翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Westside, Syracuse
・ Westside-Kelowna
・ Westslope cutthroat trout
・ Westsound/WSX Seaplane Base
・ Weststar Aviation (Malaysia)
・ Weststellingwerf
・ Westsyde Secondary School
・ Westsyde, Kamloops
・ Westsylvania
・ Westsylvania Heritage Corporation
・ Westtan Broncos F.C.
・ Westtown (West Chester Railroad station)
・ Westtown School
・ Westtown Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania
・ Westtown, New York
Westungarische Volksstimme
・ Westurrection
・ Westvale, New York
・ Westview
・ Westview (album)
・ Westview (Brookneal, Virginia)
・ Westview Cemetery
・ Westview Cemetery (Wadesboro, North Carolina)
・ Westview Centennial Secondary School
・ Westview Circle, Wyoming
・ Westview Elementary School
・ Westview High School
・ Westview High School (Arizona)
・ Westview High School (Beaverton, Oregon)
・ Westview High School (San Diego)


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

Westungarische Volksstimme : ウィキペディア英語版
Westungarische Volksstimme
''Westungarische Volksstimme'' ('West Hungarian People's Voice') was a German-language weekly newspaper published from Pressburg (Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary; later Bratislava, Czechoslovakia).
The first issue was published on March 18, 1902. ''Westungarische Volkstimme'' was a regional organ of the Social Democratic Party of Hungary.〔 The name was inspired by the central party organ ''Volksstimme'', published from Budapest.〔Duin, p. 111〕
Heinrich E. Kalmár was the founding editor of the newspaper. Paul Wittich then served as editor between July 1905 and May 1914, and then again from September 1914 onwards.〔 Kalmár and Jozef Balbam served as editors between May and September 1914〔''(Berichte und Forschungen 11/2003 )''. Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag. p. 114 ISBN 3-486-56742-X〕 Samuel Mayer served as editor of the newspaper around 1918.〔Duin, p. 264〕
The by-line of the newspaper was 'Organ of the Social Democratic Party of Hungary for the working population in West Hungary' (''Organ der ungarländischen socialdemokratischen Partei für die arbeitende Bevölkerung in Westungarn'').〔 ''Westungarische Volksstimme'' had a Hungarian-language sister newspaper, ''Népszava'' (also meaning 'People's Voice').〔Duin, p. 371〕
After the incorporation of Pressburg into Czechoslovakia, the Czechoslovak government ordered the newspaper to remove "''Westungarische''" from its name. This move caused resentment amongst the Hungarian and German social democrats of the city.〔Duin, 2009. p. 270〕 ''Volksstimme'' became an organ of the Hungarian-German Social Democratic Party after the First World War.〔 ''Westungarische Volksstimme'' got a Hungarian-language sister newspaper in Bratislava, ''Népszava'' (also meaning 'People's Voice').〔
In 1920 control of ''Volkstimme'' and ''Népszava'' was taken over by the pro-communist leftwing that emerged from the Hungarian-German Social Democratic Party.〔 The Austrian-born leftist leader F. Pfifferling became the editor of the newspaper.〔Duin, p. 372〕 The social democratic faction led by Wittich established a new newspaper in October 1920, ''Volksrecht'' ('People's Right').〔
==References==


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「Westungarische Volksstimme」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.