Definition of "Zaporozhian"
Zaporozhian
noun
plural Zaporozhians
(historical) One of the Cossacks who lived downstream of the rapids of the Dnieper River, in present-day Ukraine.
Quotations
Instead, the Zaporozhians tended to concentrate on their own affairs, that is, those of a relatively small (they rarely numbered more than 10,000), isolated Cossack fraternity based in the vast, empty steppes between the Hetmanate in the north and the Crimean Khanate in the south.
2009, Orest Subtelny, Ukraine: A History, 4th edition, University of Toronto Press, unnumbered page
The Zaporozhians detained the captains sent by Mazepa, placed them in custody ("as bandits"), and did not allow them to set fire to dry grasses in the "Wild Fields" (as had been planned in preparation for the campaign).
2020, Tatiana Tairova-Yakovleva, Ivan Mazepa and the Russian Empire, McGill-Queen's University Press, page 111
adjective
comparative more Zaporozhian, superlative most Zaporozhian
Of or relating to the Zaporozhians or their culture, etc.
Quotations
[…] city-type centres and settlements in the Zaporozhian territory the Sich's role as the regional centre grew especially important and that fact unexpectedly gave to a free steppe region a highly centralized form of government.
1978, Lev Okinshevych, Ukrainian Society and Government, 1648-1781, Ukrainian Free University, page 117
The attitude of the Zaporozhian envoys in Moscow shows that for the Zaporozhian Cossacks, who played an extraordinarily important role in the opening stage of the uprising, Kyiv was a distant if not an alien center, clearly outside the scope of Zaporozhian influence.
2001, Serhii Plokhy, The Cossacks and Religion in Early Modern Ukraine, Oxford University Press, page 271