Russkoye Znamya
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For the newspaper edited by Pavel Krushevan in 1902–1903, see Znamya (newspaper).
Russkoye Znamya (Russian: Русское знамя; Russian Banner) was a newspaper, organ of the Union of the Russian People established in St. Petersburg by Alexander Dubrovin on 11 December [O.S. 28 November] 1905, notoriously known for its antisemitic bias.[1]
Quick Facts Type, Format ...
For Orthodox Belief, Autocratic Czar, Indivisible Fatherland and Russia for Russians | |
Type | Daily newspaper |
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Format | Broadsheet |
Publisher | Alexander Dubrovin |
Editor | I. S. Durnovo P. B. Bulatsel’ (from March 1906) |
Founded | 11 December [O.S. 28 November] 1905 |
Political alignment | Russian nationalism, monarchism, black-hundredist, antisemitism |
Language | Russian |
Ceased publication | 18 March [O.S. 5] 1917 |
Headquarters | Petersburg, 4th Rota, 6 (1905–1909); Shpalernaya, 26 (1910–17) |
Circulation | 3,000–14,500 |
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It was discontinued on 18 March [O.S. 5] 1917 by the order of Petrograd Soviet.[2]