Gleb Botkin and the Church of Aphrodite

Authors

  • Dmitry Galtsin Library of Russian Academy of Science

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pome.v14i1.91

Keywords:

Church of Aphrodite, Gleb Botkin, Paganism

Abstract

The Church of Aphrodite was the first Pagan religious group officially recognized as a religion by a modern state. The Church of Aphrodite was incorporated in the United States in 1939, headed by Gleb Botkin, son of the physician of the last Russian Czar, Nicholas II. Gleb Botkin emigrated to America after the Revolution in Russia, and in the 1920–1930s created a religious and philosophical system, which finally was embodied in his church. The church didn’t survive its founder and vanished after Botkin’s death in 1969. Besides Botkin’s printed works the author makes use of Botkin’s letters to Philip Proctor (1944–1963) to reconstruct the theology of his church and his life as its Arch-Priest. Ironically, Botkin did not want to revive or create Paganism: he viewed his “true” and timeless religion, based on “the laws of the cosmos,” as separate both from world religions with their “distorted” teachings, and from the Pagan element, no matter, whether that of the ancient or the modern world.

Author Biography

  • Dmitry Galtsin, Library of Russian Academy of Science
    Dmitry Galtsin is a Researcher in the Rare Books Department, Library of Russian Academy of Science, Saint-Petersburg, Russia.

References

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Published

2013-07-18

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Galtsin, D. (2013). Gleb Botkin and the Church of Aphrodite. Pomegranate, 14(1), 91-107. https://doi.org/10.1558/pome.v14i1.91