Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten

Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten

Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten (Tsingtau Sin Pau), 1 November 1904
Traditional Chinese 青島新報
Simplified Chinese 青岛新报
Literal meaning Qingdao Newspaper

The Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten (Tsingtau Sin Pau) was a German newspaper published in Qingdao from 1905 to 1914. Fritz Seeker was the editor.[1]

The newspaper served the locals in Qingdao and various German companies in the Far East.[2] The newspaper reported on the management of the Kiautschou Bay concession, activity of Western powers in East Asia, and the methods and trades of Christian missionaries.[3] When World War I broke out, the Japanese took over Qingdao and the publishing of German newspapers ended.[1]

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References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Walravens, p. 91. "Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten (1905-1914, daily; edited by Fritz Seeker)," "The outbreak of World War I led to a close-down of German publishing in Qingdao as the Japanese took over there."
  2. United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, p. 188. "Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten, Tsingtau. Daily (evening) newspaper, in German. Advertising rates vary from $1.50 Mexican per inch to a single insertion to $25 for the same space for a year; discounts for a larger space. Annual subscription price, local, $15; foreign, 30 marks ($7.14 United States currency). Circulation not stated, but paper reaches various German firms throughout the Far East and the local population."
  3. Kim, p. 18. "Insbesondere die in Tsingtau erschienene deutschsprachige Zeitung „Tsingtauer Neueste Nachrichten" mit ihren Berichten über die Aktivitäten der westlichen Großmächte in Ostasien, über die Verwaltung des deutschen Gouvernements Kiautschou, den Handel und die vor Ort tätigen christliche Mission erwies sich als eine wichtige Quelle." - The footnote says "Diese Zeitungen zwar fuer die deutschen Leser bestimmt, aber beinhalten auch einige kritische Artikel, die von Chinakennem wie Richard Wilhelm oder dem erfahrenen deutschen Dolemstcher Heinrich Mootz gescrieben wurden."

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