Founder(s) | Aron de Yosef Hazan |
---|---|
Editor | Aron de Yosef Hazan |
Founded | 1871 |
Language | Ladino |
Ceased publication | 1912 |
Headquarters | İzmir |
Country | Ottoman Empire |
La Buena Esperanza ( [la ˈbweːna espeˈrantsa], Ladino: The Good Hope) was a Ladino language weekly newspaper which was published in Smyrna, Ottoman Empire, in the period 1871–1912, being the longest-run Ladino newspaper in the city. [1]
La Buena Esperanza was launched in Smyrna in 1871. [2] The founder and editor of the paper which was published on a weekly basis was Aron de Yosef Hazan. [2] [3] He was an Italian-origin Jewish who was working as a teacher at the Alliance Israélite Universelle school in Smyrna. [4] He closed down La Buena Esperanza in 1912 when he had to leave the city because of the invasion of Tripoli by the Italian Empire. [4]
Founder(s) | Aron de Yosef Hazan |
---|---|
Editor | Aron de Yosef Hazan |
Founded | 1871 |
Language | Ladino |
Ceased publication | 1912 |
Headquarters | İzmir |
Country | Ottoman Empire |
La Buena Esperanza ( [la ˈbweːna espeˈrantsa], Ladino: The Good Hope) was a Ladino language weekly newspaper which was published in Smyrna, Ottoman Empire, in the period 1871–1912, being the longest-run Ladino newspaper in the city. [1]
La Buena Esperanza was launched in Smyrna in 1871. [2] The founder and editor of the paper which was published on a weekly basis was Aron de Yosef Hazan. [2] [3] He was an Italian-origin Jewish who was working as a teacher at the Alliance Israélite Universelle school in Smyrna. [4] He closed down La Buena Esperanza in 1912 when he had to leave the city because of the invasion of Tripoli by the Italian Empire. [4]