Category
page 1Political magazines published in Russia

Sovremennik
Sovremennik (, "The Contemporary") was a Russian literary, social and political magazine, published in Saint Petersburg in 1836–1866. It came out four times a year in 1836–1843 and once a month after that. The magazine published poetry, prose, critical, historical, ethnographic and other material.
Fragments
Russian humorous, literary and artistic weekly magazine published in St Petersburg from 1881 to 1916
Chronicle of Current Events
Soviet samizdat periodical (1968—1983)
Epoch
magazine of Fyodor and Mikhail Dostoyevsky (1864—1865)
The New Times
Russian magazine
Vremya
magazine of Fyodor and Mikhail Dostoyevsky (1861–1863)
Russkoye Bogatstvo
magazine
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.
Grazhdanin
thumb|Гражданин
Grazhdanin (, lit. The Citizen) was a Russian conservative political and literary magazine published in Petersburg in 1872–1914 (with a one-year interval in 1880–1881). The magazine was founded by Prince Vladimir Meshchersky. It came out weekly or two times a week, and daily in 1887–1914. Grazhdanin exerted some influence on policies of the Russian government. It adhered to principals of monarchism and opposed liberal press and revolutionary movements. Fyodor Dostoyevsky was the magazine's chief editor from the early 1873 to April 1874. Throughout this magazine's existence, peo
Communist International
US magazine
Kontinent
thumb|Former Washington, D.C. office of Kontinent
Kontinent was an émigré dissident journal which focused on the politics of the Soviet Union and its satellites. Founded in 1974 by writer Vladimir Maximov, its first editor-in-chief, it was published in German and Russian and later translated into English. A Norwegian edition, '''', was published from 1979 to 1981.
Sovetsky Soyuz
Soviet magazine
Shura
defunct literary and political magazine published in Orenburg, Russian Empire