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  • Russian

    Russian 4:04 pm on August 14, 2025 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: customs,   

    Honey Savior Day: Sweet Russian Traditions for Love and Wealth 

    August 14 marks Honey Savior Day (Medovy Spas) in Russia and in many Orthodox Christian communities—the first of the three “Savior” feasts and the start of the Dormition Fast. Honey and a Wish for Love According to old folklore, women smear a little honey on their shoe soles to attract marriage within a year. A loved one applies the honey, and then the woman takes seven steps around the house while saying, “So that men will stick to me.” Honey Water for Prosperity Men have their own money-drawing ritual: stir a spoonful of honey into water, take seven sips, and say, “Just as bees fly to honey, so wealth will come rushing to me.” Part of the Dormition Fast Honey Savior Day falls at the beginning of the two-week Dormition Fast, which leads up to the Feast of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary on August 28. In many places,…

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  • Russian

    Russian 3:32 pm on August 14, 2025 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , customs, , , Veps, wedding   

    Blood Weddings, Walrus Heads, and Sky Burials: Five Unsettling Indigenous Traditions in Russia 

    Photo: TASS / Alexey Druzhinin

    In Russia, 195 ethnic groups live side by side. Each has its own traditions, passed down since ancient times. Some customs, however, are enough to make your blood run cold. Hard as it is to believe, some of them aren’t legends from the distant past but are very much part of 21st-century Russian reality. Here’s a closer look at some of the most vivid (and unsettling) traditions of the indigenous peoples from different corners of this vast land. Chukchi blood wedding straight out of Game of Thrones Life in Chukotka is harsh — it’s a cold, inhospitable land — yet people have lived there since time immemorial. Not only do they survive, herding reindeer and fishing, but they also marry — in a way that would impress George R. R. Martin himself. The beautiful bride, adorned with beads and furs, rides her own reindeer in the company of her entire…

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  • Russian

    Russian 9:40 am on August 9, 2025 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Aleuts, , customs, Enets, Eskimos, Evens, , Nganasans, Nivkhs, , Votes   

    Bald Brides, Wives for Rent, and Dates with the Dead: The Strangest Traditions of Russia’s Peoples 

    Northern shaman beats tambourine performing a rite calls spring

    Today, Russia is home to 47 indigenous peoples, classified as “autochthonous” or small-numbered. These groups live on the ancestral lands of their forebears, preserving traditional lifestyles, crafts, and customs.

    Below are some of the most fascinating and unusual traditions from these communities. Learn why Ingrian brides shaved their heads, why the Nganasans left their deceased tribespeople in the tundra, how Enets shamans “brought a drum to life,” and why some northern peoples practiced sexual hospitality. Chukchi and Koryaks – Ancient Customs Around Death Among the Chukchi, according to travelers’ accounts, dying a natural death was long considered “dishonorable” and “befitting only women.” It was believed that those who ended their own lives would enjoy a more blissful afterlife. Elderly people who no longer wished to live and young people with incurable illnesses could even ask relatives to help them pass away. If refused, they might pay someone else to do…

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  • Russian

    Russian 9:10 pm on August 6, 2025 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: believes, customs, rituals, , villagers   

    6 Strangest Rituals of the Russian People 

    rituals

    Long before modern medicine and science reached rural corners of Russia, people relied on deeply rooted folk customs to explain the unexplainable. Some of these age-old rituals may seem shocking, surreal, or even macabre today—but they were once taken seriously as essential parts of village life. Here are six of the strangest ancient rituals that were once practiced in Old Russia. 1. Salting and “Re-Baking” Infants In old Russian villages, infant mortality was tragically high. Without antibiotics or modern healthcare, desperate parents resorted to folk rituals to protect their babies.

    If a child was born prematurely or seemed sickly, they would cover the baby in dough, place them on a bread peel, and slide them into a preheated oven—briefly. This bizarre ritual, called “perepekanie” (literally “re-baking”), was believed to help the child “finish cooking,” just like in the womb. The practice lasted in some regions well into the 20th century…

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