Showing posts with label newspaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newspaper. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Ferda the Ant
Postcard CZ-594777 from Czech shows Ferda Mravenec (Ferda the Ant), a popular Czech animated character illustrated by Ondřej Sekora. It was first published on January 1, 1933 in the Lidové noviny, the oldest daily newspaper published in Prague, the Czech Republic.
The character have appeared in many Czech children books, including Ferda the Ant (1936), Ferda the Ant in the Foreign Service (1937), and Ferda Anthill (1938). It is popular in Czech as much as Micky Mouse in the U.S.
Labels:
book,
cartoon,
character,
children,
comics,
CZ-594777,
newspaper,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
received
Location:
Czech Republic
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Santa in an Airship High Over the Panama Canal
A wrong number listed on a Colorado Springs newspaper advertisement by Sears started NORAD's Santa Tracking program in 1955. Google also started to track Santa's movement in 2004 as a Google Maps service. However, the radar tracking may reveal Santa is not on a sleigh after all, as the vintage postcard US-3141511 from Virginia shows that Santa Claus on an airship overlooks the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914.
Labels:
1914,
1955,
2004,
airship,
Colorado Springs,
Google Maps,
newspaper,
NORAD,
opening,
Panama Canal,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
received,
Santa Claus,
tracking,
US-3141511,
vintage,
Virginia
Location:
Panama Canal, Panama
Friday, February 28, 2014
The Horrifying Search - The 228 Massacre in Taiwan
Postcard HK-126198 from Hongkong was entitled "the Horrifying Search - The 228 Massacre in Taiwan." Measured 14x18.3 cm, the illustration was first published by WenWeiPo, a newspaper in Shanghai, on April 28, 1947.
The 228 Massacre was an anti-government uprising in Taiwan that began in 1947. After the Japanese rule of Taiwan for 50 years ended in 1945 due to Japan's loss in World War II, Republic of China government, led by the Chinese Nationalist Party or Kuomintang (KMT), took control of Taiwan. However, local inhabitants became resentful over the perception of corrupted KMT authorities that tended to seize private property arbitrarily and mismanage economy. A dispute between a cigarette vendor and an officer of the Office of Monopoly on February 27 triggered civil disorder in Taipei and an open rebellion spread to the whole island and lasted for days. The uprising was violently suppressed beginning on February 28, or 2/28, resulting in the massacre of more than 10,000 civilians.
The incident marked the beginning of the KMT's White Terror period in Taiwan as the island was placed under martial law. Thousands more had vanished, died, or were imprisoned, before martial law was lifted on July 14, 1987. This incident is one of the most important events in Taiwan's modern history. It continues to divide Taiwan after 66 years.
恐怖的檢查 -- 臺灣二二八事件 by 黃榮燦(力軍)民國36年(1947) 4月28日上海文匯報首度刊登
Labels:
1947,
228,
Hong Kong,
illustration,
KMT,
massacre,
newspaper,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
received,
Taipei,
Taiwan
Location:
Taipei City, Taiwan
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