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Change name

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How about changing the name of the article to, for example, the Schism of Old Beleivers to follow the policy to use English terms except when necessary? And keep raskol entry as aredirect, of course. Maybe there are better names. Just a suggestion. --Irpen 08:56, July 25, 2005 (UTC)

  • I think the name is rather OK. It is the known term. I've read about a book of some Pierre Paskal 'Avvakum et les débuts du raskol'. It looks like the word is known not only in Russia, but also abroad. Am I right? Arseni 09:07, 7 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Arseni, while Raskol may be a known term it is not widely used and the alternative Schism of Old Believers or smth along these lines would describe the exact same thing no less precisely, without any loss of meaning and using a more common English terminology. One thing is when we use a native word for oblast, raion, volost, etc. for the specific terms whose translations vary from usage to usage and none of the alternative english words (region, province, district, county, etc) is clearly the best or identical. Another thing is Raskol, which is just the particular schism in the history of Christianity. In any case, I am all for introducing "raskol" in the first line of the renamed article and keeping the entry raskol as a redirect. Or raskol may evolve into a separate article about the term itslef.

As for the separating of an article about the schism itself from the article about the denomination (Old Believers), I think it is a valid point in general. The OB is a more broad topic and the "schism" article may be a more detailed account of a chapter in OB. But as of now, while there is much more to be said, perhaps it is still preferred to consentrate on the OB article and add the the info about the Schism there first. Let's see, what other editors have to say about it. Regards, --Irpen 05:18, August 8, 2005 (UTC)

I just posted a note at Russia portal. We'll see what others think. --Irpen 09:27, August 10, 2005 (UTC)

Other editors, please voice your opinion about the name. If this is placed for a vote at WP:RM it sill certainly be renamed to something similar to the name I suggested, because anglophones will certainly vote for a more familiar "Schism" than for a odd sounding "raskol". I would rather have this decided by the editors who have a clue on the subject. I prefer Schizm of Old Believers. Ghirlandajo prefers current Raskol. Arseni is fine with a Schism but seem to prefer "Raskol" slightly. Who else? --Irpen 02:52, August 13, 2005 (UTC)

  • Hi there, gentlemen! I would be more comfortable with Raskol, but the Schism of Old Believers should be a redirect to the main article at Raskol. KNewman 22:30, August 13, 2005 (UTC)

Does anybody have new thoughts on this? In Russian ru:Раскол (Raskol/schism) has a disambiguation page, while this page has a more specific title of ru:Раскол Русской церкви (Schism of the Russian church). Are there any English-language sources that refer to this schism primarily as as "Raskol" without already having the implied context of a schism of the Russian church? I think it would make sense to follow the Russian pages and move this page to Schism of the Russian Orthodox Church with a redirect from the current title. Strange Quirk (talk) 19:50, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with this proposal. Vincent J. Lipsio (talk) 22:21, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Hearing no objections I've moved the page. Strange Quirk (talk) 03:25, 16 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Crime and Punishment

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As I posted elsewhere, 'raskol' is only seen in critical editions of Crime and Punishment. The Old Believers are quite obscure from the American point of view (and I would guess, from the British and Australian one as well; the Canadians do have some experience with them). As an article name Old Believers is fine, as this is the usual English term on the few occasions you come across it. If you want a neutral synonym for 'schism', try 'secession', and when describing the people themselves, 'dissenters', or even, 'refusnik' (a fine Rus-glish portmanteau).--FourthAve 03:38, 24 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Neil Stephenson's recent Baroque cycle also contains a few paragraphs on the topic.

Ukrainian influence

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I think it's worth mentioning that the schism happened the same year as the Pereyaslav Rada and that Nikon was influenced by Kiev clerics, who used newer translations etc. A couple of sources come to mind: Nikolai Trubetskoy and Victor Zhivov. Sergivs-en (talk) 08:30, 19 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:Schism of the Russian Church/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Nominator: Pagliaccious (talk · contribs) 01:33, 26 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Reviewer: Ganesha811 (talk · contribs) 19:55, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]


Hi! I'll be reviewing this article using the template below. If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask them here. This is a big topic so it may be a complex review - please bear with me if it takes a couple days to make substantive comments, as I need to read up a little. —Ganesha811 (talk) 19:55, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hello Ganesha811. Please take your time. I am on a trip until the 12th, so I may not be very quick to respond until I return. Kind regards, Pagliaccious (talk) 23:35, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, Ganesha811. I've had my eye on this page for a little bit. I am concerned that this GA may fail comprehensiveness and that this will not be immediately apparent to those who do not speak Russian; this page is less than a quarter the size of the Russian-language page (114,288 bytes vs 28,439). Part of that is a (probably excessive) play-by-play timeline on the Russian page, but I believe significant portions may be missing from the English-language article. Given my relative inexperience at GAR, I felt unprepared to adjudicate this, so I did not choose to review. Since you're much more experienced, I figured you could use this information to make a more informed call.
@Pagliaccious: This article is in excellent shape otherwise and should pass if Ganesha judges this to be broad enough for GA. Should it not pass based on comprehensiveness, I'm happy to help build the page further if you need. ThaesOfereode (talk) 12:24, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hello @ThaesOfereode: I appreciate your comments very much. There is no need to shy away from adjudicating if you feel that the article is unready. What in particular do you think that the English article is missing that it could expand on, based on the Russian article? There are a few things I immediately notice, beyond the play-by-play that you mention. First is a cataloguing of all of the liturgical changes, accompanied by a long section on the origin of rites such as the sign of the cross. I felt that the changes were too minute (besides the book-revisions, sign of the cross, etc) and a detailed background better suited for another article, but for comprehensiveness some of this could certainly be included in the existing "Earlier reforms" section, perhaps renamed to something like "Background". Another change that could be made is a broader description of the geopolitical background. I did not mention the annexation of "Little Russia" as the Russian article does, nor do I go into the background of Nikon to explain his political ambitions. Please let me know what suggestions you have, or if there are any works in Russian that I could refer to. It seems to me that many English sources focus more on the aftermath or political significance of the reforms rather than the liturgical details of the reforms themselves.
On the subject of byte-counts and readable prose: I believe that the English article's prose is roughly half the byte-length of the prose of the Russian article, ignoring the "Chronology" section in the Russian article: on xtools, the Russian article has 34,213 bytes of prose (this tool ignores the bulleted "Chronology" list) and the English article 17,292. However, to my understanding, if both pages are stored in UTF-8 and the English characters are chiefly ASCII, then it should take about 2 bytes to encode every Cyrillic character but only 1 byte to encode a Latin character, meaning the readable (non-chronology) prose sections have roughly the same number of characters. As for information-per-character or other metrics to compare the two language articles, that is even more beyond my ken than character encodings.
Please do not hesitate to comment on whatever is lacking in the article. I would very much appreciate any suggestions you would have to improve the article's comprehensiveness. Kind regards, Pagliaccious (talk) 16:41, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you both for your comments - I will take this into account as I begin the review. I do not speak or read Russian, but will do my best to give the article a fair and thorough review nevertheless! —Ganesha811 (talk) 18:51, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Happy to help. Feel free to ping me with any questions or assistance you might need, including Russian source review. ThaesOfereode (talk) 23:40, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for your gracious response; I sincerely appreciate it. Re: byte-size, I agree that it's not the best measure, but I wanted to demonstrate the scope of the difference: one of magnitude, not two or three paragraphs. I'm not sure how the calculation works, but I couldn't get the "readable text" function to work on ru.WP, so I went with bytes. In short, it was a dumb way to frame it; I did not mean in any way to minimize your work. As for what I think may be necessary to the page's comprehension, I must admit that my Russian is a little rusty, but it seems like a good contextualization for the reader would be helpful. In particular, I think Nikon's political ambitions/the political climate – especially since they frame the event – and later appraisals and effects. Catherine the Great – to say the least of her, a towering figure in Russian history – called Nikon "личность возбуждающая во мне отвращение" and wrote negatively about the reforms. It seems noteworthy that Hilarion Alfeyev "считает это национальной трагедией" in 2021; it shows a) that the reforms are still relevant to modern Orthodox discourse/ecumenism, b) how they are viewed in the modern context, and c) that there are modern efforts (or the appearance of such) to address the schism. It might be worth digging deeper to see if other metropolitans or patriarchs have commented recently.
If something like background may be better suited to another article, I should still recommend summing the most pertinent parts of it up here, for the ignorant reader (i.e., a reader ignorant of this topic/period/religion/etc.) and placing an appropriate {{main}} or {{further}} tag. You're totally right that it has the potential to begin to creep out of the summary style demanded for GA (or indeed all articles), but I don't think a mention of Little Russia's annexation will violate it so long as it is pertinent to the topic at hand, but I will let you decide what is pertinent enough to add and what should be left out. All the best, ThaesOfereode (talk) 23:39, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
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