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Prophets

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Ruth Norman
American religious leader (1900-1993)
Inri Cristo
Brazilian astrologer
Gentileza
José Datrino, known as prophet Gentileza (11 April 1917 – 29 May 1996) was a Brazilian urban personality, kind of a preacher, who became known from 1980 by making quirky inscriptions under an overpass in Rio de Janeiro, where he walked in a white robe and long beard. "Gentileza gera gentileza" ("Kindness begets kindness") is his most famous phrase.
Brandano
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Smohalla
Smohalla (Dreamer) (circa 1815 - 1895) was a Wanapum dreamer-prophet associated with the Washani, a Native American religious movement among Native American people in the Pacific Northwest’s Columbia Plateau region.
Mabel Barltrop
English founder of the Panacea Society
Helena Ekblom
Swedish preacher (1784-1859)
Lailoken
Lailoken (aka Merlyn Sylvester) was a semi-legendary madman and prophet who lived in the Caledonian Forest in the late 6th century. The Life of Saint Kentigern mentions "a certain foolish man, who was called Laleocen" living at or near the village of Peartnach (Partick) within the Kingdom of Strathclyde. Laleocen correctly prophesied the death of King Rhydderch Hael.
Augustus Sol Invictus
American far-right political activist
Vernon Carrington
Rastafari leader (1936–2005)
Thomas Lake Harris
American spiritualistic “prophet” (1823–1906)
Maria Leer
Dutch prophetess
Vegoia
Vegoia (Etruscan: Vecu) is a sibyl, prophet, or nymph within the Etruscan religious framework. She is identified as the author of parts of their large and complex set of sacred books, detailing the religiously correct methods of founding cities and shrines, draining fields, formulating laws and ordinances, measuring space and dividing time; she initiated the Etruscan people to the arts, as originating the rules and rituals of land marking, and as presiding over the observance, respect, and preservation of boundaries.