Abstract

The article is devoted to the constructing of the image of Yury F. Samarin in the Russian public consciousness from the moment of his death in 1876 to the revolution of 1917. Attention is paid to the collection of speeches in his memory. The book by Peter Linitsky and the polemics of Vladimir Solovyov and Dmitry Samarin about Slavophilism are analyzed with reference to the heritage of Yuri Samarin. The author also analyzes the appraisal of the thinker by other conservatives, primarily on the materials of “Russkoe Obozrenie” (“Russian Review”) journal. He comes to the conclusion that the heritage of Yuri Samarin was studied only fragmentary by the beginning of the 20th century, and his image in the Russian public consciousness was not yet fixed and clearly defined.

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