Category
page 119th-century apocalypticists
Joseph Smith
founder of the Latter Day Saint movement and prophet (1805–1844)

Helena Blavatsky
Russian occult writer (1831-1891)
Camille Flammarion
French astronomer and author (1842–1925)
Ellen G. White
American author, co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church (1827–1915)

Charles Taze Russell
Founder of the Bible Student movement (1852–1916)

Edgar Cayce
purported clairvoyant healer and psychic (1877–1945)

William Miller
American founder of the Adventist movement (1782–1849)

Nat Turner
American slave rebellion leader (1800-1831)
Wilford Woodruff
President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1807-1898)
Charles Piazzi Smyth
British astronomer (1817-1900)
Wallace Fard Muhammad
American Islamic minister
Wovoka
Wovoka ( – September 20, 1932), also known as Jack Wilson, was the Paiute religious leader who founded a second episode of the Ghost Dance movement. Wovoka means "cutter" or "wood cutter" in the Northern Paiute language.
Public Universal Friend
American preacher (1752–1819)
Joseph Bates
American sailor, co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church (1792–1872)
Arsenios the Cappadocian
Greek monk
Joanna Southcott
English religious leader (1750-1814)
Jonas Wendell
American Christian evangelist (1815–1873)
Marie Julie Jahenny
French Catholic mystic
Nathaniel Brassey Halhed
Civilian of the British East India Company (1751-1830)
Mary Bateman
British murderer
George Rapp
German mystic
Enoch Mgijima
Christian Xhosa or African prophet
Wilbur Glenn Voliva
American evangelist (1870-1942)

Richard Brothers
early believer and teacher of Anglo-Israelism (alias British Israelism, a theory concerning the Lost Ten Tribes of Israel)