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Maxim Rudometkin : ウィキペディア英語版 | Maxim Rudometkin
Maxim Gavrilovich Rudometkin (Максим Гаврилович Рудомёткин) (c. 1818 – 1877) was a presbyter of the sect of Molokan ''Pryguny'' (Jumpers) and founder of the "New Israel" Maksimisty as a zealous religious leader in the mid-1800s. == Early life == He was born in Algasov village near the city of Morshansk, Tambov Oblast, in central Russia sometime from 1808 to 1818. At the age of 8, according to a letter written by him to his followers (), his family separated from the Orthodox Church in approximately 1816-1826 and joined a recently founded faith by Semeon Uklein called the Molokans. In 1833, a schism developed within Molokanism. This new Molokan sect, founded in New Russia (Novorossiya) by Lukian Petrovich Sokoloff, introduced glossolalia, and prophesy into Molokan church services. The Russian authorities of the time called them by various names; "Zionists" (Сионцы), ''Skakuny'' (Leapers/Skippers) and ''Pryguny'' (Jumpers), with the latter term prevailing in the 1897 Russian Empire Census. By the 1840s, due to the prophecies of Sokoloff, Rudometkin's family relocated to the Transcaucasia, and settled in the village of Nikitino, Erivan Governorate, renamed Fioletovo during the Soviet period. In the Southern Caucasus Rudometkin married his wife Maria Fyodorovna, and raised 3 boys, Ermolai, Alexei and Vassya. As his status among the Molokan Jumpers grew, he was given the leadership role of the community from the former leader Sokoloff. This was done according to eyewitness accounts by the laying on of hands from Sokoloff with a blessing of the Holy Spirit in the custom of their religion.
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