Rote Sturmfahne
Appearance
Type | Daily |
---|---|
Editor | Alexander Hasselbach (1934-1937) |
Founded | 1931 |
Political alignment | Communist |
Language | German language |
Ceased publication | August 1941 |
Headquarters | Marxstadt |
Circulation | ~5,000 |
Rote Sturmfahne was a German language daily newspaper published from Marxstadt, Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union.[1] It was an organ of the Marxstadt Canton Committee of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), the Marxstadt Canton Executive Committee and trade unions.[1][2] The newspaper was founded in 1931.[3][4] It had a circulation of about 5,000 copies, with the issues containing four pages.[1] Alexander Hasselbach was the editor of Rote Sturmfahne 1934-1937.[1][5] Eduard Eurich was the executive secretary of the editorial office of Rote Sturmfahne 1938-1941.[6]
The publication was discontinued in August 1941.[3][2]
External links
[edit]- Rote Sturmfahne - Organ des Kantonkomitees der KP(B)SU und Kantonvollzugskomitees des Marxstädter Kantons der ASSR d. WD, online archive of 1938 issues
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Walther Heide. Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Zeitungen im Ausland. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, 9 mar. 2020. p. 185
- ^ a b Alfred Eberlein. Die Presse der Arbeiterklasse und der sozialen Bewegungen: S-Z und Anhang. Akademie-Verlag, 1969. p. 2046
- ^ a b Sibylle Schönborn. Grenzdiskurse: Zeitungen deutschsprachiger Minderheiten und ihr Feuilleton in Mitteleuropa bis 1939. Klartext, 2009. p. 52
- ^ Dorlin, Sabrina. Histoire culturelle des Allemands au Kazakhstan de la Seconde Guerre mondiale à nos jours: des efforts d'enracinement aux perspectives de retour. Paris: Connaissances et Savoirs, 2005. p. 276
- ^ Anne Hartmann, Reinhard Müller. Tribunale als Trauma: Die Deutsche Sektion des Sowjetischen Schriftstellerverbands. Protokolle, Resolutionen und Briefe (1935-1941). Wallstein Verlag, 2022. p. 174
- ^ Немцы России: A-I. ЭРН, 1999. p. 32