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  1. Rodnovers gathered at the Temple of Svarozhich's Fire of the Union of Slavic Native Belief Communities, in Krasotinka, Kaluga Oblast, Russia, to celebrate Perun Day. Worship ceremony led by the priests of the Ukrainian organisation Ancestral Fire of Slavic Native Faith.

  2. Type. Ethnic. Date. 20 July. Related to. Perun. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Festival of Perun. Festival of Perun, Perun's Day, Perunica is a Slavic festival in honor of the god Perun celebrated by modern Slavic neopagans (rodnovers); its existence in times before the Slavs began to be Christianized remains hypothetical.

  3. Nov 7, 2020 · The Slavic Native Faith, also known as Slavic Neopaganism or Rodnovery is described by historians as a modern Pagan religion. This so-called new religious movement is founded on the historical belief systems of the Slavic people in Central and Eastern Europe. The communities of its practitioners describe it simply as Rodnovery although there ...

  4. Jul 21, 2022 · Slavic people. Type. Ethnic. Date. 20 July. Related to. Perun. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Festival of Perun . Festival of Perun, Perun's Day, Perunica is a Slavic festival in honor of the god Perun celebrated by modern Slavic neopagans (rodnovers); its existence in times before the Slavs began to be Christianized remains hypothetical.

  5. On the afternoon of March 3, 1913, the day before the inauguration of Woodrow Wilson as the nation’s 28th president, thousands of suffragists gathered near the Garfield monument in front of the U.S. Capitol.

  6. Mar 4, 2016 · By March 3 this fledgling committee had organized and found the money for a major suffrage parade with floats, banners, speakers and a 20-page official program. The total cost of the event was $14,906.08, a princely sum in 1913, when the average annual wage was $621. The programs and tableau each cost over $1,000.

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  8. Mar 1, 2018 · Crowd breaking parade up at 9th St., Mch [i.e. March] 3, 1913 LOC (1913-03-03) by Library of Congress National Women’s History Museum. The parade’s drama was heightened by the crowd’s crass behavior. Marchers were subjected to insults and physical attacks by many of the half million, largely male, spectators.

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