Mykola Stasyuk

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Mykola Stasyuk (

memoirist, a chairman of the Ukrainian Peasants Union
.

Some sources write his name as Mykola Mykolayovych Stasyuk (Tetyana Ostashko in Handbook on History of Ukraine), others - Mykola Mykhailovych Stasyuk (Mykola Chaban).

Biography

Officially,

Saint Petersburg Mining Institute
, which is very similar with biography of the Ukrainian minister Mykola Stasyuk.

According to Chaban, Stasyukov was born on 16 May 1885 in

Yekaterinoslav. The date of Stasyuk birth noted at the Petersburg archives was confirmed by the state archives documents of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast where survived metric books for the 1885th year. Mother of Stasyuk was one of the first female doctors in the region, his father owned a brick factory, his uncle worked at administration of the Yekaterina Railways with Adrian Kashchenko
.

On 24 August 1894 Stasyuk entered the Katerynoslav realschule from which he graduated on 5 June 1901, finishing a complete course of studies at the school general department. From 18 August 1901 to 5 June 1902 Stasyuk took additional class at the school. Remarkable is that his father also graduated the school 20 years before him. As historical outline of the realschule testifies, Mikhail Stasyukov graduated from the general department in 1882 and in 1883, next year, he finished the additional seventh class of chemistry-technological department.

References

  1. ^ a b Mykola Stasyuk Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine at Handbook on History of Ukraine. 2nd ed. Kiev 2001.
  2. Radio Free Europe
    (28 June 2017)
  3. ^ Kavun, M. Governorate city of Katerynoslav (1776-1880). Part II. Dnipropetrovsk. Milestones in history. "Hrani". Dnipropetrovsk 2001.

Further reading

  • Chaban, M. Wandering of Mykola Stasyuk. "Zoria" newspaper. Dnipropetrovsk 1991.
  • Chaban, M. Eternal cross on chest of the earth. "Artistic and documentary essays". Dnipropetrovsk 1993.
  • Chaban, M. Spring of our hope. "Borysthen". 1997.
  • Verstyuk, V., Ostashko, T. People of the Ukrainian Central Council. "Biographic handbook". Kiev 1998.
  • Mazur, P. Prosvita in the occupied Mariupol. "Vilna dumka". Lidcombe 2001.
  • Student archives of the
    Saint Petersburg Mining Institute (Russia
    ).

External links