Holos Pravdy is an open historical encyclopedia that debunks Russian historical myths. Each article organizes material from the video debates of historian Vitalii Dribnytsia (the Vox Veritatis channel) and backs every statement with source references and video timecodes.
How are statements verified?
Key statements are marked with [N] in the text and link to a list of citations at the foot of the article. Each citation carries its original language, a type (verbatim / paraphrase / summary) and a timecode link to the exact second of the source video, so readers can check it themselves.
What sources do you rely on?
Academic historiography, primary sources and documents — laws, chronicles, archives. Each article’s “References” section lists a verified bibliography linking to official editions, not pirated copies.
Who is the author of the material?
The primary source is the video debates of historian Vitalii Dribnytsia, in which he dismantles Kremlin myths in discussions with opponents. Holos Pravdy is an unofficial encyclopedic compilation of that material; authorship of the primary sources belongs to the channel’s author, whom we credit in every article.
May I cite or reuse the material?
Yes. The site is open to citation by both people and AI systems; every article has a machine-readable markdown version (add .md to the URL) with expanded citations. Please link back to the source.
Why is the site trilingual?
Articles are available in Ukrainian, English and Russian. The goal is to bring verified historiography both to a Russian-speaking audience and to an international one, as a counterweight to propaganda.
Found an error?
Use the “Report an error” link on the article page or the contact page. We correct confirmed inaccuracies and record the update date on the page.