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  1. Severny Vestnik (em russo: Се́верный ве́стник, em português: Mensagem do Norte) foi uma influente revista russa fundada em São Petersburgo em 1885 por Anna Yevreinova, que continuou com ela até 1889.

  2. Severny Vestnik (Russian: Се́верный ве́стник, English: The Northern Messenger) was an influential Russian literary magazine founded in Saint Petersburg in 1885 by Anna Yevreinova, who stayed with it until 1889.

  3. The novella was first published in March 1888 by Severny Vestnik. With minor changes it was included in the Stories (Рассказы, 1888) to be reproduced unchanged in all its 13 editions (1889–1899). In a revised version it was included by Chekhov into Volume 4 of his Collected Works published in 1899–1901 by Adolf Marks. [1]

  4. By this time he had the vision of the trilogy as a whole. In 1896 with Zinaida Gippius (and accompanied by Severny Vestnik editor Akim Volynsky) he made a journey to Europe visiting places where Leonardo da Vinci had stayed while accompanying Francis I of France.

  5. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Severny_VestnikAnton Čechov - Wikipedia

    Biografia Infanzia e adolescenza. Terzo di sei figli, Anton nacque in una famiglia di umili origini: il nonno, Egor Michajlovič Čech, servo della gleba e amministratore di uno zuccherificio del conte Čertkov, era riuscito a riscattare se stesso e la propria famiglia nel 1841 grazie al versamento al proprio padrone di una grossa somma di denaro, 3500 rubli.

  6. Documents introduced into scientific circulation allow expanding the range of sources for studying the history of journalism and early Russian modernism. Keywords: “Severny Vestnik”, Lyubov Gurevich, Russian literature around the turn of the 20th century, writer’s memoirs, archival materials. For citation:

  7. Abstract: The journal “Severny Vestnik” (1891 –1898), around which relatively young Petersburg writers — A. Volynsky, N. Minsky, D. Merezhkovsky and Z. Gippius, F. Sologub — were grouped in the last years of the 19th century, was of exceptional importance for the early stage of Russian Symbolism.