Christian Identity
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Christian Identity
Summary
Christian Identity is a Christian movement[1]. It draws 1,003 Wikipedia views per month (christian_movement category, ranking #7 of 46).[2]
Key Facts
- Christian Identity was influenced by British Israelism[3].
- Christian Identity was influenced by Dominick McCausland[4].
- Christian Identity was influenced by Alexander Winchell[5].
- Christian Identity was influenced by Ethel Bristowe[6].
- Christian Identity was influenced by Book of Enoch[7].
- Christian Identity's instance of is recorded as Christian movement[8].
- Christian Identity's instance of is recorded as religious movement[9].
- Christian Identity's founder is recorded as Wesley A. Swift[10].
- Christian Identity's subclass of is recorded as Christianity[11].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as Two House theology[12].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as millennialism[13].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as scientific racism[14].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as economic antisemitism[15].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as dispensationalism[16].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as premillennialism[17].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as Church of Jesus Christ–Christian[18].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as Church of Israel[19].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as LaPorte Church of Christ[20].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as Elohim City[21].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as Kingdom Identity Ministries[22].
- Christian Identity's has part is recorded as The Shepherd's Chapel[23].
- Christian Identity's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01b0zp[24].
- Christian Identity's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Christian Identity[25].
- Christian Identity's political ideology is recorded as white supremacy[26].
- Christian Identity's facet of is recorded as Protestantism[27].
Why It Matters
Christian Identity draws 1,003 Wikipedia views per month (christian_movement category, ranking #7 of 46).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]