Peterburgskaya Gazeta
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Ilya Arsenyev |
Publisher | Ilya Arsenyev (1867-1871), Sergey Khudekov |
Editor | Pyotr Monteverde (1881—1887), August Germonicus (1887—1893) |
Founded | 1867 |
Political alignment | Liberal |
Ceased publication | 1917 |
Headquarters | Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire |
Peterburgskaya Gazeta (Russian: Петербургская Газета, St. Petersburg Gazette) was a Russian political and literary newspaper, launched in 1867 by the publisher Ilya Arsenyev (1820-1888).
Originally a small-scale publication (coming out three times a week), it was bought in 1871 by , started to gain momentum and in 1882 become a popular daily. Among the authors who contributed to it on the regular basis, were Nikolai Leskov, Alexander Kugel, Sergey Terpigorev, Vasily Avseenko, Ieronim Yasinsky, Nikolai Leykin, Dmitry Minayev, Gavriil Zhulev. In all, 33 short stories by Anton Chekhov were published by the St. Petersburg Gazette in 1885–1887, including "The Huntsman", "A Malefactor" and "Sergeant Prishibeyev".[1]
In March 1917 Peterburgskaya Gazeta started to strongly support the Russian Provisional Government, calling for the anti-Bolshevik dictatorship. On 22 November of that year it was closed by the Bolshevist government.[2]
References[]
- ^ Петербургская газета at the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
- ^ Петербургская газета at the «Старости» (Oldies) site.
External links[]
- "Peterburgskaya Gazeta" digital archives in "Newspapers on the web and beyond", the digital resource of the National Library of Russia
- Newspapers published in the Russian Empire
- Newspapers published in Russia
- Newspapers established in 1867
- Russian-language newspapers
- 1867 establishments in the Russian Empire
- Mass media in Saint Petersburg
- Newspapers published in Russia stubs