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Birzhevyie Vedomosti

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Birzhevyie Vedomosti
15 July 1904 edition reporting on the assassination of Vyacheslav von Plehve
TypeDaily newspaper
Owner(s)Konstantin Trubnikov, Vasily Poletika (1861-1879)
Stanislav Propper (1880-1917)
EditorKonstantin Trubnikov
Founded1861
Political alignmentcenter left
Ceased publication1879/1917
HeadquartersSaint Petersburg, Russian Empire

Birzhevyie Vedomosti (Russian: Биржевы́е ве́домости/Биржевыя Вѣдомости, lit.'Stock Exchange News') was a Russian political, economical and literary newspaper, published in Saint Petersburg in 1861—1879. It was based in the Suneyeva House, at Konnogvardeyski Boulevard, 11.[1]

It was founded by the businessman, financier and journalist Konstantin Trubnikov after the merger of two minor publications, Commerce Gazette and Auctioneers' Journal. He was also its original publisher and editor-in-chief. In 1862 Birzheviye Vedomosti became the official organ of the tax-collecting department of the Imperial Russian government. In 1864 it started to come out six times a week. It had one popular supplement, Vechernyaya Gazeta (The Evening Gazette) (1865-1878) and numerous literary and scientific ones.

In March 1874 the businessman Vasily Poletika became the co-owner and co-editor of the newspaper, which was also joined in October of that year by Evgeny Karnovich, its new editor-in-chief. In 1875 Poletika acquired all the publishing rights and Birzheiye Vedomosti made a quick transition into an organ of the left opposition. Among its active contributors were brothers Nikolai and Vasily Kurochkins, Nikolai Mikhaylovsky, Alexey Pleshcheyev, Alexander Skabichevsky. It received several warnings from the authorities and was temporarily suspended twice. In 1879 it changed its title into Molva (Rumour) but was closed in 1880.[1][2]

In 1880, also in St Petersburg and again by way of merging two pre-existent publications, Birzhevy Vestnik and Russkiy Mir, another newspaper by the same name was founded by Stanislav Propper, then an Austrian citizen, who allegedly bought the rights at an auction, for 13 rubles he had borrowed from friends.[2] Often referred to as Birzhevye Vedomosti's "Second edition", it became a daily in 1885 and was edited first by Propper, later by Vladimir Bondi and Ieronim Yasinsky. A centrist, mildly liberal publication, it lasted until 1917 and was shut down by the city's Bolshevik authorities, answering the standard allegation of being engaged in "anti-Soviet propaganda".[2]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b Биржевые ведомости. The St Petersburg Encyclopedia // Санкт-Петербург. Петроград. Ленинград: Энциклопедический справочник. — М.: Большая Российская Энциклопедия. 1992.
  2. ^ a b c Konovalova, A.V. Birzhevye Vedomosti: The History // К вопросу об истории газеты "Биржевые ведомости". Экономическая история. Обозрение / Под ред. Л.И.Бородкина. Вып. 6. М., 2001. С. 111-119
This page was last edited on 15 June 2021, at 12:03
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