Salzburg Chronicle

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Salzburg Chronicle
Salzburg Chronicle.jpg
language German
First edition April 1, 1865
attitude 1938
Article archive 1873 to 1918

The Salzburger Chronik was an Austrian, Catholic -oriented newspaper that appeared in Salzburg between 1865 and 1938 . From 1865 to 1873 it was called the Salzburger Chronik für Stadt und Land , and from 1938 it was continued by the Salzburger Zeitung . At first it appeared only weekly, from 1867 three issues were printed per week. In order to be able to cope with the competition, from 1882 onwards the publication was published on working days and at the same time a weekly paper was published.

history

The Salzburg Chronicle for Town and Country was founded in 1865 by Johann Zimmermann, the first Regens of the Salzburg seminary. The first editor was Joseph Schwer, who was followed from 1887 to 1897 by the later Governor of Salzburg, Alois Winkler, and then by Sebastian Danner. From 1908 until the newspaper was closed in 1938, the Salzburg Press Association acted as the owner and publisher.

content

Initially, the newspaper contained only a few sections . Around 1870 there was a feature section , a daily report, correspondence, personnel news, an excerpt from the official gazette as well as the current grain prices and stock market prices. After the outbreak of World War I , the focus was on war reporting.

literature

  • Waltraud Jakob: Salzburg newspaper history , dissertation, Salzburg 1978
  • Franz Kläring: Development and expansion. The Salzburg Press Association for six decades . In: Salzburger Volkszeitung , November 29, 1968
  • Helmut W. Lang (Ed.): Austrian Retrospective Bibliography (ORBI). Row 2: Austrian Newspapers 1492–1945. Volume 3: Helmut W. Lang, Ladislaus Lang, Wilma Buchinger: Bibliography of Austrian newspapers 1621–1945. N-Z. Edited at the Austrian National Library. KG Saur, Munich 2003, ISBN 359823385X , p. 227
  • Anniversary edition of the Salzburg Chronicle on April 12, 1914 ( online )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Helmut W. Lang (Ed.): Austrian Retrospective Bibliography (ORBI). Row 2, Volume 3, 2003, p. 227.