Głos Wielkopolski
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Głos Wielkopolski
Głos ( pl, voice) may refer to: * ''Głos'' (1886–1905), a social, literary and political weekly review published in Warsaw * ''Głos'' (1991), a socio-political weekly magazine headed by Antoni Macierewicz * ''Głos (Czech Republic) ''Głos'' (meaning ''The Voice'') (formerly ''Głos Ludu'', meaning ''The Voice of People'') is the main and largest Polish newspaper in the Czech Republic. It represents the Polish minority in the Czech Republic, especially the Zaolzie region. H ...'' (formerly ''Głos Ludu''), a daily newspaper of the Polish minority in the Czech Republic * '' Głos – Tygodnik Nowohucki'', a weekly magazine founded in 1957, published in Kraków {{disambiguation ...
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Głos (1886–1905)
''Głos'' (''The Voice''; ) was a Polish language social, literary and political weekly review published in Warsaw between 1886 and 1905. It was one of the leading journals of the Polish positivist movement. Many of the most renowned Polish writers published their novels in Głos, which also became a tribune of the naturalist literary movement of late 19th century. During the Revolution of 1905 it was closed down by tsarist authorities. The literary section published works by some of the most renowned Polish writers and poets of the epoch, including Adolf Dygasiński, Jan Kasprowicz, Bolesław Leśmian, Maria Konopnicka, Władysław Orkan, Eliza Orzeszkowa, Wacław Sieroszewski, Stanisław Przybyszewski and Leopold Staff. Głos also frequently published translated literary works of contemporary foreign writers. Among the notable journalists of the weekly was also Janusz Korczak who authored numerous editorials, reportages and feuilletons, as well as had one of his novels pu ...
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Głos (1991)
''Głos'' (lit. from Polish: ''Voice'') is a Polish socio-political weekly magazine. Its editor in chief is Polish politician Antoni Macierewicz. It has a self-declared Catholic-nationalist bias (''Głos: tygodnik katolicko-narodowy''). It traces its tradition back to an underground opposition ''bibuła Polish underground press, devoted to prohibited materials ( sl. pl, bibuła, lit. semitransparent blotting paper or, alternatively, pl, drugi obieg, lit. second circulation), has a long history of combatting censorship of oppressive regimes in ...'' publication of anti-communist opposition from 1977 of that same name. References External linksHomepage 1977 establishments in Poland Magazines established in 1977 Polish-language magazines Political magazines published in Poland Weekly magazines published in Poland {{Poland-magazine-stub ...
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Głos (Czech Republic)
''Głos'' (meaning ''The Voice'') (formerly ''Głos Ludu'', meaning ''The Voice of People'') is the main and largest Polish newspaper in the Czech Republic. It represents the Polish minority in the Czech Republic, especially the Zaolzie region. History and profile The first release of the ''Głos Ludu'' appeared on 9 June 1945, in Frysztat (Fryštát). It firstly appeared weekly, then two times a week, from April 1946 three times a week. The circulation in the 1960s was 12,000.Kenig 1998, 48. The editorial staff moved from Frysztat to Czeski Cieszyn and later to Ostrava, and since 2003, has been housed in Czeski Cieszyn (Český Těšín) again. For 45 years, it was published by the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, and since 1991 by the Congress of Poles. Since 2011 it is a member of the European Association of Daily Newspapers in Minority and Regional Languages. ''Głos Ludu'' appeared on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays until 2018. Since 2018, the newspaper has been rena ...
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