Novoye wremja

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Novoje wremja - The New Era of
May 5, 1896

The Novoje wremja ( Russian Новое время 'Die Neue Zeit' ) was a political and literary daily newspaper that was published in Russian from 1868 to November 8, 1917 in Saint Petersburg .

The newspaper came out five times a week, from 1870 daily and from 1881 as a morning and evening paper. From 1891 there was a weekly illustrated supplement.

overview

Before 1876, the paper was considered liberal , then increasingly conservative - especially after the revolution of 1905 .

Publishers were

  • 1868-1872 Adam Kirkor
  • 1872–1873 Fyodor Ustryalov
  • 1873–1874 Ossip Notowitsch
  • 1874–1876 Konstantin Trubnikow
  • 1876–1912 Alexei Suvorin
  • 1912–1917 the so-called "Suworin" college

On April 21, 1872, the Russian issue of the capital was discussed by Karl Marx . From 1876, after Suvorin took over the newspaper, Die Neue Zeit gradually lost its liberal character. On one hand, messages were in this great newspaper European style spread from abroad, companies presented from different sectors of the economy and well-known personalities, but then finally had the sheet at the Liberals as servile, unscrupulous mouthpiece of reaction decried and their makers disparagingly as Neuzeitler ( Russian нововременцы nowowremenzy ) has been dismissed. In 1894 anti-Semitic remarks on reports about the Dreyfus affair rounded off the negative picture. Viktor Burenin, who has been in the Speerspitze editorial team since 1876, was rejected as a cynic by Ivan Goncharov and Nikolai Leskow , among others , but was able to appeal to a wide readership.

It was Suvorin who promoted the aspiring Anton Chekhov in the 1890s. 1901–1917 Mikhail Menshikov was one of the leading journalists.

One day after the October Revolution , the Bolsheviks stopped spreading the New Era .

1920–1930 Suvorin's son Michael continued the paper in Belgrade .

literature

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