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・ Ivan Necevski
・ Ivan Nechepurenko
・ Ivan Nechuy-Levytsky
・ Ivan Nedeljković
・ Ivan Nedelkov
・ Ivan Neill
・ Ivan Neill (priest)
・ Ivan Nelipić
・ Ivan Nemet
・ Ivan Matyazh
・ Ivan Mauger
・ Ivan Mavrodi
・ Ivan Maximov
・ Ivan Mayewski
・ Ivan Mayrina
Ivan Mazepa
・ Ivan Mazepa's Hetman's Banner
・ Ivan Maček
・ Ivan Mažuranić
・ Ivan McAlpine
・ Ivan McFarlin
・ Ivan McIntosh
・ Ivan McKinley
・ Ivan McLelland
・ Ivan Medarić
・ Ivan Medek
・ Ivan Medle
・ Ivan Medvid
・ Ivan Megharoopan
・ Ivan Meheš


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Ivan Mazepa : ウィキペディア英語版
Ivan Mazepa

Ivan Stepanovych Mazepa ((ウクライナ語:Іван Степанович Мазепа), (ロシア語:Ива́н Степа́нович Мазе́па), (ポーランド語:Jan Mazepa Kołodyński); ),〔( Ivan Katchanovski, Zenon E. Kohut, Bohdan Y. Nebesio, Myroslav Yurkevich, Historical Dictionary of Ukraine ). Retrieved 10 July 2015〕 was the Cossack Hetman of the Hetmanate in Left-bank Ukraine, from 1687–1708, and Prince of the Holy Roman Empire ad personam 1707–1709.〔(ПРО МАЗЕПУ У ВІДНІ (About Mazepa in Vienna) ). Nataliya Tsirka, Vienna. 2007〕 He was famous as a patron of the arts, and also played an important role in the Battle of Poltava where after learning of Peter I's intent to relieve him as acting Hetman of Ukraine and replace him with Alexander Menshikov, he deserted his army and sided with Charles of Sweden. The politicization of this desertion has held a lasting legacy in both Russian and Ukrainian national history.
Because of this, the Russian Orthodox Church has laid an anathema on his name since the beginning of the 18th century and refuses to renounce to this day. Everyone who opposed the Russian government in eighteenth-century Ukraine were derogatorily referred to as ''Mazepintsy'' (Mazepists).〔(''Ukraine's Navy, despite difficulties, forges ahead with media center'' by Khristina Lew. The_Ukrainian_Weekly (page 4). January 28, 1996 ) 〕 The alienation of Mazepa from Ukrainian history continued during the Soviet period, but since Ukraine's independence there have been strong moves to rehabilitate Mazepa's image, although he remains a figure of mixed standing.
==Early life==
Mazepa was probably born on March 30, 1639,〔 in Mazepyntsi, near Bila Tserkva, then part of the Kiev Voivodeship in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (today – Drozdy rural council, Bila Tserkva Raion), into a noble Ruthenian-Lithuanian family. His mother was Maryna Mokievska (1624–1707) (known from 1674–75 by her monastic name Maria Magdalena),〔(На Печерську знайдено могилу матері Мазепи (At Pechersk is found a burial of Mazepa's mother) ). Ukrayinska Pravda〕 and his father was Stefan Adam Mazepa (?-1666). Maryna Mokievska came from the family of a Cossack officer who fought alongside Bohdan Khmelnytsky. She gave birth to two children – Ivan and Oleksandra. Stefan Mazepa served as an Otaman of Bila Tserkva (1654), a Cossack representative of the King of the Polish-Lithuanian Rzecz Pospolita, and a Czernihów podczaszy (Cup-bearer of Chernihiv, 1662).
Ivan Mazepa was educated first in the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, then at a Jesuit college in Warsaw. As a page Mazepa was sent to study "gunnery" in Deventer (Dutch Republic) in 1656–1659, during which time he traveled across Western Europe. From 1659 he served at the court of the Polish king, John II Casimir (reigned 1648–1668) on numerous diplomatic missions to Ukraine.〔 His service at the Polish royal court earned him a reputation as an alleged catholicized "Lyakh"〔Hrushevsky, M., page 382.〕 – later the Russian Imperial government would effectively use this slur to discredit Mazepa. During this time there arose the legend of his affair with Madam Falbowska that inspired number of European Romantics, such Franz Liszt, Victor Hugo, and many others.〔
In 1663 Mazepa returned home when his father fell ill. After the death of his father (ca. 1665) he inherited the title of the Czernihów cupbearer.〔 In 1669–1673 Mazepa served under Petro Doroshenko (Hetman of Rightbank Ukraine from 1665 to 1672) as a squadron commander in the Hetman Guard, particularly during Doroshenko's 1672 campaign in Halychyna, and as a chancellor on diplomatic missions to Poland, Crimea, and Ottoman Empire.〔 In 1674–1681 Mazepa served as a "courtier" of Doroshenko's rival Hetman Ivan Samoylovych after was taken hostage on the way to Crimea by the Kosh Otaman Ivan Sirko in 1674.〔 In 1677–1678 Mazepa participated in the Chyhyryn campaigns during which Yuri Khmelnytsky, with the support from the Ottoman Empire, tried to regain power in Ukraine.〔 The young educated Mazepa quickly rose through the Cossack ranks, and in 1682–1686 he served as a General-Yesaul.

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