Viktor Goltsev

Viktor Goltsev
Born Viktor Alexandrovich Goltsev
(1850-08-23)August 23, 1850
Kolomna, Moscow Governorate, Russian Empire
Died December 1, 1906(1906-12-01) (aged 56)
Moscow, Russian Empire
Occupation journalist, literary critic, editor

Viktor Alexandrovich Goltsev (Russian: Виктор Александрович Гольцев, 23 August [O.S. 11 August] 18691 December [O.S. 18 November] 1906) was a Russian lawyer, journalist, literary critic and editor.

A Moscow University alumnus, Goltsev authored numerous articles and essays on law and jurisprudence, as well as critical reviews and feuilletons, published in Russkiye Vedomosti, Russkaya Pravda, Golos, Vestnik Evropy, Russkoye Bogatstvo, Delo. In his much publicized polemics with Ivan Aksakov and Mikhail Katkov he came across as a staunch proponent of the constitutional rule in Russia.

In 1880 Goltsev joined the just-launched Russkaya Mysl to become the head of its Political Review section. In March 1885 he succeeded the recently deceased Sergey Yuriev as this magazine's editor-in-chief. It was under his guidance that Russkaya Mysl drifted towards the left flank of Russian journalism and provided safe haven for many members of the stuff of the closed Otechestvennye Zapiski.[1]

Among Goltsev's books that came out as separate editions include The French State in the 17th Century (Государственное хозяйство во Франции XVII в., 1878), The Development of Pedagogy in Recent Times (Очерк развития педагогических идей в новое время, 1880), The Law and the Ways of Life in Russia in 18th century (Законодательство и нравы в России XVIII в., 1885), the collections of essays Education, Morality and Law (Воспитание, нравственность, право, 1889) and On Art (Об искусстве, 1890).[2] In 1889 he was elected a glasny for the Moscow City Duma.[3]

References

  1. Виктор Александрович Гольцев at the Russian Biographical Dictionary // Биографический словарь. 2000.
  2. Виктор Александрович Гольцев at the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary.
  3. Bykov, V.N. Гласные Московской городской Думы (1863—1917). The Moscow City Duma's Glasnys. // Московский журнал. Декабрь 2008
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