Intellectual movement in Russia opposed to Western European influences
This article is part of a series on
Conservatism in Russia
Ideologies
Eurasianism
Duginism
Monarchism
Tsarism
Populism
Putinism
Russian nationalism
All-Russian
Christian
Ultra
Slavophilia
Pochvennichestvo
Traditionalist conservatism
Principles
Authority
Autocracy
Duty
Economic interventionism
Family values
Imperialism
Irredentism
Law and order
Orthodox values
Nuclear Orthodoxy
Patriotism
Reactionism
Russian culture
Social hierarchy
Social order
Sovereign democracy
Statism
History
Black Hundreds
Great Russia
Russian Empire
Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality
White Army
White movement
Intellectuals
Aksakov
Dostoevsky
Dugin
Frank
Ilyin
Karamzin
Katkov
Leontiev
Pobedonostsev
Prokhanov
Rozanov
Semyonov
Shafarevich
Shcherbatov
Solzhenitsyn
Strakhov
Surkov
Tikhomirov
Tikhon
Uvarov
Vikulov
Zhukovsky
Politicians
Alexander III
Butina
Dubrovin
Durnovo
Gryzlov
Kolchak
Kornilov
Luzhkov
Malyshkin
Mizulina
Nicholas I
Nicholas II
Pikhno
Pobedonostsev
Putin
Rodzianko
Rogozin
Rostopchin
Shulgin
Slutsky
Surkov
Tolstoy
von Ungern
Uvarov
Vladimir
Volodin
Zhirinovsky
Parties
Active
Eurasia Party
Great Russia
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia
Rodina
Russian All-People's Union
Union of Right Forces
United Russia
Defunct
For Truth
Liberal Democratic Party of the Soviet Union
People's Union
Pamyat Society
Union of the Russian People
Organisations
All-Russia People's Front
Izborsky Club
Media
Kievlyanin
Kozma Minin
Nash Sovremennik
Russkoye Znamya
Zavtra
Znamya
Related topics
Russia for Russians
Russia under Vladimir Putin
St Petersburg Dialogues(1821)
Conservatism portal
Russia portal
v
t
e
Slavophilia (Russian: Славянофильство) was a movement originating from the 19th century that wanted the Russian Empire to be developed on the basis of values and institutions derived from Russia's early history. Slavophiles opposed the influences of Western Europe in Russia.[1] Depending on the historical context, the opposite of Slavophilia could be seen as Slavophobia (a fear of Slavic culture) or also what some Russian intellectuals (such as Ivan Aksakov) called zapadnichestvo (westernism).[2]
^
For example:
Aksakov, Ivan Sergeevich (1975). Slavi︠a︡nofilʹstvo i zapadnichestvo [Slavophilia and zapadnichestvo] (in Russian). Vol. 2 of Sochinenīi︠a︡: 1860-1886 (reprint ed.). Tip. M. G. Volchaninova. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
Slavophilia (Russian: Славянофильство) was a movement originating from the 19th century that wanted the Russian Empire to be developed on the basis of...
movement in Russia that tied in closely with its contemporary ideology, Slavophilia. The Slavophiles and the Pochvennichestvo supported the complete emancipation...
Serbianisation Slovakization Ukrainization Hellenization Pan-Slavism Slavophilia Slavophobia Bjørnflaten, Jan Ivar. "Chronologies of the Slavicization...
some contexts of Russian history, zapadnichestvo can be contrasted with Slavophilia, whose proponents argued that Russia should develop its own unique identity...