Newspapers from Imperial Russia - 1734-1917
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Astrakhanskii vestnik, (Astrakhan') 1889-1892,. in Russian, 13 reels. Barnaul'skii listok, (Barnaul) 1909-1910, in Russian, ...
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Amurskaia gazeta, (Blagoveschensk) 1895,
in Russian,
Moskovskie Vedomosti
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Moscow News (Russian: Московские ведомости) was Russia's largest newspaper by circulation before it was superseded by Saint Petersburg dailies in the mid-19th century.
The newspaper was established by the Moscow University a year after its own foundation, in 1756. With a circulation of 600, the newspaper was printed by the university press, featuring mainly official announcements and articles by university professors. In 1779, the press was leased to the first Russian journalist, Nikolay Novikov, who reformed the weekly thoroughly, introduced supplements on literature and art, and raised its circulation to 4,000. Novikov edited the Moscow News until 1789, but his immediate successors continued along the same lines.
The newspaper was published once a week until 1812, twice a week until 1842, thrice a week until 1859 and daily since then. Mikhail Katkov, who was the paper's editor in 1850-55 and 1863-87, made the daily reflect his increasingly conservative views. Under his guidance, the influence of the Moscow News rose to new heights and the circulation reached 12,000. The daily gradually acquired a semi-official character, although nominally owned by the university until 1909, when it was taken over by the Black Hundred circles. The newspaper was closed by the Bolsheviks on 9 November 1917, two days after the October Revolution.
Kubanskie vedomosti, (Krasnodar) 1887-1904,
in Russian,
Russkie vedomosti, (Moscow) 1880-1916, in Russian,
Russkaia muzykal'naia gazeta, (St. Petersburg) 1894-
1918, in Russian,
Pravitel'stvennyi vestnik, (St. Petersburg) 1869-1917,
in Russian,
Podol'skie gubernskie vedomosti, (Podol'sk) 1839-
1905, in Russian,
vosti i birzhevaia gazeta, (St. Petersburg) 1871-
1906, in Russian,
Novoe vremya, (St. Petersburg) 1868-1917,
in Russian,
Novoe vremya (The New Time), newspaper, 1868-1917
[Издательство А. С. Суворина (Невский проспект, 42). Фото 1900-х гг.]
NOVOE VREMYA (The New Time), a political and literary newspaper, which appeared in 1868-1917. In 1876 A. S. Suvorin took over the publishing and turned Novoe Vremya into one of Russia's most popular newspapers, with a circulation reaching 60,000 copies; from 1912 the paper was published in the A. S. Suvorin Novoe vremya publishing company. Already in the 1880s the newspaper asserted a stature of an unscrupulous publication (What’s your pleasure? following Saltykov-Schedrin's definition). Newspaper's leading publicists in its heyday were V. P. Burenin, М. O. Menshikov, V. V. Rozanov. Anton Chekhov, maintaining friendly ties with Suvorin, contributed for the Novoe vremya. On 26 October (8 November).1917 the Novoe vremya was closed by a resolution of the Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee. The editorial office had its seat at 40 Nevsky Prospect, afterwards at 6 Ertelev Lane (today Chekhov Street). The Novoe vremya publishing house (13 Ertelev Alleyway) was one of St. Petersburg's leading printing enterprises.
Novoe obozrenie, (Tbilisi) 1887-1906, in Russian,
Russkoe slovo, (Moscow) 1895-1917, in Russian
Sankt-Peterburgskie vedomosti, (St. Petersburg)
1734-1911, in Russian,
Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti (St.-Petersburg News), the second oldest Russian newspaper, was born in 1728 as a successor of Vedomosti o voennykh znaniiakh i inykh delakh dostoinykh znaniia i pamiati (news about Events, Both Military and Otherwise, Fit Both to Know and to Remember), which was published between 1703 and 1727. Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti, the only Russian newspaper, that was published without interruption between 1728 and 1914. For several decades, it was the only Russian periodical; it did not have to face competition until 1756, when the Moskovskie Vedomosti (Moscow News) appeared. It makes it one of the most important sources for the history of Imperial Russia during its final two centuries. Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti is now completely available on microfilm. All the lacunae in the old collection of IDC Publishers have been filmed in the most prominent Russian libraries in St. Petersburg: the National Library of Russia and the Library of the Academy of Sciences (BAN).
Birzhevye vedomosti, (St. Petersburg) 1880-1917,
in Russian,
Grazhdanin, (city unknown) 1872-1914, in Russian,
Kavkaz, (Tbilisi) 1846-1918, in Russian,
Sunday, September 14, 2008
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