Moldova Suverană
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Founded | 1 May 1924 |
Language | Romanian |
Headquarters | Chișinău |
Circulation | 100,000 copies per day in 1994 |
ISSN | 1857-1859 |
OCLC number | 37355674 |
Website | http://www.moldova-suverana.md/ |
Moldova Suverană (ISSN 1857-1859) is a Romanian language official newspaper of the Moldovan government which is published daily in Chișinău. It had a circulation of 100,000 copies per day in 1994.
It was founded in the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic capital of Balta in 1924, under the name Plugarul Roșu («Плугарул рош», lit. Red Ploughman). In 1930, it moved to Tiraspol, and was renamed to the name it would have during the remainder of the Soviet period, Moldova Socialistă («Молдова сочиалистэ»). It was printed in Chișinău, in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, from 1940, with the exception of 1941 to 1944, when it was printed in Moscow. It was renamed Moldova Suverenă upon the country's independence.
It was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour.
References
- v
- t
- e
- Soviet Union
- Central newspapers: Pravda
- Izvestia
- Komsomolskaya Pravda
- Pionerskaya Pravda
- Trud
- Sovetsky Sport
- Republican newspapers: Sovetskaya Rossiya (Russian SFSR)
- Zvyazda (Byelorussian SSR)
- Sovetskaya Latviya (Latvian SSR)
- Cīņa (Latvian SSR)
- Tiesa (Lithuanian SSR)
- Czerwony Sztandar (Lithuanian SSR)
- Rahva Hääl (Estonian SSR)
- Neuvosto-Karjala (Karelo-Finnish SSR)
- Komunisti (Georgian SSR)
- Sotsialistik Qazaqstan (Kazakh SSR)
- Sovettik Kyrgyzstan (Kirghiz SSR)
- Moldova Socialistă (Moldavian SSR)
- Borba (Yugoslavia)
- Delo (Yugoslavia)
- Dnevnik (Yugoslavia)
- Esti Budapest (Hungary)
- Esti Hírlap (Hungary)
- Freie Erde (East Germany)
- Haqiqat-e Inquilab-e Saur (Afghanistan)
- Laiko Vima (Albania)
- Mladá fronta DNES (Czechoslovakia)
- Népszabadság (Hungary)
- Neues Deutschland (East Germany)
- Novi list (Yugoslavia)
- Oslobođenje (Yugoslavia)
- Pobjeda (Yugoslavia)
- Politika (Yugoslavia)
- Politika Ekspres (Yugoslavia)
- Pravda (Czechoslovakia)
- Rabotnichesko Delo (Bulgaria)
- Rudé právo (Czechoslovakia)
- Scînteia (Romania)
- Slobodna Dalmacija (Yugoslavia)
- Sport (Yugoslavia)
- Sportske novosti (Yugoslavia)
- Trybuna Ludu (Poland)
- Večernje novosti (Yugoslavia)
- Večernji list (Yugoslavia)
- Vjesnik (Yugoslavia)
- Zëri i Popullit (Albania)
- Atze (East Germany)
- Dolgozó nő (Romania)
- Duga (Yugoslavia)
- Džuboks (Yugoslavia)
- Eulenspiegel (East Germany)
- Femeia (Romania)
- Filmspiegel (East Germany)
- Form und Zweck (East Germany)
- FRÖSI (East Germany)
- Für Dich (East Germany)
- Galaksija (Yugoslavia)
- Guter Rat (East Germany)
- Izgled (Yugoslavia)
- Jugend und Technik (East Germany)
- Jugoslavija (Yugoslavia)
- Književna reč (Yugoslavia)
- Kultur im Heim (East Germany)
- Lakáskultúra (Hungary)
- Naša žena (Yugoslavia)
- Neue Berliner Illustrierte (East Germany)
- Neue Werbung (East Germany)
- Neuer Weg (East Germany)
- Neues Leben (East Germany)
- NIN (Yugoslavia)
- Novy Vostok (Soviet Union)
- Oktyabr (Soviet Union)
- Pogledi (Yugoslavia)
- Politikin Zabavnik (Yugoslavia)
- Sibylle (East Germany)
- Signal (Yugoslavia)
- Sputnik (Soviet Union)
- Start (Yugoslavia)
- Svet kompjutera (Yugoslavia)
- Svijet (Yugoslavia)
- Tempo (Yugoslavia)
- Tina (Yugoslavia)
- Vlasta (Czechoslovakia)
- Televizioni Shqiptar (Albania)
- Bulgarian National Television (Bulgaria)
- ČST (Czechoslovakia)
- DFF (East Germany)
- MTV (Hungary)
- TVP (Poland)
- TVR (Romania)
- Central Television (USSR)
- Programme One
- Programme Two
- Moscow Programme
- Leningrad Television (Russian SFSR)
- Republican stations:
- All-Union Radio (USSR)
- First Programme (USSR)
- Eesti Raadio (Estonian SSR)
- Latvijas Radio 1 (Latvian SSR)
- Lietuvos radijas (Lithuanian SSR)
- Radio Moscow (Russian SFSR)
- Public Radio of the Armenian SSR
- Radio Belarus (Byelorussian SSR)
- Radio Georgia (Georgian SSR)
- Rundfunk der DDR (East Germany)
- Radio Tirana (Albania)
- Radio Bulgaria
- Horizont (Bulgaria)
- Magyar Rádió (Hungary)
- Kossuth Rádió (Hungary)
- Radio Polonia
- Program 1 Polskiego Radia (Poland)
- Radio Romania
- TASS (USSR)
- APN (USSR)
- Soviet Information Bureau
- ADN (GDR)
- Czech News Agency (Czechoslovakia)
This Moldovan newspaper-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e