Koshelev aleksandr (2 Ergebnisse)
Verlag: Leipzig, Teubner, , 1985
- Softcover
Anbieter: Antiquariat Gothow & Motzke, Berlin, DeutschlandAntiquariat Gothow & Motzke
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EUR 24,00
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208 S., Originalbroschur (publisher's paper covers), gutes Exemplar (fine), (Teubner - Texte zur Mathematik 77), Sprache: englisch.

- Softcover
- Erstausgabe
Anbieter: Penka Rare Books and Archives, ILAB, Berlin, DeutschlandPenka Rare Books and Archives, ILAB
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EUR 350,00
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Berlin: B. Behr's Buchhandlung (E. Bock), 1879. Octavo (20.7 × 15 cm). Original printed wrappers; 71 pp. A very good copy. Aleksandr Ivanovich Koshelev (1806-1883) worked as a journalist, economist, publisher and state official. He regularly published in Russian journals and newspapers, authoring essays primarily on issues relat…ed to economic, societal and land reform. Putting his ideas into practice on his estate in the Riazan province, Koshelev experimented with creating a diversified economy, instituting agricultural reforms, introducing new farming technologies, as well as building schools, promoting literacy and establishing a "secular government." A Slavophile and proponent of the abolition of serfdom, Koshelev supported many initiatives of his fellow Slavophiles that dealt with social and economic transformation. He also believed in introducing and adapting to Russia ideas and technology from the West. In the 1870s Koshelev focused on journalistic enterprises, contributing to such publications as "Russkaia mysl'", "Golos", and "Rus'", as well as publishing the journals "Beseda" and "Zemstvo". Due to fear of Russian censorship, he published a number of his works devoted to Russian public life in Germany. He acknowledges this in the foreword to this first edition of his polemical work "Chto zhe teper' delat'?", writing that it was only out of necessity that he chose to publish abroad, since he could no longer remain silent on matters critical to Russia. We locate no auction records in Russia or beyond. KVK, OCLC show copies at Columbia, Indiana, Leiden, the British Library, Polish National Library, and on microfilm at the New York Public Library.