Within a small circle of student friends at Moscow University in the 1830's—a group of young men immersed in German literature and philosophy—one can find the early beginnings of nearly all the trends, movements and schools which developed in Russian intellectual life of the nineteenth century. The roster of those who were in regular contact with one another as members of the circle or who directly felt its influence includes Belinskij, Bakunin, and Granovskij, Ja. M. Neverov, who became active in the field of education, V. P. Botkin, remembered for his magnificent correspondence with Belinskij, the "peasant" poet A. V. Kol'cov, whom Stankevich brought into Russian literature, Konstantin Aksakov, later the most extravagant of the Slavophiles, M. N. Katkov, and for a brief period at the end of the decade, the novelist Turgenev.