<p>Ukraine's capital Kyiv has endured a century of sieges, terrible attacks and revolutions.</p>.<p>We look at its tormented history:</p>.<p>After the outbreak of the Russian Revolution in February 1917, Ukrainians wanted to break free of the Russian Empire of which they had been a part for two centuries.</p>.<p>Ukrainian nationalists declared autonomy on November 20, 1917, and then independence in January 1918 with Kyiv as their capital.</p>.<p>The Bolsheviks had meanwhile proclaimed the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in the eastern city of Kharkiv.</p>.<p>Red Army soldiers took Kyiv on February 8, 1918.</p>.<p>With Russia losing World War I, the Bolsheviks signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on March 3, 1918, and Germany occupied Ukraine.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/dont-send-your-sons-to-war-volodymyr-zelenskyy-appeals-to-russian-mothers-1090569.html" target="_blank">'Don't send your sons to war': Zelenskyy to Russians</a></strong></p>.<p>It kicked the Bolsheviks out of Kyiv and backed a coup by a former general in the imperial Russian army.</p>.<p>After Germany's eventual defeat, the nationalists retook the city in December 1918.</p>.<p>Throughout 1919 Kyiv, like the rest of Ukraine, passed backwards and forwards between the warring Ukrainian nationalist, Tsarist "white" and the Soviet "red" armies.</p>.<p>In May 1920, with almost all of Ukraine in the hands of the Red Army, the nationalists turned to Poland for help. They retook the city only to evacuate it a month later and let the Bolsheviks in.</p>.<p>Ukraine became part of the Soviet Union along with other Soviet Socialist Republics in 1922.</p>.<p>The Soviet authorities stripped Kyiv of its status as capital in favour of Kharkiv as they sought to stamp out Ukrainian nationalism.</p>.<p>Mostly Russian-speaking Kharkiv remained the capital until 1934, when Kyiv took over again.</p>.<p>But seven years later it was devastated during World War II.</p>.<p>In June 1941 Kyiv was surrounded and bombarded by the invading Axis powers -- Germany, Hungary and Romania.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/russia-ukraine-war-news-live-updates-kyiv-maruipol-kharkiv-vladimir-putin-volodymyr-zelenskyy-attack-shelling-nuclear-war-chernobyl-zaporizhzhia-1090566.html" target="_blank">Live updates of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on DH</a></strong></p>.<p>Much of its historic centre was destroyed by the retreating Soviet army and after a fierce 80-day battle, the Nazis entered Kyiv on September 19.</p>.<p>More than 30,000 people -- mostly Jews, but also prisoners of war -- were rounded up and shot at Babi Yar, close to Kyiv's present-day television tower.</p>.<p>Tens of thousands more died during the occupation, with most of the city's Jews killed in death camps.</p>.<p>In November 1943 the Soviets retook Kyiv but by then 40 percent of its buildings had been destroyed.</p>.<p>In 1965 it was awarded "hero city" status by the Soviet Union.</p>.<p>Although its industrial infrastructure was bolstered during its reconstruction, it remained in Moscow's shadow until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.</p>.<p>That year Ukraine declared independence after a referendum with Kyiv again becoming a European capital.</p>.<p>But stability was short-lived.</p>.<p>Kyiv's vast central Independence Square, popularly known as Maidan, was the epicentre of the massive 2004 pro-democracy "Orange Revolution" as well as the long pro-European uprising of 2013/2014 that sparked Russia's annexation of Crimea.</p>.<p>In November 2004, hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians turned out over three weeks to protest fraud-tainted polls which saw Kremlin-backed Viktor Yanukovych elected president.</p>.<p>The election was cancelled and pro-Western Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko were elected.</p>.<p>Then nearly 10 years later, in November 2013, hundreds of thousands of pro-European demonstrators occupied the Maidan after Yanukovych -- back in power since 2010 -- turned his back on an association treaty with the European Union in favour of a rapprochement with Moscow.</p>.<p>The protests, which were marked by police violence, lasted day and night for three months.</p>.<p>After a bloodbath on the Maidan between February 18 and 20 when police opened fire, Yanukovych was impeached and fled to Russia.</p>
<p>Ukraine's capital Kyiv has endured a century of sieges, terrible attacks and revolutions.</p>.<p>We look at its tormented history:</p>.<p>After the outbreak of the Russian Revolution in February 1917, Ukrainians wanted to break free of the Russian Empire of which they had been a part for two centuries.</p>.<p>Ukrainian nationalists declared autonomy on November 20, 1917, and then independence in January 1918 with Kyiv as their capital.</p>.<p>The Bolsheviks had meanwhile proclaimed the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in the eastern city of Kharkiv.</p>.<p>Red Army soldiers took Kyiv on February 8, 1918.</p>.<p>With Russia losing World War I, the Bolsheviks signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on March 3, 1918, and Germany occupied Ukraine.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/dont-send-your-sons-to-war-volodymyr-zelenskyy-appeals-to-russian-mothers-1090569.html" target="_blank">'Don't send your sons to war': Zelenskyy to Russians</a></strong></p>.<p>It kicked the Bolsheviks out of Kyiv and backed a coup by a former general in the imperial Russian army.</p>.<p>After Germany's eventual defeat, the nationalists retook the city in December 1918.</p>.<p>Throughout 1919 Kyiv, like the rest of Ukraine, passed backwards and forwards between the warring Ukrainian nationalist, Tsarist "white" and the Soviet "red" armies.</p>.<p>In May 1920, with almost all of Ukraine in the hands of the Red Army, the nationalists turned to Poland for help. They retook the city only to evacuate it a month later and let the Bolsheviks in.</p>.<p>Ukraine became part of the Soviet Union along with other Soviet Socialist Republics in 1922.</p>.<p>The Soviet authorities stripped Kyiv of its status as capital in favour of Kharkiv as they sought to stamp out Ukrainian nationalism.</p>.<p>Mostly Russian-speaking Kharkiv remained the capital until 1934, when Kyiv took over again.</p>.<p>But seven years later it was devastated during World War II.</p>.<p>In June 1941 Kyiv was surrounded and bombarded by the invading Axis powers -- Germany, Hungary and Romania.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/russia-ukraine-war-news-live-updates-kyiv-maruipol-kharkiv-vladimir-putin-volodymyr-zelenskyy-attack-shelling-nuclear-war-chernobyl-zaporizhzhia-1090566.html" target="_blank">Live updates of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on DH</a></strong></p>.<p>Much of its historic centre was destroyed by the retreating Soviet army and after a fierce 80-day battle, the Nazis entered Kyiv on September 19.</p>.<p>More than 30,000 people -- mostly Jews, but also prisoners of war -- were rounded up and shot at Babi Yar, close to Kyiv's present-day television tower.</p>.<p>Tens of thousands more died during the occupation, with most of the city's Jews killed in death camps.</p>.<p>In November 1943 the Soviets retook Kyiv but by then 40 percent of its buildings had been destroyed.</p>.<p>In 1965 it was awarded "hero city" status by the Soviet Union.</p>.<p>Although its industrial infrastructure was bolstered during its reconstruction, it remained in Moscow's shadow until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.</p>.<p>That year Ukraine declared independence after a referendum with Kyiv again becoming a European capital.</p>.<p>But stability was short-lived.</p>.<p>Kyiv's vast central Independence Square, popularly known as Maidan, was the epicentre of the massive 2004 pro-democracy "Orange Revolution" as well as the long pro-European uprising of 2013/2014 that sparked Russia's annexation of Crimea.</p>.<p>In November 2004, hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians turned out over three weeks to protest fraud-tainted polls which saw Kremlin-backed Viktor Yanukovych elected president.</p>.<p>The election was cancelled and pro-Western Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko were elected.</p>.<p>Then nearly 10 years later, in November 2013, hundreds of thousands of pro-European demonstrators occupied the Maidan after Yanukovych -- back in power since 2010 -- turned his back on an association treaty with the European Union in favour of a rapprochement with Moscow.</p>.<p>The protests, which were marked by police violence, lasted day and night for three months.</p>.<p>After a bloodbath on the Maidan between February 18 and 20 when police opened fire, Yanukovych was impeached and fled to Russia.</p>