Emder yearbook for historical regional studies of East Frisia

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Emder yearbook for historical regional studies of East Frisia

description scientific journal Ostfriesland
Area of ​​Expertise East Frisian regional history
publishing company Publishing house of the East Frisian landscape
Headquarters Aurich
First edition 1872
Frequency of publication yearly
Editor-in-chief Bernhard Parisius
editor East Frisian Landscape , Society for Fine Arts and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden , Lower Saxony State Archives in Aurich , Johannes a Lasco Library
Web link www.ostfriesenelandschaft.de
Article archive 1872 to 1942 (PDF)
ISSN (print)
Title page of the first edition, 1872

The Emden yearbook for historical regional studies of East Frisia (until 1995: Yearbook of the Society for Fine Arts and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden ) is the only scientific periodical in East Frisia. It is published by the East Frisian Landscape , the Society for Fine Art and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden , the Lower Saxony State Archives in Aurich and the Johannes a Lasco Library and is published annually by the East Frisian Landscape Publishing House. The first volume appeared in 1872.

history

In 1820, six citizens of Emden founded an art association, which has been operating under its current name since 1823, the Society for Fine Art and Patriotic Antiquities of Emden (in short: Emden Art, sometimes simply art in local media ). In the 1860s, the association organized lectures on the history of East Frisia . These met with great interest, so that from 1870 a regular series was organized. In 1872 the association published the first yearbook under the title Yearbook of the Society for Fine Art and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden , in which it published the results of historical and regional research in East Frisia . The second edition appeared in 1875. From 1881 until the end of the First World War , the magazine appeared almost annually in booklets. The economic crisis and the accompanying inflation led to a very irregular publication from the 1920s onwards. During this period, the society published its yearbooks in volumes only in 1920, 1925 and from 1927 onwards. At the height of the economic crisis, the 23rd volume could only be published in 1932 with the help of a donation from Switzerland. During the Nazi era, the magazine was published annually from 1936 to 1939 and 1942 under the patronage of the National Socialist District President Refardt.

After the Second World War, the Society for Fine Art and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden concentrated its commitment on its collections, which it exhibited in the East Frisian State Museum in Emden from 1962 . The East Frisian landscape then took over with the Lower Saxony State Archives in Aurich (since 2014: Lower Saxony State Archives [location Aurich]) the editor and thus ensured the continuation of the periodical. The first edition after the war appeared in 1950. In it for the first time, in addition to the annual reports of “Emder Kunst”, the annual reports on the work of the “Aubin Circle” and from 1952 the reports on the working group “Science and Literature “Of the East Frisian landscape printed in the yearbook. From this later the annual "Report on research projects and publications of the East Frisian landscape" developed.

The Johannes a Lasco Library and the Society for Fine Arts and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden have been co-editors since 1995, and the Gerhard ten Doornkaat Koolman Foundation since 2003 . At the same time, the magazine received a new layout from issue 75 (1995) as well as the current title "Emder Yearbook for Historical Regional Studies of East Frisia". Bernhard Parisius is the editor-in-chief .

literature

  • Paul Weßels: "An expression of spiritual and cultural East Frisian life" The publication of the first yearbook of the Society for Fine Arts and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden in 1872. In: Book of the month of the Aurich Landscape Library. 6, 2011 ( PDF; 256 kB )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. In the so-called Aubin district , important personalities from East Friesland came together "to promote the spiritual, cultural and economic reconstruction of the region". See: Klaus Klattenhoff, Hans-Dietrich Raapke , Friedrich Wißmann, Paul Weßels (Hrsg.): Contributions to the school history of Ostfriesland. Episode 3 (= regional school history. Volume 10.3). BIS-Verlag of the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-8142-2083-3 , p. 50, urn : nbn: de: gbv: 715-oops-8186 . In addition, he should “avoid isolating East Frisian historiography from the general trend in German historical studies”. It is named after the "Hamburg historian Hermann Aubin who has been particularly interested in East Frisian topics since 1946 ". See Dietmar von Reeken : Heimat Movement, Cultural Policy and National Socialism. The history of the East Frisian landscape 1918–1949 (= treatises and lectures on the history of East Frisia. Volume 75). Ostfriesland-Verlag, Aurich 1995, ISBN 3-925365-93-1 , p. 228 ( limited preview in Google book search).