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Galician Russophilia, also known in Poland and Ukraine as Moscophilia was a cultural and political movement in modern-day western Ukraine, which emerged during the 19th century. First becoming popular in the region of Carpathian Ruthenia, it later spread to Galicia and Bukovina, both ruled by Austria-Hungary. Its ideology emphasized that since the Eastern Slavic people of Galicia were descendants of the people of Kievan Rus' (Ruthenians), and followers of Eastern Christianity, they were thus a branch of the Russian people. The movement was part of the larger Pan-Slavism that was developing in the late 19th century. Russophilia was largely a backlash against Polonisation, Romanianization and Magyarisation that was largely blamed on the landlords and associated with Roman Catholicism.
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