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Journal Article

Citation

Malysheva S. Gosudarstvo, Religiia, Tserkov' v Rossii i za Rubezhom/State, Religion and Church in Russia and Worl 2022; 40(1): 58-88.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022)

DOI

10.22394/2073-7203-2022-40-1-58-88

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The secular cult of the fallen heroes - martyrs of the revolution be¬came the most important component of the Bolshevik historical my¬thology of the early Soviet period (1917-1920s). This cult clearly showed a religious origin and a number of differences from the cult of heroes of the later Soviet era. The early revolutionary martyrdom, from February 1917 and the first months after October 1917, devel¬oped as a collective and largely anonymous, symbolic phenomenon. These features were also evident in the early martyriums, the mass graves on the Field of Mars in Petrograd and near the Kremlin Wall in Moscow. However, the Bolsheviks' creation of their own, revolu¬tionary secular pantheon based on religious models later individual¬ized martyrdom and developed its special criteria. A sign of individ¬ualization was the compilation of martyrologies and the formation of practices of veneration of martyrs' burial places. The cult of martyrs acquired an international character through inclusion in the panthe¬on of the victims of revolutionary events in Europe. The discursive tropes formed to describe heroic martyrdom initially normalized only violent death at the hands of the enemy. After the end of the Civil War, however, the emerging linguistic ritualization allowed for the heroi¬zation of the circumstances of death: those who died of illness, acci¬dents, even suicides were counted as martyrs. Gradually the number of heroes was reduced while the range of their types was, on the con¬trary, expanded. The martyr hero took an increasingly modest place in the hierarchy of heroes, the tropes of describing martyrdom were simplified and standardized, and their biographies were straightened and taken on a symbolic rather than an individual form. © 2022 Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration. All rights reserved.


Language: ru

Keywords

death; religion; ideology; martyrs; cult of the fallen heroes; Russian Civil War; Russian Revolution

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