Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Polish_Telegraphic_Agency> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 84 of
84
with 100 triples per page.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency abstract "Polish Telegraphic Agency (Polish: Polska Agencja Telegraficzna, PAT) was a Polish state-owned news agency established on October 31, 1918. Its main office was at first located in Krakow. Later, it was moved to Lwow, and finally to Warsaw, where it remained until the 1939 Invasion of Poland. As the only such agency in the Second Polish Republic, the PAT was the official supplier of news on Poland both for the Polish press and foreign media (through 14 yearly bulletins issued in a number of languages, including Polish, French, English and German). Since 1927 the PAT also issued a weekly newsreel. After the Soviet and German take-over of Poland in 1939, the PAT continued its service abroad as the news agency of the Polish Government in Exile. In 1991 it was officially united with the Polish Press Agency operating in Poland. It is also considered a distant predecessor of the Polish Information Agency.The bulletins, issued by the PAT, were main source of information about Poland for foreign press. They provided political, economic, cultural and sports news. In 1927, the agency produced its first, 10-minute long weekly newsreels. They were shown in Polish cinemas prior to the main film, and this custom was continued after World War Two, with the Communist-sponsored Polish Film Chronicle. Until September 1939, some 600 newsreels were produced. Only 100 survived the war, as following the Warsaw Uprising, archives of the PAT were destroyed. Since 1921, the chairman of the agency was Piotr Gorecki, but after the May Coup, all major posts were handed over to the group of supporters of Jozef Pilsudski. In 1929, the chairman was Roman Starzynski, replaced in July 1933 by Konrad Libicki. Last prewar chairman of the PAT was Mieczyslaw Obarski. In 1926, the PAT consisted of two departments: information and advertising. In 1927, film department was added, and in 1930, a film and photo studio was added. In 1935, autonomous film institute was opened, and in the same year, information department was divided into two offices: political, economical, art and culture, sports and provincial news. There also was a separate office handling foreign news. In 1935, the PAT had fourteen local offices, in the following towns: Białystok, Bydgoszcz, Gdynia, Grudziądz, Katowice, Kraków, Lublin, Lwów, Łódź, Łuck, Poznań, Sosnowiec, Toruń and Wilno. It also had ten foreign offices, at Berlin, Free City of Danzig, Geneva, London, Moscow, Paris, New York, Riga, Rome and Vienna. In the mid-1930s, the agency employed some 250 correspondents. In 1932, the PAT was merged with National Publishing House (Wydawnictwo Panstwowe), which resulted in opening four bulletins. In 1935, the agency signed advertising agreements with three major state monopolies: Polish Spirit Monopoly, Polish Tobacco Monopoly and General Savings Bank.".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageExternalLink Historia.html.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageExternalLink pat.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageID "9324479".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageLength "3393".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageOutDegree "48".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageRevisionID "588087137".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Berlin.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Białystok.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Bydgoszcz.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Category:1918_establishments_in_Poland.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Category:News_agencies.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Category:Polish_media.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Correspondent.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Free_City_of_Danzig.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Gdynia.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Geneva.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Grudziądz.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Invasion_of_Poland.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Jozef_Pilsudski.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Józef_Piłsudski.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Katowice.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Krakow.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Kraków.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink London.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Lublin.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Lutsk.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Lviv.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Lwow.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Lwów.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink May_Coup_(Poland).
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Monopoly.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Moscow.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink New_York.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink News_agency.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Newsreel.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink PKO_Bank_Polski.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Paris.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Poland.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Film_Chronicle.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Government_in_Exile.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Information_Agency.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Press_Agency.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Polish_government-in-exile.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Polmos.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Powszechna_Kasa_Oszczędności_Bank_Polski.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Poznań.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Riga.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Rome.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Second_Polish_Republic.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Sosnowiec.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Toruń.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Vienna.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Vilnius.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Warsaw.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Warsaw_Uprising.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Wilno.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink World_War_Two.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLink Łódź.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageWikiLinkText "Polish Telegraphic Agency".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency hasPhotoCollection Polish_Telegraphic_Agency.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-pl.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency subject Category:1918_establishments_in_Poland.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency subject Category:News_agencies.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency subject Category:Polish_media.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency hypernym Agency.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency type Article.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency type Organisation.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency type Agency.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency type Article.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency type Communication.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency type Establishment.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency comment "Polish Telegraphic Agency (Polish: Polska Agencja Telegraficzna, PAT) was a Polish state-owned news agency established on October 31, 1918. Its main office was at first located in Krakow. Later, it was moved to Lwow, and finally to Warsaw, where it remained until the 1939 Invasion of Poland.".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency label "Polish Telegraphic Agency".
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency sameAs Polska_Agencja_Telegraficzna.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency sameAs m.0284mkw.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency sameAs Польское_телеграфное_агентство.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency sameAs Польська_телеграфна_агенція.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency sameAs Q4371276.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency sameAs Q4371276.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency wasDerivedFrom Polish_Telegraphic_Agency?oldid=588087137.
- Polish_Telegraphic_Agency isPrimaryTopicOf Polish_Telegraphic_Agency.