Podolyans
Ethnic group
Podolians, 1841 | |
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Ukraine | ? |
Religion | |
Christianity |
Podolyans (Ukrainian: Подоляни, Polish: Podolanie) are a Ukrainian ethnographic group who populate the region of Podolia.
In the 19th century, Gustave Le Bon has found them to extend as far West as Tatra Mountains, named "Podolians".[1] (probably Podhalanie).
Gallery
- National costume of Podolia (Medzhybizh)
- Podolyans from the fair, painting by Juliusz Kossak, 1864
- Podolyans, a lunch, painting by Juliusz Kossak, 1862
- A lady from Podolia, painting by Vasily Tropinin
- In tavern (korchma) in Podolia, painting by Jan Maszkowski
- Podolians from Chortkiv county
- Pysanka from Podolia
- Podolians from Skalat, near Ternopil
- Rusyns of Carpathians, Halych, and Podolia
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Podolyans.
- Dnipryans
- Volynians
References
- ^ The Popular Science Monthly, Volume 21, pp. 566, 567
External links
- Old photos of villages. Newspaper "Podolyanyn".
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Slavic ethnic groups
- Alaskan Creoles
- Belarusians
- Boykos
- Cossacks
- Gurans
- Hutsuls
- Karyms
- Lemkos
- Molokans
- Podlashuks
- Poleshuks
- Russians
- Rusyns
- Ukrainians
- Podolyans
- Litvins
- Bosniaks
- Bulgarians
- Croats
- Gorani
- Macedonians
- Montenegrins
- Ethnic Muslims
- Resians
- Serbs
- Shopi
- Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia
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