Moscow German newspaper

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moscow German newspaper
Logo Moscow German newspaper.png
description German-language newspaper from Moscow
publishing company MAWI Group
First edition 1870, re-established in 1998
Frequency of publication biweekly
Sold edition 25,000 copies
editor Olga and Heinrich Martens
Web link www.mdz-moskau.eu
ZDB 1435299-0

The Moskauer Deutsche Zeitung , or MDZ for short ( Russian Московская немецкая газета ) is a newspaper in German and Russian that appears twice a month in Moscow in A3 format and in extracts online. Two thirds of the 24-page newspaper is in German (16 pages), one third in Russian (8 pages). The print edition has a circulation of approx. 25,000 copies. It is available in various Moscow facilities, hotels, cafes, restaurants, business centers and Moscow airports. The editors are Olga and Heinrich Martens .

history

In 1870 Theodor Ries founded the Moscow German newspaper , shortly afterwards he left the newspaper to Christian Woldemar ( Krišjānis Valdemārs ). In mid-1871 Christian Kicherer and Gustav Hannemann from Moscow's St. Michaelis Realschule took over the newspaper, which they published for the next thirty years. Noteworthy publications in the newspaper's feature pages come from Arthur Luther and Karl Nötzel . Until the beginning of the First World War , it served as a source of information for the Germans in Moscow. Due to the war it had to stop its publication and could not be revived during the time of the Soviet Union .

It was re-established on April 12, 1998 by the International Association of German Culture . Since 2000 there has been an Internet presence with a selection of its own articles - in 2012 the website was relaunched. The MDZ also issues full-color special editions on a regular basis.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Media data 2015 (PDF) Moscow German newspaper
  2. ^ Distribution offices of the Moscow German Newspaper
  3. Special editions. Moscow German newspaper