Young Pannonian Rusyn girls from Ruski Krstur, Bačka, Serbia. Foto studio of Osif and Jovgen Budinski, Museum of Vojvodina, Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments of Vojvodina, Institute for the Culture of Vojvodina Rusyns
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Young Pannonian Rusyn girls from Ruski Krstur, Bačka, Serbia. Foto studio of Osif and Jovgen Budinski, Museum of Vojvodina, Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments of Vojvodina, Institute for the Culture of Vojvodina Rusyns

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Rusyn Song Promoting Rusyn Identity from Maramureș, Romania
The Rusyns are a distinct East Slavic people whose ethnogenesis took place in the Carpathian Mountains, shaped by a complex history of migration, assimilation, and cultural exchange. Their origins lie in the settlement of Eastern Slavs in the Carpathian region, particularly from the 10th century onward, as part of the broader expansion of Kievan Rus/Galicia-Volhynia. As these Slavic settlers moved into the highlands, they came into contact with and gradually assimilated pre-Slavic or Paleo-Balkan populations, such as remnants of Thraco-Dacians and Romanized locals. In the medieval and early modern periods, the Rusyns further interacted and intermarried with Vlachs: Romanian-speaking pastoralists who moved seasonally through the Carpathians; this lead to further blending (and even domination) of "Balkanic" cultural elements such as in music, dance, food, vocabulary, architecture, religious and folkloric styles, and general way of life. These historical factors lead to producing a localized Carpatho-East Slavic identity distinct from their neighbours and even other Ruthenians. Ruthenians being the collective name of the East Slavic people inhabiting the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth which now includes Ukrainians, Belarusians, and Rusyns. Over the 19th and 20th centuries, as modern nationalism developed, many Ruthenians in the part of the former PLC historically controlled by Poland, began to adopt a Ukrainian national identity (distinct from the Belarusian identity developed in the part of the PLC controlled historically by Lithuania). This emerging Ukrainian identity drew heavily on the historical legacy and symbolic mythology of the Zaporozhia Cossacks. However, not all Ruthenians in this region followed this path. Particularly in the Carpathian highlands and Transcarpathia, many Rusyns retained a distinct linguistic (as opposed to standardized Ukrainian) and regional identity, resisting assimilation into the emerging Ukrainian national project. As a result, while Rusyns and Ukrainians share common historical roots, many Rusyns today do not identify as Ukrainians and instead assert a separate ethnolinguistic and cultural identity. This distinction remains a subject of debate, especially in Ukraine, where Rusyns are often officially regarded as a regional branch of Ukrainians rather than a distinct ethnicity. The problem is further complicated by the fact that certain Rusyn sub-groups, such as the Hutsuls, were some of the people most eager to adopt a Ukrainian identity and nationalism. Rusyns have had a historical presence in what is now northern Romania, particularly in the Maramureș region along the Carpathian Mountains. This area, once part of the Kingdom of Hungary and later the Austro-Hungarian Empire, saw Ruthenian communities settle as early as the medieval period. These East Slavic highlanders shared linguistic and cultural ties with Rusyns in neighbouring Transcarpathia and maintained a Greek Catholic faith, pastoral traditions, and distinct identity. Although today their numbers are small, Romania officially recognizes the Rusyns as a national minority, preserving their cultural legacy in the region. Unlike in Ukraine, a larger amount of Hutsuls in Romania have seen themselves as Rusyns and distinct from Ukrainians.
You know what just dawned on me? Andy Warhol is the world's most famous Rusyn. Which, if you know literally anything about Rusyns and Andy Warhol, is actually kinda hillarious.
Carpatho-Rusyns [dolinyans] in the guni
Maramuteş, Austria-Hungary, 1915
ETHNIES OF THE WORLD : Slavic ethnies part 2 !
Russians are a East Slavic people inhabitants of the country of Russia. They speak russian, on of the world most spoken language. They are orthodox. There are around 129 millions of them, and around 7 millions in Ukraine.
Ukrainians are a East Slavic people inhabitants of the country of Ukraine. They speak ukrainian. They are orthodox. There are around 37 to 45 millions of them.
Poles or Polish are a East Slavic people inhabitants of the country of Poland. They speak polish. They are catholics. There are around 60 millions of them, with 10 millions in the United States.
Belarusians are a East Slavic people inhabitants of the country of Belarus. They speak belarusian, but most of them speak russian. They are orthodox. There are around 9.5 to 10 millions of them.
Kashubians, Kashubs or Cassubians are a Lechitic Slavic people inhabitants of the region of Kashubia in Poland. They speak kashubian and polish. They are catholic. There are around 500 000 to 570 000 of them.
Rusyns or Rusnaks are a East Slavic people inhabitants of the region of the Carpathian Ruthenia, in Ukraine, Slovakia et Poland. They speak rusyn, and the language of the country they are in. There are around 623 000 of them.
Those aesthetics are part of a serie. I’m covering the biggest ethnies of the world, starting by Europe.

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Rusyn children, Slovakia 1927 (Sergej Protopopov)
Tribute to all Rusyns / Ruthenians !
Men of Jasiňa, Sub-Carphatian Rus(Carpatho-Ukraine). 1929