Maksymovych was born into an old
Zaporozhian Cossack family which owned a small estate on Mykhailova Hora near
Prokhorivka, Zolotonosha county in
Poltava Governorate (now in
Cherkasy Oblast) in
Left-bank Ukraine. After receiving his high school education at
Novhorod-Siverskyi Gymnasium, he studied
natural science and
philology at philosophy faculty of the
Imperial Moscow University and later the medical faculty, graduating with his first degree in 1823, his second in 1827; thereafter, he remained at the university in Moscow for further academic work in botany. In 1833 he received his
doctorate and was appointed as a professor for the chair of botany in the Moscow University. He taught biology and was director of the botanical garden at the university. During this period, he published extensively on botany and also on folklore and literature, and got to know many of the leading lights of Russian intellectual life including the Russian poet,
Alexander Pushkin and Russian writer,
Nikolai Gogol, and shared his growing interest in Cossack history with them. In 1834, he was appointed professor of Russian literature at the newly created
Saint Vladimir University in Kyiv and also became the university's first rector, a post that he held until 1835. (This university had been established by the Russian government to reduce Polish influence in Ukraine and Maksymovych was, in part, an instrument of this policy). Maksymovych elaborated wide-ranging plans for the expansion of the university which eventually included attracting eminent Ukrainians and Russians like,
Mykola Kostomarov, and
Taras Shevchenko to teach there. In 1847, he was deeply affected by the arrest, imprisonment, and exile of the members of the Pan-Slavic
Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius, many of whom, like the poet Taras Shevchenko, were his friends or students. Thereafter, he buried himself in scholarship, publishing extensively. In 1853, he married, and in 1857, in hope of relieving his severe financial situation, went to Moscow to find work. In 1858, Taras Shevchenko returning from exile, visited him in Moscow, and when Maksymovych returned to Mykhailova Hora, visited him there as well. At this time, Shevchenko painted portraits of both Maksymovych and his wife, Maria. During his final years, Maksymovych devoted himself more and more to history and engaged in extensive debates with the Russian historians
Mikhail Pogodin and Mykola Kostomarov. ==The physical sciences and philosophy==