The sect of Khristovovery in the Ukrainian SSR

Research Article
EDN: LQHSLA DOI: 10.31483/r-112922
Open Access
International academic journal «Ethnic Culture». Volume 6
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Published in:
International academic journal «Ethnic Culture». Volume 6
Author:
Andrey G. Berman 1
Work direction:
Ethnography, Ethnology and Anthropology
Pages:
8-15
Received: 26 August 2024 / Accepted: 25 September 2024 / Published: 25 September 2024

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1 Chuvash State Pedagogical University
For citation:
Berman A. G. (2024). The sect of Khristovovery in the Ukrainian SSR. Ethnic Culture, 6(3), 8-15. EDN: LQHSLA. https://doi.org/10.31483/r-112922
UDC 271.2–79(47)

Abstract

The article is devoted to the history of the oldest Russian sect of Hristovovery or Khlysty on the territory of Ukraine during Soviet times. The purpose of the work is to explore the existence of the Khlysty sect in the Ukrainian SSR, to consider some of the features of the spread of the sect and the details of its rituals. The source base of the research was unpublished operational documents of Ukrainian archives. Special studies devoted to the sect of Christ-believers in Ukraine during the Soviet period were not found. The article applies a materialistic understanding of history, which requires consideration of historical phenomena in development, in the unity of the logical and historical, i.e. in the unity of material and spiritual factors. In the course of the work, it was established that the Khlysty sect was recorded on the territory of the future Ukraine from the first half of the 18th century and spreads across those regions where the Great Russian population lived compactly: in Old Believer settlements in Starodubye (the future Chernigov region), in the Azov region. West of the Dnieper, the sect of Christian believers is not fixed. In Soviet times, state security agencies regularly reported the existence of Christian believers in the same areas where they existed in the pre-revolutionary period. A feature of the Christian faith in Soviet times was the merger of the sect with Orthodox movements that were in opposition to both the Soviet regime and the official Russian Orthodox Church.

Acknowledgments

The author expresses gratitude to the Lviv historian Roman Skakun, who provided photocopies of archival documents.

References

  1. 1. Vedeneev, D. V. (2016). Atheists in uniforms. Soviet special services and the religious sphere of Ukraine., 496. Moscow: Alistorus.
  2. 2. Panchenko, A. A. (2022). Christism and catholicism: folklore and traditional culture of Russian mystical sects: monograph., 544. Moscow: United Humanitarian Publishing House. EDN: WCSPRR

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