Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • Despite a serene sunset on the Dnipro river,

  • the mood is tense for the Zaporozhian Cossacks.

  • The year is 1676, and the Treaty of Żurawno has officially ended hostilities

  • between the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire.

  • But as Stepan and his men ride towards their stronghold,

  • peace is far from their minds.

  • Having made their home in the Wild Fields north of the Black Sea,

  • these cossacksderived from a Turkic word for "free man"—

  • are renowned as one of Europe's most formidable military forces.

  • Composed of hunters, fishermen, nomads and outlaws,

  • the Cossacks found freedom in these fertile unclaimed lands.

  • Yet this freedom has proven increasingly difficult to maintain.

  • Their decades-long strategy of shifting alliances between Poland and Moscow

  • has led to the partitioning of their lands.

  • In a desperate bid to reclaim independence and reunite the fractured Cossack state,

  • their most recent leader, hetman Petro Doroshenko allied with the Ottoman Empire.

  • This alliance successfully freed the Zaporozhian Cossacks

  • in the west from Polish dominion, but their victory was a bitter one.

  • Doroshenko's Ottoman allies ravaged the countryside,

  • carrying off peasants into slavery.

  • And outrage at allying with Muslims against fellow Christians

  • cost him any remaining local support.

  • Now, with Doroshenko deposed and exiled,

  • the Cossacks are at odds, disagreeing on what their next move should be.

  • Until then, Stepan must keep order.

  • With his musket and curved saber, he cuts an imposing figure.

  • He surveys his battalion of 180 men.

  • Most are Orthodox Christians and speak a Slavic language

  • that will become modern Ukrainian.

  • But there are also Greeks, Tatars, and even some Mongolian Kalmyks,

  • many with different opinions on recent events.

  • Officially, all of Stepan's men have sworn to uphold the Cossack code

  • by undergoing seven years of military training and remaining unmarried.

  • In practice, some are part-timers, holding more closely to their own traditions,

  • and maintaining families in nearby villages, outside Cossack lands.

  • Thankfully, the tenuous peace is not broken before they reach the Sich

  • the center of Cossack military life.

  • Currently located at Chortomlyk,

  • the Sich's location shifts with the tide of military action.

  • The settlement is remarkably well- organized, with administrative buildings,

  • officers' quarters, and even schools, as Cossacks prize literacy.

  • Stepan and his men make their way to the barracks where they live and train

  • alongside several other battalions or kurins,

  • all of which make up a several hundred man regiment.

  • Inside, the men dine on dried fish, sheep's cheese, and salted pork fat

  • along with plenty of wine.

  • Stepan instructs his friend Yuri to lighten the mood with his bandura.

  • But before long, an argument has broken out.

  • One of his men has raised a toast to Doroshenko.

  • Stepan cuts him off.

  • The room is silent until he raises his own toast to Ivan Sirko,

  • the new hetman who favors an alliance with Moscow against the Turks.

  • Stepan plans to support him, and he expects his men to do the same.

  • Suddenly, one of Sirko's men rushes in,

  • calling an emergency Rada, or general council meeting.

  • Stepan and the others make their way towards the church square

  • the center of Sich life.

  • Ivan Sirko welcomes the confused crowd with exciting news

  • scouts have located a large Ottoman camp completely vulnerable on one side.

  • Sirko vows that tomorrow, they will ride against their common enemy,

  • defend the Cossacks' autonomy, and bring unity to the Wild Fields.

  • As the men cheer in unison,

  • Stepan is relieved at their renewed sense of brotherhood.

  • Over the next 200 years, these freedom fighters would take on many foes.

  • And tragically,

  • they would eventually become the oppressive hand of the Russian government

  • they once opposed.

  • But today, these 17th century Cossacks

  • are remembered for their spirit of independence and defiance.

  • As the Russian painter Ilya Repin once said:

  • No people in the world held freedom, equality, and fraternity so deeply.”

Despite a serene sunset on the Dnipro river,

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B2 中上級

コサック戦士の一日 - アレックス・ゲンドラー (A day in the life of a Cossack warrior - Alex Gendler)

  • 4 0
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語