
Avolkhv orvolhv (Cyrillic: Волхв; Polish: Wołchw, translatable aswiseman,wizard,sorcerer,magus, i.e.shaman,gothi ormage) is a priest inancient Slavic religions and contemporarySlavic Native Faith.

Volkhvs are attested among the earlyRus' people. Volkhvs were believed to possess mystical powers, particularly the ability to predict the future. The first literary reference to a volkhv occurs in thePrimary Chronicle under the year 912; there, a volkhv predictsPrince Oleg's death. With the adoption of Christianity, the pagan priests came under persecution and sometimes tried to channel social discontent against the Christian church.[1] The name of the divination book "Volkhovnik" comes from the term "volkhv".

In contemporary Slavic Native Faith, the volkhvs are those responsible for holding rites for worshipping the gods and leading communities and religious festivals. Volkhvs are thehigher rank of thesacerdotal hierarchy, the lesser order being that of thezhrets.[2] The latter are not necessarily shamans, and their function is merely to holdsacrifices (the wordzhrets literally means "sacrificer", fromProto-Slavic *žьrti, and is cognate of Slavic words for "offering").[3] Though the majority of priests are males, most groups do not exclude women from the priesthood, so that a parallel female priesthood is constituted by the two ranks ofzhritsa andvedunya ("seeress"). Prestige is not limited to male priests; a priestess,Halyna Lozko from Ukraine, is an acknowledged authority within theSlavic Native Faith movement.[4]
In 2012, three Russian Rodnover organisations, the Union of Slavic Rodnover Communities, the Circle of the Pagan Tradition and the Circle of Veles, signed an "Agreement on Mutual Recognition of Priests", instituting a common priesthood and the criteria for the ordination of those wishing to become Slavic priests.[5]