Leipzig Missionswerk and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Russia #1 Teutonic Livonia, Russian civil war and poverty
· by Bijbelvorsers
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in Church and Fellowship, History, Language, Preaching, World
| tagged 16° Century, 17° Century, 19° Century, All-Union Communist Party (of Bolsheviks), Baltic Finns, Berlin, Bohemia, Bolsheviks or Bolsheviki, Carl Paul, Communism, Communist Party, Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Communists, De-Russification, Denmark, Eastern Orthodox, Eastern shores of the Baltic, Estonia, Evangelical Lutheran Church of Russia, Famine in Russia (1921–1922), Finland, German Foreign Office, German Lutheran heritage, German–Soviet relations, Government of the Soviet Union, Grain confiscation(s), Grigory Zinoviev, Gustav Eriksson Vasa king of Sweden and Finland, Gustav Hilger, Hilfsaktion = help program, Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church, Hungary, Ingria (hist. reg. N.W. Eu. Russia), Ingrian Finns, Ingrian language, Interwar period, Ivan the Terrible, Izhorian(s) - Ingrian(s) - Ingermans - Inkeri or Inkerinmaa people, John Morehead, Korenizatsiya = indigenisation, Latvia, Left Socialist Revolutionaries, Leipzig, Leipzig Missionswerk, Leon Trotsky, Lev Kamenev, Livonia - Līvõmō - Livland - Lijfland - Liwlandia (hist. reg. E. coast Baltic Sea - N. Europe), Lutheran Church, Lutheranism, Malnutrition, National delimitation, North Ingria, Northern Russia, Ober-prokuro = chief procurator, October Revolution, Pastorenhilfe = pastors help, Patriarchate of Moscow, Peter I emperor of Russia = Peter the Great, Poland, Protestant Reformation, Reformation, Russian Civil war, Russian Communist Party (of Bolsheviks), Russian domination, Russian Orthodox Church, Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party, Saint Petersburg Governorate - Leningrad Province - Government of Saint Petersburg, Scandinavia, Soviet Union, Soviets = Soviet people, Sweden, Teutonic Livonia, Theophil Meier, Tolerance, Transylvania, Treaty of Nystad (1721), Typhus, Ukraine, Ukrainian language, Vladimir Lenin
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Looking at what became the course of Lutheranism and the stand to religion in the Soviet Union