If we talk about the legal instruments of that time, 
then  it  is  worth  highlighting  the  Statute  by 
Volodymyr the Great in 996, when, besides the 
fact that the church had to pay a tithe, the church 
became an institution that in the State policy of 
social security. Namely, it was entrusted with the 
tasks of supervising hospitals (which, in fact, also 
functioned at churches and monasteries), baths, 
shelters for lonely people, taking care of socially 
disabled people (in the modern interpretation of 
such  categories).  The  medieval  feudal  code  of 
laws “Ruska Pravda” also included some articles, 
whose  rules  were  related  to  social  security 
(Yushkov, 1935; Tkachenko, Yu. 2018, p. 128). 
 
The  principality  of  Galicia-Volyn  became  the 
legal successor of the Ukrainian State tradition 
after  Kyivan  Rus.  After  the  liquidation  of  the 
principality, the Ukrainian lands eventually came 
under the rule of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, 
and  later  –  the  Polish-Lithuanian 
Commonwealth. The Lithuanian Statutes can be 
called  an  important  legal  landmark  of  those 
times. The Lithuanian Statute of 1588 provided 
for  assistance  to  persons  with  certain  physical 
disabilities  (deafness,  muteness,  blindness, 
missing  limbs,  etc.)  (Pankov,  Muzychenko  & 
Kivalov, 2004). If we characterize the period of 
the Middle Ages in general, then the medieval 
statehoods  were  almost  not  interested  in  the 
issues  of  social  security,  development  of 
hospitals,  etc.  The  church  made  a  significant 
contribution to this problem. 
 
The  Ukrainian  Cossacks,  who,  after  the 
formation of the proto-state of Zaporozhian Sich 
created  their  own  Ukrainian  statehood  –  the 
Hetmanship  gave  a  powerful  impetus  for  the 
Ukrainian  state-building  process,  development 
of schools, higher education institutions, cultural 
sphere, etc. The researchers note that the birth of 
the  Ukrainian  Cossacks  influenced  the 
development  of  book  printing,  schooling,  the 
creation of so-called brotherhoods, colleges, and 
the activities of the Ostrozka and Kyiv-Mohyla 
Academies,  which  became  the  centers  of  the 
scientific  and  cultural  and  educational  life  of 
Ukrainians.  The  Lviv,  Lutsk,  and  Kyiv 
brotherhoods, printers, and scientists contributed 
to  the  growth  of  the  general  culture  of  the 
Ukrainian  people,  and  the  Cossack  State  also 
created  institutions  that  provided  assistance  to 
crippled war veterans. It is worth highlighting the 
State mission of such hetmans as I. Vyhovskyi, 
P. Doroshenko, I. Mazepa, and in combination 
with  the  ideas  of  freedom,  defiance  of  the 
Ukrainians  and  the  power  of  the  Cossacks 
contributed  to  the  formation  of  Ukrainian 
spiritual  culture  (Kalakura,  Rafalskyi  &  Yurii 
2015, pp. 59–60). 
 
At  that  time,  the  concepts  of  democracy, 
freedom,  dignity, etc.  were  actively  introduced 
among  Ukrainians, and  even after  being under 
the  oppression  and  cultural  influence  of  the 
absolute monarchy of the  times of the Russian 
Empire  and  the  totalitarian  Soviet  Union  for 
hundreds  of  years,  Ukrainians  preserved  their 
traditions,  and  unlike  Russia  and  Belarus 
followed  the  path of  development  of  the  State 
model of liberal democracies (it is worth noting 
that  the  development  of  the  ideas  of  freedom, 
democracy,  civil  society,  the  rule  of  law, 
rejection  of  tyranny  is,  from  the  standpoint  of 
national  security  and  defense,  an  extremely 
important  aspect  of  the  State's  policy  in  the 
humanitarian sphere). 
 
During the 18th century Moscoviia, and later – the 
Russian Empire was methodically engaged in the 
process  of  absorbing  Ukrainian  Hetman 
Statehood;  at  the  end  of  the  century,  all 
democratic State institutions were liquidated, the 
regimental  system  was  abolished,  the 
gubernatorial-regent  system  of  the  empire  was 
introduced, part of the population was enslaved 
and  lost  its  freedom.  Besides,  part  of  the 
Ukrainian  lands  became  part  of  the  Austrian 
(later  –  Austro-Hungarian)  empire.  Thus,  until 
1917–1918,  Ukrainian  lands  were  part  of  two 
empires  and  could  not  create  their  own 
humanitarian policy at the State level. However, 
the  Ukrainian  national  movement  in 
humanitarian  and  political  forms  became  quite 
active;  all  this  led  to  the  Ukrainian  national 
revival in the 19th century – at the beginning of 
the  20th  century.  Ukrainian  non-state,  often 
clandestine  and  prohibited  organizations, 
associations  spread  the  ideas  of  European 
humanism,  the  views  of  the  German  thinker 
Herder,  who  attributed  the  main  role  in  the 
national  consciousness  to  language 
(Troshchynskyi,  Sytnyk  &  Kupriichuk,  2016,              
p. 110). 
 
We will  focus  on  those  acts  that  were  already 
adopted  by  the  Ukrainian  State  during  the 
Ukrainian  national  revival  of  1917–1920s,  and 
which  concern  the  State  policy  in  the 
humanitarian sphere, since, firstly, at this time, 
Ukrainians restored their own national statehood 
and, secondly, the legal instruments adopted at 
that time were of fundamental importance in the 
sense  that  for  the first  time on  the  territory of 
Ukrainian lands the ideas of equality before the 
law, as well as the ideas of the development of