Nieuws van den Dag voor Nederlandsch-Indië explained

Het Nieuws van den Dag voor Nederlandsch-Indië was a Dutch-language newspaper published on the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies (modern-day Indonesia). Originally called De Indische Courant (one of a number of papers with that name), it was published in Batavia from 1895[1] or 1896 to 1900[2] until it was renamed.[3] One of the paper's contributors was Dutch author and critic of the colonial system Multatuli.[4]

The paper was known as conservative, and editorialized vehemently against the emancipation of the native people. Its editor in chief during the 1920s was K.W. Wybrands, who put such a personal stamp on the paper that it was also known as Wybrands' paper.[5] In 1938, Willem Belonje became the editor in chief of the paper; he had earlier run De Indische Courant, in the 1920s. The paper was closed in 1942 by the Japanese occupying forces.[1] In the early 1930s the paper had a circulation of six to nine thousand, but had dropped to between three and six thousand the next decade.[5]

References

Bibliography

External links

online access to newspaper archive incl. Nieuws van den Dag voor Nederlandsch-Indië

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Journalistiek in de tropen: Het Nieuws van den Dag voor Nederlandsch-Indië, 18 december 1939. Journalistiek in de Tropen. International Institute of Social History. Dutch. 25 February 2014.
  2. Web site: Indische Pers. Journalistiek in de Tropen. International Institute of Social History. Dutch. 24 February 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140228021517/http://www.indische-pers.nl/lijstkranten/i/. 28 February 2014. dead.
  3. Maters 37-38.
  4. Van der Veur 18.
  5. Maters 38.