Forest newspaper

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Forest newspaper
Title page of the first edition
language German
First edition January 5, 1883
Editor-in-chief Robert Spannlang
Article archive 1883 to 1939

The forest newspaper is a trade journal of the Austrian Agricultural Publishing House , which has existed since 1883 . The magazine, published monthly in Vienna , has a circulation of 3,500 copies and is distributed in Austria, Germany, Switzerland and Italy. In terms of content, the forest newspaper is devoted to the topics of forest , forestry and agriculture , forest technology , torrent and avalanche control and hunting management . According to its own information, the forest newspaper has a regular reach of 16,000 readers.

The editorial team is headed by editor-in-chief Robert Spannlang and has been supported by a seven-member editorial advisory board since 2005. The reporting of the forest newspaper includes timber market, economy and monthly changing topics.

history

The forest newspaper was founded in 1883 as the Austrian forest newspaper and appeared until 1894 under the addition of Illustrirte Zeitung für Forstwirtschaft u. Timber trade, hunting, etc. Fishing . In 1895 the magazine was renamed the Österreichische Forst- und Jagdzeitung , and in 1920 the name was changed to the Wiener Allgemeine Forst- und Jagdzeitung . During the Second World War, the magazine appeared from 1939, initially under the title Allgemeine Forstzeitung , and from 1941 as Der Gebirgsforst . After the magazine was not published in 1945, there was another change in the title in 1946 and the magazine appeared until 1950 as the Allgemeine forst- und Holzwirtschaftliche Zeitung and then again as the Allgemeine Forstzeitung . In 1987 the magazine returned to its founding title Österreichische Forstzeitung and has been published as a forest newspaper since 2004 . The magazine appeared weekly until before World War II and was always circulated on Fridays. After that, the magazine only appeared monthly.

reader

According to their own information, 37 percent of the readers of the forest newspaper come from forest companies and 19 percent from forest authorities. 15 percent are forest owners, 12 percent belong to interest groups, 10 percent are involved in torrent and avalanche control and 7 percent are active in research institutes and schools. 26 percent of readers are under 41 years of age, 32 percent are between 41 and 50 years old, 28 percent are between the ages of 51 and 60 and 14 percent are over 60 years old.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Agrarverlag  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Media data for the forest newspaper, accessed on January 23, 2009@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.agrarverlag.at  
  2. Helmut W. Lang (Ed.): Austrian Retrospective Bibliography (ORBI). Series 2, Volume 3, 2003, p. 110 f.

literature

  • 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 3-598-23384-1 , p. 358, p. 110 f.

Web links