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Andrey Krayevsky

Andrey Alexandrovich Krayevsky
KrajevskyAndrey.jpg
1856 portrait by Vasily Timm
Born (1810-02-17)February 17, 1810
Moscow, Russian Empire
Died August 12, 1889(1889-08-12) (aged 79)
Pavlovsk, Russian Empire
Occupation editor
publisher
journalist
Years active 1835 – 1880s

Andrey Alexandrovich Krayevsky (Russian: Андрей Александрович Краевский, February 17 (o.s. 5), 1810, - August 20 (o.s. 8), 1889) was a Russian publisher and journalist, best known for his work as an editor-in-chief of Otechestvennye Zapiski (1839-1867), the influential literary journal he was also the publisher of. Another well-known publication that Krayevsky founded (in 1863) was the popular newspaper Golos (The Voice).

Andrey Krayevsky was born in Moscow, an illegitimate grandson of the chief of the Moscow police Nikolai Arkharov in whose house he was brought up and received primary education. In 1823 he enrolled into the Moscow University which he graduated in 1828.

After the graduation Krayevsky joined the Moscow's governor-general's office. Soon he started to write article and reviews for local publications. In 1831 he moved to St. Petersburg to work in the Ministry of Public Education. While in that office, he started a newsletter for the ministry in 1835.

Vladimir Odoyevsky introduced Krayevsky to the Russian capital' literary circles, Pyotr Pletnyov invited him to Sovremennik, first as a technical editor. After Alexander Pushkin's death Krayevsky took part in sorting out of the great poet's archives and became one of five Sovremennik’s co-publishers. In 1836 Krayevsky introduced Mikhail Lermontov to the Saint Petersburg cultural elite and was his literary mentor for a while.

In 1837 Krayevsky started editing Russky Invalid's Literary Supplement, an obscure newspaper he soon transformed into the popular Literaturnaya Gazeta. In 1839 he became the editor and publisher of Otechestvennye Zapiski, a journal he originally took on lease from Pavel Svinyin. With a stellar team of authors and critics (Vladimir Odoyevsky, Evgeny Baratynsky, Vasily Zhukovsky, Alexander Veltman, Pyotr Vyazemsky, Alexey Koltsov, Nikolay Gogol, later – Vissarion Belinsky, Alexander Hertzen, Nikolay Nekrasov, Fyodor Dostoyevsky (from 1846), Ivan Turgenev, Ivan Goncharov) in the mid-1840s Krayevsky's OZ became one of the most successful and respected Russian publications. After Belinsky's departure in 1846, Krayevsky was keen on keeping the magazine's high profile, but the change of the political atmosphere in the country forced him to make compromises. A 1848 pro-monarchist article called "Russia and The Western Europe as They Stand Now" saw him shifting from the left to the centre right of the Russian literary world’s political specter.


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