Slavic Native Faith's identity and political philosophy
In the Russian intellectual milieu, Slavic Native Faith (Rodnovery) presents itself as a carrier of the political philosophy of nativism/nationalism/populism (narodnichestvo), intrinsically related to the identity of the Slavs and the broader group of populations with Indo-European speaking origins, and intertwined with historiosophical ideas about the past and the future of these populations and their role in eschatology.
- Slavic Native Faith and mono-ideologies
- Rodnovery is critical towards what Rodnovers call the "mono-ideologies". By "mono-ideologies", they mean all those ideologies which promote "universal and one-dimensional truths", unable to grasp the complexity of reality and therefore doomed to failure
- Slavic Native Faith's theology and cosmology
- Slavic Native Faith (Rodnovery) has a theology that is generally monistic, consisting in the vision of a transcendental, supreme God which begets the universe and lives immanentised as the universe itself, present in decentralised and autonomous way in
- Slavic Native Faith in Russia
- Slavic Native Faith or Slavic Neopaganism in Russia is widespread, according to some estimates from research organisations which put the number of Russian Rodnovers in the millions. The Rodnover population generally has a high education and many of its
- Native Ukrainian National Faith
- The Native Ukrainian National Faith, also called Sylenkoism (Силенкоїзм) or Sylenkianism (Силенкіянство), and institutionally also known as the Church of Ukrainian Native Faith or Church of the Faithful of the Native Ukrainian
- Slavic Native Faith in Ukraine
- The Slavic Native Faith in Ukraine has an unspecified number of adherents which ranges between the thousands and the tens of thousands
- Peterburgian Vedism
- Peterburgian Vedism or Peterburgian Rodnovery, or more broadly Russian Vedism and Slavic Vedism, is one of the earliest branches of Rodnovery and one of the most important schools of thought within it, founded by Viktor Nikolayevich Bezverkhy in Saint
- Assianism
- Assianism is a modern Pagan religion derived from the traditional mythology of the Ossetians, modern descendants of the Alan tribes of the Scythians. Assianism is believed to be a continuation of the ancient Scythian religion. The religion is known as
- Ynglism
- Ynglism, institutionally the Ancient Russian Ynglist Church of the Orthodox Old Believers–Ynglings is a direction of Rodnovery formally established in 1992 by Aleksandr Yuryevich Khinevich in Omsk, Russia, and legally recognised by the Russian state in
- Ivanovism
- Ivanovism is a Rodnover new religious movement and healing system in Eastern Europe based on the teachings of the Russian mystic Porfiry Korneyevich Ivanov (1898–1983), who elaborated his doctrines by drawing upon Russian folklore. The movement began to
- Commission and Others v Kadi
- Commission and Others v Kadi was a case in the European Court of Justice, an appeal from the earlier case Kadi v Commission (T-85/09) in the General Court. The Court of Justice, by dismissing the appeal, confirmed the General Court’s annulment of