Buh Cossacks

The Buh Cossack Host (Ukrainian: Бузьке козацьке військо; Russian: Бугское казачье войско) was a Cossack host, which used to be located along the Southern Buh River. It was led by Ataman Pyotr Mikhailovich Skarzhinsky.[1]

Buh Cossacks

The Buh Cossack Host was formed in 1769 out of Ukrainians, Vlachs, and Bulgarians, who had taken the side of Russia during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768-1774. After the war, the regiment was quartered on the Southern Buh River. In 1788, the Buh Cossack Host became a part of the Yekaterinoslav Cossack Host (disbanded in 1796) and protected the border. It was disbanded in 1800, only to be created again in 1803 under the original name. The Buh Cossack Host had to provide three regiments of 500 men each in the times of war. In 1817, it was included into the military settlements and combined with the two Ukrainian regiments into a Buh Uhlan Division.[2]

References

  1. Lozheshnyk A. S. Atamans of the Bug Cossack Army: prosopographic portrait // Scientific works of the Faculty of History of Zaporizhzhya National University. — 2013. — Vol. XXXVI. — P. 55
  2. "How the Cossacks Were Betrayed by Britain in World War II". Warfare History Network. Retrieved 2023-01-16.


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