Rahva Hääl
Estonian daily newspaper
Type | Periodical |
---|---|
Format | A2 |
Founded | 1940[1] |
Language | Estonian |
Ceased publication | 1995 |
Rahva Hääl (lit. The People's Voice)[1][2] was the official daily newspaper[1] of the Communist Party of Estonia during the Soviet occupation of Estonia. It was founded shortly after the first Soviet takeover in 1940 based on the offices and resources of Uus Eesti (New Estonia), an earlier Estonian newspaper.
The last issue of Uue Eesti was published on June 21, 1940. The first issue of Rahva Hääle was put together by the old editors under the leadership of new editors, and the paper was published on June 22, 1940.[3]
See also
References
- ^ a b c «Рахва Хяэль» // Большая Советская Энциклопедия. / под ред. А. М. Прохорова. 3-е изд. том 21. М., «Советская энциклопедия», 1975. стр.508
- ^ Epp Lauk; Svennik Hoyer (Fall 2008). "Recreating journalism after censorship. Generational shifts and professional ambiguities among journalists after changes in the political systems" (PDF). Central European Journal of Communication. 1 (1).
- ^ "Okupatsiooni ajal Pärnus ilmunud lehed". Arhiiv (in Estonian). 5 March 2009. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
- 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)
- Rabotnichesko Delo (Bulgaria)
- Rudé právo (Czechoslovakia)
- Pravda (Slovakia)
- Haqiqat-e Inquilab-e Saur (Afghanistan)
- Laiko Vima (Albania)
- Mladá fronta DNES (Czechoslovakia)
- Freie Erde (East Germany)
- Neues Deutschland (East Germany)
- Zëri i Popullit (Albania)
- Népszabadság (Hungary)
- Esti Budapest (Hungary)
- Esti Hírlap (Hungary)
- Trybuna Ludu (Poland)
- Scînteia (Romania)
- Atze (East Germany)
- Dolgozó nő (Romania)
- Eulenspiegel (East Germany)
- Femeia (Romania)
- Filmspiegel (East Germany)
- Form und Zweck (East Germany)
- FRÖSI (East Germany)
- Für Dich (East Germany)
- Guter Rat (East Germany)
- Jugend und Technik (East Germany)
- Jugoslavija (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)
- Novy Vostok (Soviet Union)
- Oktyabr (Soviet Union)
- Sibylle (East Germany)
- Sputnik (Soviet Union)
- Start (Yugoslavia)
- Svijet (Yugoslav)
- 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 Estonian newspaper-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e