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ABOUT UKRAINE |
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Ukraine History: Famous figures The 19th-century poet and artist Taras Shevchenko was a modern Ukrainian bard, forming the foundation for the modern literature and language of the nation. Philosopher Grygoriy Skovoroda, poet Lesia Ukrainka and writer Ivan Franko were also pre-eminent in developing modern Ukrainian culture. People of Ukrainian descent have had huge impact on Russian culture, too, including composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky and authors Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Bulgakov. Many major figures in the history of the Soviet Union hailed from Ukraine, including premiers Leonid Brezhnev and Nikita Khrushchev, rocket designer Serhiy Korolyov, heart surgeon and medical inventor Mykola Amosov and composer Sergiy Prokofiev. Many members of the Ukrainian diaspora have also achieved renown, such as Kyiv-born Israeli prime minister Golda Meir and actor Jack Palance.
Ukrainian cuisine has evolved with stodgy comfort in mind. Many national specialities can follow their bloodline to down-at-heel peasant dishes, with salo (salted pork fat), yushka (meat or fish soup), chicken kyiv and the porridge-like kasha – but borsht is king, typically made with beetroot, salo and herbs and served with bread. In recent years finesse has been added, with varenyky (stuffed dumplings) and kruschenyky (beef with prunes, bacon and cabbage) becoming lighter, invariably washed down with horilka (the Ukrainian name for vodka) or uzvar, a dried fruit compote. With such a history of invaders there are massive regional variations too, and food in the south of the country is spiced up by Asiatic Tatar influences. Sport Ukraine has a footballing reputation that goes back to Soviet days but that is not the limit of their sporting prowess. Perhaps the most famous Ukrainian sportsman is Serhiy Bubka, comfortably the greatest pole vaulter of all time. 'Man of Iron' Borys Shakhlin earned seven Olympic golds, an impressive haul though fellow gymnast Larysa Latynina won nine. Other Olympic gold medallists include 1972 100m and 200m champion Valeriy Borzov, and four-times swimming title-winner Yana Klochkova. World heavyweight boxing champions Volodymyr and Vitaliy Klytschko also hail from Ukraine. Football
Ukraine was always a force within
the Soviet Union, and in the 1970s and 1980s Valeriy Lobanovskiy's
FC Dynamo Kyiv formed the backbone of the national side. Their
pinnacle was reaching the 1988 UEFA European Championship final
under Lobanovskiy and his revolutionary coaching methods brought on
talents including Oleh Blokhin, Igor Belanov, Anatoliy Demyanenko,
Volodymyr Bezsonov and Oleh Protasov. Lobanovskiy continued to coach
until his death in 2002 and his statue stands outside the Dynamo
stadium that now bears his name. Three of his pupils –Blokhin,
Belanov and Andriy Shevchenko – were awarded the Ballon d'Or.
Success in Ukrainian education drew
attention of foreign students, since 1940 preparing was underway in
Ukraine. Nowadays, Ukrainian graduates take leading positions in
foreign companies spanning Asia, Africa and Latin America. You can
see them among state officers, doctors, engineers etc. |
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