Nikolay Ogarev

Nikolay Ogarev
Ogarev's portrait by an unknown painter, c. 1830.
Ogarev's portrait by an unknown painter, c. 1830.
BornNikolay Platonovich Ogarev
(1813-12-06)December 6, 1813
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
DiedJune 12, 1877(1877-06-12) (aged 63)
Greenwich, England
Occupationpoet, historian and political activist

Nikolay Platonovich Ogarev (Ogaryov; ‹See Tfd›Russian: Никола́й Плато́нович Огарёв; December 6 [O.S. November 24] 1813 – June 12 [O.S. May 31] 1877) was a Russian poet, historian and political activist. He was deeply critical of the limitations of the Emancipation reform of 1861, claiming that the serfs were not set free, but had simply exchanged one form of serfdom for another.

Ogarev was a lifelong friend, fellow-exile and collaborator of Alexander Herzen on Kolokol, a newspaper printed in England and smuggled into Russia. In the summer of 1827, during a walk in the Sparrow Hills above Moscow, Herzen and Ogarev (both in their teens) made an oath not to rest until their country was free;[1] the oath reportedly sustained them and their friends throughout many crises of their lives at home and abroad and was described in E. H. Carr's The Romantic Exiles. The place of the oath is now marked with a monument.

  1. ^ Walicki, Andrzej (1979). A History of Russian Thought From the Enlightenment to Marxism. Stanford University Press. p. 127. ISBN 0804711321.