Frankfurter Zeitung
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The Frankfurter Zeitung was a German language newspaper that appeared from 1856 to 1943. It emerged from a market letter that was published in Frankfurt. In Nazi Germany it was considered the only mass publication not completely controlled by the Propagandaministerium under Joseph Goebbels.
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Notable contributors to the Frankfurter Zeitung
- Theodor W. Adorno
- Leopold Weiss
- Walter Benjamin
- Franz Blei
- Margret Boveri
- Alfred Döblin
- Kurt Eisner
- Lion Feuchtwanger
- Erich Kästner
- Max Rudolf Kaufmann, (correspondent in Constantinople before 1918)
- Editha Klipstein
- Annette Kolb
- Siegfried Kracauer
- Ernst Kreuder
- Heinrich Mann
- Thomas Mann
- Sándor Márai
- Franz Mehring
- Soma Morgenstern
- Peretz Naftali
- Kurt Offenburg
- Alfred Polgar
- Joseph Roth
- Richard Sorge
- Friedrich Schrader, (correspondent in Constantinople before 1918)
- Anna Seghers
- Heinrich Schirmbeck
- Walter Schmiele
- Dolf Sternberger
- Max Weber
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