Vienna day

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Vienna day

description Austrian daily newspaper
First edition 25.11. 1922
attitude 03/12 1938
Sold edition 50,000 copies
Editor-in-chief Maximilian Schreier
editor The Tag Verlag AG
The day. Extra edition. Oct. 7, 1928. For: The Home Guard and the Schutzbund deployed in Wiener Neustadt

Der Wiener Tag was an Austrian daily newspaper that first appeared on November 25th in 1922 under the name Der Tag in Vienna and was renamed on July 1st in 1930.

history

The newspaper appeared in Vienna and was published by Tag Verlag AG . It followed a left-liberal line and turned to the liberal bourgeoisie. In 1937 the circulation was around 50,000 copies.

The editorial office was located in Vienna at Canisiusgasse 8 and was printed by Johann Nepomuk Vernay Druckerei- und Verlags AG . The hour of the Kronos publishing house and the morning of the morning publishing house were published as side editions of the newspaper . Tag AG had been part of Vernay AG since 1926 .

The last edition of the newspaper appeared on March 12, 1938, the day of the " Anschluss ". The National Socialists then closed the editorial office and the newspaper was banned. The editors Maximilian Schreier , Vincenz Ludwig Ostry and Rudolf Kalmar were arrested by the Gestapo and deported to Germany in the Weimar-Buchenwald concentration camp.

Organization of the newspaper (1937)

literature

  • Karl Bömer (Hrsg.): Handbook of the world press. A representation of the newspaper industry in all countries. 3rd, completely revised edition. Armanen-Verlag, Leipzig et al. 1937.
  • Helmut W. Lang (Ed.): Austrian Retrospective Bibliography (ORBI). Row 2: Austrian Newspapers 1492–1945. Volume 3: Helmut W. Lang, Ladislaus Lang, Wilma Buchinger: Bibliography of Austrian newspapers 1621–1945. N-Z. Edited at the Austrian National Library. KG Saur, Munich 2003, ISBN 3-598-23385-X , p. 296 ( Der Tag ), p. 447 ( Der Wiener Tag ).
  • Peter Sonnenberg: Media control during the Nazi era (PDF; 793 kB). A collective biographical analysis of selected journalists from the Viennese daily newspapers “Wiener Tag” and “Telegraf”, which were banned in 1938. Vienna 2009 (Vienna, University, Master's thesis, 2010).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Information about "The Vienna Day"