Jewish press

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The Jewish press. Organ for the Interests of Orthodox Judaism appeared as the successor to the Jewish Correspondence from 1920 to 1938. The newspaper, which appeared in both Vienna and Bratislava with changing publishers, had a format of 2 °. The count is taken over from the predecessor from 1920.

garnish

  • The Kenessio Gedaulo

imprint

  • Oct. 15, 1920 - Sept. 16, 1921: property of a society;
  • from Sept. 23, 1921: Jüdischer Verl. (Eig., Ed.);
  • from November 4, 1927: Joel Pollak (original, ed., last also: publ.);
  • from September 30, 1932: David Türkl (Ed. for a working group,
  • from March 26, 1937: Ed. for the Jüdisch-Orthodoxen Preßverein);
  • from October 1, 1937: Jewish-Orthodox Press Association (Ed.)

printer

  • Melantrich, Vienna;
  • from June 7, 1917: Cooperative printing company;
  • from April 20, 1923: born Steinmann.

editorial staff

  • Joel Pollak;
  • from December 3, 1920: Jakob Deutsch (for Austria);
  • Oct. 1920 - Feb. 1931: Heinrich Schwarz (by editor for Czechoslovakia);
  • March 1931 - December 1933: Jacob Joel Braun (by editor for Czechoslovakia);
  • from Jan. 1937: Siegfried Frommer (by editor for Czechoslovakia);
  • December 3, 1926 - January 1928: Otto Stern;
  • from Jan. 13, 1928: Joel Pollak;
  • from September 30, 1932: Karl Richter;
  • from March 26, 1937: Mendel Geldwerth;
  • last: Jakob Deutsch.

literature

  • Helmut W. Lang (Ed.): Austrian Retrospective Bibliography (ORBI). Row 2: Austrian Newspapers 1492–1945. Volume 2: Helmut W. Lang, Ladislaus Lang, Wilma Buchinger: Bibliography of the Austrian newspapers 1621–1945. AT THE. Edited at the Austrian National Library. KG Saur, Munich 2003, ISBN 3-598-23384-1 , pp. 389-390.

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