in a painting by
Ivan Shishkin Historically, for most of the year, the marshes were virtually impassable to major military forces, which influenced strategic planning of all military operations in the region. Like most other wetlands in Europe, the Pripet Marshes were once seen as an unhealthy area and a focus of sickness.
Land reclamation projects of the eastern part of the wetlands were started in
1872 and by the late 19th century drainage of the marshes destroyed 1.5 million hectares of wetlands for use as pasture and farmland.
First and Second World War At the start of
World War I, the marshes separated the
Austro-Hungarian Fourth Army from the XII corps; the few roads that traversed the region were narrow and largely unimproved. That left a wide gap, and the
Third Army Corps of the
Imperial Russian Army poured in before the
Austro-Hungarian Second Army's transfer from
Serbia was complete. The Russians soon captured the valuable railhead at Lemberg (now
Lviv), then in the far east of
Austria-Hungary (now part of the western
Ukraine), as a result. Throughout the rest of the war, the wetlands remained one of the principal geographic obstacles of the
Eastern Front. The marshes divided the central and southern theatres of operation during
World War II, and they served as a hideout for both
Soviet and
Polish partisans. At one stage during the war, the
German administration planned to drain the marshes, '
cleanse' them of their 'degenerate' inhabitants and
repopulate the area with German colonists.
Konrad Meyer was the leader in command of the 'Pripet Plan'.
Hitler scuttled the project late in 1941, as he believed that it might cause
Dust Bowl conditions. In 1942, after an uprising, approximately 1,000 Jews escaped from the
Łachwa Ghetto, of whom about 600 were able to take refuge in the Pripet Marshes. Known as
Pripjet-Sümpfe by the Germans, the wetlands were dreaded by the
Wehrmacht troops. During the
German invasion of the Soviet Union, the
Third Reich armies skirted the wetlands, passing through the north or south of it. However, after the debacle of the
Eastern Front in 1944, many retreating units such as the
7th,
35th,
134th and
292nd Infantry Divisions had to cut across the marshy areas. They often needed to build tracks with logs, over which they could pull light loads in horse-drawn vehicles.
Proposed drainage in the 1950s There was a plan to drain the wetlands during 1952, when the area of the marshes was under
Soviet administration.
Chernobyl nuclear disaster In 1986, the region became world-famous because of the
Chernobyl disaster; however, the Pripet Marshes should not be confused with the
ghost city of
Pripyat; the area within which the
Chernobyl Exclusion Zone is located. It is approximately east-southeast of the geographic centre of the Pripet Marshes area. == See also ==