Danylo Skoropadskyi

Danylo Pavlovych Skoropadskyi (Данило Павлович Скоропадський; 13 February 1904 – 23 February 1957) was a Ukrainian politician who served as the leader of the Ukrainian monarchist movement. He had the title of crown prince of Ukraine from 1918 to 1919. He was the eldest surviving son of Pavlo Skoropadskyi.

Biography
During the existence of the Ukrainian State, he studied at the First Gymnasium in Kyiv in 1918. In 1919, Skoropadskyi, along with other members of the House of Skoropadskyi, was forced to flee from Ukraine due to the collapse of his father's regime immediately prior to the Soviet-Polish War. He subsequently lived and studied in Switzerland, and then in Germany, where his father had been granted political asylum in Munich. He moved to London in 1939.

From 1932, he assisted his father Pavlo Skoropadskyi in leading the Ukrainian monarchist movement. In 1948, after the death of his father, Skoropadskyi became the leader of the Ukrainian monarchist (Hetmanate) movement as pretender to the throne.

Skoropadskyi was engaged on 13 February 1957 to Halyna Melnyk-Kaluzhynska; however, he died a week and a half after being poisoned by agents of the KGB in an operation to eliminate Ukrainian independence leaders. He is alleged to have had a child out of wedlock with Olesya Tukhai-Bei, although this has never been proven.

Personal life
His fiancée Halyna Kaluzhynska was born in Volhynia near Trostyanka in 1914. After World War I, she lived in Warsaw. She later married changed her surname name to Melnyk-Kaluzhynska. After World War II, Kaluzhynska relocated to the United Kingdom along with many other displaced persons. She met Skoropadsky through a mutual friend.