Salesian Bulletin: Difference between revisions
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|{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italy]] |
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|[[1877]]<ref name="The Biographical Memoirs, Volume XIII"> |
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|[[1877]]<ref>{{cite book |title=The Biographical Memoirs of Saint John Bosco |last=Ceria |first=Eugenio |authorlink= |coauthors=Diego Borgatello |year=1983 |publisher=Salesiana Publisher |location=New Rochelle, New York |isbn=0-89944-013-4 |page=191 |pages= |url= |accessdate=}}</ref> |
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| Founded directly by Don Bosco in [[Turin]]. |
| Founded directly by Don Bosco in [[Turin]]. |
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Revision as of 03:37, 6 May 2010
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Type | Monthly bulletin |
---|---|
Format | Different formats for every edition |
Owner(s) | The Salesian Congregation |
Publisher | Salesian provinces |
Editor | Salesian Family |
Founded | 1877 |
Language | 29 languages |
Headquarters | In 135 countries |
The Salesian Bulletin is an official publication[1] of the Salesians that was founded in August 1877 by Don Bosco. It has been published without interruption since then. The proliferation of the educational works of Don Bosco in the five continents, is the first responsible of the survival of the Salesian Bulletin. As for 2010, the Bulletin was published in 56 different editions and 29 languages for 135 countries.[2]
Purpose
The purpose of the Salesian Bulletin was established by Don Bosco. It is linked initially with the foundation of the Association of Salesian Cooperators and the first Salesian missionaries in the Americas. Don Bosco intended that the Bulletin, as the official publication of the Salesian Congregation, will link Salesians and cooperators.[3]
History
The Salesian Bulletin comes from a former experience that Don Bosco did in having his own publication. Although the researchers never found a copy, it was traced a second issue by August 1875 named Bibliofilo Cattolico (The Catholic Booklover) that was printed in the Oratory Press of Don Bosco. The Catholic Booklover was dedicated to late vocations.[4] The first editions were published in Italian, but it will be soon not just translated by edited in several languages between the 19th and 20th century.
1877 to 1888
In August 1877, Don Bosco did a transformation of the Bibliofilo Cattolico to Montly Salesian Bulletin (Bollettino Salesiano Mensuale). The fact that Don Bosco numbered it as 5 and volume 3, proved the continuity with the Bibliofilo.[4]
The first language was French, followed by Spanish in 1886. Don Bosco died early 1888 and the continuity of the publication passed to his successors.
Year country and language of the expansion of the Salesian Bulletin:
Country | Language | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Italy | Italian | 1877<ref name="The Biographical Memoirs, Volume XIII"> | Founded directly by Don Bosco in Turin. |
1888 to 1927
There are new editions in other languages: In English in 1892, after German, Polish and Hungarian.
References
- ^ Ceria, Eugenio (1983). The Bibliographical Memoirs of Saint John Bosco, volume XIII (1877 - 1878). New Rochelle, New York: Salesiana Publisher. p. 61. ISBN 0-89944-013-4.
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- ^ Ceria, Eugenio (1983). The Bibliographical Memoirs of Saint John Bosco, volume XIII (1877 - 1878). New Rochelle, New York: Salesiana Publisher. p. 61. ISBN 0-89944-013-4.
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