Table of Contents
9 relations: Fuzan Nippō, History of newspapers in Korea, Japanese language, Keijō Nippō, Korea under Japanese rule, Korean yen, List of newspapers in Korea, Masan, Pacific War.
- Defunct Japanese-language newspapers
- Japanese-language newspapers published in Korea
- Newspapers disestablished in the 1940s
- Newspapers published in Korea under Japanese rule
Fuzan Nippō
was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Busan, Korea from 1905 to 1945. Nansen Nippō and Fuzan Nippō are Defunct Japanese-language newspapers, Japanese-language newspapers published in Korea and newspapers published in Korea under Japanese rule.
See Nansen Nippō and Fuzan Nippō
History of newspapers in Korea
Modern newspapers have been published in Korea since 1881, with the first native Korean newspaper being published in 1883.
See Nansen Nippō and History of newspapers in Korea
Japanese language
is the principal language of the Japonic language family spoken by the Japanese people.
See Nansen Nippō and Japanese language
Keijō Nippō
was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Korea from 1906 to 1945. Nansen Nippō and Keijō Nippō are Defunct Japanese-language newspapers, Japanese-language newspapers published in Korea and newspapers published in Korea under Japanese rule.
See Nansen Nippō and Keijō Nippō
Korea under Japanese rule
From 1910 to 1945, Korea was ruled as a part of the Empire of Japan under the name Chōsen (Hanja: 朝鮮, Korean: 조선), the Japanese reading of Joseon.
See Nansen Nippō and Korea under Japanese rule
Korean yen
The yen was the currency of Korea, Empire of Japan between 1910 and 1945.
See Nansen Nippō and Korean yen
List of newspapers in Korea
This list primarily covers newspapers published in Korea before the late August 1945 division of Korea. Nansen Nippō and list of newspapers in Korea are newspapers published in Korea under Japanese rule.
See Nansen Nippō and List of newspapers in Korea
Masan
Masan is an administrative region of Changwon, a city in the South Gyeongsang Province.
Pacific War
The Pacific War, sometimes called the Asia–Pacific War or the Pacific Theater, was the theater of World War II that was fought in eastern Asia, the Pacific Ocean, the Indian Ocean, and Oceania.
See Nansen Nippō and Pacific War
See also
Defunct Japanese-language newspapers
- Chōsen Jihō
- Chōsen Shinbun
- Chōsen Shinpō
- Chōsen Shinpō (Incheon)
- Chūsen Nippō
- Daitō Shinpō
- Fuzan Nippō
- Heijō Shinpō
- Kanjō Shinpō
- Keijō Nippō
- Keijō Shinpō
- Manshū Nichi-Nichi Shimbun
- Musansha Shinbun
- Nansen Nippō
Japanese-language newspapers published in Korea
- Chōsen Jihō
- Chōsen Shinbun
- Chōsen Shinpō
- Chōsen Shinpō (Incheon)
- Chūsen Nippō
- Daitō Shinpō
- Fuzan Nippō
- Heijō Shinpō
- Kanjō Shinpō
- Keijō Nippō
- Keijō Shinpō
- Nansen Nippō
Newspapers disestablished in the 1940s
- Abu al-Hawl (newspaper)
- Der Bialistoker Shtern
- Der royter shtern (Lvov)
- Der shtern
- Der shtern (Kharkov)
- Jingzhe (Chengdu)
- Nansen Nippō
- Oktyabr (Yiddish newspaper)
- Zai Greit!
Newspapers published in Korea under Japanese rule
- Chōsen Jihō
- Chōsen Shinbun
- Chūsen Nippō
- Fuzan Nippō
- Gyeongnam Ilbo
- Keijō Nippō
- Keijō Shinpō
- List of newspapers in Korea
- Maeil Sinbo
- Nansen Nippō
- The Chosun Ilbo
- The Christian News
- The Dong-A Ilbo
- The Seoul Press

