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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cossackslaughing_600.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''Reply of the Zaporozhian Cossacks to Sultan Mehmed IV of the Ottoman Empire'', also known as ''Cossacks of Zaporog Are Drafting a Manifesto'', painted by Ilya Repin between 1880 and 1891.]]
3
4[=Cossacks=] were groups of professional Slavic warriors first recorded as a separate group of society in Eastern UsefulNotes/{{Europe}} around late 15th century. [[UsefulNotes/{{Russia}} Russian]] Cossacks are typically seen as agile cavalry armed with lances and sabres, while [[UsefulNotes/{{Ukraine}} Ukrainian]] Cossacks mostly fought on their feet and were notorious for their mastery of musketeer tactics.
5
6There were two main groups of cossacks:
7* Zaporozhian Cossacks, named so because their stronghold (Zaporozhian Sich) was located on an island beyond ("Za") the rapids ("porogi") of the river Dnieper. For a while the Zaporozhians helped (for Sich Cossacks) or served (for Registered Cossacks) the UsefulNotes/PolishLithuanianCommonwealth fighting off Crimean Tatars -- not that the Polish had much control over them. They played a big role in the history of Ukraine, at one point liberating it from Poland and creating the Cossack Hetmanate -- a Ukrainian state in 1648-1764, a vassal of Muscovy and later of the Russian Empire during most of its history. The Russian government, while seeing the value of mighty Zaporozhian Cossack troops, barely tolerated the Sich's and Hetmanate's existence, as their regions were free of serfdom and too autonomous for TheEmpire. Considering it to be a separatist element, the Russian Empire under UsefulNotes/CatherineTheGreat annexed the Cossack Hetmanate in 1764, then ordered the destruction of the Sich in 1775. After the fall of Sich, many Zaporozhian cossacks migrated to the Kuban river valley, and these ones became the Black Sea Cossack Host, later known as Kuban Cossacks. Other Cossacks either intermingled with other parts of Ukrainian society, or escaped to the Ottoman Empire where they were organised into the Danube Cossack Host (Zadunays'ka Sich), which later returned to Russian-ruled Ukraine and became the Azov Cossack Host, that existed until 1866.
8* Don Cossacks, named because of the river Don. Gradually formed after Brodnici ("ford men", a large multi-ethnic group in southern Ruthenia) intermingled with Mongols and Cumans (traditional seminomad rivals and allies of Ruthenian princes) in the Steppe and thus adopted independent steppe-wandering style of life, as well as their name (the word "Cossack" has Turkic origins, usually reffering to "free men", who could not find their place in society and went into the steppes, where they acknowledged no authority -- some other Turkic names have the same etymology -- the UsefulNotes/{{Kazakh|stan}} people for example) from these nomads. Joined by adventurous Russian nobles and runaway peasants, the Don Host became an important part of [[UsefulNotes/TsaristRussia Muscovite Tsardom]]'s politics, while staying independent from the UsefulNotes/{{Tsar|Tsar Autocrats}} until the beginning of 18th century. After the suppression of Bulavin's revolt by the Russians, the Don Host was completely incorporated into Russia as an irregular military organization with some privileges, but less autonomy.
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10Other groups included the Terek Cossacks, Ussuri Cossacks, Ural Cossacks, etc. Cossacks were exempt from tax and were granted some land in exchange for military service, and as such considered minor nobility (that was especially the case with Registered Cossacks in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth). Cossack settlements were called "stanitsa" in Russia and "sloboda" or "zymivnik" in Ukraine. These settlements enjoyed higher liberties than common villages, e.g. a serf who managed to join the Cossacks was free from his former owner's pursuit.
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12Zaporozhian Cossacks lived between the core Ukrainian lands and the peninsula of Crimea, with the Registered or Town Cossacks moving into core Ukraine after the creation of Hetmanate. Kuban Cossacks settled between the Russian European core lands and Northern [[UsefulNotes/TheCaucasus Caucasus]]. Those Cossacks were away from Russian bureaucrats, but in return took the first hit from any southern attackers.
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14In the 16th century, a group of Don Cossacks led by the famous ataman Yermak embarked on a campaign to conquer Siberia. Yermak perished during this campaign, but it started the Cossack colonization of the Siberian frontier, and Siberian cossacks became a new large Cossack group.
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16Some 17th century Cossacks were also pirates who sailed the Black and Caspian seas. The most famous Cossack pirate was Stepan Razin, later well-known as an anti-Tsarist rebel.
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18In 19th century, the cossacks became a military force trusted by the Empire. Many new cossack hosts were recognized in south-eastern border regions of Russia, such as the Zabaikalski and Amurski cossack hosts in Siberia, and the cossacks became some kind of Russian equivalent to the Texas Rangers.
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20Unlike the regular [[UsefulNotes/RussiansWithRifles Imperial Russian Army]] units which had to submit to slavelike discipline (the Imperial Russian Navy was even worse in this regard), Cossacks enjoyed a much higher level of personal initiative and autonomy, due to their traditions of quasi-independence summarized in the proverb ''bow down to no one save the God and Emperor himself''. This strengthened their [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Proud Warrior Race]] spirit and during the early stages of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI they enjoyed a well-deserved reputation for courage and ruthlessness.
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22During the 1917-1922 Russian Civil War that followed UsefulNotes/RedOctober, the Cossacks divided; the poorer ones fought for the UsefulNotes/{{Reds|With Rockets}}, the richer ones for the Whites, though there were also the idea of independent Don and Kuban Republics. In the [[UsefulNotes/SovietRussiaUkraineAndSoOn Soviet Union]], the Cossack hosts were eliminated in 1920. During UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, some old Cossack commanders from the Civil War supported the UsefulNotes/{{Nazi|Germany}}s (and were recognised as "Ostrogoths" by Hitler's regime to mask the idea of working together with the Slavs), while UsefulNotes/JosefStalin also "restored" old Russian Cossack Hosts among many pro-Russian patriotic moves to counter the German invasion, even though these hosts were mostly formed from new guys, with many Cossacks eliminated under UsefulNotes/VladimirLenin's purge of counter-revolutionaries or fled outside, as much more Cossacks joined the White Army (as most of them were complacent to the Imperial policy to respect the Cossack's free and autonomous lifestyle, in contrast to ill-treated sailors in which lots of them joined the Reds) and Ukrainian anarchists led by Nestor Makhno.
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24After World War II ended and horse cavalry were rendered largely obsolete, the Cossack units who fought in the Red Army were dismissed once again and lived as farmers, entertainers and craftsmen, although their martial traditions makes them a preferred stock for military service and they [[UsefulNotes/SovietInvasionOfAfghanistan fought in Afghanistan]] in contemporary military units. The fate of those who fought alongside the [[UsefulNotes/NazisWithGnarlyWeapons German forces]] were far worse, as after they surrendered to the West they were simply handed back to Soviet forces, facing treason charges, albeit a number of them were White emigrants (anti-Bolshevik Russians who moved abroad after the Reds won the Civil War) which were never citizens of the Soviet Union to begin with. Their main German handler, Helmuth von Pannwitz, chose to [[InItsHourOfNeed share the fate of his men]] rather than running away from it.
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26After the fall of Soviet Union many organisations yearned for the restoration of Cossack culture. Today, the "Cossack organizations" exist, but up until recently have had little military or law-enforcement powers, other than the right to bear sabers in Russia, or acting as some honorary mounted policemen functions in Ukraine. In some cities and towns they patrol the streets as voluntary police assistance corps, still relying on cadre policemen for paperwork and with tacit or explicit consent from the official police force. Unsympathetic outside observers have warned that the Russian Cossack ethos, of conservative obedience to authority, [[UsefulNotes/OrthodoxChristianity Church]] and hierarchy, together with violence against demonstrators and those protesting against UsefulNotes/VladimirPutin's administration, places them in RightWingMilitiaFanatic territory. During the [[UsefulNotes/OlympicGames Winter Olympic Games]] of Sochi, the public whipping of Pussy Riot female dissenters by uniformed Cossacks, whilst the regular police stood by and did not intervene, was recorded on camera and seen around the world.
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28Still, the Cossack Hosts, while being mostly a relic and subect of reenactment nowadays, greatly influenced the history and culture of Eastern Europe. Zaporozhian Cossacks came to form a basis for the creation of the modern Ukrainian nation and culture, while Russian Cossacks created separate ethnographic groups in South-Western Russia, with culture and traditions that persist to this day. A lot of Cossacks from the Don host native to the Donbas region and the Kuban host descended from the Zaporozhian Cossacks fought in the war that started in Donbas in 2014 on the pro-Russian side.
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30For a long time in popular culture, the Russian Cossack look has been the primary image that pops in foreigner's minds when they think of what Russians look like, the same way {{Americans are Cowboys}}. This is due to the fact that the iconic Cossack hats and [[ThatRussianSquatDance dance]] are closely associated with Russians in movies abroad. These days however, Russian Cossacks share that spot with DirtyCommunists. As for Zaporozhian Cossacks, their imagery has showed up a lot on the international scene since early 2022 to symbolize Ukraine's resistance to the full scale Russian invasion.
31----
32!!Examples in Fiction
33[[foldercontrol]]
34
35[[folder:Animation]]
36!!Zaporozhian Cossacks
37* The classic Ukrainian cartoon characters ''Animation/{{Cossacks}}'' are Zaporozhian Cossacks.
38* The 1991 cartoon adaptation of Ivan Kotlyarevskyi's Eneyida (Aenid) has Aeneas and other Trojans that look and act like Zaporozhian Cossacks ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92J702CxzXU see here]]).
39
40!!Russian Cossacks
41* ''WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTail'' opens with the Jewish village of Shostka being subjected to a pogrom by Russian Cossacks, while their cat equivalents that come in their wake terrorize Jewish mice.
42 [[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Art]]
45* The painting ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reply_of_the_Zaporozhian_Cossacks Reply of the Zaporozhian Cossacks to Sultan Mehmed IV of the Ottoman Empire]]'' by Ilya Repin depicts a group of Cossacks writing a reply to Sultan Mehmed IV of the Ottoman Empire. Having been defeated in a battle, Mehmed attempted to intimidate the Cossacks into submission, sending them a declaration filled with impressive titles and the many lands he ruled. The Cossacks' reply twisted the many titles and lands into some very creative profanity, "goat-fucker of Alexandria" being one of the tamer ones.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Comic Books]]
49!!Zaporozhian Cossacks
50* ''[[https://www.hexagoncomics.com/shop-captain-ukraine.html Captain Ukraine]]'': The characters holding the mantle of Captain Ukraine all descend from Zaporozhian Cossacks.
51* ''ComicBook/{{Cossacks|2022}}'', a French comic book about a young early 17th century Lithuanian Hussar from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth who deserts the Polish army, joins a group of Zaporozhian Cossacks and [[GoingNative starts living among them]].
52
53!!Russian Cossacks
54* In ''Franchise/{{Tintin}} [[Recap/TintinTintinInTheLandOfTheSoviets in the Land of the Soviets]]'', among the many encounters with DirtyCommunists Tintin has in the RandomEventsPlot, there's one where he finds himself in the middle of a Russian winter, frozen after an involuntary bath and at the mercy of a wandering Cossack who wants to bring him to the [[UsefulNotes/MoscowCentre OGPU]] for a bounty. Said Cossack turns out to be [[MotherRussiaMakesYouStrong quite buff]] when Tintin gets thawed and fights him.
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:Film]]
58!!Zaporozhian Cossacks
59* ''The Road to Sich'' (1994), Ukrainian film.
60* Adaptations of Creator/NikolaiGogol's ''Taras Bulba'':
61** The 1962 American film starring Creator/YulBrynner and Creator/TonyCurtis.
62** The 2009 Russian film starring Ukrainian actor Bohdan Stupka.
63* ''With Fire and Sword'' (1999) features Zaporozhian Cossacks fighting the Poles, being an adaptation of the ''Literature/SienkiewiczTrilogy''.
64
65!!Russian Cossacks
66* ''Film/AnAmericanPickle'': While living in 1919, Herschel's shtetel is constantly pillaged by Cossacks. In the present time, a sign for Russian vodka has been planted in his wife' graveyard, and he's outraged that the "Cossacks" have invaded even there.
67* In ''Film/{{Austerlitz}}'', Kutuzov's army at the eponymous battle has Cossack regiments.
68* ''Film/TheCossacks'' is a 1928 silent film based on a Creator/LeoTolstoy novel, in which Cossacks spend their time drinking vodka and fighting Turks.
69* In ''Film/{{Golda}}'', Golda Meir recounts her childhood memories of Russian Cossacks - in her words, they would celebrate Christmas by beating Jews to death for fun.
70* In the ''Film/JamesBond'' film ''Film/GoldenEye'', the BigBad is the son of Lienz Cossacks, a group of Don, Kuban and Terek Cossacks who fought for Nazi Germany (or perhaps more accurately, ''with'' the Nazis ''against'' the Soviets, in their eyes anyway) and were forcefully repatriated to the USSR (where Stalin had them tried and executed) by the British. Their RealLife counterparts never lived in a place named "Lienz", this was just the name of the Austrian town where they were handed over to the Soviets in late May 1945.
71* A Cossack tries to assassinate UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte in Creator/SachaGuitry's ''[[Film/Napoleon1955 Napoléon]]'', and gets neutralized and shot point-blank.
72* In ''Film/{{Napoleon|2023}}'', during the French invasion of Russia in 1812, Cossacks are seen harassing Napoleon's army with [[HitAndRunTactics guerilla tactics]]. They also nail dead French soldiers at trees for intimidation.
73* A Cossack shows up in ''Film/SherlockHolmesAGameOfShadows'' as an assassin working for Moriarty to kill a UsefulNotes/{{Romani}} who might have been sent information on his plans.
74* In ''Film/{{Snatch}}'', Avi refers to Boris (whom he thinks is Russian) as a "Cossack." Because Avi is Jewish and Cossacks were involved in anti-Jewish pogroms, this is meant as an insult.
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Music]]
78!!Zaporozhian Cossacks
79* Appear frequently in Ukrainian folk songs regardless of the genre -- epic ballads, love songs, humorous / bawdy songs... anything really. "Dumy" (historical /epics ballads) in particular feature a lot of cossacks and hetmans, often mentioned by name, for example Dmytro Vyshnevetsky, Ivan Mazepa or Bohdan Khmelnytsky. Traditionally accompanied by the bandura, a zither/lute instrument. Some of the songs are adapted from the poems of Taras Shevchenko.
80* [[https://www.instagram.com/kozak.siromaha/?hl=fr Kozak Siromaha]] is a Ukrainian singer who's lived simply for years like a Zaporozhian Cossack (grew a mustache, shaved his head bar a ponytail, didn't use technology etc). The Russian invasion since 2022 made him go public on social media and tour abroad in support of his country.
81
82!!Russian Cossacks
83* Lots of Russian folk songs feature them, often accompanied by the traditional balalaika instrument.
84** [[https://youtu.be/TPeriSAdum0 "Cossack Patrol"]] is one of the most famous, especially its cover by the Red Army Choir.
85** The song "Stenka Razin" (with lyrics by Dmitri Sadovnikov) describes a fictional episode in the life of the eponymous hero, a Don Cossack chief. The song describes the Cossacks as wild and warlike, and Stenka sacrifices his beautiful young bride, a Persian princess, to maintain the loyalty of his men.
86* Cossack songs such as ''Oysa ti Oyisa'' is frequently found on WebSite/YouTube and elsewhere as the backing to videos featuring ''flankirovna'', a form of energetic [[{{Flynning}} sword-dancing]] which is associated with Kuban Cossack tradition. The song is also known as ''The Cossack's Prayer'' and sets the philosophy of the Cossack Way to music. Folk-rockers Music/OtavaYo perform a version using the same melodic and verse structure, but with different lyrics that appear to take the martial and nationalistic overtones out of it.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Literature]]
90!!Zaporozhian Cossacks
91* Taras Shevchenko's stories and poems about Zaporozhian Cossacks and their love for freedom against Poland and the Russian Empire form an important corpus for Ukrainian literature and the nation as a whole.
92* ''[[Literature/SienkiewiczTrilogy Ogniem i Mieczem]]'' Polish historical novel from 1884, set during the Khmelnytsky Uprising of the Zaporozhian Cossacks. It's perhaps the most famous fictional depiction of them outside Ukrainian media.
93* Cossacks play major roles in Creator/NikolaiGogol's stories like ''Literature/TarasBulba'', including ''Literature/ATerribleVengeance.''
94* Ivan Kotlyarevskyi (1769-1838) wrote a parody of the Aenid in Ukrainian which replaces Aeneas and co. with Zaporozhian Cossacks. The poem was later adapted into an animated film (see below).
95* "Literature/TheShadowOfTheVulture" by Creator/RobertEHoward: The story's co-heroine, Red Sonya of Rogatino (i.e. Rohatyn in Ukraine) is suggested to be a cossack by her swearing with a "Cossack curse" and going into a "Cossack dance" when she's happy.
96
97!!Russian Cossacks
98* The Russian Jewish short story writer, Isaac Babel served alongside the Cossacks, and wrote about it in his famous ''Red Cavalry'' stories. Creator/JorgeLuisBorges once wrote on the clash this created:
99--> ''In early 1921, Babel joined a Cossack regiment. Those blustering and useless warriors (no one in the history of the universe has been defeated more often than the Cossacks) were, of course, anti-Semitic. The mere idea of a Jew on horseback struck them as laughable, and the fact that Babel was a good horseman only added to their disdain and spite. A couple of welltimed and flashy exploits enabled Babel to make them leave him in peace.''
100* In ''Literature/TheMostDangerousGame'' General Zaroff says that Ivan is a Cossack, and considering that Ivan is a HuskyRusskie this seems to be used as a form of MotherRussiaMakesYouStrong, which is followed up by a similar comment about himself.
101* Many of the characters in Mikahil Sholokhov's ''The Quiet Don'' are Cossacks from the Don region of Russia.
102* In ''Literature/{{Temeraire}}'' Cossacks are mentioned as being part of the Russian forces. Unlike the main Russian Aerial Corps who favor heavyweight dragons and treat them harshly the Cossacks have fly-weight dragons only slightly larger than couriers and seem to have a very close bond to their dragons with both men and dragons sharing the same campfires at night. Their small size means that they are of limited use in a pitched fight but are excellent at skirmishing and harassing Napoleon's supply lines.
103[[/folder]]
104
105[[folder:Live Action TV]]
106* In the Creator/{{HBO}} show ''Series/{{Oz}}'', Russian mobster Yuri Kosygin is stated to be of Cossack lineage and is one of the most dangerous inmates in the prison.
107[[/folder]]
108
109[[folder:Theater]]
110* ''Theatre/FiddlerOnTheRoof'': The song "To Life" is a Jewish wedding celebration in which the local Russian soldiers unexpectedly join in with some traditional Cossack dancing, implying that they're Cossacks. Their commander warns Tevye that they will be performing a pogrom within the next few weeks. At the end of Act I, during another wedding, the Cossacks ride back in to ransack the town.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder:Video Games]]
114* ''VideoGame/CossacksEuropeanWars'', the first entry in the ''VideoGame/{{Cossacks}}'' series of historical RealTimeStrategy games (as well as its two expansions) aptly features an entire nation of these, representing 17th and early 18th century Ukraine (the Hetmanate) in the game. There is also a fast mercenary Zaporozhian Cossack light cavalry unit available to all nations, and a slow Don Cossack light cavalry unit for the Russian nation. The game used the famous Ilya Repin painting ''Reply of the Zaporozhian Cossacks to Sultan Mehmed IV of the Ottoman Empire'' (the page's pic) as cover art. [[CreatorProvincialism The amount of special attention]] Ukraine has in terms of gameplay and campaigns really stands out due to its studio, Creator/GSCGameWorld, being Ukrainian.
115** The Ukrainian campaign of ''European Wars'' is about the Polish–Cossack–Tatar War. The Polish campaign of the ExpansionPack ''The Art of War'' is about the same war, from the Polish side, obviously.
116** The third game features Cossacks again (since it's partly a [[VideoGameRemake remake]] of ''European Wars''). And this time, the game's {{Mascot}} is one.
117* One can only assume this is where the Russian Dr. Cossack got his name from in the ''Franchise/{{Megaman}}'' series.
118* The Cossacks are Russian unique national units in the later ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'' games.
119* Cossacks are one of the units for the Russian civilization in ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresIII''.
120* The ''VideoGame/MountAndBlade'' addon ''With Fire and Sword'' features the Cossack Hetmanate as one of the main factions. It is central to the game's plot.
121* ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedRevelations'' has a female Cossack named Oksana Razin as one of the Multiplayer characters, [[DarkActionGirl the Vanguard]].
122* Cossack Cavalry is used by the European Alliance in ''VideoGame/MarchOfWar''.
123[[/folder]]

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