Where can we read the more than 100 years of newspapers-from the later Qing to the present-published in Shanxi? It is the 2,100 out of his some 10,000 titles of newspapers collected by Wang Haiyong that will present y...Where can we read the more than 100 years of newspapers-from the later Qing to the present-published in Shanxi? It is the 2,100 out of his some 10,000 titles of newspapers collected by Wang Haiyong that will present your with a real feast for the eye. Among Wang’s holdings of different periods of Shanxi’s newspapers, published in the Qing dynasty were "The Jin Newspaper" of January 17, 1904, which is the first newspaper ever published in Shanxi; and "The Bingzhou Official Paper"-the earliest official newspaper-printed in the first year of Xuantong reign (1909). There were 102 newspapers published in the Republic of China period. The rarest and most prized of them are "The Jinyang Public News" and "Shanxi People Press" of 1912, the 1924’s "Merchants Weekly", "Sacrifice to Save the Nation" a paper printed on July 8, 1937, "The Five Day Times" of August 31, 1939, the earliest and only newspaper whose masthead was penned and autographed by none other than Mao Zedong, and "The Taiyue Daily" of 1940. There is also "Xinhua Daily" (North China edition) of 1941. These newspapers were published at various Anti-Japanese Front Areas and Liberated Areas, and are seen as having historical significance and collection value.展开更多
文摘Where can we read the more than 100 years of newspapers-from the later Qing to the present-published in Shanxi? It is the 2,100 out of his some 10,000 titles of newspapers collected by Wang Haiyong that will present your with a real feast for the eye. Among Wang’s holdings of different periods of Shanxi’s newspapers, published in the Qing dynasty were "The Jin Newspaper" of January 17, 1904, which is the first newspaper ever published in Shanxi; and "The Bingzhou Official Paper"-the earliest official newspaper-printed in the first year of Xuantong reign (1909). There were 102 newspapers published in the Republic of China period. The rarest and most prized of them are "The Jinyang Public News" and "Shanxi People Press" of 1912, the 1924’s "Merchants Weekly", "Sacrifice to Save the Nation" a paper printed on July 8, 1937, "The Five Day Times" of August 31, 1939, the earliest and only newspaper whose masthead was penned and autographed by none other than Mao Zedong, and "The Taiyue Daily" of 1940. There is also "Xinhua Daily" (North China edition) of 1941. These newspapers were published at various Anti-Japanese Front Areas and Liberated Areas, and are seen as having historical significance and collection value.