Murzilka

Murzilka

First Issue of Murzilka
Editor-in-Chief Tatyana Androsenko
Former editors Anatoly Mityaev
Frequency Monthly
Circulation 75,000
First issue 16 May 1924
Country Soviet Union
Russia
Based in Moscow
Language Russian
Website Murzilka
ISSN 0132-1943

Murzilka (Russian: Мурзилка) is a popular Soviet/Russian illustrated magazine for children 6–12 years old produced from May 1924 to present days.

History and profile

At the end of 19th century Canadian illustrator and writer Palmer Cox created a cycle of poems about the little people brownie. Later Russian author Anna Hvolson on the grounds of his drawings had written stories about little forest men, where the main character dressed in white tie, with a walking stick and monocle was named "Murzilka" by her.

The first issue of the magazine came out on 16 May 1924 in the Soviet Union.[1] It is published on a monthly basis.[1] Here Murzilka was a small white dog and appeared with his owner-boy Petya. From 1927 to 1928 in the magazine issued Murzilka Newspaper.

In 1937 an illustrator Aminadav Kanevsky created the image of Murzilka – yellow furry character in a red beret with a scarf and camera over his shoulder.

Murzilka started creative way of such writers as Samuil Marshak, Sergey Mikhalkov, Elena Blaginina, Boris Zahoder, Agniya Barto, Nikolay Nosov, Marina Uspenskaya. The magazine was listed by the Guinness World Records as the longest running children's magazine in the world.[1][2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Russian children’s magazine – the world’s oldest". RT News. 10 May 2011. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  2. "Longest-running children's magazine". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 13 June 2015.

External links

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