Berner Tagwacht

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1 Saturday, 1 August 1981
1 issue
2 Sunday, 2 August 1981
3 Monday, 3 August 1981
1 issue
4 Tuesday, 4 August 1981
1 issue
5 Wednesday, 5 August 1981
1 issue
6 Thursday, 6 August 1981
1 issue
7 Friday, 7 August 1981
1 issue
8 Saturday, 8 August 1981
1 issue
9 Sunday, 9 August 1981
10 Monday, 10 August 1981
1 issue
11 Tuesday, 11 August 1981
1 issue
12 Wednesday, 12 August 1981
1 issue
13 Thursday, 13 August 1981
1 issue
14 Friday, 14 August 1981
1 issue
15 Saturday, 15 August 1981
1 issue
16 Sunday, 16 August 1981
17 Monday, 17 August 1981
1 issue
18 Tuesday, 18 August 1981
1 issue
19 Wednesday, 19 August 1981
1 issue
20 Thursday, 20 August 1981
1 issue
21 Friday, 21 August 1981
1 issue
22 Saturday, 22 August 1981
1 issue
23 Sunday, 23 August 1981
24 Monday, 24 August 1981
1 issue
25 Tuesday, 25 August 1981
1 issue
26 Wednesday, 26 August 1981
1 issue
27 Thursday, 27 August 1981
1 issue
28 Friday, 28 August 1981
1 issue
29 Saturday, 29 August 1981
1 issue
30 Sunday, 30 August 1981
31 Monday, 31 August 1981
1 issue

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About this newspaper

Title: Berner Tagwacht
Canton: Bern
Available online: 4 January 1893 - 29 November 1997 (32,108 issues, 257,036 pages)
Bibliografic information (Helveticat): http://permalink.snl.ch/bib/sz001158851
Rights: private use
Segmentation level: article level
Description: The Berner Tagwacht was founded in 1892 by the Bern Workers' Union as the organ of the Social Democratic Party of the Canton of Bern. It was published from 1893 and was the successor to the newspaper Der Schweizerische Sozialdemokrat 1888-1892. The Tagwacht first appeared twice weekly, and from 1906 six times a week. It was one of the most important journalistic voices of the workers' movement and social democracy in Switzerland. Robert Grimm (1881-1958) was its editor-in-chief from 1909 to 1918, and he made it into the fighting newspaper of the left in Switzerland, while it also received international attention. In 1966 it merged with the Seeländer Volkszeitung, which had been published in Biel since 1920. Until 18 January 1952, the paper printed the main text in Fraktur (gothic) script. The Tagwacht always struggled with tight finances and was threatened with bankruptcy several times because it generated less advertising revenue than bourgeois newspapers. Therefore, from the 1970s onwards, it collaborated on the editorial side with other left-wing newspapers. At the end of 1997, it had to cease publication because of financial problems, after party newspapers in general had fallen into crisis. It then tried to survive as a weekly newspaper under the title Die Hauptstadt. This attempt failed after six months, in 1998.
First launched in 2023