The end of World War I was a chaotic time in the Ukraine. The country seesawed back and forth between Bolsheviks and Socialists with Soviets, Germans, and even Poles having their say. If only Ukrainians could find a strong legitimate leader to give an independent Ukraine a chance. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.
I mentioned the see-saw Ukraine was on. This is very visible in the stamps. The style of the communist and the monarchist is just diametrically opposed. This is from the definitive issue of the monarchist Hetman government, printed in Vienna. By the time it was ready the government was no longer in Kiev but operated from exile in Warsaw. For this reason the stamp is fake. There was a later overstamp of the issue that celebrated a planned invasion of the Ukraine in 1923 but the invasion was aborted. The Scott catalog admits to a value of the 14 stamp set of $5.
Ukraine had been under Russia since the time of Catherine the Great. Part had been in a confederation with the Poles and Lithuanians. Before all this there was a Cossack ruled area ruled by a Hetman, their term for King/Czar/Head of state. The revolution in Russia in 1917 saw the Ukraine break away under a socialist regime called the Rada that resembled Russia’s Kerensky administration. This did not satisfy Bolsheviks who formed a rival government. Germany defeated Kerensky and when he was overthrown the Soviets quickly signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk which put Ukraine in the German sphere. Germany still had it’s Kaiser so it should be no surprise that the current pretender to the very old Hetman line, Pavlo Skoropadsky was tracked down and the line reinstalled in power.
With German troops and more Cossacks inducted in the Ukrainian army the Bolshevik and Rada forces were pushed out. A deal was struck that Ukrainian grain would now feed the German war effort providing much exchange revenue. They were open to white Russians who wanted to escape the Soviets. However unlike in the Baltics, see https://the-philatelist.com/2019/08/09/latvia-1919-ulmanis-slays-the-russian-dragon-to-take-kurland/ , the end of Imperial Germany saw the German army quickly depart. Quickly the Soviets put aside the treaty they had signed and invaded Ukraine. Poland then invaded from the west and there was a difficult few years of fighting with the Soviets eventually victorious. Additional Polish lands were allocated to the Soviet Republic of Ukraine after the Soviet invasion in 1939 that were never returned to Poland.
Now former Hetman Skoropadsky settled eventually in Berlin. He did not collaborate with the Nazis and was not involved in their administration of Ukraine between 1941-1944. In 1945 he fled west to avoid the Red Army and took refuge in a German monastery. He died there when it was bombed. Skoropadsky had no son but his daughter lived on in Switzerland. She visited the new Ukraine a few times late in her life but there was no one alive to remember the Hetman.
Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the Hetman Royal line. Sure being Cossacks they weren’t exactly Ukrainian but they were strong, a necessity in a neighborhood of powerful lustful neighbors like Russia, Poland, and Germany. It beats putting faith in Biden’s drug addled son. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting