Thurgau yearbook

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Thurgauer Jahrbuch was a Swiss periodical that dealt with topics from the Canton of Thurgau . It appeared for the first time in 1927 and for the last time in 2010.

history

The founder and first editor Ernst Rieben was born in Aarberg in 1881 and learned the profession of typesetter . In 1925 he first published the Kreuzlinger Neujahrbuch , which was followed by a second in 1926. In 1927 he gave the magazine the new name Thurgauer Jahrbuch . As a result, Rieben expanded the articles with Thurgauian topics, introduced the Thurgau Chronicle and brought obituaries to Thurgauian personalities. Rieben kept the Thurgau Yearbook until 1934 and died in 1954 where he lived in Kreuzlingen .

His successor was the former canton librarian and state archivist Julius Rickenmann. From then on, the Thurgauer Jahrbuch was printed by W. Kaufmann-Furrer in Müllheim and in 1936 it was taken over by the Frauenfelder Verlag Huber & Co. Dino Larese took over the editorial office in 1949 and managed it until 1962. In the spring of 1998, Hans Ruedi Fischer (* 1942) was hired by Huber & Co. as the editor of the Thurgauer Jahrbuch .

As part of the work for the Historical Lexicon of Switzerland , the Thurgau State Archives created an alphabetical main register for the Thurgau Yearbook .

literature

  • Register for the yearbook 1925–2000. In: Thurgauer Jahrbuch , Vol. 75, 2000, pp. 223–272 ( e-periodica.ch )
  • Employees at the Thurgauer Jahrbuch 2000. In: Thurgauer Jahrbuch , vol. 75, 2000, pp. 274–279 ( e-periodica.ch )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Thurgauer Jahrbuch , on digishelf.de, accessed on March 24, 2020
  2. ^ Necrology for Ernst Rieben . In: Thurgauer Jahrbuch . tape 30 , 1955, pp. 42 f . (accessed on March 12, 2020).