Subbotnik (disambiguation)

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Subbotnik may refer to:

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Subbotnik

Subbotnik and voskresnik were days of volunteer unpaid work on weekends after the October Revolution, though the word itself is derived from Cуббо́та and the common Russian suffix -ник (-nik).

Spiritual Christianity Russian religious movement, non-Orthodox

The term "Spiritual Christianity" refers to "folk Protestants", non-Orthodox indigenous to the Russian Empire that emerged from among the Orthodox, and from the Bezpopovtsy Raskolniks. Origins may be due to Protestant movements imported to Russia by missionaries, mixed with folk traditions, resulting in tribes of believers collectively called sektanty (sects). When discovered, these tribes of heretics were typically documented by Russian Orthodox Church clergy with a label that described the heresy – not fasting, meeting on Saturday, rejecting the spirit, genital and breast mutilation, self-flagellation, etc.

Sabbatarianism advocates the observation of the Sabbath in Christianity, in keeping with the Ten Commandments.

The Subbotniks is a common name for Russian religious movements of Christian origin, whom majority belonged to Rabbinic and Karaite Judaism, the Judaizers minority to Spiritual Christianity, split from other Sabbatarians in the late 18th century.

Russian Karaites may refer to:

Russian Karaite may refer to:

Golden Eagle Award may refer to:

Subotnick and Subotnik can refer to:

Subbotnik is an annual international music festival, which takes place in Moscow, Russia.

Pop Farm is a Russian concert agency. It was founded in 2013 in Moscow. Its main projects include Subbotnik Festival, the first ever Russian tour of The Offspring, concerts of Imagine Dragons, The xx, Miles Kane, Warpaint, Cut Copy, Smashing Pumpkins, etc.

The Russians in Israel are Russian citizens who are immigrants to Israel from Russian communities of the Soviet Union and post-Soviet states, and their descendants. They are mostly members of mixed families, some of them Halachically non-Jewish members of Jewish households living in Israel. A few are descended from Russian Subbotnik families, who have migrated to Israel over the past century. People of full or partial non-Jewish ethnic Russian ancestry number around 300,000 of the Israeli population from the immigrants from the Soviet Union and post-Soviet states, and the number of Russian passport holders living in Israel is in the hundreds of thousands.

Subota or Subbota means Saturday in several Slavic languages. It may refer to

"The Requiem" is an 1886 short story by Anton Chekhov.