Prager Tagblatt
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (March 2010) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
The Prager Tagblatt was a German language newspaper published in Prague from 1876 to 1939. It was considered to be the most influential liberal-democratic German newspaper in Bohemia. It stopped publication after the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. The Prager Zeitung a German weekly published in Prague since 1991 claims to continue the traditions of the Prager Tagblatt.
Among the most important contributors to the newspaper were: Max Brod, Egon Erwin Kisch, Alfred Polgar, Alexander Roda Roda, Joseph Roth, Johannes Urzidil, Sándor Márai and Friedrich Torberg. Other important contributors were: Hans Bauer, Benjamin M. Bloch, Alfred Döblin, Martin Feuchtwanger, Egon Friedell, Stefan Großmann, Arnold Hahn, Arnold Höllriegel, Elisabeth Janstein, Siegfried Jacobsohn, Franz Kafka, František R. Kraus, Theodor Lessing, Franz Molnar, Hans Natonek, Leo Perutz, Heinrich Rauchberg, Walther Rode, Alice Rühle-Gerstel, Gisela Selden-Goth and Hans Siemsen.
External links
- Prager Tagblatt online, Austrian National Library
- Defunct newspapers of Czechoslovakia
- German Bohemian people
- German-language newspapers
- Media in Prague
- Newspapers published in Prague
- Newspapers published in Czechoslovakia
- Publications established in 1876
- Publications disestablished in 1939
- 1876 establishments in Bohemia
- 1939 disestablishments in Czechoslovakia
- Newspapers published in Europe stubs
- Mass media in the Czech Republic stubs
- Newspapers published in Germany stubs