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Berliner Morgen-Zeitung : ウィキペディア英語版
Berliner Morgen-Zeitung

The ''Berliner Morgen-Zeitung'' was a daily morning newspaper in Berlin, Germany.
==History==
It was first published on 1 April 1889〔(Berliner Morgen-Zeitung ), Datenbank der Berliner Tageszeitungen, Austrian Academy of Sciences, 31 December 1995, retrieved 21 April 2011 〕 by Rudolf Mosse, partly inspired by Leopold Ullstein's introduction of an evening newspaper, the ''Berliner Abendpost'', some 18 months previously.〔Peter de Mendelssohn, ''Zeitungsstadt Berlin: Menschen und Mächte in der Geschichte der deutschen Presse'', Berlin: Ullstein, 1959, , pp. 115–16 (2nd ed. Frankfurt/Berlin/Vienna: Ullstein, 1982, ISBN 9783550074967) 〕 It was aimed at a more popular readership than Mosse's ''Berliner Tageblatt''.〔Michael A. Meyer, Michael Brenner, Steven M. Lowenstein, ''et al.'', ''German-Jewish History in Modern Times'' Volume 3: ''Integration in Dispute, 1871-1918'', New York: Columbia University, 1997, ISBN 978-0-231-07476-6, (p. 191 ).〕 It was little known in Berlin but widely read in the surrounding countryside and the provinces; it had a higher print run in winter than summer.〔de Mendelssohn, p. 116.〕 In the initial year the print run was 60,000 copies; by 1900 it reached approximately 150,000 copies. From 1911, circulation declined and settled at 100,000. However, by 1930 it had the highest circulation in Germany.〔''Simon Wiesenthal Center Annual'' 4 (1987) (p. 227 ).〕
In 1934, it was taken over by the National Socialist Central Publishing Agency and no longer printed by Mosse. By 1937, circulation had fallen to 11,500.
The newspaper was published for the last time on 15 February 1939. The following day it was amalgamated with the ''Berliner Morgenpost''.〔

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