Moskovskiye Vedomosti
OC) | |
Ceased publication | 8 November 1917 (26 October, OC) |
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Headquarters | Moscow |
Country | Russian Empire (1756-1917) Russian Republic (1917) |
Moskovskiye Vedomosti (Russian: Моско́вские ве́домости, IPA:
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 university published the newspaper once a week until 1812, twice a week until 1842, thrice a week until 1859 and daily from 1859 until 1909. Mikhail Katkov, the paper's editor in 1850-1855 and from 1863 to 1887, 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
External links
- "Moskovskiye Vedomosti" digital archives in "Newspapers on the web and beyond", the digital resource of the National Library of Russia