Kolokol

E314209

Kolokol was a 19th-century Russian émigré political newspaper that became a major voice of liberal and revolutionary opposition to the tsarist regime.

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Label Occurrences
Kolokol canonical 1

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Russian émigré newspaper
newspaper
political newspaper
circulatedIllegallyIn Russian Empire
circulationArea Russian Empire
countryOfOrigin Russian Empire
criticized Russian censorship
bureaucratic abuses
serfdom in the Russian Empire
dissolvedOrAbolished 1867
distributionMethod clandestine distribution in Russia
editor Alexander Herzen
Nikolay Ogarev
foundedBy Alexander Herzen
Nikolay Ogarev
frequency irregular
hasContributor Russian émigré intellectuals
hasGenre commentary
editorial
political journalism
historicalPeriod 19th century
ideology anti-autocratic
pro-reform
inception 1857
influenced Russian revolutionary movement
liberal opposition in Russia
language Russian
laterPublishedIn Geneva
mainSubject Russian politics
peasant emancipation
social reform
medium print
namedAfter church bell
notableFor being a major voice of liberal and revolutionary opposition to the tsarist regime
criticizing censorship and serfdom
influencing Russian public opinion against autocracy
opposedTo tsarist regime
originallyPublishedIn London, England
surface form: London
placeOfPublication Geneva
London, England
surface form: London
politicalAlignment liberal
revolutionary democratic
printedIn Western Europe
publicationStatus defunct
publisher Alexander Herzen
targetAudience Russian intelligentsia
educated public in the Russian Empire
titleMeaning The Bell

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Alexander Herzen founded Kolokol