The Great Meadow () was a Black Sea lowland area on the Dnipro and the Kinska Rivers to the south of Khortytsia Island that consisted of a system of rivers, reed beds, swamps, flooded forests, and meadows. The Great Meadow landscape embodies the concept of Motherland for Ukrainians. Surrounded by the PonticâÂÂCaspian steppe, it was around wide and long.
The Great Meadow has been inhabited since the Bronze Age. The Scythians, who flourished during the 4th century BC, were followed by the nomadic tribes of the Sarmatians, Iazyges, Roxolani, and Yamnaya. In 16thâÂÂ18th centuries, it was inhabited by the Zaporozhian Cossacks, who were protected from external threats by the dense forests and intricate waterways. Six of their eight Sichs were located on its northern border.
After the Zaporizhzhian Sich was destroyed in 1775 by the order of Catherine the Great, the Great Meadow was divided up between her closest nobles, and became fully integrated into the Russian Empire. From that period until the end of the First World War, farmers and landowners extracted as much profit as possible from the area. From the 1920s much of the Great Meadow became collective farmland; only 20% of the area remained as forest by the 1950s. The creation of the Kakhovka Reservoir in 1956 caused irreversible damage to what remained of the original landscape. The reservoir was destroyed in June 2023 during the Russo-Ukrainian War, after which tributaries of the Dnipro, islands, and Cossack tracks reappeared. Hydrologists and engineers support the future reconstruction of the reservoir, but ecologists, historians, and archaeologists do not.
The original Great Meadow was the most prominent natural forest in the steppes of Ukraine. It was an important feeding area for migrating birds, and was inhabited by wild pigs, martens, and wolves. The creation of the reservoir in the 1950s led to the local loss or near-extinction of plants, and fundamentally changed the hydrology of the lower Dnipro. Since the destruction of the dam, a vast new ecosystemâÂÂsimilar to the original landscape of alternating strips of woodland with meadows and swampsâÂÂhas appeared, a phenomenon that provides an opportunity for the development of forest ecosystems in river valleys to be studied in depth.
The Great Meadow as it appears on Schubert's 19th-century maps: <table border="0"> <tr> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> </table> The Great Meadow was located on the Black Sea Lowland and surrounded by the PonticâÂÂCaspian steppe. It was around wide and long. It originally consisted of a system of interconnected rivers and tributaries of the Dnipro, reed-covered lakes and swamps, meadows, shrubs, and, in some places, high sandbanks. Both the banks of the Dnipro were forested. The Great Meadow was covered with floodplains and forests containing aspen, alder, willow, and oak. Ancient oak trees grew on those islands that rarely flooded. As the eastern steppes had little or no water, and a lack of shelter for animals, the Great Meadow was abundantly inhabited by hares, foxes, deer, wild pigs, martens, and wolves. Tarpans (free-ranging horses) lived on . The Great Meadow was the most prominent natural forest in the steppes of Ukraine, that was an important feeding area for migrating birds. The trees provided shelter for birds, who were preyed upon by falcons, kites, and eagles.
The Greek historian Herodotus wrote of the Dnipro in the 5th century BC:
In the 5th4th centuries BC, the area experienced regular droughts. Rivers levels reduced, and the tributaries of the Dnipro became very shallow. A thousand years later, frequent precipitation acted to raise river levels again, and peat bogs and humus were created.
The Russian word is equivalent to the Ukrainian (feminine, plural â ), or . The word describes an area of grassland along a river that is periodically flooded. A separate wordâÂÂâÂÂwas used in Ukrainian, distinct from the concept of , to describe a regularly-flooded forest. The term came to mean an ancient floodplain forest that surrounded a Cossack stronghold (sich).
The Great Meadow has been inhabited since ancient times, with archaeological finds dating back to the Bronze Age, the Scythian period, and the Kievan Rus'. It is a landscape that embodies the concept of Motherland for Ukrainians. The landscape is particularly notable due to its historical association with the Cossacks. The Ukrainian scientist has written that the steppes, the Wild Fields, and the Great MeadowâÂÂ"lowlands covered with grassy and woody vegetation, intersected by rivers flowing in different directions, bays, estuaries, channels, numerous major and minor lakes, overgrown with tall impassable reeds."âÂÂall featured predominately in the lives of the Zaporizhian Cossacks, observing that the wetlands provided them with both game, timber, and fodder for their animals.
The metropolis of Scythia, which flourished during the 6th to 4th centuries BC, was located in what is now modern Kamianka-Dniprovska. The Scythians controlled the Dnipro trade route, and taxed the goods that passed through lands they controlled. According to Herodotus, they flourished during the 4th century BC. The kurgans (tumuli) of Scythian rulers such as at , , and in Dnipro's lowlands are dated from this period. In the 3rd century BC the peoples of the Yamnaya and Kemi Oba cultures settled in the region surrounding what was to become the Great Meadow, a period that marked the end of Scythian domination. Over the next two hundred years, the nomadic tribes of the Sarmatians, Iazyges, and Roxolani ousted the Scythians. From the last quarter of the 3rd to the first half of the 2nd centuries BC, the area was inhabited by the Yamnaya.
Writing in the 1st century BC, Herodotus named eight major rivers, including the Dnipro, describing how large ships could sail these rivers to the sea. The rivers were described as wide, deep, and navigable in the chronicle (Tales of the Bygone Years), thought to have been written by Nestor the Chronicler, a contemporary of Herodotus. During this period, nomad tribes formed a series of distinct cultures; these included the Cimmerians, Scythians, Sarmatians, Halizones, and the Gelonians.
The 14th-century Kuchuhurske settlement, the largest known settlement of the Golden Horde on the Dnipro, and generally identified as , was located in the Great Meadow. In 1374, after a drought led to famine throughout the region, Mamai's forces left the Great Meadow and resettled in Crimea.
In 16thâÂÂ18th centuries, the Great Meadow was one of the most important areas of the Zaporozhian Sich. It is nowadays considered to be "an inclusive part of the formation of the modern Ukrainian ethnos". The historian Serhii Plokhy has written that it was Cossack lands that provided modern Ukraine with its language and its name.
In contrast to the surrounding dry steppe, the Great Meadow was permanently inhabited by the Zaporozhian Cossacks, who called it ('Father'). The southern part of the Great Meadow was called by the Cossacks, probably because of the Bazavluk River. According to Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan, the French-Polish cartographer who produced the 1648 General Map of Ukraine, the Zaporozhian Cossacks recruited from peasants escaping their overlords:
The Great Meadow provided more favourable conditions for settlers than the steppe, and by 1774, over 100,000 Cossacks lived in the Great Meadow. The area was used for agriculture, raising livestock, and as a source of wood, and the dense forest served to protect the Cossacks from external threats. Honey was abundant, and a lot of honey and beeswax was exported.
The Cossacks were the first Europeans to plant forests, which they planted as a means of defence. Their territory was a militarily sensitive zone that bordered the Crimean KhanateâÂÂfrom the 1650s until up to the beginning of the reign of Peter the Great (1682), their light cavalry supported the Russian army. Remaining in their own lands, they were better suited to fight the Tatars, who campaigned on horseback, and so shunned the rivers, lakes and swamps of the Great Meadow, to avoid becoming lost. Beauplan described how the Zaporozhian Cossacks were able to use an alternative river route to enter the Sea of Azov when the Dnipro estuary was blocked by the Ottomans. A long track along the entire length of the Great Meadow was probably only used when the rivers were ice-coveredâÂÂin summer, deep rivers were a much more convenient as a means of transport.
Six of the eight Sichs were located on the banks of the Dnipro, which former the northern border of the Great Meadow:
After the abolition of the Zaporozhian Sich, the area was divided between the nobles closest to the Russian court, and German farmers were brought in to work on the land. The historian Adrian Kashchenko, writing in 1917, noted that:
The easiest way to explore the Great Meadow during this period was by boat, using a good map or a guide, and even then any fast currents had to be avoided. Throughout the 19th century and into the 20th century, the area became degraded as farmers and landowners extracted as much profit as possible. The high cost of fuel during the Great War greatly contributed to its gradual destruction.
For centuries, the Great Meadow had been used for raising horses, logging, hunting, fishing, and beekeeping, and to provide wool, milk and meat. After the Ukrainian People's Republic was incorporated into the USSR in 1922, the area was steadily converted into collective farms, until only 20% of the area remained as forest. In the mid-1920s, Ukrainian Soviets scientists proposed the creation nature reserve within the Great Meadow. During the Holodomor (1932âÂÂ1933), inhabitants of the area were saved from starvation by foraging for roots and water nuts.
Prior to its destruction in the 1950s, only 20% of the Great Meadow was forested, which led to the modern perception of the area as mainly consisting of meadows. The Dnipro basin ecosystems are now largely incapable of self-restoration, as industrial plants, farms, and cities have over the decades discharged vast quantities of waste into the Dnipro and its tributaries. The creation of the Dnipro cascade reservoirs caused permanent changes that transformed the Dnipro from a river ecosystem to a predominantly lake ecosystem, causing a slowing down of water exchange in the water cycle, and an increase in water loss.
In 1956, the Kakhovka Dam was completed, and the Kakhovka ReservoirâÂÂthe largest in Ukraine at that timeâÂÂwas created. Approximately long and wide with a volume of , and a total area of , its creation caused irreversible damage to the Great Meadow, which covered almost the entire area, and the destruction of over 90 villages. Around 37,000 residents were forced to resettle. In return, the reservoir provided irrigation to vast areas of southern Ukraine, and the dam generated 1489 million kWh of electricity per year. A new townâÂÂNova Kakhovka was created. Infrastructure built at the site of the concrete dam included an earth dam, a spillway, and a lock for shipping. Additionally, the reservoir supplied over of water per year to the Kakhovka Canal, the North Crimean Canal, and the Dnipro-Kryvyi Rih Canal, so irrigating of farmland. Over the years, the banks of the reservoir damaged the surrounding farmland, and increased the risk of flooding. Water taken from the reservoir caused groundwater levels to rise and fertile land to become unproductive as a result of salinisation.
The Great Meadow had previously played an important part in maintaining the biodiversity of the southern Ukrainian lands. The creation of the reservoir led to the local loss or near-extinction of plant species such as the Scythian tulip (Tulipa scythica), the Scythian sage (Phlomis scythica), , the narrow-leaved peony (Paeonia tenuifolia), and the small fritillary (Fritillaria meleagroides).
In 2006, the Grand Meadow National Nature Park was created from small islands and coastal areas of eastern Kakhovka Reservoir in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, and similarly the was formed in 2019 in right-bank Kherson Oblast.
In June 2023, the Kakhovka Dam was destroyed, and the reservoir began to drain away. As the waters were leaving the reservoir, tributaries of the Dnipro River, islands, and Cossack tracks reappeared. Archaeological looting became widespread soon after the reservoir was emptied, and the draining of the reservoir led to the fish population dying out, totalling an estimated 11,400 tons of dead fish. Tree stumps from trees that grew before the dam was built are now visible, and rust areas along the edge of the current bank may be evidence that iron particles are emerging from groundwater. The hydrology of the lower Dnipro has changed fundamentally; water level fluctuations are now almost entirely dependent upon discharges from the Dnipro Hydroelectric Station, located upstream.
Shortly after the dam was breached, biologists from Kherson State University's Ukrainian Nature Conservation Group and the began a long-term study of the ecological development of the drained area. On 12 March 2024, the Ukrainian Cabinet of Ministers banned the transfer of ownership or use of land that emerged from the former reservoir due to plans of restoring the dam.
According to the Ukrainian historian Oleksandr Alfiorov, "â¦we still cannot assess the consequences of over 70 years of water domination in it. Now, we can see this relief, it is obvious that we will also see burial mounds, but we cannot yet assess, for example, the degree of damage and siltation of the territory. There is no doubt that most of the archaeological monuments were destroyed when the Kakhovka Reservoir was created."
The destruction of the dam coincided with the time when poplar and willow trees begin to disperse their seeds. Young forests have reappeared in the area once occupied by the reservoir, and according to the ecologist Vadym Manyuk, animals and birds such as wild boars, ptarmigan and swallows are starting to live there. According to Manyuk, the floodplains of the Great Meadow originally consisted of strips of woodland that alternated with meadows, swamps, and, possibly steppe, which the appearance of the reservoir bed resembles today. "This will be a mosaic system. We need to support the meadows. Because there are a lot of rare and interesting species here, an inseparable part of our natural biodiversity. For such systems, I would like to see wild horses come here, perhaps. They would shape these beautiful meadow landscapes."
The area will go through ecological succession that, in at least 30 years, will result in the formation of a mature forest. This large-scale phenomenon allows the study of the development of forest ecosystems in river valleys that was not possible before. Left alone, the trees would continue to grow tall, but not at such a rate. Manyuk described the water levels as constantly fluctuating according to the seasons. The ecosystem currently being restored may resemble the state of the Lower Dnipro valley before it was settled by humans.
The Ukrainian government considers the HPP at Kakhovka to be a valuable capital asset, and intends in time for it to be fully restored, despite the negative ecological and socio-economic impact this would have. Hydrologists and power engineers support the reconstruction of the dam, but ecologists, historians, and archaeologists resist the idea and propose to restore area once occupied by the Great Meadow into a protected natural and historic area.