Trautenauer Echo

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Trautenauer Echo was a German language newspaper published from

Trautenau. The newspaper was founded in 1900.[1][2] Politically it was an organ of the Social Democratic Party of Austria.[3] Tratenauer Echo appeared weekly on Saturdays.[3][2] It carried the slogan 'Organ of the Working People of North-Eastern Bohemia' (Organ für die Werktätige Bevölkerung des nordöstlichen Böhmens).[4][2] Wilhelmem Kiesewetter was the editor of the newspaper during the initial period.[1][4]

After the foundation of Czechoslovakia, Trautenauer Echo became an organ of the German Social Democratic Workers' Party in the Czechoslovak Republic.[5] Around 1920 the newspaper appeared twice weekly.[6]

As of the mid-1930s the editor-in-chief of the newspaper was Adolf Palme from Prague. Copies had between 6 and 10 pages. Around this time it appeared on Tuesdays (2,400 copies), Thursdays (1,500 copies) and Saturdays (3,800 copies). The editorial office was located on Kreuzplats.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Drahomír Jančík. Pocta Profesoru Zdeňku Kárníkovi: sborník příspěvků k jubilantovým sedmdesátinám, Volume 1. Karolinum, 2003. p. 282
  2. ^ a b c Josef Demuth. Der politische Bezirk Trautenau: Gerichtsbezirke: Trautenau, Marschendorf, Schatzlar und Eipel. Verlag des Trautenauer Bezirkslehrer-Vereins, 1901. p. 358
  3. ^ a b Hermann Beck, Hanns Dorn, Othmar Spann. Kritische Blätter für die gesamten Sozialwissenschaften, Volumen 4. O.V. Boehmert, 1908. p. 11
  4. ^ a b Jaromír Kubíček. CERBI. Sdružení knihoven České republiky, 2008. p. 367
  5. ^ Leopold Grünwald. Wandlung: ein Altkommunist gibt zu Protokoll. Verlag der Wiener Volksbuchhandlung, 1980. p. 25
  6. ^ für Volk und Heimat. "Böhmerland"-Verlag, 1920. p. 65
  7. ^ Walther Heide. Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Zeitungen im Ausland. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, 9 mar. 2020. p. 279-280