Category
page 1Monthly magazines published in Russia
Novy Mir
literary journal
PCMag
Otechestvennye Zapiski
Russian literary magazine (1856—1906)
Bezbozhnik
anti-religious weekly newspaper "The ungodly"
Niva
Russian magazine (1869-1918)
Vokrug sveta
Russian geographical magazine
Chronicle of Current Events
Soviet samizdat periodical (1968—1983)
Biblioteka Dlya Chteniya
Russian monthly magazine (1834—1865)

Severny Vestnik
Russian literary journal
Epoch
magazine of Fyodor and Mikhail Dostoyevsky (1864—1865)
Vestnik Evropy
magazine of late-nineteenth-century Russia
Russkaya Starina
magazine

The Woman Worker
Rabotnitsa (; ) is a women's journal, published in the Soviet Union and Russia and one of the oldest Russian magazines for women and families. Founded in 1914, and first published on Women's Day, it is the first socialist women's journal, and the most politically left of the women's periodicals. While the journal's beginnings are attributed to Lenin and several women who were close to him, he did not contribute to the first seven issues.
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.
Russkoye Bogatstvo
magazine
Oktyabr
monthly literary magazine in Russia
Vremya
magazine of Fyodor and Mikhail Dostoyevsky (1861–1863)
Soviet woman
Soviet magazine
USSR in Construction
Soviet journal
64
Russian chess and draughts periodical
Zhurnal dlya vsekh
Russian magazine (1895-1906)
Neva
Russian literary monthly journal
Moskvityanin
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Moskvityanin (Москвитянин, "The Muscovite") was a monthly literary review published by Mikhail Pogodin in Moscow between 1841 and 1856. It was the mouthpiece of the Official Nationality theory espoused by Count Sergey Uvarov. The literary section was edited by Stepan Shevyrev. Gogol's novella Rome was first printed in Moskvityanin, as were many Slavophile papers. In 1850 the magazine was taken over by a young generation of Slavophiles which included Apollon Grigoryev. Their object of adulation was Alexander Ostrovsky. The frequency of the magazine switched from monthly to biweekly
Znamya
Znamya (, lit. "The Banner") is a monthly Russian-language thick journal established in Moscow in 1931. It publishes traditional and experimental literature, including prose, poetry, essays, literary criticism, and bibliography. During Soviet times, it was an organ of the Union of Soviet Writers. It has been an independent publication since 1990.
Adskaya pochta
Magazine
Strana Igr
Russian video game magazine
Zvezda
Russian literary magazine
Q4197757
Igromania (, Russian for "Game Mania") is a Russian video game website and formerly a magazine.
Russian Mind
Russian magazine (1880-1918)
Mir Fantastiki
Russian science fiction and fantasy magazine and website
Iskusstvo Kino (Art of Cinema)
Russian film magazine
Russky Arkhiv
Russian magazine
Krasnaya Nov
Soviet literary magazine

Za Rulem
Russian automotive magazine
Afisha
Afisha () was a Russian entertainment and lifestyle magazine published from April 1999 to December 2015 in Moscow, Saint Petersburg and 12 other Russia's major cities. In its peak years Afisha's readership reached approximately 1.5 million people. Its online version remains one of Russia’s most popular media brands with a monthly Internet audience of more than 4.5 million.
Bezbozhnik
Russian Marxist magazine (1925–1941)
Apollon (magazine)
Russian avant-garde literary magazine
Moulin rouge
magazine in Russia
Game.EXE
Game.EXE was a monthly Russian video game magazine. It was initially launched titled Toy Shop () from March 1995 to December 1996. Starting 1997, it was renamed Game.EXE and ran until June 2006, with the last 4 issues all published in June.
Shonqar
Shonqar (, "Gerfalcon") is a Bashkir language monthly youth culture and entertainment magazine that has been published in Ufa since January 1994.
Under the Banner of Marxism
soviet philosophical journal
Voskhod
Jewish magazine in Russian
Mir Bozhiy
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).
Bezbozhnik u Stanka
antireligious magazine of the Moscow Committee of the AUCP(b)
Chervony Shliakh
Ukrainian periodical (1923–1936)
Ateist
Ateist (; lit. «Atheist») was an antireligious monthly journal in Russian, which was published from 1922 to 1930 in the RSFSR and the USSR.
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.