An academic article about scholarship on Ukrainian folk literature, songs, myths etc., by the Slavic ethnographer and literary scholar, Volodymyr Hnatiuk.
A pamphlet from the Fourth Duma from 1912-1917 on behalf of the urban and rural workers written in Ukrainian, as well as a political platform piece published in the Russian 'Pravda' by the Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party calling against…
Ukrainian translation of a work by Friedrich Hertz, considering the effects of socialism on the economics of agriculture as well as agricultural policy.
Article about the reception of Taras Shevchenko as a 'revolutionary legend' among Polish writers, surrounding the Revolution of 1846 in Galicia, written by Ivan Franko and containing censorship notes at the end of the work.
A pamphlet written in Poland by the Bureau of the Press of the Polish Legions appealing to the Bulgarians for political support of Polish Independence.
An brief article published originally in Kolomyia in 1892 by Mykhailo Drahomanov, appearing here under the editorship of Mykola Zalizniak's of the Ukrainian Party of Socialist Revolutionaries.
A pamphlet containing a letter to the editor of 'Ukrainske Slovo', and a reprint of an article in the 'Vistnyk Soiuza vyzvolennia Ukraïny' about 'Russian Ukrainians' by Volodymyr Doroshenko.
A pamphlet providing a brief historical overview of Ukrainian state organizations from the period of the end of the Cossack Hetmanate until World War I.
A brief pamphlet providing an account of the Ukrainian Independence Movement in Austria, to the Ukrainian Revolution, until the various iterations of Ukrainian governments from 1918-1919.
A brief review of the program of the Ukrainian Socialist Party, stressing the democratic line that underpins the party's objective along with expanding its 'cultural work' through 'activities' by the means of using the Ukrainian language.
A brochure by the Polish socialist propagandist, Szymon Duckstein, writing under the pseudonym, Jan Młot in Geneva, who popularized Marxists theories in the 1880's and 1890's.