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The Hamburger Anzeiger was a daily newspaper for Hamburg and its neighboring cities, which were incorporated in 1937 . Before the Second World War, the Hamburger Anzeiger was the newspaper with the highest circulation in Hamburg, to which it had become in the second half of the 1920s. The Hamburger Anzeiger was created in August 1922 through the merger of the Neue Hamburger Zeitung with the General-Anzeiger for Hamburg-Altona , both of which belonged to the Essen publisher Wilhelm Girardet . Both newspapers strove for non-partisan positions and were left-liberal. The Generalanzeiger was aimed more at industrial workers, the Neue Hamburger Zeitung more at bourgeois readers.

In 1933 the newspaper was brought into line and the former editor in chief Alois Winbauer dismissed. This newspaper appeared until the end of August 1944 and was merged from September 1, 1944 with the Hamburger Fremdblatt and the Hamburger Tageblatt to form the Hamburger Zeitung . Relaunched in 1952, it finally ceased to appear in 1957.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Christian Sonntag: Media careers. Biographical studies of post-war journalists from Hamburg 1946–1949. Munich 2006, p. 40.
  2. ^ Christof Brauers: The FDP in Hamburg 1945 to 1953. Start as a bourgeois left party. Munich 2007, p. 104.