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69:Central Rada
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799:1981 deaths
794:1893 births
772:13 December
747:13 December
703:13 December
669:13 December
538:Nashe Slovo
511: [
380: [
123: [
33:family name
29:Vasyliovych
788:Categories
619:References
177:Allegiance
113:1893-12-13
25:patronymic
403:Bolshevik
240:socialist
228:Ukrainian
190:1919–1920
77:In office
494:Augsburg
401:against
284:Ukraine
152:Bavaria
37:Fedenko
609:Opanas
564:France
542:Munich
530:London
521:, and
475:reader
463:Prague
451:Berlin
419:Poland
358:Dnipro
333:, the
315:Moscow
148:Munich
23:, the
595:Notes
560:Paris
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479:Latin
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127:]
774:2023
749:2023
705:2023
671:2023
415:Lviv
405:and
236:O.S.
138:Died
107:Born
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349:by
293:in
35:is
27:is
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