Gwiazdka Cieszyńska

Gwiazdka Cieszyńska ("Cieszyn Star") was a weekly Polish magazine published in Cieszyn (Teschen), Silesia in 1851-1939. After 1906 it appeared biweekly. It succeeded Tygodnik Cieszyński magazine which appeared in 1848-1851.

Gwiazdka Cieszyńska
Gwiazdka Cieszyńska from 31 July 1914, featuring the manifesto of Franz Joseph at the start of World War I
Former editorsPaweł Stalmach (1851-1887)
Józef Londzin (1890-1929)
CategoriesMagazine
FrequencyWeekly
Biweekly (since 1906)
First issue1 March 1851
Final issue1939
CountryAustrian Empire, Austria-Hungary, Poland
LanguagePolish

The magazine accented the Polishness of Silesia and aimed to enlighten and emancipate the people of Cieszyn Silesia, spread national consciousness among Poles and present Polish history and traditions. It however disavowed from the radical social slogans.[1] During the absolutist Bach system of the 1850s-1860s of the Austrian Empire it was the only Polish magazine in Cieszyn Silesia.[2] In the 1860s it had about 1,400 subscribers, 300 of whom lived in Silesia, 600 in Galicia.[3]

From the 1880s Gwiazdka Cieszyńska presented almost exclusively Catholic views, that were related to the spiritual evolution of editor Paweł Stalmach, who on his deathbed converted to Catholicism.[4] From 1888 it was financed by the Katolickie Towarzystwo Prasowe (Catholic Press Society).

Gwiazdka Cieszyńska later became the press expression of Związek Śląskich Katolików (ZŚlK, Association of Silesian Catholics), which in February 1923 merged with the Polish Christian Democratic Party. Before his death, editor Józef Londzin bequeathed the magazine together with all of its property to the Dziedzictwo Błogosławionego Jana Sarkandra (Heritage of Blessed Jan Sarkander). In 1927 the reactivated Związek Śląskich Katolików quarrelled with Dziedzictwo Błogosławionego Jana Sarkandra before the elections to the Silesian Sejm. In consequence the former (ZŚlK) lost its press association with Gwiazdka Cieszyńska.[5] In 1930 the magazine adopted the Polish Christian Democratic stance.

Gwiazdka Cieszyńska also stood also against the influence of the socialist movement. Regional writers who contributed to the magazine included Andrzej Cinciała, Andrzej Kotula, Ernest Farnik, Emanuel Grim, Jan Kubisz and Oskar Zawisza.

Editors

  • 1851-1887: Paweł Stalmach
  • 1889-1890: Andrzej Kusionowicz (afterwards Grodyński)
  • 1890: Józef Londzin
  • 1901-1902: Kazimierz Wróblewski
  • 1902-1929: Józef Londzin

Footnotes

  1. Spyra 2008, 36.
  2. Kenig 1998, 51.
  3. Kenig 1998, 7.
  4. Kenig 1998, 8.
  5. Kenig 1998, 21.
gollark: Human bodies (and most evolved things) have a weird thing going on where they simultaneously contain vast quantities of miraculously well-optimized stuff and ridiculous nonsensical quirks an actual engineer would have easily fixed.
gollark: Obviously, it's bad design and I would totally do better.
gollark: It's called Muller's ratchet.
gollark: The whole sex chromosome thing is vaguely weird because apparently, since there's no recombination, they are subject to inevitable slow genetic decay.
gollark: And lying is much easier than actually changing your height.

References

  • Kenig, Piotr (1998). 150 lat prasy polskiej na Śląsku Cieszyńskim. Bielsko-Biała: Muzeum Okręgowe w Bielsku-Białej. ISBN 83-905060-8-4.
  • Spyra, Janusz (2008). "Rozwój świadomości regionalnej i narodowej mieszkańców Śląska Cieszyńskiego przed pierwszą wojną światową". In Janusz Spyra (ed.). Śląsk Cieszyński. Granice - przynależność - tożsamość. Cieszyn: Muzeum Śląska Cieszyńskiego. pp. 25–44. ISBN 978-83-922005-4-3.
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