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Estonian newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uus Eesti (New Estonia) was a daily newspaper published in Estonia from September 1935 until the Soviet occupation of Estonia in June 1940. The newspaper was politically aligned with the Estonian government.[2]
Type | Daily |
---|---|
Editor-in-chief | Artur Tupits (1935–1937) Ants Oidermaa (1937–1939) |
Editor | Hugo Kukk[1] |
Founded | 1935 |
Political alignment | pro-government |
Language | Estonian |
Ceased publication | 21 June 1940 |
Headquarters | Tallinn u |
Circulation | 22,000–26,000 |
Sister newspapers | Uus Eesti kalender (1935–1939) Hommikune Uus Eesti (1938) |
The paper was established in September 1935 as the successor to the paper Kaja.[1]
Columnists and regular contributors of Uus Eesti included Johannes Aavik, Paul Öpik, Friedebert Tuglas, Aleksander Tõnisson, Marie Under, August Gailit, Paul Kogerman, Mait Metsanurk, Henrik Visnapuu, and others.[3]
In 1937, the National Archives of Estonia made an agreement with Uus Eesti photographer A. Kalm to share one photograph of each major public event in Estonia, as part of a larger project to preserve photographs from national newspapers.[4]
The Soviets shut the paper down on 21 June 1940. The pro-Soviet, communist newspaper Rahva Hääl was printed in its place.[5]
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