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Hustyn Chronicle

The Hustyn Chronicle is a 17th-century chronicle detailing the history of Ukraine until 1598. It was written in Church Slavonic.

Textual witnesses
The original chronicle has not survived, but three copies of it have been preserved: • The Hustyn Copy, copied in 1670 by Hieromonach Mykhailo Losyts'kyi, who called it the "Ruthenian Chronicle". Preserved in the Russian State Library, manuscripts department, f. 205, no. 118. • The Mhar Monastery copy • The Archival copy == Contents ==
Contents
The Hustyn Chronicle begins with a few references to Bible stories, including the Genesis flood narrative and the Tower of Babel; thereafter, the legendary founding of Kyiv by Kyi, Shchek and Khoryv and Lybid' is narrated. This is followed by the history of Kievan Rus' by the reigns of princes, with special attention to Volyn' and Podolia. After that, it becomes a history of the Ukrainian people and their relations with neighbouring peoples, such as the Belarusians within the Lithuanian principality, the Tatars and Turks, until the emergence of the Cossacks. The last date mentioned is 1597. == Composition ==
Composition
The Hustyn Chronicle is largely a copy of the Hypatian Codex, but the last 25 pages are an independent continuation from 1300 to 1597. The other sources of information have been identified as: • Caesar Baronius (1538–1607), Italian church historian and Catholic cardinal; • An Abridged Course of History by Byzantine historian John Zonaras (12th century); • Polish historian Marcin Kromer (1512–1589); • Veronese historian Alexander Guagnini (1538–1614); • a Chronicle of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, probably the Bychowiec Chronicle (16th century); • the Kyiv Caves Patericon of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra (13th century); • the Prologue (12th century); • the Palinodiia of Zacharias Kopystensky (1621/3). • material from an unknown source, hypothesised by some scholars such as M. Vozniak (1924) and E.M. Apanovich (1983) to be a now-lost, anonymous Ukrainian Authentic Chronicle () or Ukrainian Chronicle () covering the years 1512 to 1648. Given the inclusion of material from the Palinodiia, the Hustyn Chronicle could not have been compiled before 1623. Soviet historian Anatoliy Yershov (1930) concluded that Zacharias Kopystensky (died 1627), the author of the Palinodiia, had probably also written the Hustyn Chronicle. But American historian George Perfecky (1991) disagreed, because the Palinodiia and the Hustyn Chronicle present very different accounts of the Christianization of Kievan Rus', and therefore were probably not written by the same author. Instead, Perfecky built upon previous research which suggested that a now-lost, anonymous Ukrainian (Authentic) Chronicle covering the years 1512 to 1648 had existed as one of the unaccounted sources; therefore, the Hustyn Chronicle must have been written after 1648, but before it was copied by Losyts'kyi in 1670. ==See also==
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