Allgemeine Zeitung, a newspaper founded in 1798 by J. F. Cotta in Stuttgart and transferred to Augsburg in 1810 and to Munich in 1882. In 1908 it was converted into a periodical. In its heyday (up to c.1850) it had a number of well-known contributors, including Heine and F. Dingelstedt.
The Allgemeine Zeitung was in the first part of the 19th century the leading political daily journal in Germany. It has been widely recognised as the first world class German journal and is a symbol of the German press abroad.
The Allgemeine Zeitung was founded in 1798 by Johann Friedrich Cotta in Tübingen. The works of Schiller and Goethe were published in its pages.
After 1803, the journal was published in Stuttgart. From 1807 to 1882, it was published in Augsburg.
Heinrich Heine was a major contributor to the journal. From 1831 he wrote reports on music and painting and became the newspaper's Parisian correspondent. He wrote articles on the French way of life but also about Louis-Philippe and German politics.
In 1882, the Allgemeine Zeitung moved to Munich. The journal stopped publishing on July 29, 1929.
The tradition of this major journal is still maintained by the Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung and the Allgemeine Zeitung edited in Mainz.
In German :
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