Konstantin Nikolayevich Leontyev (born Jan. 25 [Jan. 13, old style], 1831, Kudinovo, near Kaluga, Russia—died Nov. 24 [Nov. 12, O.S.], 1891, near Moscow) was a Russian essayist who questioned the benefits derived by Russia from following contemporary industrial and egalitarian developments in Europe.
A military surgeon in the Crimean War, Leontyev later entered the Russian consular service, where he held posts in Crete, Edirne, and Salonika. In 1879 he became assistant editor of the newspaper Varshavsky dnevnik (“Warsaw Diary”), and a year later he joined the staff of the Moscow censorship department. In 1887 he settled in a small house near the Optina monastery, where he secretly took monastic vows but never lived under strict monastic discipline.
Leontyev wrote with a clarity and a persistent personal conviction rare among Russian political thinkers. He tried to find in the Russian empire an alternative which could civilize an Eastern world that already recoiled from the commercial-minded, democratic West. He elaborated his thoughts on this subject in a number of remarkable essays, many of which were collected in the volume Vostok, Rossiya i slavyanstvo (1885–86; “The East, Russia and Slavdom”). Leontyev also wrote novels and short stories and a revealing autobiography, Moya literaturnaya sudba (1875; “My Literary Destiny”). He has been called the Russian Nietzsche.