Halle yearbooks

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The Hallische Jahrbucher was a magazine that was first published in Prussia from 1838-1843 , then in the Kingdom of Saxony . They are considered the most important journalistic organ of the Young Hegelians .

history

The Halle Yearbooks for German Science and Art (until 1840 with subtitle Reviews. Characteristics. Correspondences. Overviews. ) Were founded in 1838 by Arnold Ruge , then a private lecturer at the University of Halle . Theodor Echtermeyer was co-founder . When it first appeared, between 150 and 180 co-authors had been won. It was representatives of all scientific directions, writers and poets who contributed with their ideas to socio-political changes before the revolution of 1848 . Conceived as diaries, the Hallische Jahrbucher appeared six times a week with the Allgemeine Deutsche Intellektivenblatt as a supplement. There were also articles by celebrities like the philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach and poets like Bettina von Arnim and Hoffmann von Fallersleben .

From the beginning, the publications were monitored by the Metternich police. Monitoring of all kinds of public statements was common domestic political practice at the time, and events at universities were no exception. In the dispute between Protestants and Catholics over raising children in mixed confessional marriages in 1839, the publishers and authors of the Hallische did not spare criticism of the state and the clergy . The publication of the papers in Prussia was then banned. Ruge and Echtermeyer had them printed from Dresden in Halle and published outside Prussia. But Prussia's influence on the Dresden Estates Assembly finally made a further appearance impossible. The January edition of 1843 was confiscated by the Saxon police. Ruge moved to Paris and edited the Halle yearbooks as Franco-German together with Karl Marx . The Federal Assembly of the German Confederation banned the distribution of the yearbooks for the entire federal territory. The show was discontinued in Paris in 1844.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. See e.g. B. Josef Matzerat: Albert Schwegler. Sigmaringen (Thorbecke) 1993, p. 91 Google book
  2. Jens Grandt: Here the radical criticism of the existing triumphs. Review of Martin Hundt's "Redaktionsbriefwechsel" in the Süddeutsche Zeitung on July 1, 2010.