
Mazepa, Ivan, b 20 March 1639 in Mazepyntsi, near
Bila Tserkva, d 2 October 1709
in Bendery, Bessarabia. (Portrait: Ivan Mazepa.) Hetman
of Ukraine in 1687–1709; son of Stepan-Adam Mazepa
and Maryna Mazepa. He studied at the Kyivan Mohyla
College and at the Jesuit college in Warsaw. While a page at the court of Jan
II Casimir Vasa in Warsaw, he was sent by the king to study in Holland. In
1656–9 he learned gunnery in Deventer and visited Germany, Italy, France,
and the Low Countries. After his return to Warsaw Mazepa continued his service
as a royal courtier, and in 1659–63 he was sent on various diplomatic
missions to Ukraine. The legend of his affair with Madame Falbowska and his
subsequent punishment by being tied to the back of a wild horse was first
popularized by the Polish memorialist J. C. Pasek. Although it has no basis in
fact, it has inspired a number of European Romantics, including Franz
Liszt, Peter Tchaikovsky, G. Byron, Victor Hugo, and Aleksandr
Pushkin and led to a rather fanciful image of the Ukrainian hetman as a youth. In 1663 Mazepa returned to Ukraine to help his ailing
father. After his father's death in 1665 he succeeded him as hereditary
cupbearer of Chernihiv. In 1669 Mazepa entered the service of Hetman Petro
Doroshenko as a squadron commander in the Hetman's Guard, and later he served
as Doroshenko's chancellor. He took part in Doroshenko's 1672 campaign against
Poland in Galicia and served on diplomatic missions, including ones to the
Crimea and Turkey (1673–4). During a mission in 1674 he was captured by
the Zaporozhian otaman Ivan Sirko, who was forced to hand him over to
Doroshenko's rival in Left-Bank Ukraine, Ivan Samoilovych. Mazepa quickly
gained the confidence of Samoilovych and Tsar Peter I, was made a
‘courtier of the hetman,’ and was sent on numerous missions to
Moscow. Mazepa participated in the Chyhyryn campaigns, 1677–8. In 1682 he
was appointed Samoilovych's general osaul. He was elected the new hetman on 25
July 1687 by the Cossack council that deposed Samoilovych and concluded the
disadvantageous Kolomak Articles with the tsar. Mazepa's political program had become evident during his
service to Petro Doroshenko and Ivan Samoilovych. He was a firm supporter of a
pan-Ukrainian Hetman state, and his main goal as hetman was to unite all
Ukrainian territories in a unitary state that would be modeled on existing
European states but would retain the features of the traditional Cossack order.
Initially Mazepa believed that Ukraine could coexist with Russia on the basis
of the Pereiaslav Treaty of 1654. Mazepa actively supported Russia's wars with
Turkey and the Crimean Khanate and sent his forces to help those of Peter I
(see Russo-Turkish wars). Although the Treaty of Constantinople of 3 July 1700
did not extend Ukrainian dominion to the Black Sea, it temporarily secured
Ukrainian lands from Turkish encroachment and Crimean Tatar incursions. Until
1708 Mazepa also supported Peter I in the first phase of his Northern War with
Sweden, by providing the Russians with troops, munitions, money, and supplies
in their effort to capture the Baltic lands. Mazepa's participation in the war
made it possible for him to take control of Right-Bank Ukraine in 1704, after
Semen Palii's Cossack revolt effectively weakened Polish authority there.
Mazepa's relations with Palii were not entirely positive, however. Mazepa did
not share the Khvastiv colonel's radical social policies, and that difference
gave rise to conflicts between them. Mazepa contributed to the development of Ukraine's economy, particularly
its industry. He also supported Ukrainian scholarship (history in particular)
and education (the transformation of the Kyivan Mohyla College into the Kyivan
Mohyla Academy, the establishment of Chernihiv College). Under his hetmancy
literature flourished (see Dymytrii Tuptalo, Stefan Yavorsky, Ioan Maksymovych,
Teofan Prokopovych, and Yoasaf Krokovsky). Mazepa himself wrote some verse. He
was a generous patron of painting and architecture, who funded many churches
built in the Cossack baroque style in Kyiv, Chernihiv, Pereiaslav, Baturyn,
Pryluky, and other towns. Mazepa was also a patron of the Orthodox church
outside Ukraine. He funded the publication of the New Testament in Arabic in
Aleppo in 1708, and he donated an Easter shroud and a pure gold chalice for the
Tomb of the Lord in Jerusalem. Although Mazepa
was able to establish a new and loyal senior Cossack starshyna, he also
faced considerable opposition from many members of the Cossack elite, and even
open rebellion (see Petro Petryk, Vasyl Kochubei, and Ivan Iskra). Mazepa's
many attempts to secure the rights of the Cossacks as an estate (the universal
of 1691), the burghers (a series of universals protecting their rights), and
the peasantry (the universal of 28 November 1701 limiting corvée to two
days a week) could not stem the growth of social discontent caused by endless
wars, abuse of the population by Russian troops stationed in Ukraine,
destruction, and increasing exploitation by the landowning starshyna.
Mazepa's alliance with Peter I also caused onerous responsibilities and losses
to be inflicted on the population, in particular as a result of the Great
Northern War and Russian exploitation in Ukraine.
Consequently Mazepa was deprived of the popular support he needed at a critical
juncture in Ukrainian history. Peter I not only interfered in the Hetmanate's internal affairs and
mercilessly exploited the population in his belligerent pursuits, but embarked
on a policy of annihilating Ukrainian autonomy and abolishing the Cossack order
and privileges. When Peter's intentions became clear, Mazepa, supported by most
of his senior officers, began secret negotiations in 1706 with King Stanislaus
I Leszczyński of Poland and then with Charles
XII of Sweden, and forged with them an anti-Russian coalition in 1708. The
actual terms of the alliance are unknown, but according to official Russian
sources its chief goal was ‘that the Little Russian Cossack people be a
separate principality and not subjects of a Russian state.’ Later the
Zaporozhian Host joined the coalition, and on 28 March 1709 Mazepa, Otaman Kost
Hordiienko, and Charles XII signed a treaty in which Charles agreed not to sign
any peace with Moscow until Ukraine and the Zaporozhian lands were freed of
Russian rule. But the Russo-Swedish
War of 1708–9, which was waged on Ukrainian territory, ended in defeat
for the allies. Peter I's forces captured Mazepa's capital, Baturyn, together
with its large armaments depot and artillery, massacred its 6,000 inhabitants,
and succeeded in splitting Mazepa's followers by engineering the election of
Ivan Skoropadsky as a new hetman in Hlukhiv in November 1708. Russian military
terror descended on those who remained loyal to Mazepa. Captured Zaporozhian
Cossacks were brutally executed, the Zaporozhian Sich was destroyed, and many
of Mazepa's followers (eg, Dmytro Maksymovych, Archimandrite
Hedeon Odorsky) were executed or exiled to northern
Russia. Mazepa's efforts at organizing a broad anti-Russian front in Eastern
Europe proved unsuccessful, and his and Charles XII's defeat at the Battle of
Poltava on 8 July 1709 sealed Ukraine's fate. Mazepa, Charles, and Kost
Hordiienko, together with 3,000 followers, fled to Turkish-held territory.
Broken by his defeat, old and ill, Mazepa died in Bendery, Moldavia. He was
buried at Saint George's Monastery in Galaţi, where his tomb was subsequently
desecrated. Peter I initially sought
Mazepa's extradition from Turkey. Having condemned Mazepa as a traitor he
ordered the Russian and Ukrainian churches to anathematize him. Thereafter,
imperial, both Russian and Soviet, propagandists and historians did their
utmost to vilify the Ukrainian patriot and statesman. Although there have been
controversial assessments of Mazepa, he has remained a symbol of Ukrainian
independence. The period of his hetmancy has justifiably been known as the
Mazepa renaissance. Apart from the works by Western European and Russian authors mentioned
above, the hetman's life and legacy also inspired works by Ukrainian writers
and artists, such as Bohdan Lepky who dedicated a
series of novels to Mazepa, and Yurii Illienko who
directed the film Molytva za het’mana Mazepu (Prayer for Hetman
Mazepa) in 2002.
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Oleksander Ohloblyn