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The following is a partial list of Judaeo-Spanish language newspapers and periodicals. Most of the former newspapers and periodicals were established in the Ottoman Empire.
Current periodicals
editIsrael
edit- Aki Yerushalayim (1979)
Turkey
edit- Şalom (1947)
- El Amaneser (2003-)
Venezuela
edit- Nuevo Mundo Israelita (1943-)
Former newspapers
editAustria
edit- El Koreo de Vyena (1869 - 1884)[citation needed]
Bosnia-Herzegovina
editBulgaria
edit- La Boz de Israel[citation needed]
- La Luz (Plovdiv, 1903; Sofia 1907–1914)[citation needed]
Egypt
editGreece
editSalonika
edit- El Lunar (1864-1865 - 1940)[citation needed]
- Salonik (1869 - 1874)[citation needed]
- La Epoka (1875 - 1912)
- El Luzero ()[citation needed]
- El Avenir (1900 - 1918)[citation needed]
- La Libertad (newspaper) (1908)[citation needed]
- Journal del Labourador (1909)[citation needed]
- El Imparcyal (1909 - 1911)[citation needed]
- El Kirbatch (1909 - 1911)[citation needed]
- El Pountchon (1909 - 1913)[citation needed]
- La Nation (Ladino newspaper) (1909 - 1932)[citation needed]
- La Tribuna Libera (1910 - 1914)[citation needed]
- La Solidaridad Ovradera (1911)[citation needed]
- Avanti (Ladino newspaper) (1912 - 1923)[citation needed]
- El Macabeo (1913 - 1929)[citation needed]
- La Esperansa (1915)[citation needed]
- La Renaissance Juive (1917 - 1937; first published in French as La Renaissance Juive, then in Judaeo-Spanish language as Renaissance Judea)[citation needed]
- El Pouevlo (1917 - 1933)[citation needed]
- Azion (1919 - 1940)[citation needed]
- Mesagero (1935 - 1941)[citation needed]
North Macedonia
editSerbia
editZemun (now Belgrad)
edit- Hashalom (1903 - 1906)
- Luzero (1905 - )[citation needed]
Turkey
editIstanbul
edit- Or Israel (1853–1855)[citation needed]
- El Jurnal Israelit (1860–1873)[citation needed]
- El Tiempo (1890- )
- El Telegrafo ()[citation needed][citation needed]
- El Djugeton (1908–1931)[citation needed]
İzmir
edit- Sha'arei Mizrah (1845–1846)[citation needed]
- La Buena Esperansa (1871 - 1912)
- Meseret (1904 - )[citation needed]
- El Nuvelista ( - 1922)[citation needed]
- La Boz del puevlo (1908 - 1919)[citation needed]
See also
editReferences
editBibliography
edit- Borovaya, Olga. Modern Ladino Culture. Press, Belles Lettres and Theater in the Late Ottoman Empire. Indiana University Press, 2012.
External links
edit- Ladino press in The National Library of Israel
- The Judeo-Spanish (Ladino-Press) (with translations). "Our Fathers' Newspapers"