Ancient deities of Skarat (Imperial Re-Uprising)

Here lists a couple of ancient deities (ancient in the eyes of the peoples of the planet Skarat) as well as the religions and nations associated with them.

Lanon/Ravinvo
The god Lanon (Vladimir Lenin - but they don't know that) was worshiped by the ancient native Vayanese civilizations. This is one of the oldest and most ancient of dieties worshiped on the planet, and existence of his worship traces as early as the first Vayanese civilizations themselves.

Lanon was depicted as being bald, having a mustache and sometimes, a beard or a chin badger and about 5'5. His significance among the ancient Vayanese is that he is the "God to End Inequality". Lanon's origins are truly unknown (to them).

The Avropians worshiped a similar, if-not identical deity, by the name of "Ravinvo". When the Avropians arrived in ancient Vayan, they were surprised at the similarities and characteristics of this "Lanon" diety. In many proto-Avropian languages, "Lanon", sometimes variants "Lanen" or "Lenin" means "large river".

In Proto-Avropian, "Ravinvo" or "Ravenvo", "Ravinva" means "equality".

Both the Vayanese and Avropian nations are pure Russians and Slavs (at least to the reader's knowledge).

Shtalana
The god Shtalana (Stalin) was worshiped by the Antalese (one of the earliest Skaratian civilizations), and later, the Samashis, both ancestors of modern-day Andemashi. (Let the reader know, this particular nation is descended from mixed Russians and Georgians who had a hardcore fetish for Stalin).

In the ancient Antalese, Samashi and modern-day Andemashi languages, "Shtalana" translates to "man of steel". This diety was regraded as having a large facial hair, very short, bushy hair, and was known to be a god of war, destruction and ruled like a "man of steel".

In Andemashi, both its modern and ancient forms, it was a huge honor to bear the name "Shtalani". Many Samashi kings, particularly that of King Osipah, who united the Samashis, Gurzis, and other Russian-Georgian descendant nations on the Shtalena Peninsula (name after him), was post-humously referred to as "Osipah de Shtalana".