Levytsky
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Levytsky
Levytsky or Levytskyi or Levytska is a surname of Ukrainian origin and may refer to * Dmytro Levytsky (1877–1942), a lawyer and major political figure * Halyna Levytska, Halyna (Olena) Levytska (1901–1949), piano performer and a music teacher * Ivan Nechuy-Levytsky, a Ukrainian writer * Kost Levytsky, the head of government of the West Ukrainian People's Republic in 1918-1919 * Maksym Levytskyi (born 1972), a retired Ukrainian footballer * Mykhailo Levytsky, a metropolitan of Lviv * Orest Levytsky (1848–1922), a Ukrainian historian, ethnographer * Tetiana Levytska-Shukvani (born 1990), a Ukrainian-born Georgian judoka * Volodymyr Levytsky (1872–1956), a Ukrainian mathematician See also

* Levitsky, a Russian version * Levitzky, a Jewish version * Lewicki, a Polish version {{Surname Ukrainian-language surnames ...
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Kost Levytsky
Kost Antonovych Levytsky (; 18 November 1859 – 12 November 1941) was a Ukrainians, Ukrainian politician. He was a leader of the Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance in the Second Polish Republic and the head of the Council of Seniors of a self-proclaimed Ukrainian national government (1941), Ukrainian government which was Declaration of Ukrainian Independence, 1941, declared on 30 June 1941 during the Operation Barbarossa, German invasion of the Soviet Union. Biography Levytsky was born on November 18, 1859, in the settlement of Tysmenytsia of today's Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast into the Western Ukrainian Clergy, family of a Greek Catholic priest. He was the oldest child of Rev. Antin Levytsky (b. ab. 1832 - d. 1909), who was in particular the priest in Nyzhniv and Constancia Kozorowska Levytska (b. ab. 1843 - d. 17 Feb. 1900). After finishing the Stanislaviv gymnasium he studied at Law faculties of Lviv University, Lviv and Vienna Universities. In 1884 he was awarded the Doct ...
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Volodymyr Levytsky
Volodymyr Levytsky (31 December 1872 – 13 August 1956) was a Ukrainian mathematician who taught mathematics and studied functions of a complex variable. Biography and education Volodymyr Levytsky finished his doctorate at the University of Lviv The Ivan Franko National University of Lviv (named after Ivan Franko, ) is a state-sponsored university in Lviv, Ukraine. Since 1940 the university is named after Ukrainian poet Ivan Franko. The university is the oldest institution of highe ... in 1901 and went on to teach mathematics and physics at high schools. After the First World War Ukrainian students were not allowed to enrol at the university and in 1920 Ukrainian professors were also banned, leaving only Polish lecturers. As a result, the Ukrainian students set up an underground university at the university in July 1921. From the beginning Levytsky taught mathematics at this new underground university for a few years until it was forced to close in 1925. Levytsky was t ...
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Orest Levytsky
Orest Ivanovych Levytsky (; – 9 May 1922) was a Ukrainian historian, ethnographer, and writer. He was a member of Kiev Hromada (Hromada), an editor of '' Kievan Past'', and a Russian language philologist. Biography Born near Poltava, in Mayachka village, into the family of a priest, Levytsky graduated from the Poltava Divinity School and Seminary in 1869. In 1869-1870 he worked as a private teacher in the village Vepryk (near Hadiach). As the best student, Levytsky was referred to be studied at a theological academy but unexpectedly enrolled into the Law faculty of Kiev University. Later he transferred to the History and Philology faculty, from which he graduated in 1874. Led by Volodymyr Antonovych, in 1874 Levytsky defended his dissertation "Overview of the internal history of Little Russia in the second half of 17th century". In 1874-1921 Levytsky was a secretary of the Provisional Commission in reviewing of old acts while teaching Russian language (1874-1909) in t ...
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Ivan Nechuy-Levytsky
Ivan Semenovych Nechuy-Levytsky (born Levytsky; – 2 April 1918) was a well-known Ukrainian writer. Biography Ivan Nechuy-Levytsky was born on to the family of a peasant priest in Stebliv (Cherkasy Oblast in central Ukraine). In 1847 he entered the Bohuslav religious school. Upon graduation from the Kiev Theological Academy in 1865, he taught Russian language, history, and geography in the Poltava Theological Seminary (1865–1866) and, later, in different gymnasiums in Kalisz, Siedlce (1867–1872), and Chișinău (1873–1874).
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Dmytro Levytsky
Dmytro Levytsky (, ) (1877–1942) was a lawyer and major political figure in western Ukraine between the two world wars. Between 1925 and 1935 he headed the Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance, the largest Ukrainian political party in western Ukraine, and served as the chief of the Ukrainian delegation within the Polish parliament. Biography Dmytro Levytsky was born in the Lviv region, then part of Austria-Hungary, in 1877. He completed law school at the University of Vienna and during World War I served as an officer in the army of Austria-Hungary. Captured by the Russians in 1915, he spent the remainder of the war in Tashkent. Returning to Ukraine as the Russian Empire fell apart, Levytsky helped to organize the unification of the West Ukrainian National Republic with the Ukrainian National Republic. After western Ukraine was conquered by Poland in 1919, Levytsky was involved in organizing Ukrainians in Vienna. In 1923, he became editor of western Ukrainians' largest ne ...
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Maksym Levytskyi
Maksym Anatoliyovych Levytskyi (; ; born 26 November 1972) is a retired Ukrainian footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Club career In January 2001, Levytskyi was involved in a fake passport scandal in which he used a purported Greek passport to play for French Ligue 1 club AS Saint-Étienne as a European Union citizen; Brazilian teammate Alex Dias used a fake Portuguese passport. The pair were given four-month bans with two more months suspended, and Saint-Étienne were deducted seven points, leading to their relegation. International career In 2009, Levytskyi committed to be a part of the 2009 Maccabiah Games football squad representing Russia. When the match dates conflicted with league play, Levytskyi pulled from the squad. Honours * Russian Premier League champion: 2001. * Russian Premier League bronze: 2002. * Russian Cup winner: 2003 (played for FC Spartak Moscow in the early stages of the 2002/03 competition). European club competitions With FC Spartak Moscow ...
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West Ukrainian People's Republic
The West Ukrainian People's Republic (; West Ukrainian People's Republic#Name, see other names) was a short-lived state that controlled most of Eastern Galicia from November 1918 to July 1919. It included major cities of Lviv, Ternopil, Kolomyia, Drohobych, Boryslav, Ivano-Frankivsk, Stanyslaviv and right-bank Przemyśl, Peremyshl. Apart from lands of Eastern Galicia, it also claimed the northern part of Bukovyna and the Carpathian Ruthenia. Politically, the Ukrainian National Democratic Party (the precursor of the interwar Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance) dominated the Ukrainian National Council of West Ukrainian People's Republic, legislative assembly, guided by varying degrees of Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, Greek Catholic, liberal and socialist ideology. Other parties represented included the Ukrainian Radical Party and the Christian Social Movement in Ukraine, Christian Social Party. The ZUNR emerged as a breakaway state amid the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, ...
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Halyna Levytska
Halyna Lvivna Levytska (, 23 January 1901 – 13 July 1949, also known as Halyna Levytska-Krushelnytska and Olena Piatyhorska) was a Ukrainian piano performer and a music teacher. She was a professor of Lviv Conservatory and the first director of the musical school associated with the conservatory. Levytska was born in Pruchnik, Austria-Hungary (currently Poland), in a Ukrainian family. Her father, Lev Levytskyi, was a lawyer. She first learned piano from her mother, an amateur piano player, continued in a girls boarding school in Przemyśl, and in 1920 she graduated from Vienna Academy of Music and Performing Arts. After that, she was giving concerts, mainly in Eastern Europe, in particular, performing pieces of Ukrainian composers. In 1927 she married a poet and artist Ivan Krushelnytskyi. Their daughter, a future historian Larysa Krushelnytska, was born in 1928. Since 1926, Levytska was teaching at Mykola Lysenko Music Institute, and, between 1926 and 1932, in the Stryi bra ...
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Levitzky
Levitzky is a Jewish surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Dmitry Levitzky (1735–1822), painter * Károly Levitzky (1885–1978), rower * Steven Levitsky (1968–present), political scientist See also * Levitsky, a Russian version * Levytsky Levytsky or Levytskyi or Levytska is a surname of Ukrainian origin and may refer to * Dmytro Levytsky (1877–1942), a lawyer and major political figure * Halyna Levytska, Halyna (Olena) Levytska (1901–1949), piano performer and a music teacher * ..., a Ukrainian version * Lewicki, a Polish version {{Surname Levite surnames Slavic-language surnames Surnames of Jewish origin Yiddish-language surnames ...
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Tetiana Levytska-Shukvani
Tetiana Levytska-Shukvani (born 7 April 1990) is a Ukrainian-born Georgian judoka. She is the bronze medallist of the 2014 Judo Grand Prix Tbilisi in the -52 kg category for Ukraine. However, she married a Georgian judoka and switched nationality to Georgia and is scheduled to participate for Georgia at the 2020 Summer Olympics The officially the and officially branded as were an international multi-sport event that was held from 23 July to 8 August 2021 in Tokyo, Japan, with some of the preliminary sporting events beginning on 21 July 2021. Tokyo .... References External links * 1990 births Living people Female judoka from Georgia (country) Ukrainian female judoka Judoka at the 2020 Summer Olympics Olympic judoka for Georgia (country) European Games competitors for Ukraine Judoka at the 2015 European Games Place of birth missing (living people) 21st-century Ukrainian sportswomen {{Georgia-judo-bio-stub ...
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Levitsky
Levitsky is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Fred Momotenko-Levitsky (born 1970), Dutch composer * Grigory Andreevich Levitsky (1878–1942), Russian and Soviet plant cytogeneticist * Maxym Levitsky (born 1972), Ukrainian footballer * Melvyn Levitsky (born 1938), American diplomat * Mykhajlo Levitsky (1774–1858), Ukrainian archbishop * Rafail Levitsky (1847–1940), Russian artist * Sergey Levitsky (1819–1898), Russian photographer * Stepan Levitsky (1876–1924), Russian chess master * Steven Levitsky (born 1968), American political scientist See also * Levitzky Levitzky is a Jewish surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Dmitry Levitzky (1735–1822), painter * Károly Levitzky (1885–1978), rower * Steven Levitsky (1968–present), political scientist See also * Levitsky, a Russian vers ... {{Surname East Slavic-language surnames Slavic-language surnames Levite surnames Surnames of Jewish origin Yiddish-language surnames ...
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