Category
page 1Antisemitism in Russia
Ivan the Terrible
Tsar and Grand Duke of all Rus' from 1547 to 1584
White movement
major faction in the Russian Civil War
Pale of Settlement
forced distribution of Jewish population in the Russian Empire
Black Hundreds
early 20th century Russian monarchist movement
Zakhar Prilepin
Russian writer and politician (born 1975)

Pyotr Krasnov
White movement Cossack (1869-1947)
Rodina
political party in Russia
Vladimir Purishkevich
Russian politician (1870-1920)
Konstantin Rodzaevsky
Russian Fascist (1907-1946)
White Terror
Russian Civil War period of political repression and mass killings in 1918 carried out by the White Army
Nikolay Alexeyev
Russian-Swiss activist and journalist
Alexander Prokhanov
Soviet and Russian writer and political activist
Vitaly Valentinovich Milonov
Russian politician
2024 Dagestan attacks
2024 mass shooting and explosion in Dagestan, Russia
Itzik Feffer
Soviet Yiddish poet (1900-1952)
Albert Makashov
Soviet general and Russian politician
Gabriel of Białystok
Belarusian saint
Viktor Anpilov
Russian hardline Communist politician/trade unionist (1945-2018)

Pamyat
thumb|right|The symbol of NPF "Pamyat" with the "Russian swastika"
The National Patriotic Front "Memory" (NPF "Memory"; , also known as the Pamyat Society; , , ) was a Russian far-right antisemitic, and monarchist organization.
Oleg Shenin
Russian politician (1937-2009)
Yury Mukhin
Russian writer
Alexander Potkin
Russian politician
Russia for Russians
anti-multicultural sentiment

Arthur Cherep-Spiridovich
Russian noble
Georgy Butmi de Katzman
Russian journalist (1856–1917)
antisemitism in Russia
overview about antisemitism in Russia
Oleg Platonov
Russian writer
National-Bolshevik Front
name for three separate strands of National Bolshevism
Fyodor Vinberg
Russian politician (1868–1927)

Dmitry Vasilyev
soviet-Russian activist; leader of Pamyat (1988-2003)

Aleksandr Kharchikov
Russian singer (1949–2023)
Zaveshchanie russkogo fashista
book by Konstantin Rodzaevsky
Hippolytus Lutostansky
Polish priest (1835–1915)
Anti-Jewish violence in Central and Eastern Europe, 1944–1946
1931 Menshevik Trial
Soviet show-trial