Delo
February 1869 issue's title page
EditorNikolai Shulgin (1866–1879)
Pyotr Bykov (1880–1881)
Nikolai Shelgunov (1881–1882)
Konstantin Stanyukovich (1883)
Viktor Ostrogorsky (1883–1884)
Dmitry Tsertelev (1885–1886)
I. S. Durnovo (1886–1888)
FrequencyMonthly
First issueSummer 1866
Final issueJanuary 1888
Based inSaint Petersburg, Russian Empire
LanguageRussian

Delo (Дело, Labour) was a monthly magazine published in Saint Petersburg, Russia, from mid-1866 till January 1888. Led formally by Nikolai Shulgin (1866–1879) and informally by Grigory Blagosvetlov, Delo was seen as an ideological heir to Russkoye Slovo (edited by the latter and closed by the authorities after Dmitry Karakozov's assassination attempt) and until 1884 remained one of the two (alongside Otechestvennye Zapiski) most radical Russian publications of the time.

After the arrest of the magazine's editor Nikolai Shelgunov (in 1883) and his successor Konstantin Stanyukovich a year later, the publication of Delo stopped. It re-emerged in 1885 as a conservative organ, with I.S. Durnovo as publisher and Dmitry Tsertelev as editor, but failed to cope with the lack of public interest and folded for good in 1888.[1][2]

References

  1. Esin, B.I. (1964). "Delo". The Brief Literary Encyclopedia. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  2. "Delo (Saint Petersburg magazine)". The Brokhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in 86 volumes. Retrieved 13 January 2014.


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