The region that is now modern-day
Belarus was first settled by Slavic tribes in the 6th century. They gradually
came into contact with the Varangians, a band of warriors consisting of
Scandinavians and Slavs from the Baltics.[10] Though defeated and briefly
exiled by the local population, the Varangians were later asked to return[10]
and helped to form a polity—commonly referred to as the Kievan Rus'—in exchange
for tribute. The Kievan Rus' state began in about 862 at the present-day city
of Novgorod.[11]
Upon the death of Kievan Rus' ruler,
Prince Yaroslav the Wise, the state split into independent principalities.[12]
These Ruthenian principalities were badly affected by a Mongol invasion in the
13th century, and many were later incorporated into the Grand Duchy of
Lithuania.[13] Of the principalities held by the Duchy, nine were settled by
ancestors of the Belarusian people.[14] During this time, the Duchy was
involved in several military campaigns, including fighting on the side of
Poland against the Teutonic Knights at the Battle of Grunwald in 1410; the
joint victory allowed the Duchy to control the northwestern border lands of
Eastern Europe.[15]
On February 2, 1386, the Grand Duchy
of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland were joined in a personal union through
a marriage of their rulers.[16] This union set in motion the developments that
eventually resulted in the formation of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth,
created in 1569. The Russians, led by Tsar Ivan the III, began military
conquests in 1486 in an attempt to gain the Kievan Rus' lands, specifically
Belarus and Ukraine.[17] The union between Poland and Lithuania ended in 1795,
and the commonwealth was partitioned by Imperial Russia, Prussia, and Austria,
dividing Belarus.[18] Belarusian territories were acquired by the Russian
Empire during the reign of Catherine II[19] and held until their occupation by
Germany during World War I.[20]
During the negotiations of the
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Belarus first declared independence on 25 March 1918,
forming the Belarusian People's Republic. The Germans supported the BPR, which
lasted for about 10 months.[21] Soon after the Germans were defeated, the BPR
fell under the influence of the Bolsheviks and the Red Army and became the
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1919.[21] After Russian occupation of
eastern and northern Lithuania, it was merged into the Lithuanian-Byelorussian
Soviet Socialist Republic. Byelorussian lands were then split between Poland
and the Soviets after the Polish-Soviet War ended in 1921, and the recreated
Byelorussian SSR became a founding member of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics in 1922.[21]
In September 1939, as a result of
the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the Soviet Union invaded Poland and annexed its
eastern lands, including most Polish-held Byelorussian land.[22] Nazi Germany
invaded the Soviet Union in 1941. Byelorussia was the hardest hit Soviet
Republic in the war and remained in Nazi hands until 1944. During that time,
Germany destroyed 209 out of 290 cities in the republic, 85% of the republic's
industry, and more than one million buildings, while causing human losses
estimated between two and three million (about a quarter to one-third of the
total population).[3] The Jewish population of Byelorussia was devastated
during The Holocaust and never recovered.[23] The population of Belarus did not
regain its pre-war level until 1971.[23] After the war ended, Byelorussia was
among the 51 founding countries of the United Nations Charter in 1945 and began
rebuilding the Soviet Republic. During this time, the Byelorussian SSR became a
major center of manufacturing in the western region of the USSR, increasing
jobs and bringing an influx of ethnic Russians into the republic.[24] The
borders of Byelorussian SSR and Poland were redrawn to a point known as the
Curzon Line.[22]
Joseph Stalin implemented a policy
of Sovietization to isolate the Byelorussian SSR from Western influences.[23]
This policy involved sending Russians from various parts of the Soviet Union
and placing them in key positions in the Byelorussian SSR government. The
official use of the Belarusian language and other cultural aspects were limited
by Moscow. After Stalin died in 1953, successor Nikita Khrushchev continued
this program, stating, "The sooner we all start speaking Russian, the
faster we shall build communism".[23] When Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
began pushing through his reform plan, the Belarusian people delivered a
petition to him in December 1986 explaining the loss of their culture. Earlier
that year, Byelorussian SSR was exposed to nuclear fallout from the explosion
at the Chernobyl power plant in neighboring Ukrainian SSR.[25] In June 1988 at
the rural site of Kurapaty near Minsk, archaeologist Zianon Pazniak, the leader
of Christian Conservative Party of the BPF, discovered mass graves which
contained about 250,000 bodies of victims executed in 1937-1941.[25] Some
nationalists contend that this discovery is proof that the Soviet government
was trying to erase the Belarusian people, causing Belarusian nationalists to
seek independence.[26]
Two years later, in March 1990,
elections for seats in the Supreme Soviet of the Byelorussian SSR took place.
Though the pro-independence Belarusian Popular Front took only 10% of the
seats, the populace was content with the selection of the delegates.[27]
Belarus declared itself sovereign on July 27, 1990, by issuing the Declaration
of State Sovereignty of the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic. With the
support of the Communist Party, the country's name was changed to the Republic
of Belarus on August 25, 1991.[27] Stanislav Shushkevich, the Chairman of the
Supreme Soviet of Belarus, met with Boris Yeltsin of Russia and Leonid Kravchuk
of Ukraine on December 8, 1991 in Belavezhskaya Pushcha to formally declare the
dissolution of the Soviet Union and the formation of the Commonwealth of
Independent States.[27] A national constitution was adopted in March 1994, in
which the functions of prime minister were given to the president.
Two-round elections for the
presidency (24 June 1994 and 10 July 1994)[28] resulted in the politically
unknown Alexander Lukashenko winning more than 45 % of the vote in the first
round and 80 %[27] in the second round, beating Vyacheslav Kebich who got 14 %.
Lukashenko was reelected in 2001 and in 2006.
Список литературы
Для
подготовки данной работы были использованы материалы с сайта http://en.wikipedia.org