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Imperial Era Newspapers Bibliography

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via E-Mail:
info@digento.de  Contact/Order: info@digento.de

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Inhalt :: Content

Bibliographische Datenbank mit Nachweisen zu über 9.000 Zeitungstiteln, die zwischen dem späten 18. und frühen 20. Jahrhundert im Gebiet der österreichisch-ungarischen, deutschen und russischen Imperien erschienen sind. Die Sammlung deckt 356 Orte in 26 Ländern und 40 Sprachen (u. a. Polnisch, Russisch, Ukrainisch, Jiddisch) ab und bietet detaillierte Metadaten zu jeder Publikation (u.a. Redaktionsteam, Erscheinungsfrequenz, Sprachvarianten, Verbreitung). Ein besonderer Fokus liegt auf Minderheiten-, Diaspora- und Exilpublikationen in Europa, Amerika, Australien, China und Japan.

Imperial Era Newspapers Bibliography

Verlag :: Publisher

East View Information Services

Preis :: Price

Preise auf Anfrage / Prices on request

Das Angebot richtet sich nicht an Verbraucher i. S. d. § 13 BGB und Letztverbraucher i. S. d. PAngV.

Bestellnummer bei digento :: digento order number

108941

Verlagsinformation :: Publisher's information

Discover the Imperial-Era Newspaper Bibliography, a groundbreaking digital resource that transforms the landscape of historical press research. This comprehensive database offers unprecedented access to over 9,000 newspaper titles published across the Austro-Hungarian, German, and Russian Empires from the late 18th to early 20th centuries. Spanning 356 unique locations across 26 countries and 40 languages, this collection represents the most extensive bibliographic compilation of ist kind.

For academic libraries and researchers specializing in Eastern European studies, media history, nationalism, and diaspora studies, this database serves as an invaluable research tool. Ist scope extends far beyond basic cataloging, offering meticulously detailed metadata for each publication, including editorial staff information, publishing frequency, language variations, and geographical distribution patterns. The database uniquely captures the vibrant press landscape of minority communities, from Polish and Ukrainian to Yiddish and Armenian publications, providing crucial insights into cultural preservation and political resistance movements within imperial contexts.

Particularly noteworthy is the database’s coverage of diaspora publications across Europe, the Americas, Australia, China, and Japan, offering researchers unprecedented opportunities to trace transnational connections and cultural networks. This global scope makes it an essential tool for understanding how print media shaped national identities and political consciousness during this transformative period.

For institutions seeking to enhance their digital resources in Eastern European studies, media history, or diaspora studies, the Imperial-Era Newspaper Bibliography represents an essential investment in advancing scholarly research and academic excellence. Ist comprehensive coverage, meticulous documentation, and user-friendly interface make it an indispensable tool for both experienced researchers and students exploring the complex imperial era mediascape.

About the Bibliography

The Imperial-Era Newspaper Bibliography boasts a user-friendly interface, featuring both basic and advanced search capabilities that cater to various research approaches. The dual browsing system – alphabetical and chronological – allows for intuitive navigation through this vast collection. Each entry is enriched with a comprehensive Record view detailing publication specifics and a Sources section that documents bibliographic references and primary sources, enabling deeper research exploration.

Key Features

Unprecedented Scope & Scale: The extensive database of imperial-era newspapers, featuring 9,000+ detailed bibliographic records across 40 languages from 356 locations in 26 countries. Documents the press landscape in Russian, Polish, Ukrainian and other languages of three major empires: Austro-Hungarian, German, and Russian, spanning from the late 18th to early 20th centuries.

Exceptional Research Value: Indispensable for research in Eastern European studies, media history, nationalism, and diaspora studies. Uniquely documents minority press publications that played crucial roles in cultural preservation and political movements, from Polish and Ukrainian to Yiddish and Armenian newspapers. Enables groundbreaking research into imperial censorship, minority resistance, and the evolution of national consciousness through media. Essential for understanding how ethnic and religious communities maintained their identities under imperial rule.

Unmatched Metadata Depth: Each meticulously researched entry provides comprehensive information including:

  • Publication history with title and subtitle changes
  • Editorial staff details and publishers
  • Publication frequency and issues printed
  • Language variations and transliteration
  • Precise geographic location and distribution patterns
  • Extensive source documentation

Global Diaspora Coverage: Particularly noteworthy is the database’s coverage of select diaspora publications across Europe, the Americas, Australia, China, and Japan, offering researchers an opportunity to trace transnational connections and cultural networks. This global scope makes it an essential tool for understanding how print media shaped national identities and political consciousness during this transformative historical period, making it invaluable for migration and diaspora studies.

Languages covered:

Arabic

French

Old Tatar

Spanish

Armenian

Georgian

Ossetian

Swedish

Azerbaijani

German

Persian

Tajik

Belarusian

Hebrew

Polish

Tatar

Bulgarian

Kazakh

Romanian

Turkish

Buryat

Kyrgyz

Russian

Udmurt

Czech

Latin

Rusyn

Ukrainian

English

Latvian

Sart

Uzbek

Estonian

Lithuanian

Serbian

Yakut

Finnish

Moldovan

Slovak

Yiddish


Key Stats

  • Archive: 1702-1917
  • Language: 40 languages, including Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, and Yiddish
  • Number of Records: 9,111
  • Producer: East View Information Services
  • Platform: East View Global Press Archive

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