Central Ural Publishing House

The Central Ural Publishing House (Russian: Средне-Уральское книжное издательство, tr. Sredne-Uralskoe knizhnoe izdatelstvo), formerly the Sverdlovsk Publishing House (Russian: Свердловское книжное издательство, tr. Sverdlovskoe knizhnoe izdatelstvo) was a Soviet and Russian book publisher head-quartered in Yekaterinburg. It was established in 1920. In 1930–1940 it was the largest book publisher in the Ural region.[1]

History

The company was established in 1920.[2] It was initially called Uralgosizdat (Russian: Уралгосиздат, Уральское областное отделение Государственного издательства, tr. Uralskoe oblastnoe otdelenie Gosudarstvennogo izdatelstva, lit. "The Ural department of the State publisher"). It published propaganda brochures, posters, leaflets, the first alphabet book for adults in the Soviet Union. In 1922 it was transformed into the joint-stock company Uralkniga (Уралкнига). Bella Kun became the chairman of the board.[3] In 1934 it was renamed to the Sverdlovsk Publishing House,[2] abbreviated as Sverdlgiz (Russian: Свердлгиз, Свердловское областное государственное издательство, tr. Sverdlovskoe oblastnoe gosudarstvennoe izdatelstvo).[3]

In 1963 it was rebranded as the Central Ural Publishing House, with the State Committee for Publishing taking over.[2] The Tyumen department was opened. It was active till late-1990s. The number of published titles gradually decreased through the years, e.g. 104 books were released in 1979, but only 26 in 1997.[4]

Publications

gollark: ddg! Multiparty secure computation
gollark: Interesting.
gollark: Oh, unless you control the client entirely and are the only user.
gollark: AT ALL for ANYTHING. The client tells only lies. Do not believe what it says.
gollark: Anyway, you CAN NEVER trust the client.

References

  1. Rozhdestvenskaya, Yelena (2005). "Moemu neizmenno okryljajushhemu redaktoru: vspominaja Pavla Petrovicha Bazhova" Моему неизменно окрыляющему редактору: вспоминая Павла Петровича Бажова [To my always inspiring editor: remembering Pavel Petrovich Bazhov]. Ural (in Russian). Yekaterinburg. 1.
  2. Karaychentseva, Svetlana; Sukhorukova, Elizaveta (2009). История Российской книжной палаты: Вспомогательные указатели (in Russian). Российская книжная палата. p. 75.
  3. Издательство «Свердловское книжное издательство» [Sverdlovsk Publishing House] (in Russian). FantLab. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  4. Издательство «Средне-Уральское книжное издательство» [Central Ural Publishing House] (in Russian). FantLab. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.