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A. S. Khomyakov as an Anglophile: The Paradox of a Westerner in the Heart of Slavophilism

Introduction: England as a Philosophical Counterbalance

Alexey Stepanovich Khomyakov (1804-1860) is a central figure of early Slavophilism, whose teachings are associated with a critique of Western rationalism and the affirmation of the uniqueness of Russian Orthodox communal life. However, his personality and intellectual path contain a deep paradox: Khomyakov was a passionate Anglophile. His fascination with England was not superficial or everyday but deeply philosophical and religious. For him, England did not represent the “West” in general (which he identified with the rationalist, depersonalized Romano-Germanic world), but a special, conservatively organic alternative to revolutionary France and metaphysical Germany. His Anglophilia was an important component in constructing his own Slavophile system.

Khomyakov’s England: The Land of “Living Tradition” and “Organic Conservatism”

Unlike many of his contemporaries who saw England as the birthplace of parliamentarism and bourgeois progress, Khomyakov valued something else in it:

Unwritten constitution and the supremacy of custom (Common Law): He admired that English statehood grew not from abstract theories (like the French), but from historical tradition, from the organic development of ancient institutions. This resonated with his idea that the true life of a people is rooted in unwritten, irrational foundations.

“Burkean conservatism” as an antithesis to revolution: Edmund Burke’s philosophy, his critique of the French Revolution in the name of historical continuity and “prejudices,” was extremely close to Khomyakov. In England, he saw the realization of Burke’s ideal — a society developing through gradual reform rather than violent rupture.

Religious freethinker and connoisseur of English theology: Khomyakov, a profound Orthodox theologian, was well versed not only in Anglicanism but also in the history of English religious movements — Puritans, Quakers, Methodists. He maintained lively correspondence with Anglican theologians (for example, William Palmer), striving to explain the essence of Orthodoxy to them. His famous treatise “The Church is One” was first published in French for a Western audience, demonstrating his orientation towards dialogue rather than isolation.

Interesting fact: Khomyakov was one of the first Russian intellectuals to deeply study and translate into Russian William Langland’s “Vision of Piers Plowman” — a monument of medieval English literature which, according to Khomyakov, reflected the deep folk-religious roots of the English spirit, still unspoiled by later rationalism.

Anglophilia in Everyday Life and Public Position

Khomyakov did not merely reflect on England — he consciously cultivated an “English style” in life, which was a form of intellectual protest and identity.

“English” landowner: On his estate Bogucharovo, he managed the household in a rational, almost farming manner, introducing advanced agricultural techniques borrowed from English literature. He bred purebred cattle and experimented with machinery. This was a challenge to Russian noble laziness and mismanagement.

Cult of physical activity and sports: Khomyakov was known as an excellent horseman, hunter, and a man of considerable physical strength. This corresponded to the ideal of the English gentleman, combining intellectual refinement with physical hardening, in contrast to the pampered French salon type.

Political position: During the Crimean War (1853-1856), when England was officially an enemy of Russia, Khomyakov, a fervent patriot, wrote a poem “To Russia” with provocative lines: “And the shamefully meek fruit of false wisdom / Before you we will burn, beloved English sprout…” However, this criticism was not directed against the “true,” conservative England, but against political England, which allied with the “rotten West” (France) against Orthodox Russia. His love for England was a love disappointed.

England as a Tool for Criticism of Russia and the West

Khomyakov used his idealized image of England as a mirror to criticize two evils:

For criticism of Russia: He reproached his compatriots for lacking the businesslike, practical spirit, respect for law, and personal initiative that he saw in the English. Russian laziness, impracticality, and disregard for law were all opposites of English virtues.

For criticism of the “Romano-Germanic” West: England served him as an example that the West is not homogeneous. In contrast to the abstract rationalism of French Enlightenment thinkers and the metaphysical idealism of the Germans, England embodied common sense, empiricism, and respect for historical specificity. Thus, his Anglophilia helped him not simply reject the West but to make a subtle differentiation.

Example from correspondence: In Khomyakov’s letters, comparisons constantly appear. On one hand, he could admire the English Parliament as a living organism, and on the other, he could ironically comment on the “dry legal formalism” of the English, which he opposed to the “living truth” of conciliarity. England was for him a complex, contradictory object of study, not a simple model to emulate.

The Limits of Anglophilia: Orthodoxy vs. Protestantism

The main and insurmountable boundary was religion. Khomyakov admired the historical stability of the Anglican Church but regarded Protestantism in general (including its English forms) as the logical culmination of Western rationalism, leading to the rupture of the conciliar unity of the Church and individualism in faith. His dialogue with Anglicans was an attempt to show them that their “missing link” lay in Orthodoxy. Thus, England in religious terms was not for him a final point but a stage on the path to realizing the truth of Orthodoxy.

Conclusion: The Anglophile as a Russian Thinker

A. S. Khomyakov’s Anglophilia is not a deviation from Slavophilism but its integral and productive part. It demonstrates that early Slavophilism was not primitive nationalism and denial of Europe, but a complex intellectual project to reassess Western heritage from the standpoint of Orthodox Russian consciousness. England, due to its unique historical path, proved to be for Khomyakov the most complex and interesting “other” — a society that avoided (as he believed) the extremes of Latin rationalism and revolutionary upheaval, preserving the spirit of tradition.

His fascination was a form of cultural reflection and self-knowledge. Studying England, he sought and found arguments both for criticizing Russian shortcomings and for confirming his faith in Russia’s special organic path, which was to surpass even the English ideal by enriching it with the principles of Orthodox conciliarity and love. Khomyakov the Anglophile shows that genuine Russian thought was always born in dialogue — even and especially when that dialogue was tense and selective. His legacy is a reminder that love for one’s own does not require hatred of the other, but presupposes a deep, thoughtful, and critical understanding of it.


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A. S. Khomyakov as an Anglophile // New-York: Libmonster (LIBMONSTER.COM). Updated: 26.01.2026. URL: https://libmonster.com/m/articles/view/A-S-Khomyakov-as-an-Anglophile (date of access: 18.05.2026).

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