The icon of Our Lady of Kyiv-Belz (

) did come to Kyiv via Constantinople and was later taken to Belz which is on the border with Poland. The Polish noble Wladislaw Opolskie took it to Czestochowa with him where it became “Our Lady of Czestochowa.”
We even know the route he took as his entourage moved from Belz to Czestochowa - wherever he stopped with his entourage for the night, there a church or a monastery was built in honour of a copy of the icon because of the miraculous signs following where the Icon was put for the night.
One copy of such an icon, Our Lady of Hoshiv, became especially miraculous in the years leading up to the destruction of communism and the resurrection of the Eastern Catholic Church. Another such miraculous copy of the Czestochowa icon is Our Lady of Turkovitz.
There is a miraculous copy in Kyiv as well as in other places.
In the 15th century, a Ukrainian prince, Theodore Ostrozhsky, fought to push the Poles out of western Ukraine. He later went to Czestochowa to engage in peace talks. As he visited the chapel where the icon was enshrined, he recognized it to be one of the icons historically from Ukraine but taken out of Ukraine (such as the Virgin of Vladimir was by Andrei Bogolubsky). Being of a hot-tempered sort, he climbed up and started to remove the icon from its shrine to take home with him . . . He was quickly arrested and then tried in a Polish court for “blasphemy.” His defence was that he committed no blasphemy, only that he wanted to take back what belonged to his country. He was later released and then went to Kyiv where he joined the Kyivan Caves Monastery, leading a saintly life and was canonized as “St Theodore Ostrozhsky” among the more than 150 Holy Fathers of the Kyivan Caves.
Believe it or not . . .
There are also a few statues of the Mother of God that are venerated in the Orthodox Church - not many, but there are some. It is said in the life of St Alexius, the Man of God, that he heard the voice of the Theotokos that came from a statue enshrined at Edessa, Our Lady of Edessa that is honoured in the East, but I have yet to come across a representation of it.
Alex