The Guardian (1713)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Guardian_(1713) an entity of type: Thing

Die Zeitung The Guardian war eine kurzlebige Publikation, die 1713 in London erschien. Gegründet wurde der Guardian von Richard Steele. Wichtige Mitarbeiter waren Joseph Addison, und . Steele und Addison hatten zuvor schon beim Spectator und beim Tatler zusammengearbeitet. Alle diese Publikationen haben nichts mit den gleichnamigen, immer noch erscheinenden britischen Printorganen zu tun. rdf:langString
The Guardian was a short-lived newspaper published in London from 12 March to 1 October 1713. It was founded by Richard Steele and featured contributions from Joseph Addison, Thomas Tickell, Alexander Pope and Ambrose Philips. Steele and Addison had previously collaborated on the Tatler and The Spectator (after which the present-day Spectator and Tatler are named). The Gentleman's Magazine followed on the heels of The Guardian, being touted by Richard Steele as a sequel of it. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Guardian (1713)
rdf:langString The Guardian (1713)
rdf:langString The Guardian
rdf:langString The Guardian
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xsd:integer 1117928985
xsd:date 1713-10-01
xsd:date 1713-03-12
rdf:langString Richard Steele
rdf:langString Die Zeitung The Guardian war eine kurzlebige Publikation, die 1713 in London erschien. Gegründet wurde der Guardian von Richard Steele. Wichtige Mitarbeiter waren Joseph Addison, und . Steele und Addison hatten zuvor schon beim Spectator und beim Tatler zusammengearbeitet. Alle diese Publikationen haben nichts mit den gleichnamigen, immer noch erscheinenden britischen Printorganen zu tun.
rdf:langString The Guardian was a short-lived newspaper published in London from 12 March to 1 October 1713. It was founded by Richard Steele and featured contributions from Joseph Addison, Thomas Tickell, Alexander Pope and Ambrose Philips. Steele and Addison had previously collaborated on the Tatler and The Spectator (after which the present-day Spectator and Tatler are named). Button's Coffee House in Russell Street, Covent Garden, acted as an ad hoc office for the newspaper. Contributors submitted written material in a marble lion's head letterbox, said to have been designed by the artist William Hogarth, for possible publication in The Guardian. The Gentleman's Magazine followed on the heels of The Guardian, being touted by Richard Steele as a sequel of it.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4761
xsd:date 1713-03-12

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