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Konstantinoupolis (newspaper)

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beliefs, the readership decreased in the 1900s and 1910s. Nicolaides' son Nikolakis "Nikos" received the publication in June 1909 (mid-1327 in the Ottoman calendar) after their father asked the Ottoman Press office, in summer 1905 (start of Ottoman calendar 1326) to allow for a change of ownership as
160:. The second discussed ethnic Greek notable figures and home economics and other personal content. The third was dedicated to poetry and literary fiction, with some translations from European publications, as well as tourism-related content and content about the 130:
he was becoming elderly. Because Nicolaides tried to save the newspaper no matter what it took, he sold his possessions and lost his wealth. Balta and Kavak concluded, therefore, that the newspaper also caused "his financial ruin".
285:; Ayșe Kavak (2018-02-28). "Publisher of the newspaper Konstantinoupolis for half a century. Following the trail of Dimitris Nikolaidis in the Ottoman archives". In Sagaster, Börte; Theoharis Stavrides; Birgitt Hoffmann (eds.). 640: 73:"went down in the history of the Istanbul press as setting the seal on 's career in journalism". They also wrote that its popularity was reflected by the long length of publication. 630: 149:
newspaper had political news and commentary for the first two pages, and letters to the editor and other news on the third page. Classifieds and announcements were on page four.
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Publication in a 25-centimetre (9.8 in) by 20-centimetre (7.9 in) newspaper format began in 1867, and after six months of newspaper publication it was given the name
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periodical version had three sections. The first was for literary and science articles, some Greek versions of content from European journals and some initially published in
56:"was long to remain the most widely read Greek paper in the Ottoman Empire." An employee, Manuel Gedeon, stated that the style of the periodical was similar to that of 376: 174:
Turkish history, and where the Turkish people came from. Balta and Kavak stated that this was the first publication in the Greek language to have such content.
655: 328: 216:, Ὀθωμανικοὶ Κώδηκες ("Othōmanikoi kōdēkes", meaning "Ottoman Codes", with Demotic Greek using "Οθωμανικοί Κώδικες"). In addition they published versions of 187: 191: 323: 650: 645: 635: 307: 356: 319: 286: 295: 269: 241: 76:
The newspaper was published daily for much of its history, though initially it was a thrice weekly publication.
386: 96:. Nicolaides became the editor in 1864, and in 1865 Raptarchis sold it to him. Initially Nicolaides renamed it 118:
At times the Ottoman authorities enacted censorship, so publication did not occur for circa 1883 until 1884.
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included German studies of the Turks, including a glossary of terminology related to administration,
237: 45:(Ἑπτάλοφος, "City of Seven Hills"), was a Greek-language newspaper and periodical published in the 370: 254: 355:
and Other Official Texts into Minority Languages". In Herzog, Christoph; Malek Sharif (eds.).
315: 303: 582: 569: 556: 552: 539: 526: 513: 500: 480: 467: 449: 445: 432: 414: 299: 161: 84: 282: 66: 351:
Strauss, Johann (2010). "A Constitution for a Multilingual Empire: Translations of the
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Press and Mass Communication in the Middle East: Festschrift for Martin Strohmeier
171: 134: 122: 183: 126: 224: 194:. Balta and Kavak stated that it had a "moderate stance" in regards to the " 236:
Libraries and archives with copies of the paper include the website of the
212: 362: 218: 83: 266:- A collection of Ottoman laws in French edited by Nicolaides 258:- A newspaper in Ottoman Turkish published by Nicolaides 108:, with the first new issue in 15 January of that year. 641:Defunct newspapers published in the Ottoman Empire 324:Kooperativer Bibliotheksverbund Berlin-Brandenburg 495: 493: 491: 489: 462: 460: 458: 427: 425: 423: 409: 407: 405: 403: 401: 399: 397: 395: 115:. Publication as a periodical stopped in 1871. 92:Ioannis M. Raptarchis owned a periodical named 210:publishers published the Greek version of the 314:- Volume 12 of Bamberger Orientstudien - Old 8: 631:1914 disestablishments in the Ottoman Empire 133:Publication stopped for good in 1914, when 375:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 358:The First Ottoman Experiment in Democracy 198:". The editors opposed illegal activity. 188:Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople 52:The historian Johann Strauss wrote that 343: 244:, and other such facilities in Athens. 368: 7: 121:As more and more Greeks adopted the 656:Publications disestablished in 1914 14: 389:) // Cited: p. 29 (PDF p. 31). 1: 125:, clashing with Nicolaides' 296:University of Bamberg Press 270:Media of the Ottoman Empire 672: 242:National Library of Greece 182:The newspaper favored the 651:Constantinopolitan Greeks 646:Greek-language newspapers 26: 636:Defunct daily newspapers 387:Martin Luther University 65:According to historians 89: 616:Veria Digital Library 614:- Articles in 1867 - 605:Veria Digital Library 603:- Articles in 1865 - 87: 59:Revue des Deux Mondes 581:Balta and Kavak, p. 568:Balta and Kavak, p. 551:Balta and Kavak, p. 538:Balta and Kavak, p. 525:Balta and Kavak, p. 512:Balta and Kavak, p. 499:Balta and Kavak, p. 479:Balta and Kavak, p. 466:Balta and Kavak, p. 444:Balta and Kavak, p. 431:Balta and Kavak, p. 413:Balta and Kavak, p. 263:Législation ottomane 238:Hellenic Parliament 196:Bulgarian Question 90: 383:info page on book 365:. pp. 21–51. 178:Political stances 147:Konstantinoupolis 113:Konstantinoupolis 71:Konstantinoupolis 54:Konstantinoupolis 27:Κωνσταντινούπολις 18:Konstantinoupolis 663: 586: 579: 573: 566: 560: 549: 543: 536: 530: 523: 517: 510: 504: 497: 484: 477: 471: 464: 453: 442: 436: 429: 418: 411: 390: 380: 374: 366: 348: 332: 313: 293: 283:Balta, Evangelia 162:Byzantine Empire 69:and Ayșe Kavak, 28: 671: 670: 666: 665: 664: 662: 661: 660: 621: 620: 595: 590: 589: 580: 576: 567: 563: 550: 546: 537: 533: 524: 520: 511: 507: 498: 487: 478: 474: 465: 456: 443: 439: 430: 421: 412: 393: 367: 350: 349: 345: 340: 326: 310: 291: 281: 278: 250: 234: 204: 180: 143: 82: 67:Evangelia Balta 33:"), originally 12: 11: 5: 669: 667: 659: 658: 653: 648: 643: 638: 633: 623: 622: 619: 618: 607: 594: 593:External links 591: 588: 587: 574: 561: 544: 531: 518: 505: 485: 472: 454: 437: 419: 391: 342: 341: 339: 336: 335: 334: 308: 277: 274: 273: 272: 267: 259: 249: 246: 233: 230: 203: 200: 179: 176: 142: 139: 81: 78: 47:Ottoman Empire 31:Constantinople 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 668: 657: 654: 652: 649: 647: 644: 642: 639: 637: 634: 632: 629: 628: 626: 617: 613: 612: 611:Eptalofos Nea 608: 606: 602: 601: 600:Eptalofos Nea 597: 596: 592: 584: 578: 575: 571: 565: 562: 558: 554: 548: 545: 541: 535: 532: 528: 522: 519: 515: 509: 506: 502: 496: 494: 492: 490: 486: 482: 476: 473: 469: 463: 461: 459: 455: 451: 447: 441: 438: 434: 428: 426: 424: 420: 416: 410: 408: 406: 404: 402: 400: 398: 396: 392: 388: 384: 378: 372: 364: 360: 359: 354: 353:Kanun-ı Esasi 347: 344: 337: 330: 325: 321: 317: 311: 309:9783863095277 305: 301: 297: 290: 289: 284: 280: 279: 275: 271: 268: 265: 264: 260: 257: 256: 252: 251: 247: 245: 243: 240:Library, the 239: 231: 229: 227: 226: 221: 220: 215: 214: 209: 201: 199: 197: 193: 189: 185: 177: 175: 173: 169: 168:Nea Eptalofos 165: 163: 159: 158:Nea Eptalofos 155: 154:Nea Eptalofos 150: 148: 140: 138: 136: 131: 128: 124: 119: 116: 114: 109: 107: 106: 105:Nea Eptalofos 101: 100: 99:Eptalofos Nea 95: 88:Eptalofos Nea 86: 79: 77: 74: 72: 68: 63: 61: 60: 55: 50: 48: 44: 43: 38: 37: 32: 24: 20: 19: 609: 598: 577: 564: 547: 534: 521: 508: 475: 440: 357: 352: 346: 322:- Hosted at 287: 261: 253: 235: 223: 217: 211: 207: 205: 181: 167: 166: 157: 153: 151: 146: 144: 132: 120: 117: 112: 110: 104: 103: 98: 97: 93: 91: 75: 70: 64: 57: 53: 51: 41: 40: 35: 34: 17: 16: 15: 327: [ 298:. pp.  192:Joachim III 137:broke out. 135:World War I 123:Megali Idea 94:Heptalophos 36:Heptalophos 625:Categories 320:3863095278 276:References 202:Publishing 184:Rum Millet 127:Ottomanist 371:cite book 225:The Iliad 208:Eptalofos 42:Eptalofos 363:Wurzburg 248:See also 141:Contents 80:History 333:(KOBV) 318:  306:  255:Servet 232:Access 219:Aeneid 213:Düstur 190:, and 186:, the 338:Notes 331:] 292:(PDF) 172:Oghuz 23:Greek 377:link 316:ISBN 304:ISBN 222:and 206:The 152:The 145:The 385:at 302:-. 39:or 29:, " 627:: 583:39 570:38 557:35 553:34 540:34 527:56 514:57 501:36 488:^ 481:33 468:55 457:^ 450:37 446:36 433:35 422:^ 415:37 394:^ 373:}} 369:{{ 361:. 329:de 300:33 294:. 228:. 164:. 62:. 49:. 25:: 585:. 572:. 559:. 555:- 542:. 529:. 516:. 503:. 483:. 470:. 452:. 448:- 435:. 417:. 381:( 379:) 312:. 102:/ 21:(

Index

Greek
Constantinople
Ottoman Empire
Revue des Deux Mondes
Evangelia Balta

Megali Idea
Ottomanist
World War I
Byzantine Empire
Oghuz
Rum Millet
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
Joachim III
Bulgarian Question
Düstur
Aeneid
The Iliad
Hellenic Parliament
National Library of Greece
Servet
Législation ottomane
Media of the Ottoman Empire
Balta, Evangelia
Press and Mass Communication in the Middle East: Festschrift for Martin Strohmeier
University of Bamberg Press
33
ISBN
9783863095277
ISBN

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