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This is a list of massacres that have occurred in the modern day areas of Ukraine.
Massacres until 1939
[edit]
Name
|
Date
|
Location
|
Perpetrators
|
Deaths
|
Notes
|
Siege of Kyiv[1]
|
November 28–December 6, 1240
|
Kyiv
|
Mongol Empire
|
48,000[2]
|
Of a total population of 50,000, all but 2,000 are massacred.
|
Cossack riots (Tach Vetat)
|
1648–1649
|
Nationwide
|
Cossacks
|
20,000–100,000 Jews
|
See Jewish casualties of Tach Vetat for discussion of various estimates of the number of murdered
|
Batih massacre
|
June 3–4, 1652
|
Batih
|
Cossacks
|
3,500–8,000 Polish POWs
|
Also known as the "Sarmatian Katyń"
|
Sack of Baturyn
|
November 2, 1708
|
Baturyn
|
Russian Empire
|
~7,000 Ukrainians
|
After the capture of the city, its entire civil population was massacred by Russian forces
|
Massacre of Uman
|
June 1768
|
Uman
|
Ukrainian rebels
|
2,000–33,000 Jews and Poles
|
|
Kiev pogrom (1881)
|
May 7, 1881
|
Kyiv
|
|
Unknown
|
|
Odessa pogrom (1905)
|
October 18 and 22, 1905
|
Odesa
|
Ethnic Russian, Ukrainian, and Greek rioters
|
400–1,000 Jews
|
|
Kiev pogrom (1905)
|
October 31–November 2, 1905
|
Kyiv
|
Ethnic Russian, Ukrainian, etc. rioters
|
100 Jews
|
|
Pogroms of the Russian Civil War
|
1918–1923
|
Ukraine and Southern Russia
|
Ukrainian People's Republic[citation needed] White Army Green armies Ukrainian nationalists
|
100,000–150,000 Jews
|
Including Jews who were massacred in Southern Russia
|
Fastiv massacre
|
September 1919
|
Fastiv
|
White Army
|
1,000–1,500 Jews
|
|
Eichenfeld massacre
|
November 1919
|
Eichenfeld, Katerynoslav
|
Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine
|
136 Mennonites
|
|
Berdychiv massacre (1920)
|
7 June 1920
|
Berdychiv
|
1st Cavalry Army
|
Hundreds of wounded Polish and Ukrainian soldiers, Red Cross workers and nuns.
|
Victims were burned alive in a hospital.[3]
|
Vinnytsia massacre
|
1937–1938
|
Vinnytsia
|
Soviet Union
|
9,432 Ukrainians and Poles
|
Part of the Great Purge.
|
Massacres during World War II
[edit]
Name
|
Date
|
Location
|
Perpetrators
|
Deaths
|
Notes
|
Katyn massacre
|
April–May 1940
|
Kharkiv, Kherson, Kyiv
|
Soviet Union
|
7,247 Poles
|
7,247 of the 22,000 victims of the massacre were murdered in the three Ukrainians cities.[4]
|
Lunca massacre
|
February 7, 1941
|
Lunca
|
Soviet Union
|
Over 600
|
Massacre of Romanians
|
Fântâna Albă massacre
|
April 1, 1941
|
Fântâna Albă
|
Soviet Union
|
44 (Soviet & Russian claim) 3,000 (Romanian claim)
|
Massacre of Romanians
|
NKVD prisoner massacres in Ukraine
|
June–November 1941
|
In 78 prisons across Ukraine
|
Soviet Union
|
Almost 9,000
|
By Stalin's orders
|
Lviv pogroms (1941)
|
June 1941 – July 1941
|
Lviv
|
OUN-B, Einsatzgruppen, Ukrainian nationalists, local crowds
|
6,000 Jews
|
|
Kamianets-Podilskyi massacre
|
August 27–28, 1941
|
Kamianets-Podilskyi
|
Nazi Germany Ukrainian Auxiliary Police
|
23,600 Jews
|
|
Pavoloch massacre
|
September 5, 1941
|
Pavoloch
|
Nazi Germany
|
1,500 Jews
|
|
Nikolaev massacre
|
September 16–30, 1941
|
Mykolaiv
|
Nazi Germany
|
35,782 mostly Jews
|
|
Babi Yar massacre
|
September 29–30, 1941
|
Babi Yar
|
Nazi Germany
|
33,771 Jews
|
|
Berdychiv massacre (1941)
|
October 5, 1941
|
Berdychiv
|
Nazi Germany
|
20,000–38,536 Jews
|
|
1941 Odessa massacre
|
October 22–24, 1941
|
Odesa
|
Nazi Germany Kingdom of Romania local crowds
|
25,000–100,000 Jews
|
|
Drobitsky Yar
|
December 15, 1941
|
Kharkiv
|
Nazi Germany
|
15,000 Jews
|
|
Artemivsk massacre
|
January 11, 1942
|
Artemivsk (now Bakhmut)
|
Nazi Germany
|
1,317–3,000 Jews
|
|
Sarny massacre
|
August 27–28, 1942
|
Sarny
|
Nazi Germany
|
14,000–18,000 Jews
|
|
Massacre of Grischino
|
February 1943
|
Pokrovsk
|
Soviet Union
|
596 POWs and prisoners
|
Massacre of Germans, Italians, Romanians, Ukrainians, Hungarians, and Danes.
|
Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia
|
March 1943 – December 1944
|
Volhynia
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
60,000–100,000 Poles
|
|
Koriukivka massacre
|
March 1–2, 1943
|
Koriukivka
|
Nazi Germany
|
6,700
|
|
Janowa Dolina massacre
|
April 23, 1943
|
Janowa Dolina
|
Ukrainian nationalists
|
600+ Poles
|
|
Hurby massacre
|
June 2, 1943
|
Hurby
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
250 Poles
|
|
Dominopol massacre
|
July 11, 1943
|
Dominopol
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
490 Poles
|
|
Gurów massacre
|
July 11, 1943
|
Gurów
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
410 Poles
|
|
Poryck massacre
|
July 11, 1943
|
Poryck
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
300 Poles
|
|
Zagaje massacre
|
July 11–12, 1943
|
Zagaje
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
260–350 Poles
|
|
Budy Ossowskie massacre
|
August 29, 1943
|
Budy Ossowskie
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
290 Poles
|
|
Głęboczyca massacre
|
August 29, 1943
|
Głęboczyca
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
250 Poles
|
|
Wola Ostrowiecka massacre
|
August 30, 1943
|
Wola Ostrowiecka
|
Ukrainian Insurgent Army
|
529 Poles
|
|
Huta Pieniacka massacre
|
February 28, 1944
|
Huta Pieniacka
|
Ukrainian nationalists
|
500–1,200 Poles
|
|
Chodaczków Wielki massacre
|
April 16, 1944
|
Chodaczków Wielki
|
14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Galician)
|
862 Poles
|
|
Massacres in the post-WWII period
[edit]
These events involving multiple deaths in Ukraine are not widely known, or recognised, as 'massacres'.
Other events involving multiple deaths in Ukraine
Name
|
Date
|
Location
|
Perpetrators
|
Deaths
|
Notes
|
Dnepropetrovsk maniacs
|
June 25-July 16, 2007
|
Dnipro
|
Viktor Sayenko, Igor Suprunyuk
|
21
|
Two 19-year old boys killed 21 people.
|
Leskovitsa Killings
|
April 20–21, 2010
|
Chernihiv
|
Oleksandr Sergov
|
3
|
1 Wounded, A Neo-Nazi kills three people with a shovel in Chernihiv's Leskovitsa neighborhood
|
Trofimov Beheadings
|
December 15, 2012
|
Kharkiv
|
Unknown
|
4
|
Murder of judge Vladimir Trofimov and his relatives
|
Revolution of Dignity
|
February 18–21, 2014
|
Kyiv
|
Government of Viktor Yanukovych (Berkut)
|
108
|
Including 2014 Hrushevskoho Street riots
|
2014 Odesa clashes
|
May 2, 2014
|
Odesa
|
Euromaidanites (and Anti-Maidanites)
|
48
|
|
Murder of Pentecostals in Sloviansk
|
June 2014
|
Sloviansk
|
Russian Orthodox Army
|
4
|
|
Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
|
July 17, 2014
|
Hrabove, Donetsk Oblast
|
Donetsk People's Republic
|
298
|
|
Novosvitlivka refugee convoy attack
|
August 18, 2014
|
Novosvitlivka, Luhansk Oblast
|
Luhansk People's Republic
|
17
|
|
Volnovakha bus attack
|
January 13, 2015
|
Volnovakha
|
Donetsk People's Republic
|
12
|
|
Siege of Chernihiv
|
February 24–April 4, 2022
|
Chernihiv
|
Russia
|
700+
|
|
Chernihiv bombing
|
March 3, 2022
|
Chernihiv
|
Russia
|
47
|
Part of Siege of Chernihiv
|
March 2022 Donetsk attack
|
March 14, 2022
|
Donetsk
|
Russia Donetsk People's Republic
|
23
|
|
Chernihiv breadline attack
|
March 16, 2022
|
Chernihiv
|
Russia
|
14
|
Part of Siege of Chernihiv
|
Mariupol theatre airstrike
|
March 16, 2022
|
Mariupol
|
Russia
|
12 (Amnesty International) 600 (AP)
|
Part of Siege of Mariupol
|
Mykolaiv government building airstrike
|
March 29, 2022
|
Mykolaiv
|
Russia
|
37
|
Part of Battle of Mykolaiv
|
Kramatorsk railway station attack
|
April 8, 2022
|
Kramatorsk, Donetsk Oblast
|
Russia
|
59
|
|
Bilohorivka school bombing
|
May 7, 2022
|
Bilohorivka, Luhansk Oblast
|
Russia
|
2 (confirmed) 60 (claim)
|
|
2022 Kremenchuk missile strike
|
June 27, 2022
|
Kremenchuk, Poltava Oblast
|
Russia
|
21
|
Missile airstrike of Amstor mall
|
Izium mass graves
|
Discovered on 15 September 2022
|
Izium, Kharkiv Oblast
|
Russia Russian Ground Forces
|
440+
|
|
|
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|
By past country or territory | |
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By country or territory | |
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By war | |
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By group | |
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See also | |
---|
|
List of massacres in Europe |
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Sovereign states | |
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States with limited recognition | |
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Dependencies and other entities | |
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