Background
Nikolai Vikentyevich Albertini wa born on August 12, 1826 in Oster, Ukraine. His father, a son of the composer and conductor Vicenzo Albertini, was of Italian and Polish descent, his mother (née Korkunova) was Russian.
Nikolai Vikentyevich Albertini wa born on August 12, 1826 in Oster, Ukraine. His father, a son of the composer and conductor Vicenzo Albertini, was of Italian and Polish descent, his mother (née Korkunova) was Russian.
Nikolai Vikentyevich graduated from the Oster district school (1839). A Moscow 3rd Gymnasium graduate (1846), he enrolled into the Moscow University to study law, and after the graduation in 1851 went on to teach jurisprudence at the 2nd Moscow Cadet Corps, which he did until 1859.
In 1857 Nikolai Vikentyevich started writing for Otechestvennye Zapiski where his monthly Political Reviews made him both popular and controversial author. A staunch Anglophile who considered Great Britain a perfect model for Russia's political and economic development, he was harshly criticised by radicals like Nikolai Chernyshevsky and Dmitry Pisarev, whom he habitually defended in his polemics with the conservative press.
Nikolai Vikentyevich had clashes, though, with Nikolai Dobrolyubov, on the latter's series of articles "From Turin", as well as with Grigory Blagosvetlov, on the latter's English reports. In 1862 in London he had talks with Alexander Hertzen and regularly corresponded with Nikolai Ogaryov, who insisted that he'd 'make peace' with his Russian critics (as well as Mikhail Bakunin) "in the name of our common cause".
In 1866 Nikolai Vikentyevich was arrested among the group of authors involved in the (Hertzen-related) so-called "Heidelberg Reading-room Case" and was deported, without trial, to the Archangelsk region. In 1872 he was allowed to move to Revel and worked there for a while for the local governor's chancellery.
After the return to Saint Petersburg he joined the Foreign Ministry office and became a regular contributor to Golos newspaper where his front page reviews under the Daily Topics headline appeared on a daily basis for three years. After Golos was shut down in 1883 Albertini worked for Novoye Vremya.
Nikolai Vikentyevich died in 1890 and is interred in Voskresensky Novodevichy monastery in Saint Petersburg.
A moderate liberal, Nikolai Vikentyevich was deeply interested in the revolutionary movement and maintained strong links with Russian radicals abroad.