In the Boyko Region (,
Boyko and ), there lived up to 400,000 people of whom most were Boykos. They also lived in
Sanok,
Lesko and
Przemyśl County of the
Podkarpackie Voivodeship in Poland, before the
Population exchange between Poland and Soviet Ukraine and the
forced relocation of Rusyns and Ukrainians in Poland in 1947. In commemoration of Boykos, Ukraine's national parliament, the
Verkhovna Rada, in 2016 renamed
Telmanove Raion into Boykivske Raion where Boykos were deported from
Czarna, Bieszczady County (today in Poland) after the
1951 Polish–Soviet territorial exchange. It is estimated from the evidence available that in 1970 there lived 230,000 people of Boyko origin. The deprecated and archaic term
Ruthenian, while also derived from ''
Rus''', is ambiguous, as it technically may refer to Rusyns and
Ukrainians, as well as
Belarusians and in some cases
Russians, depending on the historical period. According to the 2001 Ukraine census, only 131 people identified themselves as Boykos, separate from Ukrainians. This is also on top of many attempts within the
USSR and modern day Ukraine to assimilate the Rusyn people into the modern Ukraine state. In the Polish census of 2011, 258 people stated Boyko as a national-ethnic identity, with 14 of those people listing it as their only national-ethnic identity. ==Location==