Page 170 - Weiss, Jernej, ur./ed. 2024. Glasbena kritika – nekoč in danes ▪︎ Music Criticism – Yesterday and Today. Koper/Ljubljana: Založba Univerze na Primorskem in Festival Ljubljana. Studia musicologica Labacensia, 7
P. 170
glasbena kritika – nekoč in danes | music criticism – yesterday and today
can find articles about music: Karlovački viestnik (1861), Glasonoša (1861–
1865), Karlovački viestnik (1866), Svjetlo (1884–1905), Sloga (1886–1888) and
Karlovački glasnik (1899–1903), and until the end of the First World War,
Glasonoša (1905–1909) and Sloga (1910–1919). Some of the aforementioned
newspapers were short-lived because the response from subscribers was
not satisfactory, and the financial expenses for printing were high. This pa-
per will present the preliminary results of research on the subject under-
taken within the project “Institutionalization of Modern Bourgeois Musi-
cal Culture in the 19th Century in Civil Croatia and the Military Frontier
(MusInst19)” funded by the Croatian Science Foundation.4
Table 1: Overview of Karlovac newspapers in the “long” nineteenth century
Title Editor/s Period Frequency Notes
Der Pilger of publication 3 times a week Owner Ivan Ne-
Karlovački Franz C. Schall semi-weekly pomuk Prettner
viestnik Dragutin Akurti, from 1841–1847
13 March Skender Vab- semi-weekly 02 Jan – 29 Jun
Glasonoša ković/Fabković 1861
weekly from the end
Karlovački Abel Lukšić, from 1862 1861–1865 semi-weekly of September
viestnik Skender Vabković, in 1864 to the end
Svjetlo5 1863 Josip Eugen Tomić, of December
Ivan Trnski, from May 1865, published
1865 August Šenoa in Vienna; mo-
stly news abo-
Ljudevit Tomšić 1866 ut Slavs in Vi-
enna, almost no
more news from
Karlovac
06 Jan – 25 Sep;
Owner, editor
and publisher
Dragutin Kos-
tinčer
Adolf G. Prettner, from 1884–1886; 1889–
1891 Dušan Lopašić 1905
4 So far, the research covers the papers Karlovački viestnik (1861), Glasonoša (1861–
1865), Karlovački viestnik (1866), Svjetlo, Sloga (1886–1888) and Karlovački glasnik.
5 It is stated in the literature that Sloga (1886), as well as Glasonoša (1905) and Sloga
(1910) are stages in the publishing of the Svjetlo newspaper. The name change in 1886
to Sloga happened due to censorship and the confiscation of the paper. Cf. Marija
Vrbetić, “Novinstvo u Karlovcu 1841–1941 [Journalism in Karlovac 1841–1941],” in
Karlovac: 1579–1979, ed. Đuro Zatezalo (Zagreb: Historijski arhiv u Karlovcu, 1979),
313.
170
can find articles about music: Karlovački viestnik (1861), Glasonoša (1861–
1865), Karlovački viestnik (1866), Svjetlo (1884–1905), Sloga (1886–1888) and
Karlovački glasnik (1899–1903), and until the end of the First World War,
Glasonoša (1905–1909) and Sloga (1910–1919). Some of the aforementioned
newspapers were short-lived because the response from subscribers was
not satisfactory, and the financial expenses for printing were high. This pa-
per will present the preliminary results of research on the subject under-
taken within the project “Institutionalization of Modern Bourgeois Musi-
cal Culture in the 19th Century in Civil Croatia and the Military Frontier
(MusInst19)” funded by the Croatian Science Foundation.4
Table 1: Overview of Karlovac newspapers in the “long” nineteenth century
Title Editor/s Period Frequency Notes
Der Pilger of publication 3 times a week Owner Ivan Ne-
Karlovački Franz C. Schall semi-weekly pomuk Prettner
viestnik Dragutin Akurti, from 1841–1847
13 March Skender Vab- semi-weekly 02 Jan – 29 Jun
Glasonoša ković/Fabković 1861
weekly from the end
Karlovački Abel Lukšić, from 1862 1861–1865 semi-weekly of September
viestnik Skender Vabković, in 1864 to the end
Svjetlo5 1863 Josip Eugen Tomić, of December
Ivan Trnski, from May 1865, published
1865 August Šenoa in Vienna; mo-
stly news abo-
Ljudevit Tomšić 1866 ut Slavs in Vi-
enna, almost no
more news from
Karlovac
06 Jan – 25 Sep;
Owner, editor
and publisher
Dragutin Kos-
tinčer
Adolf G. Prettner, from 1884–1886; 1889–
1891 Dušan Lopašić 1905
4 So far, the research covers the papers Karlovački viestnik (1861), Glasonoša (1861–
1865), Karlovački viestnik (1866), Svjetlo, Sloga (1886–1888) and Karlovački glasnik.
5 It is stated in the literature that Sloga (1886), as well as Glasonoša (1905) and Sloga
(1910) are stages in the publishing of the Svjetlo newspaper. The name change in 1886
to Sloga happened due to censorship and the confiscation of the paper. Cf. Marija
Vrbetić, “Novinstvo u Karlovcu 1841–1941 [Journalism in Karlovac 1841–1941],” in
Karlovac: 1579–1979, ed. Đuro Zatezalo (Zagreb: Historijski arhiv u Karlovcu, 1979),
313.
170