Category
page 1Magazines published in the Soviet Union

Krokodil
Krokodil (, ) was a satirical magazine published in the Soviet Union and later Russia. The first issue was published on 27 August 1922 as the satirical supplement to the ''Workers' Gazette (called simply «Приложения» [Supplement]). When it became a separate publication, the name Crocodile was chosen at an editorial meeting from among a list of suggested animal names. At that time, many satirical magazines existed, such as Zanoza and Prozhektor''. Nearly all of them eventually disappeared.
Molla Nasreddin
Azerbaijani satirical periodical
Kvant
Soviet and Russian magazine focused on physics and mathematics
Bezbozhnik
anti-religious weekly newspaper "The ungodly"
Sputnik
defunct Soviet magazine
Vokrug sveta
Russian geographical magazine
Chronicle of Current Events
Soviet samizdat periodical (1968—1983)
The New Times
Russian magazine
Pionerskaya Pravda
Soviet and Russian newspaper for children
LEF
1920s Soviet art journal
Azerbaijan gadini
Azerbaijani women's magazine
Soviet woman
Soviet magazine
Murzilka
Murzilka () is a popular Soviet, and later Russian, illustrated magazine for children aged 7-13 years old. It has been in continued publication since May 1924.
Sovetsky ekran
Soviet film magazine
Problems of Peace and Socialism
journal of Communist and workers parties which was published in Prague from 1958 to 1990
Kommunist
Kommunist (Russian: Коммунист), named Bolshevik (Большевик) until 1952, was a Soviet journal. The journal was started in 1924. The founders were Nikolai Bukharin, Georgy Pyatakov, and Yevgenia Bosch. It was the official theoretical and political organ of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
Vozhyk
Vozhyk (Belarusian: Во́жык, Russian: Ёжик) is a Belarusian humour magazine offering satire, cartoons, caricature and humorous essays to its readers. Vozhyk stands for "hedgehog" in Belarusian.
64
Russian chess and draughts periodical
Kommunistka
Kommunistka (in ) was a communist magazine from the Soviet Union, associated to the Zhenotdel, founded by Inessa Armand and Alexandra Kollontai in 1920.
USSR in Construction
Soviet journal
Russian Mind
Russian magazine (1880-1918)
Satirikon
Russian satirical magazine (1908-1914)
Communist International
US magazine
Iskusstvo Kino (Art of Cinema)
Russian film magazine
Under the Banner of Marxism
soviet philosophical journal
Krasnaya Nov
Soviet literary magazine

Za Rulem
Russian automotive magazine
Bezbozhnik
Russian Marxist magazine (1925–1941)
Smena
Soviet and Russian magazine
Sovetsky Soyuz
Soviet magazine
Khatabala
Khatabala (; ) was a twelve-page Armenian satirical periodical published in Tiflis (Tbilisi) from 1906 to 1916 and again in 1922 and 1925–26 in the Armenian and occasionally Russian and Georgian languages. It was founded by Astvatsatur Yeritsyan (1872–1929), who edited the periodical along with Ashot Atanasyan (1870–1941). The name of Khatabala comes from a popular word used by Armenians, Georgians, Azerbaijanis and Persians meaning misfortune, setback, or troubles, ultimately derived from the Arabic words 'error' and 'trouble, tribulation'.

Nauka i Zhizn
Russian and Soviet science magazine
Pchelovodstvo
Pchelovodstvo () is a venerable and well regarded Russian journal dealing with Beekeeping. The journal promotes the newest methods of beekeeping and targets a broad audience.
Sygnały
'''Sygnały Magazyn' (Signals Magazine) was a Polish cultural and social magazine published 1933–1939 in Lwów (Lemberg, today Lviv, Ukraine). It was a leading periodical of the leftist Polish intelligentsia. The journal started as a 12-page monthly and was subsequently published once every two weeks, with editions of up to 32 pages. Sygnały was published in the tabloid format, similar to the New York Times'' at about 56x40 cm (22x16 inches).
Chervony Shliakh
Ukrainian periodical (1923–1936)
Pikker
Estonian magazine of satire (1943–2001)
Roman-Gazeta
thumb|Roman-Gazeta
Roman-Gazeta (, literally: "Novel-Newspaper") was a special kind of literary magazine in the Soviet Union. The magazine was started in 1927. It was issued irregularly (4 to 24 issues per year, 202 issues in total) from 1927 to 1942, then monthly from 1946 until 1957 when it began to be published twice a month by the "Khudozhestvennaya Literatura" publishing house.
Tekhnika Molodezhi
magazine
Bezbozhnik u Stanka
antireligious magazine of the Moscow Committee of the AUCP(b)
Znanie – Sila
Soviet and Russian popular science magazine
Ateist
Ateist (; lit. «Atheist») was an antireligious monthly journal in Russian, which was published from 1922 to 1930 in the RSFSR and the USSR.
Ural Pathfinder
Russian monthly magazine