- a
product of
collaboration of the
editors of this
newspaper and
Yuriy Mirolyubov, who
later claimed to have
found the book.
Others believe that either...
-
Viktor Sergeyevich Mirolyubov (Russian: Виктор Серге́евич Миролюбов, 22
January 1860, in Moscow,
Russian Empire – 26
October 1939, in Leningrad, USSR)...
- (Vologda, 1963). pp. 152–158.
Correspondence of
Kuprin and
Mirolyubov. P.P. Shirmakov, ed.
Mirolyubov, V.S. 1899–1907.
Literary Archive, vol. 5,
Academy of...
- Yav. The
publisher and
probable falsifier of the Book of Veles, Yury
Mirolyubov,
interprets these terms as follows: We
managed only
after long efforts...
- (vedat)
spiritual truths. The term was
first emplo**** by Yury
Petrovich Mirolyubov—the
writer or
discoverer of the Book of Veles—in the mid-twentieth century...
-
ruble for a year's subscription)
contributed to its po****rity.
Viktor Mirolyubov who came to
Zhurnal Dlya
Vsekh in 1898 as its
publisher and
editor gathered...
-
early 1998,
Zemfira invited Rinat Akhmadiyev,
Sergei Sozinov,
Sergei Mirolyubov, and
Vadim Solovyov to join Zemfira.
Their first professional gig took...
-
spread that the most
ancient "Aryan"
people are the "Rus".
Emigrant Yury
Mirolyubov wrote about the
existence of the Rus in the
Paleolithic when they suffered...
- of the term "Vedism" to
refer to
Rodnovery goes back to Yury
Petrovich Mirolyubov, the
writer or
discoverer of the Book of Veles.
Peterburgian Vedic theology...
-
regularly since 1898. Upon
receiving the text, the magazine's
editor Viktor Mirolyubov wrote in a
letter dated May 29, 1901: "Thank you very much, dear Ivan...