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Language | German |
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Ceased publication | 1996 |
Country | East Germany |
The Wochenpost (English: Weekly Post) was an East German weekly. [1] [2] It was founded in 1953, and circulation peaked at over one million copies per issue from 1971 to the German reunification. The academic Deirdre Byrnes writes that the paper was "one of the most influential" publications in East Germany. [3] Its highest circulation was around 1.2 million copies, [4] making the paper the most popular weekly in East Germany. [5] Wochenpost considered a paper for intellectuals. [6] The paper continued to be published after German reunification until it ceased publication in late December 1996.
The paper published its first issue on 22 or 23 December 1953, around Christmas. [7] [8] [9] [10] The cover of the first issue was a depiction of a child blowing a candle out with the words "to all who are of goodwill." [10] It was co-founded by Margot Pfannstiel, [11] who also worked as chief reporter, [12] Heinz Knobloch, who took responsibility for "puzzles, mental recreation and humour" ("Rätsel, Denksport und Humor"), [13] and Hilde Eisler. [14] Pfannstiel left in 1958, [15] and returned in 1968. [16] Work on the Wochenpost quickly became a principal vehicle for Knobloch's professional success over more than three decades. He served as its culture editor from 1957 to 1965, and between 1968 and 1988 contributed a weekly Feuilleton-format opinion column. [17] Its first editor-in-chief was Rudi Wetzel. [18] Circulation of the paper peaked at over one million copies per issue from 1971 to the German reunification. The academic Deirdre Byrnes writes that the paper was "one of the most influential" publications in East Germany. [3]
The paper was characterized by providing "practical advice", such as how to decorate an apartment and how to dress fashionably. [19] : 232 Wochenpost was not an opposition paper; the journalist Klaus Polkhen , who worked at the paper for many years, noted that it was "no more opportunistic than its readers". [10]
After the German reunification, the paper was purchased by Gruner + Jahr and Robert Maxwell and relaunched in Berlin. [20] From 1983 to 1991, Brigitte Zimmermann was editor in chief of the paper. [20] By 1994 it was selling around 100,000 copies per week. The Independent compared the paper to Die Zeit . [21] The paper was struggling by 1996 and ceased publication in late December. [9] [22] [23]
Eva Strittmatter was a German writer of poetry, prose, and children's literature.
Leitenhausen was a village in Germany, founded in 1317 A D. It was part of the former municipality Gompertshausen. It was destroyed by the East German authorities in 1972 as it stood too close to the Inner German border, the border between the post-war states of East and West Germany. It lay in the extreme south of Thuringia in Heldburger Land in the district of Hildburghausen, only a few hundred metres away from the Thuringian-Bavarian border.
Ernst Melsheimer was a German lawyer.
Jens Gieseke is a German historian. His work is focused on the German Democratic Republic and its Ministry for State Security.
Heinz Knobloch was a German writer and journalist, who spent most of his professional career working in the German Democratic Republic.
Andreas Herbst is a German historian. His career has been divided between authorship and museum work. He has written extensively on aspects of the German Democratic Republic and since 2001 has worked for the German Resistance Memorial Center in Berlin.
Manfred Döring was a Major general (Generalmajor) with the East German Ministry for State Security (Stasi). He also served, between 1987 and 1990, as a commander of the elite motorised rifles regiment, the Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards.
Marlies Deneke is a German politician.
Horst Pehnert was an East German journalist and party official who in 1976 became a long-standing deputy Minister for Culture - effectively the minister for film and cinema.
Bernhard Elsner was a Major general in the East German Ministry for State Security (Stasi). During the course of a long career with the quasi-military ministry, between 1972 and 1987 he was Commander of the Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment.
Brigitte Zimmermann is a German journalist. Between 1983 and 1991 she was editor in chief of Wochenpost, East Germany's top selling weekly newspaper.
Lucie Pflug was a senior cultural official in the German Democratic Republic.
Margot Pfannstiel was a German journalist and author. She was Editor in Chief of the East German women's magazine Sibylle between 1958 and 1968. Both before and after her decade at Sibylle she was a chief reporter at the weekly news magazine Wochenpost.
Stefan Wolle is a German historian. A focus of his socio-historical research is on the German Democratic Republic which is where, before reunification, he lived and worked.
Heinz Heinrich Schmidt was a German journalist and editor. During the twelve Nazi years he was involved in active resistance, spending approximately three years in prison and a further seven years as a political refugee in London.
Sonja Gerstner was an East German artist and writer. She died young, after which publication by her mother of a book containing some of her poems, diary entries and other writings covering treatment she had received for her psychotic illness brought her to the attention of a wide audience.
Georg Friedrich Alexan was a Jewish German journalist, best remembered as the editor-in-chief of the East German newspaper USA in Wort und Bild.
Heinz Gronau was a communist resistance activist during the Hitler years. He was transferred to Buchenwald concentration camp in 1938. At the concentration camp he became a leading figure in the "International Buchenwald Military Organisation" . He survived the war and in 1946 joined the (semi-militarised) police service in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany. A succession of promotions followed. In 1966 he was promoted to the rank of Major general in the East German Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment. During the final years of his career he combined his overtly military posting with command of the National Department I at the Ministry for State Security ("Stasi"). The department was a specialist intelligence section of the ministry, tasked with attending to the intelligence needs of the ministry's armed units.
Klaus Sorgenicht was a German politician and party functionary of the Socialist Unity Party (SED).
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