Paris Bulletin is the name of several Russian-language newspapers published in Paris by Russian emigration:
Content
- 1 1910-1914
- 2 1925-1926
- 3 1942-1944
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
1910-1914
Social-Democratic, publisher V. Beloy [1] , editor in 1911 G. S. Khrustalyov-Nosar .
1925-1926
Subtitled fr. Messager russe de Paris [2] [3] . Pro-Bolshevik, produced with the support of the Soviet embassy. V. Mayakovsky , A. Lunacharsky , I. Ehrenburg , A. Nyurenberg , A. Kusikov and others were published in the newspaper.
1942-1944
Subtitled fr. Le courrier de Paris , German Pariser Beobachter [4] , publisher - Office of Russian Emigration in France ( G. S. Zherebkov ).
It was published from June 14, 1942 to August 12, 1944 (during the German occupation) and occupied a pro-German position. The position of editor-in-chief was successively held by P. N. Bogdanovich , O. V. Puzino, and N. V. Pyatnitsky .
General P.N. Krasnov , writers I.S.Shmelev and Ilya Surguchev , poets Valentin Goryansky , Georgy Evangulov and Nikolai Turoverov , philosopher Georgy Meyer , artist Alexander Benois , choreographer Sergei Lifar and several other figures periodically published their articles in the newspaper. The activities of the ROA were also actively covered.
Notes
- ↑ http://test7.dlibrary.org/en/nodes/117-russkaya-zarubezhnaya-periodika-1910-1930-h-gg-v-fondah-tsspi
- ↑ Counter-propaganda actions of the Soviet authorities on the introduction of Russian emigration into the information space in the 1920s
- ↑ TSSPI Collections | Paris Bulletin (France)
- ↑ Parizhskīĭ vi͡estnik = Le courrier de Paris = Pariser Beobachter = Parijsky viestnik in SearchWorks