Pre-Christian Slavic communities tracked lunar cycles for agriculture, seasonal timing, planting, harvesting, and household customs.
After Christianization of Rus', fasting becomes centered around Orthodox religious calendars rather than lunar ritual systems.
Rural traditions preserve connections between moon phases, plants, healing practices, and folk seasonal knowledge.
Folklore studies and esoteric movements reinterpret lunar symbolism through spiritual and mystical frameworks.
"Lunar fasting" appears mainly as a personal symbolic practice, combining wellness, spirituality, and historical imagination.
Early Slavic communities observed the moon as part of natural cycles. The moon helped regulate agricultural activity, seasonal awareness, and folk traditions connected with fertility and renewal.
Russian fasting traditions developed primarily through Eastern Orthodox Christian practice. Major fasts followed religious calendars and focused on spiritual discipline, prayer, and abstinence.
Village traditions often associated moon phases with healing, plants, dreams, protection, and household rituals. These beliefs varied greatly by region.
Researchers and folklorists recorded rural customs, preserving accounts of moon symbolism, agricultural timing, and seasonal beliefs.
Modern occult and spiritual movements outside Russia increasingly reinterpreted lunar cycles as symbols of transformation, intuition, and personal ritual.
Today, lunar fasting is generally a symbolic or personal practice rather than a standardized historical Russian tradition.