Category
page 1Defunct newspapers published in Russia
The Moscow Times
independent bilingual newspaper
Kolokol
Russian newspaper
Terciman
Terciman or Tercüman (, , means "The Translator") was a Pan-Turkist weekly newspaper published between 1883 and 1918 by Crimean Tatar intellectual and educator Ismail Gasprinsky in Bakhchysarai. It was the first Crimean Tatar periodical, and the main publication of Turkic peoples in the Russian Empire.
Moskovskiye Vedomosti
periodical literature
Moskovskiye Novosti
Russian-language newspaper
Vremya Novostei
Russian daily newspaper
Russkiye Vedomosti
Russian periodical (1863-1918)
Novaya Zhizn
bolshevik daily newspaper
Journal de St.-Pétersbourg
French-language newspaper published in Saint Petersburg, Russia
Golos Truda
Russian anarchist newspaper
Rech
Russian newspaper
Groznensky Rabochy
historical, scientific-cognitive and cultural-enlightening Russian-language newspaper of the Chechen Republic
Bednota
Bednota (, "Poverty" or "The poor") was a daily newspaper designed and focused toward a peasant readership that was issued by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in Moscow, Russia, from March 1918 to January 1931. It has been described as the first Soviet newspaper "designed primarily for the lower-class or common reader".
Novye Izvestia
Russian newspaper
Russky Invalid
military newspaper published in St. Petersburg, the official newspaper of the War Ministry in 1862-1917

Ha-Melitz
HaMelitz (, ) was the first Hebrew newspaper in the Russian Empire. It was founded by Alexander Zederbaum in Odessa in 1860.
Novaya Zhizn
menshevik-run newspaper
Proletariatis Brdzola
Golos
Russian political and literary newspaper (1863-1883)
Put Domoi
Russian newspaper
Robotnik (newspaper)
Polish socialist newspaper
Ha-Yom
Ha-Yom (, "The Day") was a Hebrew-language newspaper published from 1886 to mid-1888 from Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was founded and edited by Jehuda Löb Kantor. Ha-Yom was the first daily Hebrew newspaper. When it was launched Ha-Yom had a daily circulation of around 2,400. By 1887 the number of subscribers had fallen to around 1,600.
Droeba
thumb|A droeba issue with Prince Ilia Chavchavadze's article on its front page
Droeba (, "the Times") was an influential Georgian political and cultural newspaper published in Tiflis from 1866 to 1885.