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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ivan_AksakovIvan Aksakov - Wikipedia

    Ivan Sergeyevich Aksakov (Russian: Ива́н Серге́евич Акса́ков; October 8 [O.S. September 26] 1823, village Nadezhdino, Belebeyevsky Uyezd, Orenburg Governorate – February 8 [O.S. January 27] 1886, Moscow) was a Russian littérateur and notable Slavophile.

  2. - Moscú, 30 de abril jul. / 12 de mayo de 1859 greg.) fue un escritor, ensayista, crítico literario y periodista ruso del siglo XIX. Fue padre de los famosos eslavófilos y escritores Konstantín Aksákov (1817-1860), Iván Aksákov (1823-1886) y Vera Aksákova (1819-1864). Biografía.

  3. Dec. 7 [Dec. 19], 1860, Zacynthus, Greece (aged 43) Konstantin Sergeyevich Aksakov (born March 29 [April 10, New Style], 1817, Novo-Aksakovo, Russia—died Dec. 7 [Dec. 19], 1860, Zacynthus, Greece) was a Russian writer and one of the founders and principal theorists of the Slavophile movement.

  4. AKSAKOV, IVAN SERGEYEVICH (1823 – 1886), Slavophile and Panslav ideologue and journalist. Son of the famous theater critic Sergei Timofeyevich Aksakov, Ivan Aksakov received his early education at home in the religious, patriotic, and literary atmosphere of the Aksakov family in Moscow.

  5. 14 de feb. de 2023 · 1 Citations. Abstract. This chapter offers a historical perspective on Russian Pan-Slavism. The first part of the chapter explains the roots of Pan-Slavism, situating it in the East European context and presenting the major phases of its development since the nineteenth century.

    • Mikhail Suslov
    • mikhail.suslov@hum.ku.dk
  6. Aksakov, Iván Serguéyevich (1823-1886). Literato y periodista ruso, nacido en Nadedjino en 1823, y muerto en Moscú en 1886. Hijo del célebre novelista Serguéi Timoféyevich Aksakov , sobresalió por sus publicaciones periódicas de carácter paneslavista.

  7. AKSAKOV, IVAN (1823 – 1886), Russian publicist, Slavophile, and pan-Slavist. Aksakov had a mixed career as civil servant, banker, and journalist. He accepted with all other Slavophiles that religion was the decisive factor in the shaping of a nation and that the essence of Russian national life ( narodnostʾ ) was inseparably bound up with ...