Rech (newspaper)
Rech (lit. 'Speech'; current Russian: Речь, originally: Рѣчь) was a Russian daily newspaper and the central organ of the Constitutional Democratic Party.
History[]
Rech was published in St. Petersburg from February 1906[1] to October 1917.[2] Julian Buck, an engineer and philanthropist, was the first editor. The newspaper was based in his house on Kirochnaya street, № 24, in apartment № 21. Its editorial office and printing house were located at Zhukovsky street, № 21.[3] The editors were and Pavel Miliukov.[1] It was a radical paper.[1] Politically it supported approachment with Britain and France (e.g. welcomed the Anglo-Russian Convention). It was closed down by the Bolsheviks after the October Revolution 1917.
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Jacob Walkin (July 1954). "Government Controls Over the Press in Russia, 1905-1914". Russian Review. 13 (3). JSTOR 125972.
- ^ Lenin: 11. TO THE EDITOR OF PRAVDA
- ^ Густаров, Андрей (2018). Исторические здания.
External links[]
- "Rech" digital archives in "Newspapers on the web and beyond", the digital resource of the National Library of Russia
Categories:
- 1906 establishments in the Russian Empire
- 1917 disestablishments in Russia
- Newspapers established in 1906
- Publications disestablished in 1917
- Defunct newspapers published in Russia
- Russian-language newspapers
- Mass media in Saint Petersburg
- Constitutional Democratic Party
- Newspapers published in Russia stubs