Märkische Volksstimme

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The Märkische Volksstimme was a daily newspaper that appeared in the province of Brandenburg , later in the state of Brandenburg and then in the Potsdam district .

The newspaper was founded in 1890 as the SPD newspaper in Frankfurt (Oder) and banned by the Nazi rulers in 1933.

On April 18, 1946, the party newspapers “Volkswille” (KPD) and “Der Märker” (SPD) merged in Potsdam . The Märkische People's Voice appeared from then on as "organ of the SED," in 1952 as an organ of the SED district leadership for the district Potsdam. The Märkische Volksstimme underlined its local character with its pages “Across the Province” in the “General Edition for the Mark Brandenburg” and in the “Greater Potsdam Edition”. The Märkische Volksstimme was published in the “ Berlin Format ” and cost 15 Pfennig.

On 3 October 1990, the notified Märkische popular vote in Märkische General to (MAZ).

Editors-in-chief

Editors-in-chief of the Märkische Volksstimme (incomplete):

Period Surname
1946-1949 Walter Franze & Ernst Berends (until 1948)
1949 Alfred Sicker
1949-1954 Arno Mielatz
1954-1956
1956-1958 Hans-Werner Ortmann
1958-1963 Hans-Joachim Pommert
1963-1974 Willi Siebenmorgen
1974-1979 Peter Trommer
1979-1980
1980-1987 Peter Trommer
1987-1989 Werner Schubert

Web links

  • Märkische Volksstimme: social democratic organ for the districts of Cottbus, Spremberg, Calau, Luckau, Guben, Crossen, Lübben in the magazine database : ZDB -ID 1000241-8