Ladies' Magazine (1823–1833)

Ladies' Magazine was a literary and artistic periodical published by writer and journalist Peter Shalikov at the Moscow University printing house.

Poets Vasily Pushkin, Pyotr Vyazemsky, Dmitry Khvostov, playwright Alexander Pisarev collaborated with the publication.

So, Vissarion Belinsky, criticizing the historical novel "Khmelnitsky, or the Accession of Little Russia", casually remarked: "You think that you are reading a tirade from the Ladies' Magazine".

[4] The fairly warm relationship that the publisher had with Alexander Pushkin did not stop the poet from writing the ironic epigram "Prince Shalikov, Our Sad Newsboy".

The discussion was initiated by Dmitriev in Herald of Europe; Vyazemsky's response was the articles "On Literary Hoaxes", "Analysis of the Second Talk, Published in No.

[11] Six months after the first issue, the Minister of Public Education of the Russian Empire, Prince Alexander Golitsyn, expressed dissatisfaction with the jokes printed on the pages of the magazine and "ladies' negligee with lace".

The Minister also did not like the fact that in Ladies' Magazine "sensual pleasures are set as the goal of real life and happiness", which he informed the trustee of the Moscow school district.

Publisher Peter Shalikov