The Ukrainian city Lviv's many names (Lviv, Lvov, Lwow, Lemberg,
Leopolis) bear witness to its conflicted past - it has, at one time or
another, belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Poland, Russia and
Germany, and has brought forth numerous famous artists and
intellectuals. My Lwow, Jozef Wittlin's short 1946 treatise on the
city he left in 1922, is a wistful and lyrical study of an electrifying
cosmopolis, told from the other side of the catastrophe of the Second
World War. Philippe Sand's essay provides a parallel account of the
city as it is today: the cultural capital of Ukraine, its citizens
played a key role during the Orange Revolution*,* and its executive
committee declared itself independent of the rule of President Viktor
Yanukovych in February 2014. The City of Lions includes both old
black-and-white photos showing Lviv during the first half of the
twentieth century, and new photographs by the award-winning Diana Matar,
of the city as it is today.