Luxemburger Wort Explained

Type:Daily newspaper
Foundation:23 March 1848
Owners:Mediahuis Luxembourg
Language:German
Political:Catholic
Circulation:66,158 (2013)
Headquarters:2, rue Christophe Plantin, Luxembourg City

Luxemburger Wort (pronounced as /de/;) is a German-language Luxembourgish daily newspaper. There is an English edition named the Luxembourg Times.[1] It is owned by Mediahuis Luxembourg.[2]

History and profile

Luxemburger Wort has been published since 1848.[3] The paper was founded just three days after press censorship was abolished. The newspaper is mainly written in German, but includes small sections in both Luxembourgish and French.[3] For many years from its founding until recently, the paper was part of the Saint-Paul Luxembourg S.A. which was owned by the Archdiocese. The paper has a strong Catholic leaning.[4]

It is not known exactly how the Apostolic Vicar Jean-Théodore Laurent, who had been accused by the government of provoking the 1848 Revolution and had to leave the country six weeks later, brought about the creation of the newspaper.[5]

Nevertheless, Laurent wrote to his brother that they were making use of freedom of the press. In 1948, the bishop Joseph Laurent Philippe described the foundation of the Luxemburger Wort as Laurent's last great act; the director of the seminary Georges Hellinghausen described Laurent's participation as decisive. The new newspaper was an aggressive Catholic opposition newspaper and, in part, combative towards the liberal state. Its creation marked the true birth of political Catholicism in Luxembourg.

From its very foundation, the newspaper opposed the Volksfreund, founded by Samuel Hirsch, and the Judenrabbiner, as well as the subsidy for the Jewish congregation. In the period from 1849 to 1880, on average it published two anti-Semitic articles per week.[6]

From 1938, the newspaper opposed Nazi Germany. In 1940, after the German invasion of Luxembourg, the Luxemburger Wort was co-opted as part of the occupation. The director Jean Origer and the editors Batty Esch and Pierre Grégoire were arrested by the Nazis and sent to a concentration camp. Pierre Grégoire was the only one of them to survive imprisonment.[7] After the liberation of Luxembourg, the paper produced the headline: Lëtzebuerg as fräi! ("Luxembourg is free!"). At the same time this was one of few editions that appeared entirely in Luxembourgish; the publishing house also changed its name from German into French as a symbolic act.

After André Heiderscheid's replacement as editor-in-chief by Leon Zeches, the latter sought to 'de-ideologise' the newspaper and to distance it more strongly from the Christian Social People's Party.[8] For example, the paper increasingly started to report on initiatives, debates and congresses of other political parties as well.

From 17 March 2005 to 21 March 2008, the paper called itself d' Wort: Luxemburger Wort für Wahrheit und Recht.[9]

In the period of 1995–1996 Luxemburger Wort had a circulation of 85,000 copies, making it the best-selling paper in the country.[10] The circulation of the paper was 83,739 copies in 2003.[11] In 2006 its circulation was 79,633 copies.[12] The paper had a circulation of almost 70,000 copies a day and a daily readership of more than 180,000 (print and e-paper) in 2007,[13] making it Luxembourg's most popular newspaper by both counts.[14]

Editors

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Luxembourg Times . 2023-10-26 . luxtimes.lu.
  2. Web site: Luxemburger Wort . 2023-10-26 . Mediahuis . en-US.
  3. Web site: Media . Grand Duchy of Luxembourg . 14 November 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141129014717/http://www.luxembourg.public.lu/catalogue/medias/ap-medias/AP-Medias-2013-EN.pdf . 29 November 2014 .
  4. Book: Kohn . Media in Multilingual Societies. Freedom and Responsibility . 2003 . Karlsreiter . Ana . Vienna . Luxembourg . 22 January 2015.
  5. Book: Hilgert, Romain . Les journaux au Luxembourg 1704-2004 . Service information et presse . 2004 . 2-87999-136-6 . Luxembourg . 66–71 . fr . Newspapers in Luxembourg 1704–2004.
  6. Tanja Muller: „Nichts gegen die Juden als solche …“ (PDF; 1,1 MB) Forum für Politik, Gesellschaft und Kultur, No. 312, November 2011. p. 54ff.
  7. http://www.mediadb.eu/forum/zeitungsportraets/luxemburger-wort.html Edda Humprecht: Luxemburger Wort für Wahrheit und Recht.
  8. Kollwelter. Serge. Pauly. Michel. October 2015. Diskussionsforum Luxemburger Wort?. Forum. de. 355. 43–44.
  9. D' Wort: Luxemburger Wort für Wahrheit und Recht in the Zeitschriftendatenbank (ZDB)
  10. Book: Media Policy: Convergence, Concentration & Commerce. 1 December 2014. 24 September 1998. SAGE Publications. 978-1-4462-6524-6. 7.
  11. Web site: David Ward. A Mapping Study of Media Concentration and Ownership in Ten European Countries. Dutch Media Authority. 11 February 2015. 2004.
  12. Web site: List of represented titles. Publicitas International AG. 5 May 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150505210435/http://www.publicitas.com/fileadmin/uploads/common/Vertretungsliste_15.09.2008.pdf. 5 May 2015. 15 September 2008.
  13. Web site: d'Wort . 6 August 2007 . 2007 . Saint-Paul Luxembourg . https://web.archive.org/web/20071007122953/http://www.regies.lu/data/pdf07/fr/wort_f.pdf . 7 October 2007 . dead .
  14. Web site: Media pluralism in the Member States of the European Union. 6 August 2007. 17 January 2007. European Commission.
  15. News: Fast so alt wie der Luxemburger Staat. Zeches. Léon. December 2014. ons stad. 3 September 2019. 107. 16–21. de.