Birzhevyie Vedomosti (1880–1917)

'Stock Exchange News') was a Russian newspaper established in 1880 in St. Petersburg.

It was a merger of two pre-existent publications, Birzhevy Vestnik and Russkiy Mir, founded by Stanislav Propper,[1] then an Austrian citizen, who allegedly bought the rights at an auction for 13 rubles he had borrowed from friends.

[2] Often referred to as Birzhevye Vedomosti's "Second edition", it became a daily in 1885.

It was edited first by Propper, and later by Vladimir Bondi and Ieronim Yasinsky.

A centrist, mildly liberal publication, it lasted until 1917 and was shut down by the city's Bolshevik authorities, answering the allegation of being engaged in "anti-Soviet propaganda".