翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Lezama
・ Lezama Facilities
・ Lezama Park
・ Lezama Partido
・ Lezama, Buenos Aires
・ Lezant
・ Lezare
・ Lezas Formation
・ Lezay
・ Lezayre
・ Lezayre railway station
・ Lezcano
・ Lezennes
・ Lezerea
・ Lezey
Lezgi Gazet
・ Lezgi Mosque
・ Lezgian
・ Lezgian language
・ Lezgian people
・ Lezgic languages
・ Lezgin alphabets
・ Lezginka
・ Lezgistan
・ Lezha River
・ Lezhi County
・ Lezhnevo
・ Lezhnevsky
・ Lezhnevsky District
・ Lezhë


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Lezgi Gazet : ウィキペディア英語版
Lezgi Gazet

|format=A3 (Tabloid)
|ceased publication = 1931
|relaunched = 1943
| chiefeditor = Агариза Саидов (Aragiza Saidov)
| depeditor = Шихмурад Шихмурадов (Shikhmurad Shikhmuradov)
| sister newspapers =
| circulation= ~10,000 (2010)
| website =
}}
''Lezgi Gazet'' (, (ロシア語:''Лезгинская газета'')) is a Lezgin-language newspaper published in Dagestan, Russia, first established in the early days of the Soviet Union.
==History==
The newspaper was established in 1928 with the name ''The New World'' (''ЦIийи дуьнья'') by Hajibey Hajibeyov (, (ロシア語:Гаджибек Гаджибеков)), who that same year created the first official alphabet for Lezgin. (Previously Lezgin was written in Arabic script.) "The New World" was the first Lezgin-language publication using its own alphabet.
The newspaper changed names several times. The paper ceased publication in 1931, but in 1943 returned under the name ''Banner of Socialism'' (''Социализмдин пайдах'').
In 1951, the Soviet Union required all non-Russian newspapers to rely on the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's newspaper, ''Pravda'', for their content. The Lezgi newspaper was renamed ''Dagestani Truth'' (''Дагъустандин гьакъикъат''), and almost all of its content consisted of translated articles published in the Russian-language ''Dagestani Truth'' (''Дагестанская правда'').
Agariza Saidov, editor of the ''Lezgi Gazet'' since 1994, said, "This decision was ill-conceived and erroneous, since it hindered the development of the culture, language and literature in native languages." In 1957, the Communist Party reversed its decision and the newspaper resumed publication of its own content under the name, ''Kommunist'' (''Коммунист'').〔
In 1978, the paper received the Order of the Badge of Honour from the Soviet government.〔
By 1973, it was published three times per week and had a circulation of 20,000.〔Great Soviet Encyclopedia: («Коммунист» (газета Дагестанской АССР) )〕
For many years, the newspaper published the works of (1913—1996), called "the national poet of Dagestan," who also translated the works of Russian poets like Alexander Pushkin into the Lezgin language.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the newspaper changed its name to ''Lezgi Gazet''.〔 Its circulation was approximately 4,000 in 1994.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Lezgi Gazet」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.