Karjalan Sanomat
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | OmaMedia |
Publisher | Periodika |
Editor-in-chief | Mikko Nesvitski |
Founded | 1920 |
Language | Finnish |
Headquarters | Petrozavodsk, Republic of Karelia |
Country | Russia |
Circulation | 1,230 (as of 1920) |
Website | www |
Karjalan Sanomat (literally: Karelia's Messages) is a weekly Finnish language newspaper from the Republic of Karelia, published in Petrozavodsk. The newspaper was founded in 1920 as 'Karjalan kommuuni'.[1]
The newspaper is owned by OmaMedia, a conglomerate in the Karelian-language newspaper- industry. Its publisher is Periodika, a Russian state-owned publisher associated with OmaMedia.[2]
Previous names:
- 1920-1923: Karjalan kommuuni (Karelian Commune)
- 1923-1937: Punainen Karjala (Red Karelia)
- 1938-1940: Советской Карелия (Soviet Karelia)[3]
- 1940-1955: Totuus (Truth)
- 1955-1957: Leninilainen totuus (Lenin's Truth)
- 1957-1991: Neuvosto-Karjala (Soviet Karelia)
- 1991-: Karjalan sanomat (Karelian News)
From 1938 to 1940 the newspaper was printed in Karelian using Cyrillic, rather than Finnish.
See also
References
- ^ "Historia│Karjalan Sanomat". Archived from the original on 2015-06-30.
- ^ "Karjalan Sanomat". Omamedia - мультиязычный портал Карелии. Retrieved 2023-10-21.
- ^ Jukka Pietiläinen (2005). "Diffusion of the News Paradigm 1850-2000". From Participating to Informing. The Transition of Journalism in Russian Regional Press (PDF). Nordicom. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
- v
- t
- e
- Soviet Union
- Central newspapers: Pravda
- Izvestia
- Komsomolskaya Pravda
- Pionerskaya Pravda
- Trud
- Sovetsky Sport
- Republican newspapers: Sovetskaya Rossiya (Russian SFSR)
- Zvyazda (Byelorussian SSR)
- Sovetskaya Latviya (Latvian SSR)
- Cīņa (Latvian SSR)
- Tiesa (Lithuanian SSR)
- Czerwony Sztandar (Lithuanian SSR)
- Rahva Hääl (Estonian SSR)
- Neuvosto-Karjala (Karelo-Finnish SSR)
- Komunisti (Georgian SSR)
- Sotsialistik Qazaqstan (Kazakh SSR)
- Sovettik Kyrgyzstan (Kirghiz SSR)
- Moldova Socialistă (Moldavian SSR)
- Borba (Yugoslavia)
- Delo (Yugoslavia)
- Dnevnik (Yugoslavia)
- Esti Budapest (Hungary)
- Esti Hírlap (Hungary)
- Freie Erde (East Germany)
- Haqiqat-e Inquilab-e Saur (Afghanistan)
- Laiko Vima (Albania)
- Mladá fronta DNES (Czechoslovakia)
- Népszabadság (Hungary)
- Neues Deutschland (East Germany)
- Novi list (Yugoslavia)
- Oslobođenje (Yugoslavia)
- Pobjeda (Yugoslavia)
- Politika (Yugoslavia)
- Politika Ekspres (Yugoslavia)
- Pravda (Czechoslovakia)
- Rabotnichesko Delo (Bulgaria)
- Rudé právo (Czechoslovakia)
- Scînteia (Romania)
- Slobodna Dalmacija (Yugoslavia)
- Sport (Yugoslavia)
- Sportske novosti (Yugoslavia)
- Trybuna Ludu (Poland)
- Večernje novosti (Yugoslavia)
- Večernji list (Yugoslavia)
- Vjesnik (Yugoslavia)
- Zëri i Popullit (Albania)
- Atze (East Germany)
- Dolgozó nő (Romania)
- Duga (Yugoslavia)
- Džuboks (Yugoslavia)
- Eulenspiegel (East Germany)
- Femeia (Romania)
- Filmspiegel (East Germany)
- Form und Zweck (East Germany)
- FRÖSI (East Germany)
- Für Dich (East Germany)
- Galaksija (Yugoslavia)
- Guter Rat (East Germany)
- Izgled (Yugoslavia)
- Jugend und Technik (East Germany)
- Jugoslavija (Yugoslavia)
- Književna reč (Yugoslavia)
- Kultur im Heim (East Germany)
- Lakáskultúra (Hungary)
- Naša žena (Yugoslavia)
- Neue Berliner Illustrierte (East Germany)
- Neue Werbung (East Germany)
- Neuer Weg (East Germany)
- Neues Leben (East Germany)
- NIN (Yugoslavia)
- Novy Vostok (Soviet Union)
- Oktyabr (Soviet Union)
- Pogledi (Yugoslavia)
- Politikin Zabavnik (Yugoslavia)
- Sibylle (East Germany)
- Signal (Yugoslavia)
- Sputnik (Soviet Union)
- Start (Yugoslavia)
- Svet kompjutera (Yugoslavia)
- Svijet (Yugoslavia)
- Tempo (Yugoslavia)
- Tina (Yugoslavia)
- Vlasta (Czechoslovakia)
- Televizioni Shqiptar (Albania)
- Bulgarian National Television (Bulgaria)
- ČST (Czechoslovakia)
- DFF (East Germany)
- MTV (Hungary)
- TVP (Poland)
- TVR (Romania)
- Central Television (USSR)
- Programme One
- Programme Two
- Moscow Programme
- Leningrad Television (Russian SFSR)
- Republican stations:
- All-Union Radio (USSR)
- First Programme (USSR)
- Eesti Raadio (Estonian SSR)
- Latvijas Radio 1 (Latvian SSR)
- Lietuvos radijas (Lithuanian SSR)
- Radio Moscow (Russian SFSR)
- Public Radio of the Armenian SSR
- Radio Belarus (Byelorussian SSR)
- Radio Georgia (Georgian SSR)
- Rundfunk der DDR (East Germany)
- Radio Tirana (Albania)
- Radio Bulgaria
- Horizont (Bulgaria)
- Magyar Rádió (Hungary)
- Kossuth Rádió (Hungary)
- Radio Polonia
- Program 1 Polskiego Radia (Poland)
- Radio Romania
- TASS (USSR)
- APN (USSR)
- Soviet Information Bureau
- ADN (GDR)
- Czech News Agency (Czechoslovakia)
This Russian newspaper–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e